For long, 50-year-old Sanjay Tickoo has been fighting for the rights of Kashmiri Pandits based in the Valley and the return of those who migrated elsewhere in the country. Welcoming the resolution introduced by Opposition leader and former chief minister Omar Abdullah last week on the matter and passed by the Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly, Tickoo, who hails from the volatile Old City in Srinagar바카라a 바카라separatist hub바카라바카라and leads the Kashmiri Pandit Sangharsh Samiti (KPSS), comprising Pandits living in the Valley, says the devil is in the details.
바카라The resolution is a significant development and an acknowledgment of our suffering. But is there any mechanism to implement it?바카라 asks Tickoo, pointing out that improper execution could well trigger another wave of migration. 바카라Is the Valley safe for the return of Pandits, especially in the current situation, that follows months of unrest? And didn바카라t the National Conference side with the separatists when they opposed separate townships for Pandits in the Valley in 2012?바카라
Omar moved the resolution on January 19 and the House passed it unanimously, except for a dissenting note from independent legislator Engineer Rashid. In a rare gesture, the ruling People바카라s Democratic Party (PDP) and the BJP supported and hailed the resolution. BJP legislator from Nowshera, Jammu, Ravinder Raina, even said his government 바카라will roast the militants (bhoon daalenge)바카라 and jail the separatists if they dared to obstruct the Pandits바카라 return. He said it was a blot on Kashmir that 바카라Pandits, Sikhs and nationalist Muslims had to migrate from the Valley and were still wandering, pushed from pillar to post바카라.
According to the Jammu and Kashmir government, 38,119 families migrated from Kashmir in 1990, including 2,168 Muslim and 1,747 Sikh families. However, the Union government pegs the number of Kashmiri migrants registered in the country at 60,452 families, of whom 38,119 were in Jammu, 19,338 in Delhi and 1,995 families in other states.
In 2008, the UPA government had announced a package of Rs 1,618.40 crore for the return and rehabilitation of migrant Kashmiri families. Under the package being implemented by the state, around 2,000 migrant youths have been given jobs in the state government, mostly in the education department. The Pandit beneficiaries stay in newly constructed 1,010 transit accommodations in north and south Kashmir and work in different places. There are scores of other Pandits, mostly retired government employees, who visit the transit camps to spend the summer months in the Valley.
For many reasons, though, the issue of permanent return to the Valley is more complex for Pandits living in the migrant camps. Sarla Bhat, 45, who hails from Sogam Valley of frontier Kupwara district in the Valley and lives at Jagti migrant camp, was outside the Muthi migrant camp this Sunday, January 22, along with her relations. They were on the way to see a relative who has managed to build a house in Jammu. 바카라If the situation returns to normal in the Valley, as it was during our teenage years, before 1990,바카라 says Sarla, 바카라then we would think of returning.바카라 Her female kin, who were with her, chip in and tell Outlook they are not sure whether they would be safe even if the government establishes separate colonies for them.
Sarla바카라s generation is in a Catch-22 situation. They long to the return to the Valley and are all praise for its syncretic culture, but are also concerned about their safety and whether the Valley could provide jobs to the educated migrant Pandit youth. 바카라After migration, our parents suffered a lot,바카라 says a relative of Sarla. 바카라There was no socialising in Jammu and other places. The culture was different, they failed to adjust and they fell ill.바카라
Another woman says that the young generation is mainly concerned with jobs and security. 바카라Why should my son, for example, who is settled in London, come back and live in the Valley?바카라 asks Sarla, pointing out that a lot of migrant Pandits are not so lucky. 바카라The government is not doing enough for those who are unemployed.바카라


Omar Abdullah
In fact, the National Conference is in a tight spot today as a section of Pandits, including Tickoo, are accusing the party of not doing any groundwork ahead of moving the resolution in the assembly. Hardliners in Kashmir say Omar바카라s party has not been serious in following up on most items on its agenda, including the autonomy resolution and the Resettlement Bill.
바카라I objected to the resolution as it has not talked about thousands of Muslim migrants, who crossed to Pakistan from the border areas of Kashmir,바카라 says MLA Rashid, who accuses Omar of lacking political commitment and will. 바카라It is also silent about the Resettlement Bill, which was exploited by Omar바카라s father Farooq Abdullah and, before him, by his grandfather, Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah, for their political gain.바카라
Unlike the autonomy resolution passed by Farooq in 2000 and the Resettlement Bill, passed by the Sheikh Abdullah government, the party says it was not bound to give any roadmap for the return of Pandits. 바카라It was an initiative to evolve a political consensus on the exodus of Kashmiri Pandits from the Valley and there was no necessity to give a roadmap,바카라 says National Conference spokesman Junaid Azim Mattu. 바카라On the other issues, our party will follow its political agenda, including restoration of autonomy, without being apologetic about it.바카라
In 2000, the Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly adopted by voice vote a resolution accepting a report of the State Autonomy Committee (SAC), recommending greater autonomy to the state after an intense debate on the issue both in J&K and across the country. Farooq had set up the SAC in 1996 when he took over as chief minister.
Earlier, after a spectacular electoral win in 1977, Sheikh Abdullah had come up with the Resettlement Bill in the assembly, which gave the right to return to Kashmir to all subjects of Jammu and Kashmir who had migrated between 1947 and 1953, and their descendants. The bill was aimed at paving the way for the return of nearly five lakh Muslims who had migrated from Jammu after the 1947 riots. The then governor, B.K. Nehru, delayed the assent to the bill and Farooq had to get it passed in the assembly again in October 1982. The then central government under Congress PM Indira Gandhi, though, refused to play ball and moved the Supreme Court against the J&K assembly바카라s decision.
바카라Our stand on the autonomy or the resettlement bill is for everybody to see,바카라 says Mattu. 바카라The resolution for the return of Pandits was moved on 27th year of their exodus from the Valley. But that doesn바카라t change our stand on the Resettlement Bill or about other migrations from the Valley in the past 20 years.바카라
Now that the NC has passed the resolution and every party has endorsed it, Tickoo says all the parties should campaign for it바카라바카라going door to door, as they do in elections바카라바카라to seek the support of the majority of Kashmiris. 바카라Until the return of Pandits gets support from all quarters, such resolutions are meaningless, and any ill-devised plan to settle them in the Valley could set off another wave of migration, just like what happened in 1990 after Pandits were killed.바카라
While the state government says 219 Kashmiri Pandits were killed in the Valley since 1990, Tickoo says KPSS has listed the names of 637 Pandits who were killed. Connecting the return of Pandits with that of the larger Kashmir issue, he says once progress is made on the latter, the return should be made part of the solution. 바카라Only then can there be a long-term settlement,바카라 he concludes.
By Naseer Ganai in Srinagar & Jammu