On Mon, Aug 18, 2008 at 8:40 AM, Udhay Shankar N <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> This actually seems like a reasonable idea - hold another referendum in
> Kashmir and let them go if they want to. Anything I am missing here?
>
>
Swaminathan Aiyar has similar thoughts:

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Opinion/Columnists/Swaminathan_A_Aiyar/Independence_Day_for_Kashmir/articleshow/3372132.cms

On August 15, 
India<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Opinion/Columnists/Swaminathan_A_Aiyar/Independence_Day_for_Kashmir/articleshow/3372132.cms#>celebrated
independence from the British Raj. But Kashmiris staged a bandh
demanding independence from India. A day symbolising the end of colonialism
in India became a day symbolising Indian colonialism in the Valley.

As a liberal, i dislike ruling people against their will. True,
nation-building is a difficult and complex exercise, and initial resistance
can give way to the integration of regional aspirations into a larger
national identity — the end of Tamil secessionism was a classical example of
this.

I was once hopeful of Kashmir's integration, but after six decades of
effort, Kashmiri alienation looks greater than ever. India seeks to
integrate with Kashmir, not rule it colonially. Yet, the parallels between
British rule in India and Indian rule in Kashmir have become too close for
my comfort.

Many Indians say that Kashmir legally became an integral part of India when
the maharaja of the state signed the instrument of accession. Alas, such
legalisms become irrelevant when ground realities change. Indian kings and
princes, including the Mughals, acceded to the British Raj. The documents
they signed became irrelevant when Indians launched an independence
movement.

The British insisted for a long time that India was an integral part of
their Empire, the jewel in its crown, and would never be given up.
Imperialist Blimps remained in denial for decades. I fear we are in similar
denial on Kashmir.

The politically correct story of the maharaja's accession ignores a
devastating parallel event. Just as Kashmir had a Hindu maharaja ruling over
a Muslim majority, Junagadh had a Muslim nawab ruling over a Hindu majority.
The Hindu maharaja acceded to India, and the Muslim nawab to Pakistan.

But while India claimed that the Kashmiri accession to India was sacred, it
did not accept Junagadh's accession to Pakistan. India sent troops into
Junagadh, just as Pakistan sent troops into Kashmir. The difference was that
Pakistan lacked the military means to intervene in Junagadh, while India was
able to send troops into Srinagar. The Junagadh nawab fled to Pakistan,
whereas the Kashmir maharaja sat tight. India's double standard on Junagadh
and Kashmir was breathtaking.

Do you think the people of Junagadh would have integrated with Pakistan
after six decades of genuine Pakistani effort? No? Then can you really be
confident that Kashmiris will stop demanding azaadi and integrate with
India?

The British came to India uninvited. By contrast, Sheikh Abdullah, the most
popular politician in Kashmir, supported accession to India subject to
ratification by a plebiscite. But his heart lay in independence for Kashmir,
and he soon began manoeuvering towards that end. He was jailed by Nehru, who
then declared Kashmir's accession was final and no longer required
ratification by a plebiscite. The fact that Kashmir had a Muslim majority
was held to be irrelevant, since India was a secular country empowering
citizens through democracy.

Alas, democracy in Kashmir has been a farce for most of six decades. The rot
began with Sheikh Abdullah in 1951: he rejected the nomination papers of
almost all opponents, and so won 73 of the 75 seats unopposed! Nehru was
complicit in this sabotage of democracy.

Subsequent state elections were also rigged in favour of leaders nominated
by New Delhi. Only in 1977 was the first fair election held, and was won by
the Sheikh. But he died after a few years, and rigging returned in the 1988
election. That sparked the separatist uprising which continues to gather
strength today.

Many Indians point to long episodes of peace in the Valley and say the
separatists are just a noisy minority. But the Raj also had long quiet
periods between Gandhian agitations, which involved just a few lakhs of
India's<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Opinion/Columnists/Swaminathan_A_Aiyar/Swaminomics/Independence_Day_for_Kashmir/articleshow/msid-3372132,curpg-2.cms#>500
million people. One lakh people joined the Quit India movement of
1942,
but 25 lakh others joined the British Indian army to fight for the Empire's
glory.

Blimps cited this as evidence that most Indians simply wanted jobs and a
decent life. The Raj built the biggest railway and canal networks in the
world. It said most Indians were satisfied with economic development, and
that independence was demanded by a noisy minority. This is uncomfortably
similar to the official Indian response to the Kashmiri demand for azaadi.

Let me not exaggerate. Indian rule in Kashmir is not classical colonialism.
India has pumped vast sums into Kashmir, not extracted revenue as the Raj
did. Kashmir was among the poorest states during the Raj, but now has the
lowest poverty rate in India. It enjoys wide civil rights that the Raj never
gave. Some elections — 1977, 1983 and 2002 — were perfectly fair.

India has sought integration with Kashmir, not colonial rule. But Kashmiris
nevertheless demand azaadi. And ruling over those who resent it so strongly
for so long is quasi-colonialism, regardless of our intentions.

We promised Kashmiris a plebiscite six decades ago. Let us hold one now, and
give them three choices: independence, union with Pakistan, and union with
India. Almost certainly the Valley will opt for independence. Jammu will opt
to stay with India, and probably Ladakh too. Let Kashmiris decide the
outcome, not the politicians and armies of India and Pakistan.






-- 
Aadisht Khanna
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