Greater autonomy in J&K will not end militancy: report
Greater autonomy for Jammu and Kashmir, as
demanded by Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah, is no guarantee against
militancy in Kashmir contrary to the state government's claim that
it would end the Kashmiri people's alienation, says a recent report.
The report, Chargesheet on Autonomy, says that secessionist
forces operating in the state do not accept the exclusion of Jammu
and Kashmir from the constitutional organisation of India as a
basis for settlement on Kashmir.
They also do not accept the restoration of pre-1953 status to the state as a
basis for a settlement on Kashmir and their operations would
continue despite the state's exclusion from the Indian
constitutional organisation, the report says.
''what is the guarantee that after the state is excluded from the
Indian political organisation, the secessionist forces will not
take advantage of the dissolution of all federal instrumentalities
in the state and deliver another military offensive against
Kashmir?'' asks the report.
The state government has appointed a commission to look into the
quantum of autonomy to be given to the people of the state to end
alienation among the people, particularly the Kashmiris.
The report has been compiled by the Panun Kashmir Movement, an
organisation of Kashmiri pandits.
The report seeks a guarantee that the exclusion of the state from
the Indian political organisation would not be used as a plank to
pull the state out of India.
Also, the report wonders how the government would ensure the return of half a million migrants from Kashmir and the Doda district of Jammu in a state excluded
from the Indian political organisation.
The report disputes the argument that the erosion of autonomy had
consolidated the secessionist and separatist forces in the state.
''All such insinuations are a misreading of history and part of the
disinformation campaign to camouflage the real character of
secessionism in the state,'' it says.
According to the report, the separate political identity of the
state contravenes the basic structure of the Constitution and
negates ''Indian secularism.'' It says the claim of restoration of the 1952 position
underlines the revocation of the provisions of the Constitution extended to the state after 1954 to secure its exclusion from the constitutional reorganisation of India.
It also underlines that after the state is excluded, militants
will use violence again to force a settlement on India in which
Kashmir, the contiguous Muslim majority areas of Jammu
and the frontiers of Ladakh are delinked from India.
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