The Independent - 06.08.2019

(Ron) #1

the revocation of Article 370 of the country’s constitution is the biggest shake-up of the fragile situation in
Kashmir for 70 years. It will allow people from outside the state to buy property in the Kashmir valley,
remove Kashmir’s autonomy over its laws and end policies which set aside most government jobs and
higher education spots for local Kashmiris.


Supporters of India’s Hindu nationalist government say the move will improve integration of the whole
state of Jammu and Kashmir, of which the Kashmir valley is a part, into the rest of the country. But it will be
deeply unpopular among Kashmiris themselves, who fear what they see as a government plan to fill the
Muslim-majority valley with Hindu settlers and engineer permanent demographic change.


Despite a blackout on internet services and communication services imposed by India, Jammu and
Kashmir’s former chief minister Mehbooba Mufti tweeted that the government’s decision was “illegal” and
“unconstitutional”. “Today marks the darkest day in Indian democracy,” she said.


The move has also been condemned by Pakistan, which claims Kashmir is part of its territory and has fought
several wars over the province with India. Shah Mahmood Qureshi, the country’s foreign minister, said his
government would immediately launch a diplomatic campaign to prevent the revocation of Article 370
coming into force, which he claimed violated UN resolutions on Kashmir. He said he would raise the issue
with Washington.


The US embassy in Delhi issued a security alert, urging Americans to leave the region immediately, citing
the “potential for terrorist incidents, as well as violent public unrest”.


Pakistan’s foreign ministry said in a statement that it would “exercise all possible options to counter the
illegal steps” taken by India. There was no statement from Pakistan’s powerful military last night. Sardar
Masood Khan, who runs the Pakistan-administered portion of Kashmir, has gone further and said India can
“go to war” with Pakistan over the attempt to undermine the region’s Muslim majority status.


In Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir around 30 miles from the contested border,
dozens of protesters held black flags and burnt car tyres, chanting “Down with India”.


“The abolition of the special status of Kashmir will not serve its purpose,” said Zahid Iqbal, 35, a migrant
from Indian-administered Kashmir. “We will fight, and we will fight with more vigour.”


There were also protests in Islamabad, the capital, and Pakistan’s commercial hub of Karachi.


UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres has urged India and Pakistan to exercise restraint, with
spokesperson Stephane Dujarric saying that UN peacekeepers observing a ceasefire in the state of Jammu
and Kashmir “has observed and reported an increase in military activity along the line of control”.


Two of the three wars fought between Pakistan and India have been over the restive Himalayan province.


Tensions in the heavily-militarised region most recently spilled over earlier this year when sporadic
shelling and shooting across the border killed dozens of civilians and soldiers. Pakistan had earlier shot
down an Indian fighter jet and briefly detained its pilot while India conducted airstrikes in Pakistani
territory against what it claimed was a terrorist training camp. The latest outbreak of conflict was sparked by
a car bombing in Indian-administered Kashmir which killed 44 police officers. A Pakistani Islamist militant
group, Jaish-e-Mohammed, claimed responsibility for the atrocity.


Although the standoff over Kashmir has now rumbled on for more than 70 years, last month Donald Trump
said he could help mediate an end to the simmering conflict.


India’s ruling party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), promised in its 2019 election manifesto to revoke
Kashmir’s special status. Since the BJP, a historically a Hindu nationalist force, first came to power in 2014,
India has seen a rise in sectarian attacks on the country’s Muslim minority.

Free download pdf