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History of
Kashmir
The record history of Kashmir goes back to
about 2000 BC.
For about three quarters of its history,
Kashmir has been an independent State
though its areas has been expanding and
shrinking.
The ruler of Lalita Ditya (715-752-AD), a
famous Hindu ruler of Kashmir, is considered
the golden period of pre-Muslim era Kashmir
whereas that of Sultan Zainul Abedin – The
Budshah (1420-1470 AD) is know as the golden
Era of the entire Kashmir history. The
details of this is elaborately given below:
ANCIENT KASHMIR
Kashmir's first period of imperial history
begins in the third century BC with the rule
of Asoka. Kashmiris became famous throughout
Asia as learned, cultured and humane and the
intellectual contribution of writers, poets,
musicians, scientists to the rest of India
was comparable to that of ancient Greece to
European civilization. With hindsight,
Pundit Prem Nath bazaz is critical of the
conduct of the Hindu kings, 'Again and again
history afforded opportunity to the Hindu
aspirants to kingship to start afresh but,
on every such occasion they failed to grasp
it and give a good account of themselves.'
Islam made them men again'. but although the
people may have been persecuted and
oppressed, the Kashmiris retained their
humanistic principles.
The story of
the spread of Islam in Kashmir reads like a
traveler's tale. A Buddhist ruler, Rinchen,
had left his home in Laddakh, after the
murder of his father and taken refuge at
King Sahadeva's court in Kashmir. At about
the same time, a Muslim from Swat, Shah Mir,
also came to Kashmir looking for work. After
the Mongols, under Dulaca, had invaded
Kashmir without Sahadeva, a new king had to
be found. Supported by Shah Mir and some of
the feudal lords searching for a new faith,
he met a Muslim saint called Bulbul Shah and
his teachings mead a deep impact on Rinchen.
Taking the name of Sadruddin, he became a
Muslim. His conversion marks the beginning
of Muslim rule in Kashmir. Rinchen is
remembered as a just and wise ruler.
Janaraja calls him a 'lion among men.' But
his reign did not last long.
The first great
king of Muslim period was Shabab-ud-Din who
came to the throne in 1354. With the peace
restored after the devastation of the
Mongols, Shahab-ud-Din devoted his attention
to foreign expeditions, conquering Baltistan,
Ladakh, Kishtwar and Jammu. Shahab-ud-Din
also loved learning and patronized art and
architecture. in 1361 there was a
devastating flood, but the atmosphere of
general well being prevailed and on
Shahab-ud-Din's death in 1373 the succession
passed peacefully to Qutb-ud-Din.
During the
reign of Qutb-ud-Din, the pace of conversion
to Islam increased. Muslim from west and
central Asia, in search of refuge from the
Mongols, arrived in Kashmir and the most
influential was Mir Syed Ali. He came with
hundreds of missionaries, or syeds as they
came to be known, from Hamadan and other
parts of Persia. 'Islam made its way into
Kashmir', writes Sir Aurel Stein, 'not by
forcible conquest, but by gradual
conversion'. Qutb-ud-Din was succeeded by
his son. Sikunder in 1389. Sikunder's
younger son came to the throne in 1420. He
was pupularly called Bud Shah (the great
king). During his long reign which lasted
until 1470, the valley prospered.
When Bud Shah
died in 1470 the dynasty of the Shah Mirs
began to decline. In the years to come, the
fame of Kashmir attracted the Mughals but
they failed in their early attempts to
dominate the valley. In the reign of Babur's
son, humayun, Mirza Haider Dughlat, a cousin
of Babur's mother, finally succeeded in
conquering Kashmir in 1540. In 1555, Ghazi
Chak became king of Kashmir, which brought
to an end the 200-year-old dynasty of the
Shah Mirs.
It was only
matter of time before the Mughal emperor,
Akbar, who had succeeded to the throne of
Delhi in 1558, led Kashmir's incorporation
into the Mughal Empire. So ended Kashmir's
long history as a kingdom in its own right.
Despite the ravages of so much cruelty and
bloodshed during its early history, the
valley of Kashmir, surrounded by its
mountains, always retained its allure for
future generations. But warned Dr. Parmu
'beautiful countries have often been the
homes of tragedy. Happiness is rarely the
lot of a beautiful land. So Kashmir, the
desired land of men and monarchs, paid for
her beauty.'
MONARCHS AND DEMONS 1586-1819
The conquest of
the Kashmir valley by the Mughals in 1586 is
generally regarded as marking the beginning
of Kashmir's modern history. At first the
Mughal army had difficulty crossing the
passes, but the Kashmiris were unable to
stop their advance and in October the Mughal
army marched into Srinagar. Akbar was
proclaimed emperor. Of all the rulers of
Kashmir Akbar's son and successor, Jehangir,
is perhaps best remembered for his love of
the valley. He ascended the throne in 1605.
During his reign Jehangir adorned Kashmir
with over 700 gardens. Their names evoke the
beauty of the place: Shalimar (abode of
love) and Nishat (garden of gladness) are
the two most famous. For several years in
succession Jehangir and his wife, Nurmahal,
remained in Kashmir during the summer.
On his deathbed
Jehangir was asked if there was anything he
wanted, to which he is reported as saying:
'Nothing but Kashmir>' He was succeeded in
1627 by his son, Shah Jehan. He too loved
Kashmir and the valley became a popular
place of refuge for the Mughals during the
hot summers. Aurangzeb, who came to the
throne in 1658, was the last of the Mughal
Emperors to make any impact on Kashmir's
history.
Towards the end
of Aurangzeb's reign an event occurred which
had special significance for later
generations of Kashmir's. In 1700 a strand
of the beared of the Prophet Muhammad, the
Mo-i-Muqaddas, was brought by the servant of
a wealthy Kashmiri merchant to Kashmir. It
was originally displayed in the Khanqah
Naqshband in Srinagar but the mosque could
not accommodate the crowds who came to see
it. It was therefore taken to another mosque
on the banks of Upper Dal lake which was
known first as Asar-i-Sharif-Shrine of the
relic- and then Hazratbal - the lake of the
Hazrat, or the prophet. It has remained
there ever since, with one brief interlude
in 1963 when it mysteriously disappeared.
Nadir Shah's
invasion of the seat of Mughal power at
Delhi in 1738 had weakened their imperial
hold on Kashmir still further. This in turn
left Kashmir at the mercy of further
predators.
With the
decline of Mughal power in India the
governors of Kashmir became 'irresponsible
and cruel'/ In 1762, in alliance with the
Dogra Rajput ruler, Raja Ranjit Dev of
Jammu, the Afghans attached Kashmir and
captured Sukh. When the Afghan leader, Ahmed
Shah Durrani, died in 1772 Jawan Sher the
Afghan ruler of Kashmir, set himself up as
an independent ruler.
Afghan
domination lasted for little more than fifty
years, but the period is generally
remembered as one of the darkest of Kashmiri
history. Through the assistance of the Sikhs
and Ranjit Singh - a ruler in nominal
alliance with their Afghan oppressors
Kashmir's overthrew the Afghan tyranny. In
doing so the Kashmiris had been responsible
for asking for help from a foreign ruler:
submission to an external power was not only
a matter of expediency but survival in a
cruel world.
SIKH CONQUEST 1819
In the wake of
the decline of the decline of the Afghan
empire in northern Indian Ranjit Singh had
shown himself both able and willing to fill
the vacuum. In 1834, Ranjit Singh sent
Colonel Mian Singh Kumedan, from Gujranwala
as governor. Considered to be the best of
all the Sikh governors, he attempted to
bring the valley out of the economic chaos
resulting from the 1833 famine. Ranjit Singh
never visited the valley of Kashmir, but
there is a well known story of how he once
wrote to Colonel Mian Singh: Would that I
could only once in my life enjoy the delight
of wandering through the gardens of Kashmir,
fragrant with almond-blossoms, and sitting
on the fresh green turf.
On the
sidelines of Kashmir, in the neighboring
plains of Jammu, the Dogras were keenly
interested in events in the valley.
When Ranjit
Singh died, Gulab Singh had been his protege
for thirty years; aged forty-seven, he was
well-placed to control events not only in
the heart of the Sikh empire in Lahore but
also in Kashmir. Until the death of Ranjit
Singh, the East India Company had maintained
cordial relations with the Sikhs; they in
turn did not with to upset the British.
After his death, the relationship soon fell
apart.
KASHMIR FOR SALE 1846
As relations
deteriorated between the British and the
Sikh prior to the outbreak of war in 1845,
Gulab Singh played an important role, which
ultimately helped to further his own
territorial ambitions, enabling him to
become a maharaja in his own right. As the
chief architect of the Treaty of Amritsar
and the decision to sell Kashmir to Gulab
Singh, Henry Hardinge came under strong
criticism for his role. The British signed
the Treaty of Amritsar with Gulab Singh in
1846. Article I stated that:
"The British
Government transfers and makes over for ever
in independent possession to Maharaja Gulab
Singh and the heirs male of his body all the
hilly or mountainous country with its
dependencies situated to the eastward of the
River Ravi, including Chamba and excluding
Lahul, being part of territories ceded to
the British government by the Lahore State
according to the provision of the Article IV
of the Treaty of Lahore, dated 9 March
1846." Gulab Singh was to pay the exact sum
in lieu of which the British had taken
possession of Kashmir one week earlier: one
crore of rupees towards the indemnity.
Twenty-five lakhs were later waived in
consideration of the British being allowed
to retain the area of Kulu and Mandi across
the river Beas. Gulab Singh's biographer,
K.M Panikhar argues against the transaction
being a sale. "The view that Kashmir was
sold for a paltry sum by a Government whose
main interest was to fill its coffers is a
travesty of facts and misreading of
history". But neither Panikhar nor any other
apologist for Gulab Singh could deny that
money was exchanged in return for land and
people and that, 150 years later, the
transaction still causes deep resentment.
'Each one of us was purchased by the Dogra
ruler for 3 rupees', said Mian Abdul Qayum,
President of Srinagar's Bar Association in
1994. Furthermore, there was no consultation
with the people of Kashmir. Britain was,
however becoming a paramount power in the
sub-continent and all relationships were
based on what was perceived to be in the
best interests of the new imperialists. The
sale of the valley of Kashmir and its
incorporation into a princely state is also
considered to have had an adverse effect on
its future development. In 1925, the Muslim
Outlook newspaper commented that but for the
'ineffable folly' of the British; 'Kashmir
would have been part of the Punjab. More
significantly, had Kashmir been annexed by
Britain and become part of the British India
when the sub-continent became independent
from British rule in 1947, according to the
principle of the partition it could have
been divided along communal lines and the
predominantly Muslim valley would
undoubtedly have been allocated to Pakistan.
After ten years as mahjaraja, Gulab Singh's
health began to fail. In order to smooth the
succession he asked the governor-general to
install his third son. Ranbir Singh, as
maharaja on 8 February 1856. Although Gulab
Singh had formally abdicated, he became
governor of the province and retained full
sovereignty until his death on 7 August
1857. The state of Jammu and Kashmir, under
the joint leadership of the ailing Gulab
Singh and his son, Ranbir, responded
favorably to British appeals for help.
AN ENGLISH FORTRESS
In 1882 Ranbir
Singh had considered nominating his youngest
son, Amar Singh, as his successor as he was
'wiser' than his brothers Pratap or Ram. But
the British did not agree. Although the
maharaja repeated his request in 1884, the
British chose to let Pratap Singh accede to
the throne when Ranbir died in September
1885. The new maharaja "was a story book
Indian Prince, writes Patrick French
'vacillating and oppressive, bedecked in
silk pyjamas, pearls and a diamond-encrusted
turban'. He was also addicted to opium. The
views expressed by St. John after four
months resident, the maharaja was unfit to
rule, persisted throughout his long reign.
On 1 April 1889 the maharaja was divested of
all but nominal powers. Indian contemporary
belief was that the maharaja had been
deposed because of British designs and that
the allegation of maladministration was
merely an excuse to take over control of the
state. As the popularity of Kashmir grew, so
did the number of houseboats. "The British,
who came to Kashmir to escape the scorching
heat, taught us how to finish a houseboat,
how to make it a decorative e one with beds,
chairs, tables', says Chapra. A century
later, there were estimated to be 1,500
houseboats on Dal lake. It was also a
favored way of having some form of
accommodation. The houseboats also gave
Kashmir the reputation as a place for rest
and pleasure for foreign guests, around
which the social and economic fife of a
great number of the people revolved. Makers
of shawls, embroidery, carpets, papier mache
boxes all benefited from the presence of
officers, with their wives and children, who
arrived in the valley every summer to escape
the heat of the plains. The influx of
light-hearted holiday makers was in total
contrast to the harshness of the lives of
the local people, most of whom lives in
abject poverty. Only a small minority,
centered around the Dogra rulers, enjoyed
unparalleled affluence. Ever since his
deposition, Pratap Singh held his brother,
Amar Singh, responsible for all his
problems.
Other Indian
princes, however, were not happy with the
unprecedented British interference in
Kashmir. On account of the enmity between
Amar and the Maharaja, in 1907 Pratap Singh
decided to adopt a 'spiritual heir', the
second son of the Raja of Poonch. His
intention was evidently to prevent his
brother from inheriting the throne. Only
when Amar Singh died in 1909 did the long
feud between the brothers finally end. While
the Kashmiri Pandits began to benefit from
better education, the Muslims, although
numerically superior, remained excluded. As
Canon Tyndale Biscoe had noted when he came
to Srinagar in 1890 as headmaster of the
Church Missionary School" 'The Mohammendan
did not send their sons to school as all
Government service as closed to them. The
all India Muslim Kashmiri Conference, formed
in 1896 and supported by many Muslim
Kashmiri who had settled mainly in the
Punjab, was, however, beginning to support
the Kashmiri in the state, both morally and
financially, by offering scholarships for
them to study in British India. In 1905 the
Mir Waiz of Kashmir, the religious leader of
the Muslims of the Kashmir valley, founded
an association called the
Anjuman-i-Nusrat-ul-Islam which aimed at
improving the conditions of the Muslims,
especially in education. During the First
World War, the Indians from both British
India and the princely states had
demonstrated their loyalty to the British
Crown by their willing support of the war
effort. Throughout the war, Pratap Singh
placed all the forces of the state of Jammu
and Kashmir at the disposal of the British.
While the Indian people fought on behalf of
the British Empire overseas, within British
India, Indian political leaders were
exerting pressure to increase the pace of
change. 'Their minds were full of the ideas
of the onrushing tide of democracy in the
West'. They read with emotion about
political movements of Turkey, Ireland,
Egypt', writes Prem Nath Bazaz. "The spirit
of independence revived and with it came the
desire to turn out the outsiders and to
fight for the freedom of the motherland.
"Throughout the 1920s the honorary
secretary-general of the All India Muslim
Kashmiri Conference, Syed Mohsin Shah, a
Kashmiri lawyer, who had moved to Lahore in
the early 1920s, was constantly writing to
the resident, Sir John Wood, on behalf of
the Kashmri Muslims. Amongst those who also
gave vocal support to the Muslim was the
influential and widely respected poet,
Allama Sir Muhammad Iqbal. He first visited
Kashmir in 1921 and put to verse his
distress at the poverty of the people: In
the bitter chill of winter shivers his naked
body whose skill wraps the rich in royal
shawls. Leading Muslim newspapers in India
continued to point to the progress of the
Kashmiri Pandits at the expense of the
Muslims:'They till the land, feed the state,
fill its coffers, they are invariably sent
to the wall and the Kashmiri Pandit is
placed at the helm of affairs to rule them
with a rod of iron', stated the Muslim
outlook in 1923. In the Spring 1924 the
workers of the state-owned silk factory
demanded an increase in wages and the
transfer of a Hindu clerk whom the workers
alleged as extorting bribes. Established in
the late nineteenth century, the factory
employed about 5,000 workers, most of whom
were Muslims. Although the workers were
given a minimal wage increase, some of their
leaders were arrested, which led to a
strike. As later reported in a
representation to the viceroy, Lord Reading
: 'Military was sent for and most inhuman
treatment was meted out to the poor,
helpless, unarmed peace loving laborers who
were assaulted with spears, lances and other
implements of warfare'. The representation,
signed by the two chief religious leaders,
submitted to the viceroy, through Mohsin
Shah, also referred to other grievances: The
Mussulmans of Kashmir are in a miserable
plight today. Their education needs are
woefully neglected. Though forming 96 per
cent of the population, the percentage of
literacy amongst them is only 0.8 per cent.
So far we have patiently borne the State's
indifference towards out grievances and our
claims and it high-handiness towards our
rights, but patience has its limit and
resignation its end... the Hindus of the
State, forming merely 4 per cent of the
whole population are the undisputed masters
of all departments.
They also
complained about the closure of certain
mosques in Srinagar and the desecration of
the Khanqah Bulbul shah, which was claimed
by the Hindus to be a Hindu Shrine. Pratap
Singh died on 25 September 1925. Although
Hari Singh's accession was not contested,
the Government of India was at once alert to
the implications of a change of leadership
on British foreign Policy. The new maharaja
was to be allowed to return to the normal
relationship with the Government of India,
which any princely state enjoyed by treaty
obligations but at the same time, as the
sub-continent moved slowly towards self
government, the British were not prepared to
lose sight of the importance of Jammu and
Kashmir as a 'frontier state'.
THE MIRAGE OF INDEPENDENCE
In the 1930s,
as the Indian political leaders in British
India became involved in the struggle to
determine how they should become
self-governing, the people of the state of
Jammu and Kashmir began a campaign against
the autocracy of the new maharaja. When
Lieutenant-general His Highness Inder
Mahander Rajrajeshwar Maharajadhiraj Sir
Hari Singh succeeded to the throne, there
was cautious optimism that he would prove a
more effective ruler than his uncle. The
alienation of the Kashmiris from their new
ruler was heightened by the continuing
presence of 'outsiders' in government
service, which led to a movement known as
'Kashmir for the Kashmiris', sponsored by
the more educated Kashmiri Pandits. But, to
the annoyance of the Kashmiris the top
positions were invariably filled by people
from Jammu, especially the ruling class of
the Dogras Rajputs, who headed all the
departments of the state administration.
When the Pandits began to improve their
status in governments service, this caused
further aggravation amongst the Muslims.
Abdul Suharawardy was a young boy from the
rural districts, whose ambition in the 1930s
was to become a gazetted officer in the
Indian Civil Service. 'As I grew up I found
that the Muslims were the underdogs. The
Hindus were the privileged class because
they belonged to the religion of the
community of the ruler. Almost all the
government officials occupying almost all
the ranks from the lowest up to the highest
were occupied by Hindu'. The army was also
exclusively reserved for the Dogras. No
Muslim in the valley was allowed to carry a
firearm and the only Muslims who were
recruited into the army, normally under the
command of a Dogra officer, were the
Suddhans of Poonch and the Sandans from
Mirpur. Culturally and linguistically
distinct from the Kashmiris of the valley,
the maharaja believed he could depend on
them to suppress whatever trouble might
arise in the valley. The Lahore Muslim press
had been consistently highlighting the
condition of the Muslim Kashmiris and
newspapers critical of the maharaja were
sent into the state. At the same time, small
groups joined together to discuss their
complaints.
In 1929 Ghulam
Abbas, one of the comparatively few educated
Muslims from Jammu who had obtained a law
degree in Lahore, reorganized the
Anjuman-i-Islamia into the young men's
Muslim Association of Jammu, for the
betterment of Muslims. He also looked after
Muslim orphans and did social work. In
Srinagar the Reading Room party, comprising
a number of graduates from Aligarh
University, rose to prominence. Prem Nath
Bazaz, Ghulam Abbas, Muhammad yousuf Shah
were all active in discussing their
grievances. In 1931 Yusuf Shah succeeded his
uncle in Srinagar as Mirwaiz the spiritual
leader of Muslims. He used his position in
the mosque to organize a series of meetings,
which protested against the maharaja's
government. Kashmir was already like a
powder keg. The spark was provided by a
butler in the service of European, Abdul
Qadir, who made an impassioned fiery speech
calling for the people to fight against
oppression. When he was arrested, crowds
mobbed the jail, and several others were
also arrested. There was further protest
from the crowd at which point the police
fired at them. Twenty-one people died. Their
bodies were carried in procession to the
centre of the town. In March 1940 the Muslim
League adopted the Lahore Resolution 'that
the areas in which the Muslims are
numerically in a majority, as in the
north-western and eastern zones of India,
should be grouped to constitute independent
states" in which the constituent units shall
be autonomous and sovereign. Although it was
not clear how such a proposal would be
formalised, the demand for a separate
homeland for the Muslims of the
sub-continent had its roots in an emergent
ideology, first proposed by a student,
Chaudhri Rahmat Ali in Cambridge in 1933 for
the Muslim living in Punjab, North-West
Frontier Province (Afghan Province) Kashmir,
Sind and Balochistan, to be recognised as a
distinct nation, 'Pakistan'. The inclusion
of predominantly Muslim Kashmir was,
however, an early indication that there was
already a body of opinion which believed
that the princely state should become part
of Pakistan, if and when it could be
achieved. When alternative avenues for a
federation of British India and the princely
states had been exhausted, and partition of
the sub-continent took place, this opinion
held fast. Jawaharlal Nehru and the Congress
party had defined their position on the
Indian states in August 1935: "The Indian
National Congress recognises that the people
in the Indian states have an inherent right
of Swaraj (independence) no less than the
people of British Indian. it has accordingly
declared itself in favour of establishment
of representative responsible government in
the States'. Jinnah leader of All India
Muslim League was not unconcerned by events
within Kashmir. In 1943 he wrote to the
viceroy, Lord Linlithgow, stating that he
understood that the present situation in
Kashmir was intolerable and that it would
remain so "unless some responsible
independent and impartial head of the
Administration takes charge". Jinnah's last
visit to the state of Jammu and Kashmir took
place in May 1944. When the frail but
imperial figure of the leader passed through
their rows, writes Muhammad Saraf, who
became a keen supporter of the movement for
Pakistan, 'thousand of men and women were
unable to control themselves as his very
sight stirred up deep emotions resulting in
tears trickling down their eyes. Many
actually wept under the sheer weight of
joy'. Jinnah was described as 'a beloved
leader of the Muslims of India'.
STANDSTILL IN 1947
By 1947 the independence of the
sub-continent was assured. On 3 June the
British government finally published a plan
for the partition of the sub-continent. On
18 July the Indian Independence Act was
passed, stating that independence would be
effected on an earlier date than previously
anticipated : 15 August 1947.
The state of
Jammu and Kashmir had unique features not
shared by the princely states. Ruled by a
Hindu, with its large Muslim majority it was
geographically contiguous to both India and
the future Pakistan. Although Jawaharlal
Nehru's family had emigrated from the valley
at the beginning of the eighteenth century,
he had retained an emotional attachment to
the land of his ancestors. Despite the
assurances given by Mountbatten to Hari
Singh that the Congress leaders would not
regard it as 'an unfriendly act', if, given
the Muslim majority population, he
eventually acceded to Pakistan, it is clear
that Nehru in particular had strong reasons
for wanting the state of Jammu and Kashmir
to accede to India. When, at the end of
July, Mountbatten heard that Nehru was once
more planning to go to Kashmir he was not
pleased. As Nehru persisted in atttempting
to visit Kashmir, Mountbatten continued to
try and dissuade him. He noted that both the
maharaja and his prime minister, Ram Chandra
Kak, 'hate Nehru with a bitter hatred and I
had visions of the maharaja declaring
adherence to Pakistan just before Nehru
arrived'. Mountbatten had also heard how,
during a meeting with Patel, 'Nehru had
broken down and wept, explaining that
Kashmir meant more to him at the time than
anything else'. The sub-continent was in the
midst of a deep communal and political
crisis. Yet both Nehru and Gandhi had
insisted on visiting Kashmir. Ghandhi
finally left for Srinagar on 1 August.
Muhammad Saraf was amongst those who
protested at his arrival in Baramula. Even
some glass panes of his car were broken by
the demonstrators.
The Partition
plan of 3 June 1947, established under the
Indian Independence Act, envisaged two
Boundary Commissions, consisting of four
high court judges. The chairman was to hold
the casting vote. The man entrusted with
that post was a British lawyer, Sir Cyril
Radcliffe, who arrived in India for the
first time on 8 July 1947.
The objective
of what came to be known as the Radcliffe
award as to divide the provinces of Punjab
in the west and Bengal in the east, leaving
Muslim majority areas in Pakistan and those
with Hindu morjorities in India. Of the main
routes by which Kashmir could be reached,
two roads passed through areas which could
expected to be allocated to Pakistan: the
first via Rawalpindi, Murree, Muzaffarabad,
Baramula and thence to Srinagar. The other
route went via Sialkot, Jammu and the
Banihal pass. A third route, which was no
more than a dirt track existed via the
district of Guardaspur, which comprised the
four tehsils of Shakargarh, Batala,
Gurdaspur and Pathankot. From Pathankot the
route carried on to Madophur, across the
Ravi river to Kathua in the state of Jammu
and Kashmir. Under the 'national' award
provided in the first Schedule of the Indian
Independence Act, all of the Gurdaspur
district, with a 51.14 per cent Muslim
majority had been assigned to Pakistan,
which meant that all these routes would have
fallen under the control of Pakistan. At
this press conference on 4 June, in answer
to a question regarding provisional and
final demarcations, Mountbatten, however,
suggested that the boundary Commission would
be unlikely to throw the whole of the
Gurdaspur district into the Muslim majority
areas. Subsequently, the revised Mountbatten
plan referred to the basis for partition by
area rather than by district. The future
Pakistanis soon became concerned by the
prospect of a departure from the 'national'
award giving all of Gurdaspur district to
Pakistan to one where part of Gurdaspur
would be allocated to India. In the final
award the three tehsils of Batala, Gurdaspur
and Pathankot went to India. A memorandum
prepared by the minister of state, which
included Radcliffe's observations after he
returned to England, reported that the
reason for changing the 'national' award
regarding Gurdaspur was because 'the
headwaters of the canals which irrigate the
Amritsar District lie in the Gurdaspur
District and it is important to keep as much
as possible of these canals under one (i;e
Indian) administration. Fact that much of
Lahore district is irrigated from upper Bari
Doab canal with head works in Gurdaspur
district is awkward but there is no solution
that avoids all such difficulties.
The suspicions
created in the minds of the Pakistanis by
the award of three tehsils of Gurdaspur to
India were compounded by the issue of the
'salient' of the Ferozepur and Zira tehsils.
In the map of the Radcliffe award, the
salient, which protruded beyond the notional
boundary into the Sikh heart land, was
marked as part of Pakistan. It is very
strange that other factors should have
worked consistently in favour of India and
against Pakistan', commented Chaudhri
Muhammad Ali. The departure from the
'notional' award to Radcliffe's division of
Gurdaspur between the two Dominions has
created considerable bitterness not only
because of the loss of territory, but
because of the growing realisation that
India was thereby assured of access to the
state of Jammu and Kashmir. Although the
future of the princely states was a separate
issue from the division of the Punjab and
Bengal, for which purpose the Boundary
Commission was instituted, Mountbatten
himself had made the connection between
Jammu and Kashmir and the award of the
Boundary Commission. Kashmir, he said, 'was
so placed geographically that it could join
either Dominion'. 'Had the whole of
Gurdaspur District been awarded to
Pakistan', according to Lord Birdwood,
'India could certainly never have fought a
war in Kashmir.' The Indian journalist, M.
J. Akbar, interprets the award as a single
piece of political expediency on the part of
Nehru. And so, during private meetings, he
persuaded Mountbatten to leave this
Gurdaspur link in Indian hands. But in view
of Inadequate explanations and selective
secrecy surrounding the Radcliffe award, the
belief amongst Pakistanis that there was a
conspiracy between Mountbatten and Nehru to
deprive Pakistan of Gurdaspur has held fast.
"The object of grabbing Kashmir was to
encircle Pakistan militarily and strangle it
economically, ' writes Suhrawardy. In the
state of Jammu and Kashmir there were
staunch Muslim League supporters who
believed they would become part of Pakistan
at independence and when freedom came at
midnight on 14 august they rejoiced.
The Pakistani
flag was hoisted on most of the post offices
until the government of the maharaja ordered
that they should be taken down. All
pro-Pakistani newspapers were closed.
Muhammad Saraf was in Baramula, where the
flag remained flying until dusk: 'It was a
spectacle to watch streams of people from
all directions in the town and its suburbs
swarming towards the Post office in order to
have a glimpse of the flag of their hopes
and dreams. Those whose hopes were dashed at
not becoming part of Pakistan set in train a
sequence of events which was rooted in their
past disappeared. In the weeks following
independence, despite Maharaja Harisingh's,
signature of the standstill agreement with
Pakistan, political manoeuvreing was taking
place on all sides. Prime Minister Nehru and
Sardar Patel, who had become minister for
Home Affairs, corresponded regularly in
order to determine how Kashmir could be
secured for India. 'One of the most
interesting revelations of the Patel papers
when they began to be published in 1971',
writes Alastair Lamb 'was the extent to
which this powerful congress politician had
directly involved himself in all planning
directed towards an eventual Indian
acquisition of the State of Jammu and
Kashmir. Clear steps were being taken to
improve communications with India, by
telegraph, telephone, wireless and roads. In
Pakistan it was widely believed that India
was preparing to announce Kashmir's
accession to India in the autumn. The
Pakistani government alleged that India had
violated the standstill agreement, because
they had included Kashmir within the Indian
postal system. As evidence, they produced a
memorandum, dated 1 September 1947, signed
by the director general of Postal Telegraph,
New Delhi, in which towns in the State of
Jammu and Kashmir were listed as part of
India.
ENTER THE UNO
Lord Mountbatten's belief, and that of the
British government, that the UN would be
able to perform some useful role in
resolving the Kashmir dispute made it one of
the first major issues with which the newly
founded world body was to deal. Mountbatten
had first suggested the use of the UN during
his 1 November 1947 meeting with Mohammad
Ali Jinnah in Lahore. Prime Minister Liaquat
Ali Khan had agreed to refer the dispute to
the UN In January 1948 the Kashmir issue was
debated in the Security Council of the
United Nations with representations from the
Indian and Pakistani delegates. Much to the
annoyance of the Indians, Sir Zafrullah
Khan, Pakistani's Foreign Minister, made a
bold speech lasting five hours in favour of
Pakistan's position and against the
continuing rule of the Dogras over the
Kashmiris: 'What is not fully known is the
depths of misery to which they have been
reduced by a century of unmitigated tyranny
and oppression under Dogra rule until it is
difficult to day which is the greater
tragedy to a Kashmiri: 'his life or his
death'.
On 20 January,
the Security Council passed a resolution
which established a commission, to be known
as the United Nations Commission for India
and Pakistan (UNCIP), to investigate the
facts the dispute and carry out 'any
mediatory influence likely to smooth away
difficulties. The government of India was
requested to reduce its forces to the
minimum strength, after which the
circumstances for holding a plebiscite
should be put into effect' on the question
of the accession of the State to India or
Pakistan'. A further resolution on 13 August
1948 adopted unanimously by UNCIP outlined
arrangements for the cessation of
hostilities and once more restated that a
final decision on the future status of the
Jammu and Kashmir 'shall be determined in
accordance with the will of the people'.
On 5 January
1949, UNCIP once more affirmed that, when
the truce agreement had been signed, the
question of the accession of the State of
Jammu and Kashmir to India or Pakistan would
be decided through 'the democratic method of
a free and impartial plebiscite'. The roots
of the Kashmir dispute are deep', concluded
the third and final report of UNICP, which
made three visits to the sub-continent
between 1948 and 1949. Then as now, the
Indian government considered itself to be in
legal possession of the state of Jammu and
Kashmir by virtue of the Instrument of
Accession of October 1947 signed by the
Maharaja and the then Governor - General,
Lord Mountbatten. This basic premise
constituted the legality of India's presence
in the state and of her control over it.
India maintained that her armies were in
Kashmir as a matter of right; her control of
the defence, communications and external
affairs of the state was as a direct
consequence of the act of accession. The
Pakistani position was based on the
contention that the accession of the state
of Jammu and Kashmir to India was illegal
and, therefore, there was no basis
whatsoever for India's contention that the
legality of the accession was 'in fact and
law beyond question'. Pakistan maintained
that the Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir had
no authority left to execute and Instrument
of Accession on 26 October 1947 because the
people had successfully revolted, had
overthrown his government and had compelled
him to flee from Srinagar, the capital. The
act of accession was brought about by
violence and fraud and as such it was
invalid from the beginning, the maharaja's
offer of accession was accepted by the
Governor-General of India, Lord Mountbatten,
on the condition that as soon as law and
order had been restored, the question of the
accession of the state would be decided by a
reference to the people. Pakistan also
believed that the Azad movement was
indigenous and spontaneous, as a result of
repression misrule by the maharaja's
government.
SPECIAL STATUS
Lord Mountbatten's belief, and that of the
British government, that the UN would be
able to perform some useful role in
resolving the Kashmir dispute made it one of
the first major issues with which the newly
founded world body was to deal. Mountbatten
had first suggested the use of the UN during
his 1 November 1947 meeting with Mohammad
Ali Jinnah in Lahore. Prime Minister Liaquat
Ali Khan had agreed to refer the dispute to
the UN. In January 1948 the Kashmir issue
was debated in the Security Council of the
United Nations with representations from the
Indian and Pakistani delegates. Much to the
annoyance of the Indians, Sir Zafrullah
Khan, Pakistan's Foreign Minister, made a
bold speech lasting five hours in favour of
Pakistan's position and against the
continuing rule of the Dogras over the
Kashmiris: 'What is not fully known is the
depths of misery to which they have been
reduced by a century of unmitigated tyranny
and oppression under Dogra rule until it is
difficult to say which is the greater
tragedy to a Kashmiri: 'his life or his
death'. On 20 January, the Security Council
passed a resolution which established a
commission, to be known as the United
Nations Commission for India and Pakistan (UNCIP),
to investigate the facts of the dispute and
carry out 'any mediatory influence likely to
smooth away difficulties. The Government of
India was requested to reduce its forces to
the minimum strength, after which the
circumstances for holding a plebiscite
should be put into effect 'on the question
of the accession of the State to India or
Pakistan'. A further resolution on 13 August
1948 adopted unanimously by UNCIP outlined
arrangements for the cessation of
hostilities and once more restated that a
final decision on the future status of the
Jammu and Kashmir 'shall be determined in
accordance with the will of the people'. On
5 January 1949, UNCIP once more affirmed
that, when the truce agreement had been
signed, the question of the accession of the
State of Jammu and Kashmir to India or
Pakistan would be decided through 'the
democratic method of a free and impartial
plebiscite'. 'The roots of the Kashmir
dispute are deep', concluded the third and
final report of UNICP, which made three
visits to the sub-continent between 1948 and
1949. Then as now, the Indian government
considered itself to be in legal possession
of the state of Jammu and Kashmir by virtue
of the Instrument of Accession of October
1947 signed by the Maharaja and the then
Governor - General, Lord Mountbatten. This
basic premise constituted the legality of
India's presence in the state and of her
control over it. India maintained that her
armies were in Kashmir as a matter of right;
her control of the defence, communications
and external affairs of the state was as a
direct consequence of the act of accession.
The Pakistani position was based on the
contention that the accession of the state
of Jammu and Kashmir to India was illegal
and, therefore, there was no basis
whatsoever for India's contention that the
legality of the accession was 'in fact and
law beyond question'. Pakistan maintained
that the Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir had
no authority left to execute an Instrument
of Accession on 26 October 1947 because the
people had successfully revolted, had
overthrown his government and had compelled
him to flee from Srinagar, the capital. The
act of accession was brought about by
violence and fraud and as such it was
invalid from the beginning, the maharaja's
offer of accession was accepted by the
governor - general of India, Lord
Mountbatten, on the condition that as soon
as law and order had been restored, the
question of the accession of the state would
be decided by a reference to the people.
Pakistan also believed that the Azad
movement was indigenous and spontaneous, as
result of repression misrule by the
maharaja's government.
The instrument
of Accession, which was not granted to other
former princely states. Legally, India's
jurisdiction only extended to external
affairs, defence and communications. It was
anticipated that the accession would be
confirmed by reference to the people, under
the auspices of the United Nations. In the
year to come, the Indian government sought
to integrate within the framework of India,
what it controlled of the original princely
state of Jammu and Kashmir. The will of the
people, however, was never ascertained in
such a manner as to make them feel that the
issue was finalised. The history of what
happened to the state's 'special status'
partially explains events in the present
day. In less than two years after signing
the Instrument of Accession, in which Hari
Singh had asserted that he would continue to
enjoy ' the exercise of any powers,
authority and rights now enjoyed by me as
Ruler of this State', he was obliged to
relinquish control. He died in Bombay in
1962. First as regent, then as
Sadar-i-Riyasat, his son Karan Singh
remained involved in Kashmiri affairs. But
the Dogras dynasty, founded by Hari Singh's
great grandfather a century earlier, was
gone. The Security Council once again
discussed Kashmir, and once more observed
that India and Pakistan had accepted the
resolutions of 13 August 1948 and 5 January
1949, affirming that the future of the state
of Jammu and Kashmir was to be decided
through 'the democratic method of a free and
impartial plebiscite. Pakistan accepted this
recommendation , but Nehru responded by
stating that he would not permit the fate of
four million people to be decided by a third
person. Even though the United Nations had
failed to ensure that the plebiscite was
held, the idea in principle of a referendum
to ascertain the wishes of the people was
handed down to a new generation of Kashmiris.
That the plebiscite was agreed upon the
world body, such as the United Nations,
meant that those Kashmiris who were opposed
to union with India came to expect
international support for what they
perceived to be their right of self
determination.
DIPLOMACY AND WAR
Throughout the 1960s the Kashmir issue
continued to cause concern at an
international level. After six rounds of
talks between India and Pakistan which were
held intermittently until May 1963, a joint
communiqué was issued which stated with
regret that no agreement could be reached on
a settlement of the Kashmir dispute. In
October 1963 the Government of Pakistan once
more refereed the question of Kashmir to the
Security Council and, in the Spring of 1964,
the issue was debated for the 110th time in
fifteen years. On his way to New York,
Pakistan Foreign Minister Zulfikar Ali
Bhutto announced that Pakistan was prepared
to discuss the issue a thousand times in
order to see that it was settled 'in an
honourable manner'. But, in view of the
Soviet Veto, there was little the United
Nations could do. The president of the
Security Council expressed the concern of
all the members for reestablishing of good
relations between India and Pakistan "whose
present disputes, particularly that
centering upon Jammu and Kashmir, should be
settled amicably in the interest of world
peace'. The mysterious theft of the holy
relic from Hazratbal which occurred in 1963
demonstrated the intense Islamic feeling
amongst the Muslims of the valley. There was
evidence of the beginnings of political
dissent amongst the younger Kashmiris, which
meant the movement for plebiscite and
self-determination would be carried on to
the next generation. 'The greatest headache
of the politically alert sections of my
generation was how to get the new generation
- our children - involved in the struggle
for the State's accession to Pakistan',
writes Muhammad Saraf. Most were young
children, some not even born in 1947, and
many of their politically active parents,
like Ghulam Abbas, Muhammad Saraf, and
others had opted for Pakistan. However, when
selig harrison toured Kashmir, he reported
that he found the people were solidly
hostile to Indian rule and that it was only
the presence of twelve Indian army brigades
which kept the movement for self -
determination contained. In the late 1960s
fires in Muslim areas left many Muslim
families homeless; activists hostile to the
Indian government regard the occurrence of
these fires with suspicion as part of a plan
to make Kashmir into a majority Hindu state.
Ever sensitive of the incursion of outsiders
into the state, they objected to
'citizenship' certificates being awarded to
non-Muslims who had settled in the valley.
Algiers's successful struggle against France
and the Vietnamese resistance against the
United States were beginning, however, to
show the Kashmiri nationalists that there
might, after all, be a way to change the
status quo. Maqbool Butt, a Kashmiri freedom
fighter and another activist were sentenced
to death by New Delhi in September 1968,
but, before the sentence was carried out,
they escaped from the jail. 'It created a
sensation and electrified the people who
rejoiced on their brilliant escape', writes
Saraf. 'Can there be any better proof of
Kashmiris innate hatred against India than
the fact that for one month (these two
leaders) were sheltered, transported and
guided by their people"? With the passage of
time, the Indian government was able "to
make laws relating to the prevention of
activities directed towards disclaiming,
questioning or disrupting the sovereignty
and territorial integrity of India or
bringing about secession of part of the
territory of India". This effectively gave
India control in the areas which mattered
most. Commentators at the time believed that
the issue of plebiscite and
self-determination could now be laid to
rest. From an Indian standpoint, the
movement for self-determination virtually
came to an end with the 1975 accord between
the Kashmiri leader Sheikh Abdullah and
Indian Prime Minister Indra Gandhi. Pakistan
was less than happy with the accord. Tension
had once more increased between India and
Pakistan after India's first nuclear
explosion in May 1974. Thus when the accord
was announced it was termed a 'self-out' and
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto also stated that the
accord had ciliated the terms of Simla
agreement that he had signed with India and
the UN requirements for a plebiscite. With
in the state of Jammu and Kashmir, Mirwaiz
Maulvi Farooq believed that the accord had
subverted Kashmiris' right of
self-determination. Opposition to the Accord
among Kashmiris was widespread. "Our
education taught us that the accord is not
the resolution of the Kashmir dispute" said
a Kashmiri journalist, who was editing a
daily newspaper in Srinagar in 1975. "Our
youth awoke and realized that we can't any
longer be the slaves of India'. 'We Muslims
feel we have been deprived of something',
said Ali, a carpet dealer, in 1981. "We
haven't allowed to join India or Pakistan of
our own free will. Rather we have been
forced to be with India".
AN EXPLOSIVE SITUATION
The decade of the 1980s began
peacefully for the valley of a Kashmir.
Under the surface, however, disaffection as
present. Sheikh Abdullah who now headed the
government in Jammu and Kashmir was not
popular in Jammu or in Laddakh and the
Islamic groups, which had opposed the
accord. As the Sheikh's health began to fail
he settled the succession on his son, Farooq
in 1981. A new era of violence began. Farooq
Abdullah, unlike his father, had not been
schooled in the politics of the freedom
movement. He had spent most of his adult
like in Britain, where he had tainted as a
doctor. On 21 August 1981 in a ceremony
which stunned the people, who had assembled
in Iqbal Park in Srinagar, Sheikh Abdullah
appointed his untested progeny as president
of the National Conference. Although Sheikh
Abdullah was able to hand over the office,
he could no pass on the experience to his
son. As subsequent events were to show,
Farooq's rise to power came too easily. "In
happier times', writes Ajit Bhattachrjea "Farooq
Abdullah could have proved an ideal leader
for Kashmir. Tall, handsome, engaging, and
forthright, he attracted crowds easily,
making them believe that he would lead them
out of the uncertainty, intrigue and
corruption that darkened the last days of
his father'. but he was also impulsive,
gullible, easygoing and a novice in
administration and politics'. 'He liked the
attention, the fun that went with power, and
he liked the atmosphere of a feudal court
that surrounded his father, says Tavleen
Singh. 'He was also both surprised and
delighted by the adulation of the people and
the society hostesses in Delhi'. Famed as
the 'disco' chief minister, who enjoyed
riding around Srinagar on his motor bicycle.
Abdullah also played into Mrs. Gandhi's hand
instead of confining himself to the politics
of Jammu and Kashmir. At the beginning of
June, Mr. Gandhi's operation Blue Star in
the Punjab was put into action with the
storming of Golden Temple against the Sikh
extremists of the Akali Dal led b Sant
Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale. in the
aftermath, Punjab was in turmoil. Yet with
supreme confidence the plan for Farooq's
dismissal was put into action. Soon after
Blue Star, Gandhi visited Ladakh. On her
return she summoned several newspaper
editors, including Inder Malahotra. 'She
made no secret of her conviction that
Farooq's continuance as chief minister of
Kashmir was bad for the state and the
country. On the national stage, because of
his meeting earlier in the year with
Bhindranwale, Farooq was charged with
secretly supporting the Sikh separatists and
of permitting them to train in the state of
Jammu and Kashmir. With the weight of Delhi
now behind Abdullah's brother-in-law, G.M
Shah, the latter was appointed chief
minister. The fact that the prime minister
of India was willing and able to set
Abdullah aside for what essentially were
personal reasons demonstrated the lack of
regard she and the government of Delhi had
for Kashmir's so-called special status.
Shah's government was unpopular form the
outset. Under his chief ministership, the
government sank 'to the lowest depths of
corruption and capriciousness'. Why then did
Mrs. Gandhi allow him to be installed? 'The
more one explores this question the more
convinced one is that she was virtually
blinded by her intense dislike of Farooq'.
As Malhotra writes, 'According to Arun
Nehru, a cousin of Rajiv Gandhi and member
of Mrs. Gandhi's kitchen cabinet','Indira
puphi (aunt) asked us to get rid of Farooq
at all costs and we did'. Mrs. Gandhi's
assassination in October 1984 by her Sikh
bodyguards in revenge for Operation Bluestar
removed the architect of Farooq's dismissal.
But the memory of betrayal remained. No
amount of self-justification by Delhi could
hide the fact that Farooq Abdullah's
drawingroom dismissal merely confirmed what
Kashmiris had long suspected: that despite
their 'special status', no one could remain
in power in Srinagar if they did not have
the support of Delhi. This lesson was not
lost on Farooq Abdullah. When he returned to
power following the 1987 elections believed
to be massively ragged, it was as the head
of a Conference-Congress alliance. Rajiv
Gandhi, who became Prime Minister after his
mother's assassination, made it a policy to
attempt to accommodate regional forces, not
only in Kashmir, but also in the Punjab and
Assam. Despite the role he may have played
in Farooq's dismissal, their personal
relationship was better than that between
Farooq and Mrs. Gandhi. After less than two
years in office, G.M. Shah was dismissed on
7 March 1986 in the wake of severe communal
riots which the state government had been
unable to control. The army was called out
and indefinite curfew was imposed, which
gave G.M. Shah the name 'Gul-e-Curfew' (the
Curfew flower). Muslims, however, found that
they were being excluded from key jobs and
that there was a general onslaught on Muslim
culture and identity, both through the
educational curriculum and socially. The
Muslim political parties had called for
peaceful strikes (hartals) in the valley to
challenge the power of Delhi. Many were
arrested. Azam Inquilabi, general secretary
of the Mahaz-i-Azadi (independence Front)
was detained in 1985 and his services as a
teacher were terminated for his alleged
involvement in 'subversive' activities.
Shabir Ahmad Shah, another prominent
Kashmiri leader was also arrested. A veteran
activist who had begun his political career
in 1968 at the age of fourteen, when he was
arrested for publicly demanding the right of
self-determination. After six months of
discussion in November 1986, Rajiv
reappointed Farooq Abdullah as chief
minister in an interim National
Conference-Congress coalition government,
but Abdullah was already beginning to pay
the price for bowing to Delhi. 'Overnight,
Farooq was transformed from hero to traitor
in the Kashmiri mind,' writes Tavleen Singh.
'Propel could not understand how a man who
had been treated the way he had by Delhi,
and especially by the Gandhi family, could
now be crawling to them for accords and
alliances'. Amongst those who entered the
political vacuum were the collection of
political parties which had organised
themselves in September 1986 to form the
Muslim United Front to contest the election.
MUF's election manifesto stressed the need
for a solution to all outstanding issues
according to the Simla agreement. It also
assured the voters that it would work for
Islamic unity and against political
interference from the center. Before the
election, several MUF leaders were arrested
as well as number of election agents. There
were widespread charges of rigging. 'Votes
were cast in favour of the Muslim United
Front, but the results were declared in
favour of the National Conference. The
people of Kashmir got disgusted and
disappointed and disillusioned. Educated but
unemployed, their grievances were fueled by
events both within and outside the valley.
They were also the ones who considered
themselves economically deprived because
they were neither part of the bureaucracy
nor the elite. In May 1987 the first major
act of violence was perpetrated against
Farooq Abdullah when his motorcade was
attacked on the way to the mosque. Farooq
Abdullah's domestic standing was further
diminished by his attempt to locate some of
the government departments permanently. His
suggestion caused an outburst in Jammu,
where the people went on strike in protest.
Throughout 1988 there were continuing
disturbances against Abdullah's government
which disrupted daily life. In June, there
were demonstrations in Srinagar against he
sudden rise in the cost of electricity. The
price increase annoyed people because
supplies of electricity were at best
erratic, but the government's response was
unsympathetic. Anti-Indian feeling within
the valley was mirrored by a surge of
support for Pakistan. On 11 April 1988,
young Muslims in Srinagar had forced
shopkeepers to keep their shops shut in
sympathy with all those who had been killed
in an ammunition dump at Ojhri in Pakistan.
Mirwaiz Maulvi Farooq sent a condolence
telegram to General Zia for the loss of
life. Prayers were said in the Jammu mosque.
A mourning procession was taken out in the
streets of Srinagar which raised
pro-Pakistan slogans, burnt buses and
clashed with the police. As India prepared
to celebrate forty-one years of
independence, anti-India slogans were raised
in the valley. Pro-Pakistani supporters
celebrated Pakistan's independence day on 14
August, but India's independence on 15
August was called a 'black day'. Two days
later, on 17 August, General Zia-ul-Haq was
killed in a plane crash at Bahawalpur in
Pakistan. His death was mourned in the
valley, which led to disturbances. Eight
people were reported to have been shot dead
and at least thirteen wounded. On 27 October
- the anniversary of India's airlift into
Srinagar in 1947 - there was a complete
strike on what the protesters were now
calling 'occupation Day'. As the decade of
the 1980s drew to a close, the valley of
Kashmir reflected an explosive situation'.
CLOSURE OF THE VALE 1990
Every youth in Kashmir came to be regarded
as a potential militant. Reports of Human
rights abuses began to hit the headlines
world-wide. Stories emerged of torture, rape
and indiscriminate killing. A strike was
called for India's Republic Day on 26
January. It was the first of many hartals in
1989, which took up one-third of the year's
working days. The fifth anniversary of
Maqbool Butt's execution on 11 February was
the occasion for another strike. Two days
later there was a massive anti-Indian
demonstration against Salman Rushdie's
Satanic Verses, which lasted nearly a week,
even though the government had banned the
book. The whole of Srinagar went on strike.
When five people were reportedly killed in
police firing the strike spread to other
towns in the valley. There was a blackout on
14 November, Nehru's birthday, and on 5
December, Sheikh Abdullah's birthday. Too
many Kashmiri youth were unemployed; a
problem which Farooq understood but could
not remedy. 'bright students could not get
admission into colleges in the 1980s unless
they paid bribes to politicians', stated a
lecturer at the university of Kashmir. This
led to a loss of faith in the system and
eventually the revolt. We kept struggling
for a peaceful resolution of the dispute,
but failed', said Inquilabi, 'so this young
generation has opted for active resistance
and it has gained momentum and it will
continue to gain momentum come what may'. On
the night of 19 January in intensive
house-to-house search was carried out in an
area where militants were believed to be
hiding. Three hundred people were arrested,
most of whom were later released. The
reaction from the people was unprecedented.
'The whole city was out. I was sleeping - it
was midnight. I heard people on the road
shouting pro-Pakistani slogans and Islamic
slogans - 'Allah o Akbar', 'What do we want?
We want freedom!" recalls Haseeb, a Kashmiri
medical student. The next day, as Jagmohan
was sworn in as governor with the promise
that he would treat the state like a
'nursing orderly', a large demonstration
assembled in the streets of Srinagar to
protest against the search the night before.
In response, paramilitary troops gathered on
either side of the Gawakadal bridge over the
Jhelum river. When the unarmed crowd reached
the bridge it was fired on from both sides
of the river. The shooting has been called
the worst massacre in Kashmiri history. Over
a hundred people died, some from gunshot
wounds, others because, in fear, they jumped
into the river and drowned. Farooq Ahmad, a
mechanical engineer who was watching the
demonstration, was wounded. Presumed dead,
he was put into a lorry filled with bodies,
'I was fortunate, my back was hit by six
bullets... but my head was safe, I was
conscious also. I saw the bridge was
completely full of dead bodies... there was
chaos, people running here and there.
Whereas the Indian press played the incident
down, the foreign press reported the
massacre and its repercussions to the world.
'Thousands of Muslims, chanting "Indian dogs
go home", 'We want freedom', reported the
Daily Telegraph. As a result, foreign
correspondents were banned from the valley.
A curfew was imposed indefinitely. Several
other towns were put under curfew. In
defiance of what came to be called
'crackdown' by the authorities, the people
continued to come out on the streets: 'There
were loudspeakers in the mosques encouraging
people to come out. Everyday, all day people
were shouting slogans', recalls Haseeb. 'Azadi,
Azadi...Allah-o-Akbar - Freedom, Freedom,
God is Great' was broadcast from the
minarets. Even I was thinking within ten
days, India will have to vacate Kashmir.
Teachers, doctors, lawyers, civil servants,
students all came out on the streets in
protest. For the first time the Indian flag
was not hoisted to celebrate India's
Republic Day on 26 January, which was
observed as a 'black day'. Those journalists
already in Srinagar remained confined to
their hotel rooms; their curfew passes were
withdrawn. Restrictions on the press,
however, prevented genuine information from
getting through to the valley. With the
exception of foreign radio, the Kashmiris
were obliged to relay on press release
issued from Jagmohan's office in Raj Bhavan.
The same stories appeared in different
newspapers with the same content under
different by-lines. At the end of February
an estimated 400,000 Kashmiris marched on
the offices of the United Nations Military
Observer Group to hand in petitions
demanding the implementation of the UN
officials were obliged to point out that
their presence in the valley was only to
monitor the line of control. Nearly every
day a procession of lawyers, women,
teachers, doctors marched through the
streets of Srinagar. On 1 March more than
forty people were killed in police firing
when a massive crowd, estimated at one
million took to the streets. The continuing
curfew led to severe shortages of food,
medicines and other essential items. The
hospitals were becoming so full of the
victims of the insurgency that the name of
the Bone and Joint hospital in Srinagar was
changed to the hospital for bullet and bomb
blast injuries. In a mass exodus, at the
beginning of March 1990, about 140,000
Hindus left the valley for refugee camps
outside Jammu. The more affluent took up
residence in their second homes in Delhi,
but the vast majority were housed in squalid
tents in over fifty camps on the outskirts
of both Jammu and Delhi. Their story is as
familiar as any the world over. Used as
propaganda material by the Indian government
to demonstrate that Muslims were not the
only ones suffering during the insurgency.
There was and still is, however, a
widespread feeling that the departure of the
Hindus was not necessary and that Jagmohan,
who had a reputation for being anti-Muslim,
attempted to give the Kashmiri problem a
communal profile by facilitating their
departure in government transport. Two
eminent jurists, V.M. Tarkunde, now in his
eighties, and Rachinder Sachar, as well as
the educationalist, Amrik Singh, and balraj
Puri, toured Kashmir in March and April
1990. Parts of there report read: 'The fact
is that the whole Muslim population of the
Kashmir valley is wholly alienated from
India and due to the highly repressive
policy pursued by the administration in
recent months, especially since the advent
of Shri Jagmohan in January 1990, their
alienation has now turned into bitterness
and anger'. Mirwaiz Farooq Assumed the role
of respected elder, someone whom in the
present crisis, both the government and the
militants could approach. As chief preacher
at the Jamia Masjid in Srinagar, his
religious influence was considerable.
However, on 21 May 1990 he was shot dead at
his home. His teenage son, Omar, blamed
'those elements who were working against the
interests of the Kashmiri movement' for his
death. During his funeral procession as the
crowd passed Islamia College, where the 69th
battalion of the CRPF was quartered, some
officers opened fire. Officially, the
government acknowledged twenty seven dead,
but unofficial sources claimed as many as
100 died, possibly more. The Mirwaiz's
coffin was also pierced with bullets.
Outrage at the murder turned into hysteria
against the government. The valley under
Jagmohan became a closed war zone. When the
Punjab Human Rights Organisation
investigated Maulvi Farooq's death, they
described' a complete iron curtain'
separating the Kashmir valley from the
outside world. "The regime of the curfew is
all pervading. There are severe restrictions
on outsider Indians seeking to enter the
valley". Although Jagmohan's tenure as
Governor lasted less than five months,
during this period, the alienation of the
valley against the Indian government became
almost total. After Mirwaiz Farooq's death,
Jagmohan was replaced as governor by Girish
"Gary' Saxena. He had spend seventeen years
with the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW),
India's intelligence agency. Human Rights
organisation, although restricted in their
access, condemned the violations of human
rights in the valley. In 1991 Asia Watch
stated that the government forces 'have
systematically violated international human
rights law by using lethal force against
peaceful demonstrators. The Armed Forces
(Jammu and Kashmir) special Ordinance,
introduced in July 1990, provided the
security forces with extraordinary power to
shoot and kill, search and arrest without a
warrant, all under immunity from
prosecution. The security forces were
reported as going on 'a binge' of arson,
burning shops and houses in retaliation for
a recent ambush by the militants". In April
1990, David Housego filed from Malangam in
the Kashmir valley the following report:
'Indian security forces tied up and shot
seven men and boys, all members of the same
Kashmiri Muslim family in this remote
village at the weekend; in what seems to
have been a calculated act of brutality to
deter villagers from helping Kashmiri
separatists'. The apparently cold-blooded
reprisals by India's Border Security Force
BSF, against villagers they believed to be
shielding militants or weapons is further
evidence of breakdown in discipline among
Indian forces in Kashmir'. In June 1991,
Tony Allen-Mills reported how the
inhabitants of Kulgam were subjected to
indiscriminate firing in the streets in
reprisal for a rocket attack on BSF
barracks, when two soldiers were slightly
injured: Abdul Hamid Wazi, a baker's
assistant, saw soldiers poring gunpowder on
the outside walls of his house. They fired a
shot and set the place alight. The thatched
roof collapsed on him. Wazi jumped through
the flames, badly burning his leg and face.
by the time the soldiers' wrath was spent,
twenty-eight shops and two houses had been
torched, there were bullet holes in the
mosque and several women claimed to have
been raped. One of the most serious
allegation of excess which Governor Sexena
faced happened in the small town of kunan
Poshpura. In February 1991 there were
reports of fifty-three women being gangraped,
while the men were kept ousted in the
freezing cold or locked in houses and
interrogated. 'What happened in Kunan
Poshpura is seen as the greatest single
atrocity by security forces,' wrote
Christopher Thomas in the Times. The
soldiers were identified as members of the
4th Rajput rifles. Indian army ad
paramilitary were initially estimated to be
150,. The belief that 'half a million Indian
troops' were stationed in Kashmir became an
established fact in the opinion of all
opposition groups. Hindu communalism
remained a factor during this period. It
reached alarming proportions at the end of
December 1992 with the destruction by Hindu
extremists of the mosque at Ayodha in Uttar
Pradesh, Southnof Nepal. 'After Ayodha',
commented one Kashmiri activist, 'we did not
understand why the Muslims in India did not
do like us and ruse up against the Indian
government.' One of the towns to suffer most
at the hands of the security forces was
Sopore. On 6 January 1993, at least
forty-three people were killed and a whole
section of central Sopore was burnt to the
ground. It was considered to be the largest
reprisal attack by the security forces
during the insurgency. According to Asia
Watch, witnesses reported seeing the BSF
soldiers pour houses and shops. Witnesses
also stated that the BSF prevented fire
fighters from putting out the blaze. On 18
February 1993 Dr. Farooq Ashai, chief
orthopedic surgeon at the Bone and Joint
hospital in Central Srinagar, was killed
while returning home in his car with his
wife and daughter. A respected doctor, he
had acted as a spokesman for injured
civilians in Kashmir. His students later
erected a monument in his memory outside the
hospital. They commemorated their "beloved
teacher and humanist patriot who fell to the
bullets of security forces". In March
another renowned doctor, Dr. Abdul Ahad
Guru, a heart surgeon, was shot in Srinagar.
Once again there was an outcry but no
inquiry took place. During his funeral
procession, a large crowd assembled. 'There
were 5000 to 6,000 people but the BSF had
cordoned off the area to the Martyrs
graveyard and said that only a hundred
people will go', said a relative. In the
encounter which followed, the police opened
fire and Dr. Guru's brother-in-law, Ashiq
Hussain, one of the pallbearers, was shot in
the head and died instantly. "Although the
evidence does not indicate that the police
targeted Hussain, it is evident from the
testimony and photographs that they fired
directly into the crowd', stated Asia Watch.
Amnesty International was persistently
forbidden access to the troubled valley.
HEARTS AND MINDS
In October the government set up the
National Human Rights Commission under the
Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993. But,
according to Amnesty International, Whose
observers were still not allowed into the
valley, its efficacy was reduced by the fact
that it was not empowered to enquire into
complaints of human rights violations by the
army and paramilitary forces. 'All it can do
when faced with complaints of this nature is
to call for official reports from the
government, effectively functioning as a
'post box' of official views. In October
1993 the mosque at Hazratbal once more
attracted international attention. by the
autumn, the Indian government decided to
take action. Azam Indquilabi, whose
Operation Balakote militants were also at
Hazratbal, said that the intention of the
Indian army was to destroy the mosque. They
wanted to humiliate the religious sentiments
of the Kashmiris, to the extent that, once
the shrine would have been demolished
through shelling, they would then tell the
Kashmiris. "You see even after having this
shrine demolished, Pakistani forces could
not intervene. So they do not express
solidarity with you struggling people. They
are leaving you in the lurch; so this is
hypocrisy of the Muslim world, therefore why
should you fight for the Muslim world and
you should reconcile yourselves to the
situation as it was in 1989. Pakistan
condemned the Indian action in surrounding
the mosque as sacrilege and onlookers, both
domestic and foreign, feared the outcome
would be similar to the storming of the
Golden Temple in Amritsar when the Indian
army moved against Sikh militants in 1984.
The image of Indian restraint was, however,
undermined by the actions of the border
security forces in Bijbihara when they shot
at least thirty-seven unarmed demonstrators
who were protesting against the siege of
Hazratbal. Fourteen BSF members were held
responsible. According to the Indian
Government, a Magisterial Inquiry and a
Staff Court Inquiry were undertaken. The
SCOI blamed four security force personnel
for excessive use of force, while the
Magisterial Inquiry indicated twelve
people'. The magistrate also concluded that
the shootings were unprovoked. The Indian
government posted security forces in bunkers
around Hazratbal. The Kashmiris objected to
the mosque being 'fortified' by Indian
troops. International concern over Kashmir
reached a high point in February 1994 when
the Pakistani prime Minister, Benezir
Bhutto, who had returned to office in
October 1993, raised the issue in the United
Nations Commission for Human Rights in
Geneva. The situation in Kashmir was
intolerable, she said, as was the world's
silence. Despite its repression, India had
failed to impose its will on the indomitable
people of Jammu and Kashmir. When election
speculation was at its height during the
spring of 1995, one by one the members of
the All Parties Hurriyat Conference a loose
coalition of some 34 Kashmiri political
parties and groups in the freedom struggle
said they would not participate. l 'The
Indian government has thrust this election
process on us because they want to convey to
the external world that they believe in the
democratic system', said Yasin Malik a
prominent Kashmir Leader. He felt so
strongly about the proposed election that he
threatened to immolate himself: 'I am not
doing this act against India. If the world
conscience will come forward, they can stop
the Indian government in this so-called
election process. If they do not come
forward then I will do this act against the
world conscience, then I will be convinced
that there is no one who can listen to the
voice of the oppressed people'. Shabir Shah,
believed to be one of the few leaders who
could be a unifying force throughout the
state, said that he would not take part in
the election. 'We have no trust in Delhi.
They have eroded our rights since 1953 and
therefore we don't believe they will return
us these rights". Professor Abdul Ghani of
the Muslim Conference described the Indian
government's attempt to hold elections as
'political prattle as opposed to political
initiative'. Even Farooq Abdullah, who is
committed to finding a solution within
secular India, placed stringent conditions
on his participation. The political parties,
represented by the Harriet, indicated that
they would no be willing to participate in
an election process within the frame-work of
the Indian constitution. 'Their idea of
elections is just to create a government, a
chief minister, an administration and then
stop', says Omar Farooq. 'While our stand is
that elections cannot be a substitute for
self-determination. If elections were a
solution to the problem we have already had
eight or nine elections. But still the basic
issue is unresolved'. 'India realizes that
they cannot make a dramatic change with
elections, but they want to impress upon the
international community that they are doing
something and divert attention from the main
issue of self determination.
TORTURE
Opponents of
India's military occupation of the valley of
Kashmir continue to maintain that 600,---
troops are stationed throughout the state in
what is the highest troops to civilian
population density ratio in any region in
the world. This figure is taken to include
over half of the 33 divisions of the regular
army, border security forces (100,000) and
Jammu and Kashmir police (30,000). A 'crack'
corps of Rashtriya (National) Rifles (RR)
was also brought into the valley to deal
specifically with counter-insurgency. The
report of the International Commission of
Jurists after their visit in August 1993
noted: There is a long way still to go to
overcome undiscipline and misconduct of the
security forces, particularly the BSF, the
persistent and regular use of torture in
interrogation and the practice of
extra-judicial militants and suspected
militants has been a feature of Indian
counter-insurgency tactics as a means of
extracting information, coercing confessions
and punishment.
According to
Amnesty International, 'the brutality of
torture in Jammu and Kashmir defies belief.
It has left people mutilated and disabled
for life. The severity torture meted out by
the Indian security forces in Jammu and
Kashmir is the main reason for the appalling
number of deaths in custody'. The torture
generally includes electric shocks,
beatings, and the use of a heavy roller on
leg muscles, which can result in extensive
muscle damage, leading to acute renal
failure. Other forms of inhuman treatment on
various parts of the body, including sexual
molestation have also been reported.
According to one victim, quoted by amnesty,
'You always know in advance about the
"current" because they send in the barber to
shave you from head to foot. This is
supposed to facilitate the flow of
electricity. After he finishes shaving you,
he hands you a cup of water to drink and
then they attach the electrodes'. Other
common methods, described by the US Human
Rights Agency, Asia Watch, include
suspension by the hands or feet, stretching
the legs apart and burning the skin with a
clothes iron or other heated object. Victims
have also been kicked and stamped on by
security forces wearing spiked boots.
Sixty-three interrogation centres where
torture is routinely carried out are
believed to exist in Jammu and Kashmir,
mostly run by the BSF and the CRPF. Army
camps, hotels and other buildings have been
taken over by the security forces as
detention centres. One BSF center is located
in one of the Maharaja's old guest houses
overlooking Dal lake and the mountains. With
faded wallpaper, worn carpets and stags'
antlers on the walls, the luxuries of the
past intrude inappropriately on the
brutality of the present. Whereas an officer
on duty will admit to the necessity of
giving 'a few slaps' to captured militants
to make them reveal where they have hidden
their weapons gruesome photographs of
mutilated bodies are part of any press kit
given to concerned journalists by human
rights activists and militant sympathizers.
In its December 1993 report, Amnesty
International produced information about
disappearances in Kashmir. Another report by
Amnesty in January 1995 regarding 705 people
who, since 1990 had died in custody as a
result of torture, shooting or medical
neglect, produced yet another rebuttal from
the Indian government. Amnesty, however,
described their response as 'evasive and
misleading'. Complacently, the government
refuses to recognise that there is an urgent
need to take decisive action to put an end
to the appalling human rights violations in
Jammu and Kashmir. "Such practices clearly
contravene international human rights
standards which the Indian government is
bound to uphold. Amnesty also notes that,
court orders to protect detainees are
routinely flouted. Despite promises of
enquiries into custodial deaths, official
investigations are rare. When they have
taken place, the evidence is not made
public, which diminishes the credibility of
government findings. 'It also makes a
mockery of its expressed intention to
eradicate human rights violations.
The Jammu and
Kashmir Republic Safety Act (1978) permits
people to be detained for up to two years on
vaguely defined grounds to prevent them
acting 'in any manner prejudicial... to the
security of the state and the maintenance of
public order. Detention without charge is
possible for up to one year. In 1990 the act
was amended in order to exempt the
authorities from informing the detainee the
reason for his arrest. In its report, the
ICJ concluded that the law has led to
'hardships among those arrested under its
scope. Its highly discretionary tone
undermines efforts to discover the
whereabouts of arrested persons and the
quest for habeas corpus. The Terrorist and
Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act 1987
(TADA) prohibits not only terrorist acts but
also broadly defined 'disruptive'
activities. The act established special
courts to try those arrested. The term
'disruptive activities' is defined as
including: Any action, whether by act or by
speech or through any other media or in any
other manner, which questions, disrupts...
the sovereignty or territorial integrity of
India, or which is intended to bring about
or supports any claim for the cession of any
part of India or the secession of any part
of India from the union. As the
international jurists pointed out. The
definition of 'disruptive activities' is 'a
blatant contravention of the right to
freedom of speech'. The discretionary nature
of the Armed Forces (Jammu and Kashmir)
Special Powers Act, introduced by Saxena in
1990, which gives the governor or the
government in New Delhi the authority to
declare all or part of the state a
'disturbed area' and to use the armed forces
to assist the civil power, means that the
military can be used 'to suppress legitimate
political activity' and according to the ICJ
cannot possibly be justified. Since the
military have the power to shoot and kill,
'this involves a potential infringement of
the right to life. Additional laws have been
either introduced or revived 'with negative
impact on human rights'. Pakistan's official
stand has been to highlight the abuse of
human rights on the international stage and
point to the alienation of the Kashmiris of
the valley from Indian rule while putting
the issue in its historical context and
referring back to the UN resolutions.
Traditionally, Azad Kashmiris have been
sympathetic to the Kashmiris of the valley
where many still have relatives. A
'liberation cell' has been operating in
Muzaffarabad, capital of Azad Jammu and
Kashmir since 1987, which retains close
links both with the AJK government in
Muzaffarabad and Islamabad. Its
representatives guide foreigners through the
political issues at stake as well as the
refugee camps which have been set up to
accommodate those who fled from the border
towns of Kupwara, handwara, and Baramula in
the early years of the insurgency. 'We eat
and are clothed', said one refugee from
Ambore camp outside Muzaffarabad, 'but
everything gets distasteful when we remember
out bothers and sisters in occupied
Kashmir'. 'We notice the need for women to
have psychiatric help', says Nayyar Malik,
who works as a voluntary social worker in
the camps. They have been through such
terrible thing and they need to talk. A
radio station has been operating since 1960
in Muzaffarabad. It was initially set up to
publicise the development activities of the
Azad Jammu and Kashmir government. but, says
Masood Kashif, the station director, 'it was
not possible to keep our eye shut on the
situation in Occupied Kashmir, therefore, a
fair proportion of its broadcast was
reserved for broadcasting programs on the
subjects of freedom movement, freedom
history and other relevant topics'. He
believes that the Azad Kashmir radio is so
popular in "Occupied Kashmir' that the
Indian government has imposed a ban on
listening to the station and 'is making her
best efforts to jam the transmission.
LIVING UNDER SIEGE
The city of
Srinagar is dusty and dirty, with
uncollected rubbish dumped on the roadside
for dogs and cows to forage through. The
streets are full of potholes. The charred
remains of once revered buildings, such as
the library next to the mosque at Hazratbal,
are a visual reminder of past battles. Al
lake is thick and stagnant with weeds. The
lives of the Kashmiris have been convulsed
by bomb attacks, reprisals, cross-firing and
curfew. Their homes have been raided and
sometimes destroyed because of frequent
security operations. Sopore is still
half-gutted by fire. 'I used to be
frightened when the army came. but now I am
used to it', said a young girl from Sopore.
"The searching totally destroys our houses.
They scatter our belongings and break
things". For over eight years, the Kashmiris
have lived in fear of the gun. Whether it is
the militants or Indian security forces.
Suspected militants or sympathisers, have
been arrested, tortured, killed or just
disappeared." In practice any young Muslim
man living within a village rural area or
part of town noted for activities of any of
the pro-independence or pro-Pakistan groups
can become a suspect and a target for the
large-scale and frequently brutal search
operations', stated the Amnesty in 1993,
Extrajudicial executions of militants have
often been publicised as death in 'an
encounter'. Nearly every Kashmiri has a sad
tale to tell of a family member who had been
picked up by the security forces on
suspicion of being a militant. Dr. Rashid is
one of thousands who suffered personal loss:
My brother was twenty-five years old. He was
running a cosmetics shop. The BSF came and
took him. In front of my father and family,
he was killed. Someone had pointed him as
being a militant. He was not armed and in
the news that evening they gave that there
was an encounter, when there was no
encounter at all. Not long afterwards Dr.
Rashid's younger brother was also shot for
being a suspected militant. Then he heard
the news about his cousin's son: He was
eighteen year old-he was a student. He was
captured; I went to the police station and
asked to see him because I had heard he had
got some bullet injuries. They told me to
wait and they would see where he was. For
two hours I waited there. Then they brought
his dead body. The report said he was
running away and then they shot him. If he
was running away he would have had bullet
wounds on the back. but he had two bullet
injuries at 2cm distance just on his heart
in front. For the majority of the people the
ill-effects of living under siege are
tremendous. No one has yet been able to
evaluate the trauma of events on their lives
since 1989. Children have frequently been
unable to go to school and the standard of
education has declined. Schools in rural
areas have been occupied by the security
forces, who have also installed themselves
in university campuses. Medical facilities
are insufficient and the hospitals are
unhygienic. The doctors are overworked and
many have fled. In 1995 the bone and Joint
Hospital had only three senior medical
staff, besides nine registrars and six
consultants. Immunisation programmers for
children have fallen behind. On account of
the insurgency, there are twenty times the
number of psychiatric cases than in 1989.
Unofficial statistics estimate that 40,000
people have died since 1988. Amnesty bases
its figures on police and hospital sources
and assesses the number as in excess of
17,000. 'but we also believe there are
several thousand more for whom we have no
statistics', says a representative of
Amnesty. The martyr's graveyards in Srinagar
is full of fresh graves with weeping mothers
and onlookers standing by. In 1994 M.N
Sabharwal, the director-general of Police in
Srinagar admitted that at least 1,500
civilians had been killed in the crossfire,
with many more injured. Just one of those
casualties lay in a ward of the Bone and
joint Hospital in April 1994. He had been
out shopping with his wife on his
motorcycle. When firing began in a crowded
street, soldiers shouted at them to get off
the motorcycles and lie face down on the
ground. Both he and his wife received bullet
wounds. He was crying as he related his
story. 'My Mrs. is in the ladies hospital. I
am here. What have we done to deserve this?
His own injury, close to his heart, was so
serious that the doctor had only permitted
him to be interviewed on the understanding
that I did not tell him that his wife had
already died. 'The shock', warned the doctor
'might kill him'. All communities have
suffered during the insurgency. For those
Kashmiri Muslims of the valley who so
enthusiastically supported the demand for
Azadi, on the understanding that they had
been promised a plebiscite in order to
determine their future, the sense of
betrayal is perhaps greatest. The repression
of the 1990s, the indiscriminate and
unnecessary killings have merely added fuel
to their anger. Time and again I heard
people say: 'How could we ever accept the
Indian government again, after what the
military did to our people?' The record
numbers of nearly 80,000 foreign tourists
who visited the valley in 1989 are reduced
to about 9,000. Isolated incidents of
kidnapping foreigners who were either
working in Kashmir or had come as tourists,
as well as the rape of a Canadian girl in
October 1990 by two army officers, acted as
an obvious deterrent. So too the
miltarisation of the valley and the paradox
of enjoying a holiday, while the local
people were subjected to crackdowns and
cross-firing.
The lack of
tourists has, of course, meant that the
business of the local Kashmiris has suffered
accordingly: houseboat, the Rickshaw wallahs,
taxi drivers, tonga drivers hotel owners,
and those who depended on selling their
handicrafts to visiting tourists, have all
lost what was the only avenue of income open
to them. In July 1995 Six foreigners were
kidnapped. The Hurriyat and virtually all
the Kashmiri parties condemned the
kidnapping. Pakistan also condemned the
kidnapping and some commentators even
believed that the incidents was an elaborate
ploy by Indian intelligence to discredit the
Kashmiri movement and, indirectly, Pakistan.
The valley, surrounded by the magnificent
Himalayan mountains, whose beauty has, for
centuries, attracted visitors from far and
wide, is still the home of tragedy.
CONCLUSION
The Kashmiri
conflict, which has lasted half a century,
has been inherited by the next and the next
generation. Many of those in the forefront
of the struggle today were not born when it
all began, nor were those who have died
fighting in the cause of Kashmir. The State
of Jammu and Kashmir remains, as every,
poised strategically between powerful and
competing neighbors: China to the east, the
new Central Asian republics to the north and
west and the land mass of the sub-continent
to the south. The world, however, has become
much more dangerous since 1947. Yet the
basic demand of those Kashmiris challenging
the Indian government is the same; the right
to determine their future. The Kashmiris who
are challenging Indian rule, however,
believe that it is the moral duty of the
international community to support their
cause precisely because successive
resolutions, unanimously adopted by the
Security Council, called for the settlement
of the dispute by means of a free and
impartial plebiscite under the auspices of
the United Nations.
The Kashmiris
refute India's suggestion that if Kashmir
secedes it will lead to the break-up of
India. 'We have a legal case, supported by
United Nations resolution. There are
commitments made by India', says Omar Farooq
also believes that India does not have to
retain Kashmir for the sake of its 'secular'
image, 'There are over 100 million Muslims
in India, which make it secular, without
India having to hold onto Kashmir. The
Kashmiris are also apprehensive that adverse
publicity regarding the militancy means that
their struggle is misunderstood by the world
community. 'It is portrayed as a terrorist
and Islamic fundamentalist movement, while
that is not the case', says Omar Farooq. 'It
is important to understand the Kashmiris'
point of view. We are not fanatics'.
Kashmiris still see that the best solution
lies in pressure from he international
community. The Kashmiris who are opposing
India do not see themselves as remote and
rate their struggle on the same basis as
other trouble spots. 'We see issues like
Bosnia, Ireland, Middle East getting
solved', says Omar Farooq, 'Therefore we
have high hopes of getting the international
community involved to solve the issue in
Kashmir.' The Government of India has
strongly objected to Pakistan's
re-introduction of the Kashmir issue on the
international platform, be it at the United
Nations, the Organisation of Islamic
Countries, the Commonwealth or in meetings
with foreign leaders. The history of Kashmir
may be relevant to understand the depth of
feeling, but once understood, the challenge
is to move on. World parameters have
changed. They have also hardened.
Nationalist feeling, the braking republics
within the former Soviet Union, and
alienation towards the Indian government in
New Delhi have made the Kashmiris' demand
for self-determination even stronger. The
reunification of East and West Germany was
particularly symbolic. 'We felt if the
Berlin Wall could be dismantled so too could
the line of control', said Dr. Hamida Bano,
professor of English at the University of
Kashmir in Srinagar. What has not changed,
however, is the belief that a plebiscite is
the time-honored way to finalise the issue.
Regardless of prior elections, accords and
economic packages, the Kashmiris people have
never been allowed to exercise their right
of self-determination to which the peoples
of Jammu and Kashmir became entitled as
parto of the process of partition has
neither been exercised nor abandoned, and
thus remains execrable today. Unless the
Kashmiris themselves can be made to feel
that they have been given the freedom to
choose their destiny, the issue may never be
laid to rest. If this generation is
silenced, the next will learn the history,
read about the plebiscite and seek, perhaps
again through armed struggle, to achieve
their aims. Discontent in the Valley did not
begin with the insurgency of the 1990s. The
Government of India had nearly fifty years
to win over the hearts of the Kashmiris.
Even during periods of stability and
apparent calm the acquiescence of the people
was never wholehearted or unanimous. The 'riggid'
elections of 1987 and 96, combined with
economic grievances, corruption and
unfulfilled expectations, completed the
process of alienation. India's persistent
belief that Pakistan instigated the Kashmiri
problem has also prevented a thorough
analysis of the Indian government's handling
of the situation. 'I do not believe that any
foreign hand engineered the Kashmir
problem', stated Gorge Fernandes in 1990'.
The problem was
created by us. Is there a solution? Our
first goal should be that we should be in a
position to decide our future', says Omar
Farooq. In consultation with the political
leadership of Azad Kashmir, we could take a
decision. All Kashmiris should sit and
discuss what will be the future of the
state. Until we can discuss with our
brothers across the border it is very
difficult for us to take a single-handed
decision. Spoken so convincingly, it all
sounds easy. 'We have given proposals to the
Indian government', Farooq continues 'you
stop human rights abuses, allow in Amnesty
and other organisations, release political
prisoners and accept that Kashmir is part of
a dispute. Kashmiri political activists
continue to maintain that elections are no
substitute for a plebiscite. Without a
generally acceptable settlement, the Kashmir
issue is likely to remain indefinitely on
the international agenda of unresolved
conflicts, which may yet become more
explosive'.
Periods
of Independence
Up to 1325: Ruled by 155 Rajas independent
and sovereign 1325 to 1585: Muslim Sultans
independent and sovereign (1420 to 1470)
"Golden period of Kashmir history" Periods
of Occupation and Struggle for Freedom

1586 to 1752: Mughal Rule
1752 to 1819: Tyrannical Afghan Rule
1819 to 1846: Colonized by Sikhs
16 March 1846: British sold Kashmir to
Dogras
1846 to 1947: Dogra Rule
15 August 1947: Partition of British India
Indo-Pak war to gain control over the
territory of Kashmir
22 Oct.1947 : Pakistani backed tribal
Invasion of Kashmir
24 Oct. 1947: Pakistan occupies one third of
Kashmir - Provisional Govt. of Azad Kashmir
proclaimed
27 Oct. 1947: Indian military intervention
in Kashmir- two thirds of Kashmir occupied
by India
Indo-Pak War: Cease-fire achieved 1 Jan,
1949.
History
'Kashmir' denotes the whole state of Jammu &
Kashmir as it existed before October 1947.
Millions of years back enormous tidal waves
arose from the Indian ocean and layer after
layer of silt and rock deposited to make the
Himalayan range of mountains. The rock
formations seen today confirm this theory.
These waves
brought water with them. The receding waters
left infertile foothills and the shelving
shores of inland sea, the lakes of Kashmir
today . Kashmir was an expanse of water and
the first people who ever lived had homes in
water, and indeed some still do ! Islands of
land surfaced in time and people migrated .
Theories have been postulated to explain
this evolution. A massive volcanic eruption
made a crater in the mountains and drained
the water. Earthquakes in Kashmir are common
and the bye-products like ash from lava is
present in mountains. Kashmir could have
been a mighty glacier in ice-age and
earthquake split open a gorge , ice melted
and drained away.
In Hindu
mythology the big lake (Satisar) was
inhabited by Nagas (Snake people) who
fearing the demon (Jaladeo) pray to Kashyap
(The sage). The sage goes into long penance
to deliver the Nagas. Shiva (Hindu God) came
down and with a hard blow created a crater
in the mountains and drained the water away
to surface land on which people started
living. There is also a legendary story
about Kind Solomon using ingenious
canalization methods , drained the waters,
using human labor. Whatever it was which
created Kashmir it has since been awfully
serpentine, ruefully demonic and the natives
suffered gusty blows from the mighty waves
of mordant politics
Jehlum river ,
the hydaspes formed the Eastern limit of
advances for Alexandra the great of
Macedonia. He left behind a gene- pool of a
big continent of his army. The God King,
ferocious fighter died in Babylon at 36 in
323 BC. The fair color of Kashmiri skin may
be attributed to that invasion.
3rd century BC
Ashoka (296-232 BC) the grandson of Chandra
Gupta, the Mauryan King made Srinagar the
capital of his huge empire. The Buddhists
ruled up to 8th century and left their
culture and monasteries, especially in
Ladakh.
Huns gained
control in sixth century. Mihira Kula, a Hun
prince was known as cruel as death for his
cruel behavior. The Ujjan empire took
control in 530 AD. The Hindu king Lalitya
Dityas' rule ( 724-761) marked an era of
literature and learning. Kashmir as his base
he led his armies deep into South India,
Turkistan and Tibet. He built temples at
Martand , Avantipor and Pandrethan which
still remain. He set an example for Kashmir
as an independent country.
King
Unmattavati 939-944 AD was inauspicious. He
ripped the abdomen of the pregnant women to
see the fetus, plunged daggers in the
hollows between the breasts of naked women.
The saga of repression continued during the
time of King Harisha 1089-1101 AD.
Pundit Kalhane
the great poet of the 12th century wrote
Rajatarangi (River of Kings). He wrote
"Kashmir may be conquered by force of
spiritual merit but never by force of
soldiers" which, in present political
climate may be worth remembering. The spate
of literal tranquility was short lived ,
ferocious tartars ( 1300-1320AD) Zulfi Khan
from Changis Khan family invaded and
indulged in ruthless killing, loot and
arson. He perished in a blizzard crossing
the Devasar pass. Simha Deva and his
associate Ram Chand ruled for a while but
soon Prince Rinchen took over having killed
Ram Chand and married his daughter, Kuta
Rani. Rinchen converted to Islam and called
himself Sultan sadru-ud-din and built the
great Jama Masjid and Ziyarat for Bulbul
shah who was his mentor. Rinchen died and
Simbha Deva's brother Udayadeva married the
widow Kuta Rani and ruled for 50 days. Shah
Mir a Muslim from swat and adviser to
Rinchen was waiting in the wings and took
over the throne. This heralded the ' Sultan
dynasty' which lasted 200 years.
In 1372 Shah
Hamadan arrived from central Asia with
thousands of followers and spread his
message of Islam. People were converted to
his faith enmasse.. In the meantime Shah Mir
died and the throne was inherited by Sultan
Skinder in 1389 who ruled for 24 years and
destroyed idols and sacred thread (500 lbs)
of the converted Hindus . The fifty years
rule of Zainul Abidin (Budsha) which
followed is known as the golden era in the
history of Kashmir He invited artists from
Iran and handicrafts boomed. His rule has
been remarkable in progress, prosperity and
justice. His rule extended to Tibet and
Punjab. He built a palace in the island
called Zainlank also made by him and
inscribed on the edifice 'May this edifice
be as firm as the foundation of the heavens'
He married into a Hindu Raja family from
Jammu.. His two sons fought with each other
after his death in 1470 and lost the throne
to Chak family , waiting in the wings.
Yousuf Shah
Chak and his wife Haba Khatoon were ruling
when Akbar the Mughul Emperor beguiled him
and entered Kashmir on June 5, 1586 to rule
for the next 166 years. Jehangir inherited
the throne and became obsessed with the
beauty of Kashmir. He and his wife Nur Jehan
built 777 gardens and panted Chinar trees.
On his death in 1627 he uttered 'Kashmir
only Kashmir'.
Shah Jehan
stepped in after his father Jehangir and
also built places like Chashma Shahi and his
sons Murad married to a Kashmiri girl built
the Island called Char Chinar. His eldest
son dara Shikoh built Pari Mahal and
Greystone mask still standing today. It was
Aurangzeb who got the throne having beheaded
Dara. In 1664 Dec Aurangzeb set off from
Delhi for Kashmir , accompanied by his
sister Roshan Ara. 100,000 horsemen, camels,
elephants and cattle. He lost most of his
livestock in the mountains. The Mughal era
came to an end with the ferocious invasion
of Persian leader Nadir Shah in 1739. He
took the peacock throne and Kohinoor and
left the Mughals in disarray.
It was the
Afghans who saw an opportunity and invaded
Kashmir. Ahmad Shah Abdali ruled in a
ruthless manner, he ordered public
executions and people drowned in the Jehlem
river. Afghans built Amira Kadal, Hari
Parbat forte. One ruler 18 year old Azad
Khan plundered , killed and raped like a
lunatic. He slit the stomach of his doctor
for not curing his eye ailment. Abdali died
in Kabul in 1818 , the sons fought and lost
Kashmir to Sikhs. It was like coming out of
the frying pan into the fire !
The Sikhs were
invited by locals to get rid of the Afghans
but the 27 years rule from Sikhs was a hell
. People were stoned to death for killing a
cow. A despotic rule which led to
pestilence, destitution followed
unfortunately by earthquakes and famine of
1832. Ranjit Singh the ruler never visited
Kashmir but wanted , taxes, shawls and
women. Gulab Singh a dogra commander won his
favor by fighting the British. He was
awarded Jammu as Jagir.
It was Gulab
Singh who conquered Ladakh and Dardistan in
1840. Poonch remained with his brother Dyan
Singh. Gulab Singh betrayed his old master
and helped the British to defeat Ranjit
Singh. British demanded a heavy fine to
relinquish Kashmir. Gulab Singh offered to
pay and Kashmir was sold to him for Rs
75,000, one horse , 12 goats and three
shawls. One shawl and 100 goats also to be
given every year otherwise Kashmir would
revert back to the British.. This became the
famous Treaty of Amritsar.
Gulab Sigh
consolidated power and Dogra rule of a
complete century was heralded. He was very
cruel and sought to reconvert all Muslims
back to Hindus. 1857 Rambir Singh took over
and helped British retake Delhi after a
mutiny. His repressive rule lasted for 28
years and was succeeded by Major General
Partap Singh. Partap Singh was dominated by
British and he allowed a resident and a
revenue commissioner Walter Lawrence was
installed. This was a great relief for
Kashmiris, because inhuman laws like
'Beggar' or forced free labor and execution
for cow slaughter was abolished. In 1889 the
British took over direct rule for sixteen
years , giving a breathing time of relief
for Kashmiris from repressive Dogra rule.
Soon enough Maharaja was reinstalled in 1905
and saga of autocratic despotic rule
continued. Hari Singh was the nephew (
Partap Sigh had no son) born and educated in
Paris. He became the westernized Maharaja of
Kashmir. Polo. golf, house -boats and trout
fishing became the norm in Kashmir. British
missionaries like Arthur Neve, Cecil Tyndale
Biscoe, Miss Mellinson became the pioneers
of development and education in Kashmir.
Srinagar Silk
Weaving factory strike in 1924 when Said-ud-din
Shawl and Noor Shah Naqshbandi were expelled
was an important landmark for the political
renascence of Kashmir. They submitted a
petition to Lord Reading the viceroy of
India with their grievances . On 13 July
1931 nine people were gunned down in front
of central jail who were protesting against
a Jammu policeman desecrating Quran. This
became the 'Martyrs Day' A school teacher
Shiekh Abdulla formed the 'Muslim
Conference' which he later converted to
National Conference to include the non-muslims
in the party. Several thousand people got
killed by Dogra army. The British set up the
Glancy commission to investigate. Maharaja
caved in and passed the constituent assembly
act. Now 35 out of 70 seats would be
elected. Muslim conference still active in
Jammu under Choudry Abbas got 14 seats. The
'Quit Kashmir' movement launched by Abdulla
took off like wild fire. Repression
intensified. "Srinagar has been transformed
into a graveyard" stated Nehru " I must go
there" He was greeted with black flags by
Pandits and arrested.
1947 sorting
partition of India out Lord Mountbatten
called a meeting of the party leaders on
June 13, 47. Mr. Nehru said that no state
can claim independence, but Mr. Jinnah said
'that constitutionally and legally the
Indian states will be independent sovereign
states on the termination of paramountcy and
they will be free to decide for themselves
to adopt any course they like. They can
decide to remain independent. In the later
case they enter into agreements and
relationships, such as economic or
commercial, with Hindustan or Pakistan as
they may choose'
Maharaja and
his Prime Minister Ram Chand Kak wanted
independent Kashmir. A stand still agreement
was signed with India and Pakistan. A trade
agreement with Pakistan meant oil, salt
could be imported and communication link
kept open. Sudhans in Poonch revolted and
got slaughtered by state forces. On 22
October Tribals from Waziristan invaded
plunging Kashmir in darkness. They were only
a few miles from capturing the capital city
when Maharaja fleeing for life allegedly
accepted provisional accession to India, in
return for safety of his life. Indian army
was flown in on 27th October and a war
ensued between india and Pakistan. This
resulted in partition of the state and 50
years on it still remains split and divided.
The accession document signed by Lord
Mountbatten states that the accession is
probationary and subject to a plebiscite
confirming his action. It is this plebiscite
that people were promised that has now
caused over 50,000 deaths of Kashmiris.
United Nations
got involved. Jan, 24, 1948 Mr. Warren
Austen of USA suggested an interim
government followed by a plebiscite. Jan
1951 Australian PM , Mr. R G Menzies
proposed stationing commonwealth troops or
Indo Pakistan joint force or raise a local
army in Kashmir It was rejected by India.
United Nations or two deadly wars did not
alter the status defacto position of Kashmir
dispute nor did the Nehru-Abdulla agreement
of July 24, 1952 Abdulla , the serving prime
minister was arrested and jailed. The
reasons for this action are elaborated ( 15
points )
September,4
,1965 UN resolution stopped the
Indo-Pakistani war, culminated in the
Tashkent Declaration of Jan, 10, 1966. POW's
were exchanged , but Kashmir was left
simmering in the smoldering fire. One more
Indo-Pakistani war erupted, this time in
East Pakistan and culminated in the Simla
agreement of July ,3,1972. Again after
exchange of POW's Kashmir was left to be
discussed later , in order to arrive at an
amicable solution.
As time passed
people eg Shastri, Ayub Khan , Nehru,
Abdulla passed away; Even Mountbatten , who
would have been an important witness was
blown up by the IRA in Ireland. The local
people have now come out in open revolt and
every day more people die , more homes are
blasted, more women molested and
dehumanization is a norm.
OVERVIEW OF KASHMIRI RULERS
KASHMIR
IN 3RD CENTURY BC
The Imperial
history of Kashmir begins in the third
century BC with the rule of Asoka. At that
time, Kashmiris became famous throughout
Asia as learned, cultured and humane and the
intellectual contribution of writers, poets,
musicians, and scientists to the rest of
south Asia was comparable to that of ancient
Greece to European civilization. SADR-U-DIN
Rinchen, a
Buddhist ruler, who was converted to Islam
by a famous Muslim saint Bulbul shah and
given the Islamic name Sadr-u-din, became
the first Muslim monarch of Kashmir. He was
considered to be the wise ruler, but his
reign did not last for long.
KINGDOM OF SHAHAB-UD-DIN
Shabab-ud-Din who came to the
throne in 1354 is the first great king of
Muslim period. Shahab-ud-Din devoted his
attention to foreign expeditions, conquering
Baltistan, Ladakh, Kishtwar and Jammu.
Shahab-ud-Din loved learning and patronized
art and architecture. In 1361 there was a
devastating flood, but the atmosphere of
general well being prevailed. On
Shahab-ud-Din's death in 1373, Qutb-ud-Din
succeeded him.
KINGDOM
OF QUTB-UD-DIN
During Qutb-ud-Din's rule, the pace of
conversion to Islam increased. Muslim from
west and central Asia, in search of refuge
from the Mongols, arrived in Kashmir. The
most influential among them was Mir Syed Ali
Hamadani (RA). He came with hundreds of
missionaries i.e Syeds, from Hamadan and
other parts of Persia who preached Islam and
made this land the land of faithful. Sir
Aurel Stein writes, "Islam made its way into
Kashmir not by forcible conquest, but by
gradual conversion."
KINGDOM
OF BUD SHAH
After the death of Qutb-ud-Din his son
Sikander took over the power in 1389.
Sikander was succeeded by his younger son
popularly know as Bud Shah (the great king)
in 1420. During Bud Shah's long reign, which
lasted until 1470, the valley prospered both
economically and culturally. With the death
of Bud Shah, the dynasty of the Shah Mirs
began to decline.
MUGHAL
RULE IN KASHMIR
Attracted by the fame of Kashmir, Mughals
made several attempts to dominate it but
they always failed. It was at Hamayun's
ruling period that Mirza Haider Dughlat, a
cousin of Babar's mother finally succeeded
in conquering Kashmir in 1540. In 1555,
Ghazi Chak, bringing the end to the 200-year
old dynasty of Shah Mirs, became king of
Kashmir. The Mughal Emperor Akbar led
Kashmir's incorporation into Mughal Empire
and ended the Kashmir's long history as a
kingdom in its own right.
JAHANGEER'S GLORIOUS ERA
Of all the rulers of Kashmir Akbar's son and
successor, Jehangeer, is best remembered for
his love of the valley Kashmir. He ascended
the throne in 1605. During his reign
Jehangeer adorned Kashmir with over 700
captivating and charming gardens. Their
names evoke the beauty of the place:
Shalimar (abode of love) and Nishat (garden
of gladness) are the two most famous.
FALL OF
MUGHAL REGIME
Jehangir was succeeded by his son, Shah
Jehan in 1627. He too loved Kashmir and the
valley became a popular place of refuge for
the Mughals during the hot summers.
Aurangzeb, who came to the throne in 1658,
was the last of the Mughal Emperors to make
any impact on Kashmir's history.
AFGHANIS ARRIVAL IN KASHMIR
Nadir Shah's invasion of the seat of Mughal
power at Delhi in 1738 had weakened their
imperial hold on Kashmir. This in turn left
Kashmir at the mercy of coming rulers. With
the decline of Mughal power in India the
governors of Kashmir became irresponsible
and cruel. In 1762, in alliance with the
Dogra Rajput ruler, Raja Ranjit Dev of
Jammu, the Afghans attached Kashmir. When
the Afghan leader, Ahmed Shah Durrani, died
in 1772 Jawan Sher the Afghan ruler of
Kashmir, set himself up as an independent
ruler. Afghan domination lasted for little
more than fifty years, but the period is
generally remembered as one of the darkest
periods of Kashmir's history.
SIKH
RULE
After the overthrow of Afghan rulers, the
state came under Sikh rule headed by Ranjeet
Singh. Ranjeet Singh sent Colonel Mian Singh
Kumedan, from Gujranwala as governor to
Kashmir. Considered to be the best of all
the Sikh governors, he attempted to bring
the valley out of the economic chaos
resulting from the 1833 famine. Gulab Singh
had been Ranjit Singh's protégé for thirty
years. When Ranjit Singh died, Gulab Singh,
aged forty-seven, was well-placed to control
events not only in the heart of the Sikh
empire in Lahore but also in Kashmir. Until
the death of Ranjit Singh, the East India
Company had maintained cordial relations
with the Sikhs; but after his death, the
relationship soon fell apart. As relations
deteriorated between the British and the
Sikh prior to the outbreak of war in 1845,
Gulab Singh played an important role, which
ultimately helped to further his own
territorial ambitions, enabling him to
become a maharaja in his own right.
DARKEST
DOGRA RULE
Under the Treaty of Amritsar, the Britishers
sold Kashmir to Gulab Singh at a cost of
7,500,000 Nanak Shahi currency and hence
commenced the Dogra rule in Kashmir. The
Dogra rule in Kashmir is thought to be one
of the darkest periods in Kashmir's history.
In this period the people of Kashmir have
suffered a lot at the hands of Dogra rulers.
The successors of Dogra dynasty after Gulab
Singh including Ranbir Singh (1858), Partab
Singh (1885) and Hari Singh (1925). The
latter was the last ruler of the dynasty
until partition of the Sub Continent in
1947.
The record
history of Kashmir goes back to about 2000
BC.
For about three quarters of its history,
Kashmir has been an independent State
though its areas has been expanding and
shrinking.
The ruler of Lalita Ditya (715-752-AD), a
famous Hindu ruler of Kashmir, is considered
the golden period of pre-Muslim era Kashmir
whereas that of Sultan Zainul Abedin – The
Budshah (1420-1470 AD) is know as the golden
Era of the entire Kashmir history. The
details of this is elaborately given below:
ANCIENT KASHMIR
Kashmir's first period of imperial history
begins in the third century BC with the rule
of Asoka. Kashmiris became famous throughout
Asia as learned, cultured and humane and the
intellectual contribution of writers, poets,
musicians, scientists to the rest of India
was comparable to that of ancient Greece to
European civilization. With hindsight,
Pundit Prem Nath bazaz is critical of the
conduct of the Hindu kings, 'Again and again
history afforded opportunity to the Hindu
aspirants to kingship to start afresh but,
on every such occasion they failed to grasp
it and give a good account of themselves.'
Islam made them men again'. but although the
people may have been persecuted and
oppressed, the Kashmiris retained their
humanistic principles.
The story of
the spread of Islam in Kashmir reads like a
traveler's tale. A Buddhist ruler, Rinchen,
had left his home in Laddakh, after the
murder of his father and taken refuge at
King Sahadeva's court in Kashmir. At about
the same time, a Muslim from Swat, Shah Mir,
also came to Kashmir looking for work. After
the Mongols, under Dulaca, had invaded
Kashmir without Sahadeva, a new king had to
be found. Supported by Shah Mir and some of
the feudal lords searching for a new faith,
he met a Muslim saint called Bulbul Shah and
his teachings mead a deep impact on Rinchen.
Taking the name of Sadruddin, he became a
Muslim. His conversion marks the beginning
of Muslim rule in Kashmir. Rinchen is
remembered as a just and wise ruler.
Janaraja calls him a 'lion among men.' But
his reign did not last long.
The first great
king of Muslim period was Shabab-ud-Din who
came to the throne in 1354. With the peace
restored after the devastation of the
Mongols, Shahab-ud-Din devoted his attention
to foreign expeditions, conquering Baltistan,
Ladakh, Kishtwar and Jammu. Shahab-ud-Din
also loved learning and patronized art and
architecture. in 1361 there was a
devastating flood, but the atmosphere of
general well being prevailed and on
Shahab-ud-Din's death in 1373 the succession
passed peacefully to Qutb-ud-Din.
During the
reign of Qutb-ud-Din, the pace of conversion
to Islam increased. Muslim from west and
central Asia, in search of refuge from the
Mongols, arrived in Kashmir and the most
influential was Mir Syed Ali. He came with
hundreds of missionaries, or syeds as they
came to be known, from Hamadan and other
parts of Persia. 'Islam made its way into
Kashmir', writes Sir Aurel Stein, 'not by
forcible conquest, but by gradual
conversion'. Qutb-ud-Din was succeeded by
his son. Sikunder in 1389. Sikunder's
younger son came to the throne in 1420. He
was pupularly called Bud Shah (the great
king). During his long reign which lasted
until 1470, the valley prospered.
When Bud Shah
died in 1470 the dynasty of the Shah Mirs
began to decline. In the years to come, the
fame of Kashmir attracted the Mughals but
they failed in their early attempts to
dominate the valley. In the reign of Babur's
son, humayun, Mirza Haider Dughlat, a cousin
of Babur's mother, finally succeeded in
conquering Kashmir in 1540. In 1555, Ghazi
Chak became king of Kashmir, which brought
to an end the 200-year-old dynasty of the
Shah Mirs.
It was only
matter of time before the Mughal emperor,
Akbar, who had succeeded to the throne of
Delhi in 1558, led Kashmir's incorporation
into the Mughal Empire. So ended Kashmir's
long history as a kingdom in its own right.
Despite the ravages of so much cruelty and
bloodshed during its early history, the
valley of Kashmir, surrounded by its
mountains, always retained its allure for
future generations. But warned Dr. Parmu
'beautiful countries have often been the
homes of tragedy. Happiness is rarely the
lot of a beautiful land. So Kashmir, the
desired land of men and monarchs, paid for
her beauty.'
MONARCHS AND DEMONS 1586-1819
The conquest of
the Kashmir valley by the Mughals in 1586 is
generally regarded as marking the beginning
of Kashmir's modern history. At first the
Mughal army had difficulty crossing the
passes, but the Kashmiris were unable to
stop their advance and in October the Mughal
army marched into Srinagar. Akbar was
proclaimed emperor. Of all the rulers of
Kashmir Akbar's son and successor, Jehangir,
is perhaps best remembered for his love of
the valley. He ascended the throne in 1605.
During his reign Jehangir adorned Kashmir
with over 700 gardens. Their names evoke the
beauty of the place: Shalimar (abode of
love) and Nishat (garden of gladness) are
the two most famous. For several years in
succession Jehangir and his wife, Nurmahal,
remained in Kashmir during the summer.
On his deathbed
Jehangir was asked if there was anything he
wanted, to which he is reported as saying:
'Nothing but Kashmir>' He was succeeded in
1627 by his son, Shah Jehan. He too loved
Kashmir and the valley became a popular
place of refuge for the Mughals during the
hot summers. Aurangzeb, who came to the
throne in 1658, was the last of the Mughal
Emperors to make any impact on Kashmir's
history.
Towards the end
of Aurangzeb's reign an event occurred which
had special significance for later
generations of Kashmir's. In 1700 a strand
of the beared of the Prophet Muhammad, the
Mo-i-Muqaddas, was brought by the servant of
a wealthy Kashmiri merchant to Kashmir. It
was originally displayed in the Khanqah
Naqshband in Srinagar but the mosque could
not accommodate the crowds who came to see
it. It was therefore taken to another mosque
on the banks of Upper Dal lake which was
known first as Asar-i-Sharif-Shrine of the
relic- and then Hazratbal - the lake of the
Hazrat, or the prophet. It has remained
there ever since, with one brief interlude
in 1963 when it mysteriously disappeared.
Nadir Shah's
invasion of the seat of Mughal power at
Delhi in 1738 had weakened their imperial
hold on Kashmir still further. This in turn
left Kashmir at the mercy of further
predators.
With the
decline of Mughal power in India the
governors of Kashmir became 'irresponsible
and cruel'/ In 1762, in alliance with the
Dogra Rajput ruler, Raja Ranjit Dev of
Jammu, the Afghans attached Kashmir and
captured Sukh. When the Afghan leader, Ahmed
Shah Durrani, died in 1772 Jawan Sher the
Afghan ruler of Kashmir, set himself up as
an independent ruler.
Afghan
domination lasted for little more than fifty
years, but the period is generally
remembered as one of the darkest of Kashmiri
history. Through the assistance of the Sikhs
and Ranjit Singh - a ruler in nominal
alliance with their Afghan oppressors
Kashmir's overthrew the Afghan tyranny. In
doing so the Kashmiris had been responsible
for asking for help from a foreign ruler:
submission to an external power was not only
a matter of expediency but survival in a
cruel world.
SIKH CONQUEST 1819
In the wake of
the decline of the decline of the Afghan
empire in northern Indian Ranjit Singh had
shown himself both able and willing to fill
the vacuum. In 1834, Ranjit Singh sent
Colonel Mian Singh Kumedan, from Gujranwala
as governor. Considered to be the best of
all the Sikh governors, he attempted to
bring the valley out of the economic chaos
resulting from the 1833 famine. Ranjit Singh
never visited the valley of Kashmir, but
there is a well known story of how he once
wrote to Colonel Mian Singh: Would that I
could only once in my life enjoy the delight
of wandering through the gardens of Kashmir,
fragrant with almond-blossoms, and sitting
on the fresh green turf.
On the
sidelines of Kashmir, in the neighboring
plains of Jammu, the Dogras were keenly
interested in events in the valley.
When Ranjit
Singh died, Gulab Singh had been his protege
for thirty years; aged forty-seven, he was
well-placed to control events not only in
the heart of the Sikh empire in Lahore but
also in Kashmir. Until the death of Ranjit
Singh, the East India Company had maintained
cordial relations with the Sikhs; they in
turn did not with to upset the British.
After his death, the relationship soon fell
apart.
KASHMIR FOR SALE 1846
As relations
deteriorated between the British and the
Sikh prior to the outbreak of war in 1845,
Gulab Singh played an important role, which
ultimately helped to further his own
territorial ambitions, enabling him to
become a maharaja in his own right. As the
chief architect of the Treaty of Amritsar
and the decision to sell Kashmir to Gulab
Singh, Henry Hardinge came under strong
criticism for his role. The British signed
the Treaty of Amritsar with Gulab Singh in
1846. Article I stated that:
"The British
Government transfers and makes over for ever
in independent possession to Maharaja Gulab
Singh and the heirs male of his body all the
hilly or mountainous country with its
dependencies situated to the eastward of the
River Ravi, including Chamba and excluding
Lahul, being part of territories ceded to
the British government by the Lahore State
according to the provision of the Article IV
of the Treaty of Lahore, dated 9 March
1846." Gulab Singh was to pay the exact sum
in lieu of which the British had taken
possession of Kashmir one week earlier: one
crore of rupees towards the indemnity.
Twenty-five lakhs were later waived in
consideration of the British being allowed
to retain the area of Kulu and Mandi across
the river Beas. Gulab Singh's biographer,
K.M Panikhar argues against the transaction
being a sale. "The view that Kashmir was
sold for a paltry sum by a Government whose
main interest was to fill its coffers is a
travesty of facts and misreading of
history". But neither Panikhar nor any other
apologist for Gulab Singh could deny that
money was exchanged in return for land and
people and that, 150 years later, the
transaction still causes deep resentment.
'Each one of us was purchased by the Dogra
ruler for 3 rupees', said Mian Abdul Qayum,
President of Srinagar's Bar Association in
1994. Furthermore, there was no consultation
with the people of Kashmir. Britain was,
however becoming a paramount power in the
sub-continent and all relationships were
based on what was perceived to be in the
best interests of the new imperialists. The
sale of the valley of Kashmir and its
incorporation into a princely state is also
considered to have had an adverse effect on
its future development. In 1925, the Muslim
Outlook newspaper commented that but for the
'ineffable folly' of the British; 'Kashmir
would have been part of the Punjab. More
significantly, had Kashmir been annexed by
Britain and become part of the British India
when the sub-continent became independent
from British rule in 1947, according to the
principle of the partition it could have
been divided along communal lines and the
predominantly Muslim valley would
undoubtedly have been allocated to Pakistan.
After ten years as mahjaraja, Gulab Singh's
health began to fail. In order to smooth the
succession he asked the governor-general to
install his third son. Ranbir Singh, as
maharaja on 8 February 1856. Although Gulab
Singh had formally abdicated, he became
governor of the province and retained full
sovereignty until his death on 7 August
1857. The state of Jammu and Kashmir, under
the joint leadership of the ailing Gulab
Singh and his son, Ranbir, responded
favorably to British appeals for help.
AN ENGLISH FORTRESS
In 1882 Ranbir
Singh had considered nominating his youngest
son, Amar Singh, as his successor as he was
'wiser' than his brothers Pratap or Ram. But
the British did not agree. Although the
maharaja repeated his request in 1884, the
British chose to let Pratap Singh accede to
the throne when Ranbir died in September
1885. The new maharaja "was a story book
Indian Prince, writes Patrick French
'vacillating and oppressive, bedecked in
silk pyjamas, pearls and a diamond-encrusted
turban'. He was also addicted to opium. The
views expressed by St. John after four
months resident, the maharaja was unfit to
rule, persisted throughout his long reign.
On 1 April 1889 the maharaja was divested of
all but nominal powers. Indian contemporary
belief was that the maharaja had been
deposed because of British designs and that
the allegation of maladministration was
merely an excuse to take over control of the
state. As the popularity of Kashmir grew, so
did the number of houseboats. "The British,
who came to Kashmir to escape the scorching
heat, taught us how to finish a houseboat,
how to make it a decorative e one with beds,
chairs, tables', says Chapra. A century
later, there were estimated to be 1,500
houseboats on Dal lake. It was also a
favored way of having some form of
accommodation. The houseboats also gave
Kashmir the reputation as a place for rest
and pleasure for foreign guests, around
which the social and economic fife of a
great number of the people revolved. Makers
of shawls, embroidery, carpets, papier mache
boxes all benefited from the presence of
officers, with their wives and children, who
arrived in the valley every summer to escape
the heat of the plains. The influx of
light-hearted holiday makers was in total
contrast to the harshness of the lives of
the local people, most of whom lives in
abject poverty. Only a small minority,
centered around the Dogra rulers, enjoyed
unparalleled affluence. Ever since his
deposition, Pratap Singh held his brother,
Amar Singh, responsible for all his
problems.
Other Indian
princes, however, were not happy with the
unprecedented British interference in
Kashmir. On account of the enmity between
Amar and the Maharaja, in 1907 Pratap Singh
decided to adopt a 'spiritual heir', the
second son of the Raja of Poonch. His
intention was evidently to prevent his
brother from inheriting the throne. Only
when Amar Singh died in 1909 did the long
feud between the brothers finally end. While
the Kashmiri Pandits began to benefit from
better education, the Muslims, although
numerically superior, remained excluded. As
Canon Tyndale Biscoe had noted when he came
to Srinagar in 1890 as headmaster of the
Church Missionary School" 'The Mohammendan
did not send their sons to school as all
Government service as closed to them. The
all India Muslim Kashmiri Conference, formed
in 1896 and supported by many Muslim
Kashmiri who had settled mainly in the
Punjab, was, however, beginning to support
the Kashmiri in the state, both morally and
financially, by offering scholarships for
them to study in British India. In 1905 the
Mir Waiz of Kashmir, the religious leader of
the Muslims of the Kashmir valley, founded
an association called the
Anjuman-i-Nusrat-ul-Islam which aimed at
improving the conditions of the Muslims,
especially in education. During the First
World War, the Indians from both British
India and the princely states had
demonstrated their loyalty to the British
Crown by their willing support of the war
effort. Throughout the war, Pratap Singh
placed all the forces of the state of Jammu
and Kashmir at the disposal of the British.
While the Indian people fought on behalf of
the British Empire overseas, within British
India, Indian political leaders were
exerting pressure to increase the pace of
change. 'Their minds were full of the ideas
of the onrushing tide of democracy in the
West'. They read with emotion about
political movements of Turkey, Ireland,
Egypt', writes Prem Nath Bazaz. "The spirit
of independence revived and with it came the
desire to turn out the outsiders and to
fight for the freedom of the motherland.
"Throughout the 1920s the honorary
secretary-general of the All India Muslim
Kashmiri Conference, Syed Mohsin Shah, a
Kashmiri lawyer, who had moved to Lahore in
the early 1920s, was constantly writing to
the resident, Sir John Wood, on behalf of
the Kashmri Muslims. Amongst those who also
gave vocal support to the Muslim was the
influential and widely respected poet,
Allama Sir Muhammad Iqbal. He first visited
Kashmir in 1921 and put to verse his
distress at the poverty of the people: In
the bitter chill of winter shivers his naked
body whose skill wraps the rich in royal
shawls. Leading Muslim newspapers in India
continued to point to the progress of the
Kashmiri Pandits at the expense of the
Muslims:'They till the land, feed the state,
fill its coffers, they are invariably sent
to the wall and the Kashmiri Pandit is
placed at the helm of affairs to rule them
with a rod of iron', stated the Muslim
outlook in 1923. In the Spring 1924 the
workers of the state-owned silk factory
demanded an increase in wages and the
transfer of a Hindu clerk whom the workers
alleged as extorting bribes. Established in
the late nineteenth century, the factory
employed about 5,000 workers, most of whom
were Muslims. Although the workers were
given a minimal wage increase, some of their
leaders were arrested, which led to a
strike. As later reported in a
representation to the viceroy, Lord Reading
: 'Military was sent for and most inhuman
treatment was meted out to the poor,
helpless, unarmed peace loving laborers who
were assaulted with spears, lances and other
implements of warfare'. The representation,
signed by the two chief religious leaders,
submitted to the viceroy, through Mohsin
Shah, also referred to other grievances: The
Mussulmans of Kashmir are in a miserable
plight today. Their education needs are
woefully neglected. Though forming 96 per
cent of the population, the percentage of
literacy amongst them is only 0.8 per cent.
So far we have patiently borne the State's
indifference towards out grievances and our
claims and it high-handiness towards our
rights, but patience has its limit and
resignation its end... the Hindus of the
State, forming merely 4 per cent of the
whole population are the undisputed masters
of all departments.
They also
complained about the closure of certain
mosques in Srinagar and the desecration of
the Khanqah Bulbul shah, which was claimed
by the Hindus to be a Hindu Shrine. Pratap
Singh died on 25 September 1925. Although
Hari Singh's accession was not contested,
the Government of India was at once alert to
the implications of a change of leadership
on British foreign Policy. The new maharaja
was to be allowed to return to the normal
relationship with the Government of India,
which any princely state enjoyed by treaty
obligations but at the same time, as the
sub-continent moved slowly towards self
government, the British were not prepared to
lose sight of the importance of Jammu and
Kashmir as a 'frontier state'.
THE MIRAGE OF INDEPENDENCE
In the 1930s,
as the Indian political leaders in British
India became involved in the struggle to
determine how they should become
self-governing, the people of the state of
Jammu and Kashmir began a campaign against
the autocracy of the new maharaja. When
Lieutenant-general His Highness Inder
Mahander Rajrajeshwar Maharajadhiraj Sir
Hari Singh succeeded to the throne, there
was cautious optimism that he would prove a
more effective ruler than his uncle. The
alienation of the Kashmiris from their new
ruler was heightened by the continuing
presence of 'outsiders' in government
service, which led to a movement known as
'Kashmir for the Kashmiris', sponsored by
the more educated Kashmiri Pandits. But, to
the annoyance of the Kashmiris the top
positions were invariably filled by people
from Jammu, especially the ruling class of
the Dogras Rajputs, who headed all the
departments of the state administration.
When the Pandits began to improve their
status in governments service, this caused
further aggravation amongst the Muslims.
Abdul Suharawardy was a young boy from the
rural districts, whose ambition in the 1930s
was to become a gazetted officer in the
Indian Civil Service. 'As I grew up I found
that the Muslims were the underdogs. The
Hindus were the privileged class because
they belonged to the religion of the
community of the ruler. Almost all the
government officials occupying almost all
the ranks from the lowest up to the highest
were occupied by Hindu'. The army was also
exclusively reserved for the Dogras. No
Muslim in the valley was allowed to carry a
firearm and the only Muslims who were
recruited into the army, normally under the
command of a Dogra officer, were the
Suddhans of Poonch and the Sandans from
Mirpur. Culturally and linguistically
distinct from the Kashmiris of the valley,
the maharaja believed he could depend on
them to suppress whatever trouble might
arise in the valley. The Lahore Muslim press
had been consistently highlighting the
condition of the Muslim Kashmiris and
newspapers critical of the maharaja were
sent into the state. At the same time, small
groups joined together to discuss their
complaints.
In 1929 Ghulam
Abbas, one of the comparatively few educated
Muslims from Jammu who had obtained a law
degree in Lahore, reorganized the
Anjuman-i-Islamia into the young men's
Muslim Association of Jammu, for the
betterment of Muslims. He also looked after
Muslim orphans and did social work. In
Srinagar the Reading Room party, comprising
a number of graduates from Aligarh
University, rose to prominence. Prem Nath
Bazaz, Ghulam Abbas, Muhammad yousuf Shah
were all active in discussing their
grievances. In 1931 Yusuf Shah succeeded his
uncle in Srinagar as Mirwaiz the spiritual
leader of Muslims. He used his position in
the mosque to organize a series of meetings,
which protested against the maharaja's
government. Kashmir was already like a
powder keg. The spark was provided by a
butler in the service of European, Abdul
Qadir, who made an impassioned fiery speech
calling for the people to fight against
oppression. When he was arrested, crowds
mobbed the jail, and several others were
also arrested. There was further protest
from the crowd at which point the police
fired at them. Twenty-one people died. Their
bodies were carried in procession to the
centre of the town. In March 1940 the Muslim
League adopted the Lahore Resolution 'that
the areas in which the Muslims are
numerically in a majority, as in the
north-western and eastern zones of India,
should be grouped to constitute independent
states" in which the constituent units shall
be autonomous and sovereign. Although it was
not clear how such a proposal would be
formalised, the demand for a separate
homeland for the Muslims of the
sub-continent had its roots in an emergent
ideology, first proposed by a student,
Chaudhri Rahmat Ali in Cambridge in 1933 for
the Muslim living in Punjab, North-West
Frontier Province (Afghan Province) Kashmir,
Sind and Balochistan, to be recognised as a
distinct nation, 'Pakistan'. The inclusion
of predominantly Muslim Kashmir was,
however, an early indication that there was
already a body of opinion which believed
that the princely state should become part
of Pakistan, if and when it could be
achieved. When alternative avenues for a
federation of British India and the princely
states had been exhausted, and partition of
the sub-continent took place, this opinion
held fast. Jawaharlal Nehru and the Congress
party had defined their position on the
Indian states in August 1935: "The Indian
National Congress recognises that the people
in the Indian states have an inherent right
of Swaraj (independence) no less than the
people of British Indian. it has accordingly
declared itself in favour of establishment
of representative responsible government in
the States'. Jinnah leader of All India
Muslim League was not unconcerned by events
within Kashmir. In 1943 he wrote to the
viceroy, Lord Linlithgow, stating that he
understood that the present situation in
Kashmir was intolerable and that it would
remain so "unless some responsible
independent and impartial head of the
Administration takes charge". Jinnah's last
visit to the state of Jammu and Kashmir took
place in May 1944. When the frail but
imperial figure of the leader passed through
their rows, writes Muhammad Saraf, who
became a keen supporter of the movement for
Pakistan, 'thousand of men and women were
unable to control themselves as his very
sight stirred up deep emotions resulting in
tears trickling down their eyes. Many
actually wept under the sheer weight of
joy'. Jinnah was described as 'a beloved
leader of the Muslims of India'.
STANDSTILL IN 1947
By 1947 the
independence of the sub-continent was
assured. On 3 June the British government
finally published a plan for the partition
of the sub-continent. On 18 July the Indian
Independence Act was passed, stating that
independence would be effected on an earlier
date than previously anticipated : 15 August
1947.
The state of
Jammu and Kashmir had unique features not
shared by the princely states. Ruled by a
Hindu, with its large Muslim majority it was
geographically contiguous to both India and
the future Pakistan. Although Jawaharlal
Nehru's family had emigrated from the valley
at the beginning of the eighteenth century,
he had retained an emotional attachment to
the land of his ancestors. Despite the
assurances given by Mountbatten to Hari
Singh that the Congress leaders would not
regard it as 'an unfriendly act', if, given
the Muslim majority population, he
eventually acceded to Pakistan, it is clear
that Nehru in particular had strong reasons
for wanting the state of Jammu and Kashmir
to accede to India. When, at the end of
July, Mountbatten heard that Nehru was once
more planning to go to Kashmir he was not
pleased. As Nehru persisted in atttempting
to visit Kashmir, Mountbatten continued to
try and dissuade him. He noted that both the
maharaja and his prime minister, Ram Chandra
Kak, 'hate Nehru with a bitter hatred and I
had visions of the maharaja declaring
adherence to Pakistan just before Nehru
arrived'. Mountbatten had also heard how,
during a meeting with Patel, 'Nehru had
broken down and wept, explaining that
Kashmir meant more to him at the time than
anything else'. The sub-continent was in the
midst of a deep communal and political
crisis. Yet both Nehru and Gandhi had
insisted on visiting Kashmir. Ghandhi
finally left for Srinagar on 1 August.
Muhammad Saraf was amongst those who
protested at his arrival in Baramula. Even
some glass panes of his car were broken by
the demonstrators.
The Partition
plan of 3 June 1947, established under the
Indian Independence Act, envisaged two
Boundary Commissions, consisting of four
high court judges. The chairman was to hold
the casting vote. The man entrusted with
that post was a British lawyer, Sir Cyril
Radcliffe, who arrived in India for the
first time on 8 July 1947.
The objective
of what came to be known as the Radcliffe
award as to divide the provinces of Punjab
in the west and Bengal in the east, leaving
Muslim majority areas in Pakistan and those
with Hindu morjorities in India. Of the main
routes by which Kashmir could be reached,
two roads passed through areas which could
expected to be allocated to Pakistan: the
first via Rawalpindi, Murree, Muzaffarabad,
Baramula and thence to Srinagar. The other
route went via Sialkot, Jammu and the
Banihal pass. A third route, which was no
more than a dirt track existed via the
district of Guardaspur, which comprised the
four tehsils of Shakargarh, Batala,
Gurdaspur and Pathankot. From Pathankot the
route carried on to Madophur, across the
Ravi river to Kathua in the state of Jammu
and Kashmir. Under the 'national' award
provided in the first Schedule of the Indian
Independence Act, all of the Gurdaspur
district, with a 51.14 per cent Muslim
majority had been assigned to Pakistan,
which meant that all these routes would have
fallen under the control of Pakistan. At
this press conference on 4 June, in answer
to a question regarding provisional and
final demarcations, Mountbatten, however,
suggested that the boundary Commission would
be unlikely to throw the whole of the
Gurdaspur district into the Muslim majority
areas. Subsequently, the revised Mountbatten
plan referred to the basis for partition by
area rather than by district. The future
Pakistanis soon became concerned by the
prospect of a departure from the 'national'
award giving all of Gurdaspur district to
Pakistan to one where part of Gurdaspur
would be allocated to India. In the final
award the three tehsils of Batala, Gurdaspur
and Pathankot went to India. A memorandum
prepared by the minister of state, which
included Radcliffe's observations after he
returned to England, reported that the
reason for changing the 'national' award
regarding Gurdaspur was because 'the
headwaters of the canals which irrigate the
Amritsar District lie in the Gurdaspur
District and it is important to keep as much
as possible of these canals under one (i;e
Indian) administration. Fact that much of
Lahore district is irrigated from upper Bari
Doab canal with head works in Gurdaspur
district is awkward but there is no solution
that avoids all such difficulties.
The suspicions
created in the minds of the Pakistanis by
the award of three tehsils of Gurdaspur to
India were compounded by the issue of the
'salient' of the Ferozepur and Zira tehsils.
In the map of the Radcliffe award, the
salient, which protruded beyond the notional
boundary into the Sikh heart land, was
marked as part of Pakistan. It is very
strange that other factors should have
worked consistently in favour of India and
against Pakistan', commented Chaudhri
Muhammad Ali. The departure from the
'notional' award to Radcliffe's division of
Gurdaspur between the two Dominions has
created considerable bitterness not only
because of the loss of territory, but
because of the growing realisation that
India was thereby assured of access to the
state of Jammu and Kashmir. Although the
future of the princely states was a separate
issue from the division of the Punjab and
Bengal, for which purpose the Boundary
Commission was instituted, Mountbatten
himself had made the connection between
Jammu and Kashmir and the award of the
Boundary Commission. Kashmir, he said, 'was
so placed geographically that it could join
either Dominion'. 'Had the whole of
Gurdaspur District been awarded to
Pakistan', according to Lord Birdwood,
'India could certainly never have fought a
war in Kashmir.' The Indian journalist, M.
J. Akbar, interprets the award as a single
piece of political expediency on the part of
Nehru. And so, during private meetings, he
persuaded Mountbatten to leave this
Gurdaspur link in Indian hands. But in view
of Inadequate explanations and selective
secrecy surrounding the Radcliffe award, the
belief amongst Pakistanis that there was a
conspiracy between Mountbatten and Nehru to
deprive Pakistan of Gurdaspur has held fast.
"The object of grabbing Kashmir was to
encircle Pakistan militarily and strangle it
economically, ' writes Suhrawardy. In the
state of Jammu and Kashmir there were
staunch Muslim League supporters who
believed they would become part of Pakistan
at independence and when freedom came at
midnight on 14 august they rejoiced.
The Pakistani
flag was hoisted on most of the post offices
until the government of the maharaja ordered
that they should be taken down. All
pro-Pakistani newspapers were closed.
Muhammad Saraf was in Baramula, where the
flag remained flying until dusk: 'It was a
spectacle to watch streams of people from
all directions in the town and its suburbs
swarming towards the Post office in order to
have a glimpse of the flag of their hopes
and dreams. Those whose hopes were dashed at
not becoming part of Pakistan set in train a
sequence of events which was rooted in their
past disappeared. In the weeks following
independence, despite Maharaja Harisingh's,
signature of the standstill agreement with
Pakistan, political manoeuvreing was taking
place on all sides. Prime Minister Nehru and
Sardar Patel, who had become minister for
Home Affairs, corresponded regularly in
order to determine how Kashmir could be
secured for India. 'One of the most
interesting revelations of the Patel papers
when they began to be published in 1971',
writes Alastair Lamb 'was the extent to
which this powerful congress politician had
directly involved himself in all planning
directed towards an eventual Indian
acquisition of the State of Jammu and
Kashmir. Clear steps were being taken to
improve communications with India, by
telegraph, telephone, wireless and roads. In
Pakistan it was widely believed that India
was preparing to announce Kashmir's
accession to India in the autumn. The
Pakistani government alleged that India had
violated the standstill agreement, because
they had included Kashmir within the Indian
postal system. As evidence, they produced a
memorandum, dated 1 September 1947, signed
by the director general of Postal Telegraph,
New Delhi, in which towns in the State of
Jammu and Kashmir were listed as part of
India.
ENTER THE UNO
Lord
Mountbatten's belief, and that of the
British government, that the UN would be
able to perform some useful role in
resolving the Kashmir dispute made it one of
the first major issues with which the newly
founded world body was to deal. Mountbatten
had first suggested the use of the UN during
his 1 November 1947 meeting with Mohammad
Ali Jinnah in Lahore. Prime Minister Liaquat
Ali Khan had agreed to refer the dispute to
the UN In January 1948 the Kashmir issue was
debated in the Security Council of the
United Nations with representations from the
Indian and Pakistani delegates. Much to the
annoyance of the Indians, Sir Zafrullah
Khan, Pakistani's Foreign Minister, made a
bold speech lasting five hours in favour of
Pakistan's position and against the
continuing rule of the Dogras over the
Kashmiris: 'What is not fully known is the
depths of misery to which they have been
reduced by a century of unmitigated tyranny
and oppression under Dogra rule until it is
difficult to day which is the greater
tragedy to a Kashmiri: 'his life or his
death'.
On 20 January,
the Security Council passed a resolution
which established a commission, to be known
as the United Nations Commission for India
and Pakistan (UNCIP), to investigate the
facts the dispute and carry out 'any
mediatory influence likely to smooth away
difficulties. The government of India was
requested to reduce its forces to the
minimum strength, after which the
circumstances for holding a plebiscite
should be put into effect' on the question
of the accession of the State to India or
Pakistan'. A further resolution on 13 August
1948 adopted unanimously by UNCIP outlined
arrangements for the cessation of
hostilities and once more restated that a
final decision on the future status of the
Jammu and Kashmir 'shall be determined in
accordance with the will of the people'.
On 5 January
1949, UNCIP once more affirmed that, when
the truce agreement had been signed, the
question of the accession of the State of
Jammu and Kashmir to India or Pakistan would
be decided through 'the democratic method of
a free and impartial plebiscite'. The roots
of the Kashmir dispute are deep', concluded
the third and final report of UNICP, which
made three visits to the sub-continent
between 1948 and 1949. Then as now, the
Indian government considered itself to be in
legal possession of the state of Jammu and
Kashmir by virtue of the Instrument of
Accession of October 1947 signed by the
Maharaja and the then Governor - General,
Lord Mountbatten. This basic premise
constituted the legality of India's presence
in the state and of her control over it.
India maintained that her armies were in
Kashmir as a matter of right; her control of
the defence, communications and external
affairs of the state was as a direct
consequence of the act of accession. The
Pakistani position was based on the
contention that the accession of the state
of Jammu and Kashmir to India was illegal
and, therefore, there was no basis
whatsoever for India's contention that the
legality of the accession was 'in fact and
law beyond question'. Pakistan maintained
that the Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir had
no authority left to execute and Instrument
of Accession on 26 October 1947 because the
people had successfully revolted, had
overthrown his government and had compelled
him to flee from Srinagar, the capital. The
act of accession was brought about by
violence and fraud and as such it was
invalid from the beginning, the maharaja's
offer of accession was accepted by the
Governor-General of India, Lord Mountbatten,
on the condition that as soon as law and
order had been restored, the question of the
accession of the state would be decided by a
reference to the people. Pakistan also
believed that the Azad movement was
indigenous and spontaneous, as a result of
repression misrule by the maharaja's
government.
SPECIAL STATUS
Lord
Mountbatten's belief, and that of the
British government, that the UN would be
able to perform some useful role in
resolving the Kashmir dispute made it one of
the first major issues with which the newly
founded world body was to deal. Mountbatten
had first suggested the use of the UN during
his 1 November 1947 meeting with Mohammad
Ali Jinnah in Lahore. Prime Minister Liaquat
Ali Khan had agreed to refer the dispute to
the UN. In January 1948 the Kashmir issue
was debated in the Security Council of the
United Nations with representations from the
Indian and Pakistani delegates. Much to the
annoyance of the Indians, Sir Zafrullah
Khan, Pakistan's Foreign Minister, made a
bold speech lasting five hours in favour of
Pakistan's position and against the
continuing rule of the Dogras over the
Kashmiris: 'What is not fully known is the
depths of misery to which they have been
reduced by a century of unmitigated tyranny
and oppression under Dogra rule until it is
difficult to say which is the greater
tragedy to a Kashmiri: 'his life or his
death'. On 20 January, the Security Council
passed a resolution which established a
commission, to be known as the United
Nations Commission for India and Pakistan (UNCIP),
to investigate the facts of the dispute and
carry out 'any mediatory influence likely to
smooth away difficulties. The Government of
India was requested to reduce its forces to
the minimum strength, after which the
circumstances for holding a plebiscite
should be put into effect 'on the question
of the accession of the State to India or
Pakistan'. A further resolution on 13 August
1948 adopted unanimously by UNCIP outlined
arrangements for the cessation of
hostilities and once more restated that a
final decision on the future status of the
Jammu and Kashmir 'shall be determined in
accordance with the will of the people'. On
5 January 1949, UNCIP once more affirmed
that, when the truce agreement had been
signed, the question of the accession of the
State of Jammu and Kashmir to India or
Pakistan would be decided through 'the
democratic method of a free and impartial
plebiscite'. 'The roots of the Kashmir
dispute are deep', concluded the third and
final report of UNICP, which made three
visits to the sub-continent between 1948 and
1949. Then as now, the Indian government
considered itself to be in legal possession
of the state of Jammu and Kashmir by virtue
of the Instrument of Accession of October
1947 signed by the Maharaja and the then
Governor - General, Lord Mountbatten. This
basic premise constituted the legality of
India's presence in the state and of her
control over it. India maintained that her
armies were in Kashmir as a matter of right;
her control of the defence, communications
and external affairs of the state was as a
direct consequence of the act of accession.
The Pakistani position was based on the
contention that the accession of the state
of Jammu and Kashmir to India was illegal
and, therefore, there was no basis
whatsoever for India's contention that the
legality of the accession was 'in fact and
law beyond question'. Pakistan maintained
that the Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir had
no authority left to execute an Instrument
of Accession on 26 October 1947 because the
people had successfully revolted, had
overthrown his government and had compelled
him to flee from Srinagar, the capital. The
act of accession was brought about by
violence and fraud and as such it was
invalid from the beginning, the maharaja's
offer of accession was accepted by the
governor - general of India, Lord
Mountbatten, on the condition that as soon
as law and order had been restored, the
question of the accession of the state would
be decided by a reference to the people.
Pakistan also believed that the Azad
movement was indigenous and spontaneous, as
result of repression misrule by the
maharaja's government.
The instrument
of Accession, which was not granted to other
former princely states. Legally, India's
jurisdiction only extended to external
affairs, defence and communications. It was
anticipated that the accession would be
confirmed by reference to the people, under
the auspices of the United Nations. In the
year to come, the Indian government sought
to integrate within the framework of India,
what it controlled of the original princely
state of Jammu and Kashmir. The will of the
people, however, was never ascertained in
such a manner as to make them feel that the
issue was finalised. The history of what
happened to the state's 'special status'
partially explains events in the present
day. In less than two years after signing
the Instrument of Accession, in which Hari
Singh had asserted that he would continue to
enjoy ' the exercise of any powers,
authority and rights now enjoyed by me as
Ruler of this State', he was obliged to
relinquish control. He died in Bombay in
1962. First as regent, then as
Sadar-i-Riyasat, his son Karan Singh
remained involved in Kashmiri affairs. But
the Dogras dynasty, founded by Hari Singh's
great grandfather a century earlier, was
gone. The Security Council once again
discussed Kashmir, and once more observed
that India and Pakistan had accepted the
resolutions of 13 August 1948 and 5 January
1949, affirming that the future of the state
of Jammu and Kashmir was to be decided
through 'the democratic method of a free and
impartial plebiscite. Pakistan accepted this
recommendation , but Nehru responded by
stating that he would not permit the fate of
four million people to be decided by a third
person. Even though the United Nations had
failed to ensure that the plebiscite was
held, the idea in principle of a referendum
to ascertain the wishes of the people was
handed down to a new generation of Kashmiris.
That the plebiscite was agreed upon the
world body, such as the United Nations,
meant that those Kashmiris who were opposed
to union with India came to expect
international support for what they
perceived to be their right of self
determination.
DIPLOMACY AND WAR
Throughout the
1960s the Kashmir issue continued to cause
concern at an international level. After six
rounds of talks between India and Pakistan
which were held intermittently until May
1963, a joint communiqué was issued which
stated with regret that no agreement could
be reached on a settlement of the Kashmir
dispute. In October 1963 the Government of
Pakistan once more refereed the question of
Kashmir to the Security Council and, in the
Spring of 1964, the issue was debated for
the 110th time in fifteen years. On his way
to New York, Pakistan Foreign Minister
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto announced that Pakistan
was prepared to discuss the issue a thousand
times in order to see that it was settled
'in an honourable manner'. But, in view of
the Soviet Veto, there was little the United
Nations could do. The president of the
Security Council expressed the concern of
all the members for reestablishing of good
relations between India and Pakistan "whose
present disputes, particularly that
centering upon Jammu and Kashmir, should be
settled amicably in the interest of world
peace'. The mysterious theft of the holy
relic from Hazratbal which occurred in 1963
demonstrated the intense Islamic feeling
amongst the Muslims of the valley. There was
evidence of the beginnings of political
dissent amongst the younger Kashmiris, which
meant the movement for plebiscite and
self-determination would be carried on to
the next generation. 'The greatest headache
of the politically alert sections of my
generation was how to get the new generation
- our children - involved in the struggle
for the State's accession to Pakistan',
writes Muhammad Saraf. Most were young
children, some not even born in 1947, and
many of their politically active parents,
like Ghulam Abbas, Muhammad Saraf, and
others had opted for Pakistan. However, when
selig harrison toured Kashmir, he reported
that he found the people were solidly
hostile to Indian rule and that it was only
the presence of twelve Indian army brigades
which kept the movement for self -
determination contained. In the late 1960s
fires in Muslim areas left many Muslim
families homeless; activists hostile to the
Indian government regard the occurrence of
these fires with suspicion as part of a plan
to make Kashmir into a majority Hindu state.
Ever sensitive of the incursion of outsiders
into the state, they objected to
'citizenship' certificates being awarded to
non-Muslims who had settled in the valley.
Algiers's successful struggle against France
and the Vietnamese resistance against the
United States were beginning, however, to
show the Kashmiri nationalists that there
might, after all, be a way to change the
status quo. Maqbool Butt, a Kashmiri freedom
fighter and another activist were sentenced
to death by New Delhi in September 1968,
but, before the sentence was carried out,
they escaped from the jail. 'It created a
sensation and electrified the people who
rejoiced on their brilliant escape', writes
Saraf. 'Can there be any better proof of
Kashmiris innate hatred against India than
the fact that for one month (these two
leaders) were sheltered, transported and
guided by their people"? With the passage of
time, the Indian government was able "to
make laws relating to the prevention of
activities directed towards disclaiming,
questioning or disrupting the sovereignty
and territorial integrity of India or
bringing about secession of part of the
territory of India". This effectively gave
India control in the areas which mattered
most. Commentators at the time believed that
the issue of plebiscite and
self-determination could now be laid to
rest. From an Indian standpoint, the
movement for self-determination virtually
came to an end with the 1975 accord between
the Kashmiri leader Sheikh Abdullah and
Indian Prime Minister Indra Gandhi. Pakistan
was less than happy with the accord. Tension
had once more increased between India and
Pakistan after India's first nuclear
explosion in May 1974. Thus when the accord
was announced it was termed a 'self-out' and
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto also stated that the
accord had ciliated the terms of Simla
agreement that he had signed with India and
the UN requirements for a plebiscite. With
in the state of Jammu and Kashmir, Mirwaiz
Maulvi Farooq believed that the accord had
subverted Kashmiris' right of
self-determination. Opposition to the Accord
among Kashmiris was widespread. "Our
education taught us that the accord is not
the resolution of the Kashmir dispute" said
a Kashmiri journalist, who was editing a
daily newspaper in Srinagar in 1975. "Our
youth awoke and realized that we can't any
longer be the slaves of India'. 'We Muslims
feel we have been deprived of something',
said Ali, a carpet dealer, in 1981. "We
haven't allowed to join India or Pakistan of
our own free will. Rather we have been
forced to be with India".
AN EXPLOSIVE SITUATION
The decade of
the 1980s began peacefully for the valley of
a Kashmir. Under the surface, however,
disaffection as present. Sheikh Abdullah who
now headed the government in Jammu and
Kashmir was not popular in Jammu or in
Laddakh and the Islamic groups, which had
opposed the accord. As the Sheikh's health
began to fail he settled the succession on
his son, Farooq in 1981. A new era of
violence began. Farooq Abdullah, unlike his
father, had not been schooled in the
politics of the freedom movement. He had
spent most of his adult like in Britain,
where he had tainted as a doctor. On 21
August 1981 in a ceremony which stunned the
people, who had assembled in Iqbal Park in
Srinagar, Sheikh Abdullah appointed his
untested progeny as president of the
National Conference. Although Sheikh
Abdullah was able to hand over the office,
he could no pass on the experience to his
son. As subsequent events were to show,
Farooq's rise to power came too easily. "In
happier times', writes Ajit Bhattachrjea "Farooq
Abdullah could have proved an ideal leader
for Kashmir. Tall, handsome, engaging, and
forthright, he attracted crowds easily,
making them believe that he would lead them
out of the uncertainty, intrigue and
corruption that darkened the last days of
his father'. but he was also impulsive,
gullible, easygoing and a novice in
administration and politics'. 'He liked the
attention, the fun that went with power, and
he liked the atmosphere of a feudal court
that surrounded his father, says Tavleen
Singh. 'He was also both surprised and
delighted by the adulation of the people and
the society hostesses in Delhi'. Famed as
the 'disco' chief minister, who enjoyed
riding around Srinagar on his motor bicycle.
Abdullah also played into Mrs. Gandhi's hand
instead of confining himself to the politics
of Jammu and Kashmir. At the beginning of
June, Mr. Gandhi's operation Blue Star in
the Punjab was put into action with the
storming of Golden Temple against the Sikh
extremists of the Akali Dal led b Sant
Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale. in the
aftermath, Punjab was in turmoil. Yet with
supreme confidence the plan for Farooq's
dismissal was put into action. Soon after
Blue Star, Gandhi visited Ladakh. On her
return she summoned several newspaper
editors, including Inder Malahotra. 'She
made no secret of her conviction that
Farooq's continuance as chief minister of
Kashmir was bad for the state and the
country. On the national stage, because of
his meeting earlier in the year with
Bhindranwale, Farooq was charged with
secretly supporting the Sikh separatists and
of permitting them to train in the state of
Jammu and Kashmir. With the weight of Delhi
now behind Abdullah's brother-in-law, G.M
Shah, the latter was appointed chief
minister. The fact that the prime minister
of India was willing and able to set
Abdullah aside for what essentially were
personal reasons demonstrated the lack of
regard she and the government of Delhi had
for Kashmir's so-called special status.
Shah's government was unpopular form the
outset. Under his chief ministership, the
government sank 'to the lowest depths of
corruption and capriciousness'. Why then did
Mrs. Gandhi allow him to be installed? 'The
more one explores this question the more
convinced one is that she was virtually
blinded by her intense dislike of Farooq'.
As Malhotra writes, 'According to Arun
Nehru, a cousin of Rajiv Gandhi and member
of Mrs. Gandhi's kitchen cabinet','Indira
puphi (aunt) asked us to get rid of Farooq
at all costs and we did'. Mrs. Gandhi's
assassination in October 1984 by her Sikh
bodyguards in revenge for Operation Bluestar
removed the architect of Farooq's dismissal.
But the memory of betrayal remained. No
amount of self-justification by Delhi could
hide the fact that Farooq Abdullah's
drawingroom dismissal merely confirmed what
Kashmiris had long suspected: that despite
their 'special status', no one could remain
in power in Srinagar if they did not have
the support of Delhi. This lesson was not
lost on Farooq Abdullah. When he returned to
power following the 1987 elections believed
to be massively ragged, it was as the head
of a Conference-Congress alliance. Rajiv
Gandhi, who became Prime Minister after his
mother's assassination, made it a policy to
attempt to accommodate regional forces, not
only in Kashmir, but also in the Punjab and
Assam. Despite the role he may have played
in Farooq's dismissal, their personal
relationship was better than that between
Farooq and Mrs. Gandhi. After less than two
years in office, G.M. Shah was dismissed on
7 March 1986 in the wake of severe communal
riots which the state government had been
unable to control. The army was called out
and indefinite curfew was imposed, which
gave G.M. Shah the name 'Gul-e-Curfew' (the
Curfew flower). Muslims, however, found that
they were being excluded from key jobs and
that there was a general onslaught on Muslim
culture and identity, both through the
educational curriculum and socially. The
Muslim political parties had called for
peaceful strikes (hartals) in the valley to
challenge the power of Delhi. Many were
arrested. Azam Inquilabi, general secretary
of the Mahaz-i-Azadi (independence Front)
was detained in 1985 and his services as a
teacher were terminated for his alleged
involvement in 'subversive' activities.
Shabir Ahmad Shah, another prominent
Kashmiri leader was also arrested. A veteran
activist who had begun his political career
in 1968 at the age of fourteen, when he was
arrested for publicly demanding the right of
self-determination. After six months of
discussion in November 1986, Rajiv
reappointed Farooq Abdullah as chief
minister in an interim National
Conference-Congress coalition government,
but Abdullah was already beginning to pay
the price for bowing to Delhi. 'Overnight,
Farooq was transformed from hero to traitor
in the Kashmiri mind,' writes Tavleen Singh.
'Propel could not understand how a man who
had been treated the way he had by Delhi,
and especially by the Gandhi family, could
now be crawling to them for accords and
alliances'. Amongst those who entered the
political vacuum were the collection of
political parties which had organised
themselves in September 1986 to form the
Muslim United Front to contest the election.
MUF's election manifesto stressed the need
for a solution to all outstanding issues
according to the Simla agreement. It also
assured the voters that it would work for
Islamic unity and against political
interference from the center. Before the
election, several MUF leaders were arrested
as well as number of election agents. There
were widespread charges of rigging. 'Votes
were cast in favour of the Muslim United
Front, but the results were declared in
favour of the National Conference. The
people of Kashmir got disgusted and
disappointed and disillusioned. Educated but
unemployed, their grievances were fueled by
events both within and outside the valley.
They were also the ones who considered
themselves economically deprived because
they were neither part of the bureaucracy
nor the elite. In May 1987 the first major
act of violence was perpetrated against
Farooq Abdullah when his motorcade was
attacked on the way to the mosque. Farooq
Abdullah's domestic standing was further
diminished by his attempt to locate some of
the government departments permanently. His
suggestion caused an outburst in Jammu,
where the people went on strike in protest.
Throughout 1988 there were continuing
disturbances against Abdullah's government
which disrupted daily life. In June, there
were demonstrations in Srinagar against he
sudden rise in the cost of electricity. The
price increase annoyed people because
supplies of electricity were at best
erratic, but the government's response was
unsympathetic. Anti-Indian feeling within
the valley was mirrored by a surge of
support for Pakistan. On 11 April 1988,
young Muslims in Srinagar had forced
shopkeepers to keep their shops shut in
sympathy with all those who had been killed
in an ammunition dump at Ojhri in Pakistan.
Mirwaiz Maulvi Farooq sent a condolence
telegram to General Zia for the loss of
life. Prayers were said in the Jammu mosque.
A mourning procession was taken out in the
streets of Srinagar which raised
pro-Pakistan slogans, burnt buses and
clashed with the police. As India prepared
to celebrate forty-one years of
independence, anti-India slogans were raised
in the valley. Pro-Pakistani supporters
celebrated Pakistan's independence day on 14
August, but India's independence on 15
August was called a 'black day'. Two days
later, on 17 August, General Zia-ul-Haq was
killed in a plane crash at Bahawalpur in
Pakistan. His death was mourned in the
valley, which led to disturbances. Eight
people were reported to have been shot dead
and at least thirteen wounded. On 27 October
- the anniversary of India's airlift into
Srinagar in 1947 - there was a complete
strike on what the protesters were now
calling 'occupation Day'. As the decade of
the 1980s drew to a close, the valley of
Kashmir reflected an explosive situation'.
CLOSURE OF THE VALE 1990
Every youth in
Kashmir came to be regarded as a potential
militant. Reports of Human rights abuses
began to hit the headlines world-wide.
Stories emerged of torture, rape and
indiscriminate killing. A strike was called
for India's Republic Day on 26 January. It
was the first of many hartals in 1989, which
took up one-third of the year's working
days. The fifth anniversary of Maqbool
Butt's execution on 11 February was the
occasion for another strike. Two days later
there was a massive anti-Indian
demonstration against Salman Rushdie's
Satanic Verses, which lasted nearly a week,
even though the government had banned the
book. The whole of Srinagar went on strike.
When five people were reportedly killed in
police firing the strike spread to other
towns in the valley. There was a blackout on
14 November, Nehru's birthday, and on 5
December, Sheikh Abdullah's birthday. Too
many Kashmiri youth were unemployed; a
problem which Farooq understood but could
not remedy. 'bright students could not get
admission into colleges in the 1980s unless
they paid bribes to politicians', stated a
lecturer at the university of Kashmir. This
led to a loss of faith in the system and
eventually the revolt. We kept struggling
for a peaceful resolution of the dispute,
but failed', said Inquilabi, 'so this young
generation has opted for active resistance
and it has gained momentum and it will
continue to gain momentum come what may'. On
the night of 19 January in intensive
house-to-house search was carried out in an
area where militants were believed to be
hiding. Three hundred people were arrested,
most of whom were later released. The
reaction from the people was unprecedented.
'The whole city was out. I was sleeping - it
was midnight. I heard people on the road
shouting pro-Pakistani slogans and Islamic
slogans - 'Allah o Akbar', 'What do we want?
We want freedom!" recalls Haseeb, a Kashmiri
medical student. The next day, as Jagmohan
was sworn in as governor with the promise
that he would treat the state like a
'nursing orderly', a large demonstration
assembled in the streets of Srinagar to
protest against the search the night before.
In response, paramilitary troops gathered on
either side of the Gawakadal bridge over the
Jhelum river. When the unarmed crowd reached
the bridge it was fired on from both sides
of the river. The shooting has been called
the worst massacre in Kashmiri history. Over
a hundred people died, some from gunshot
wounds, others because, in fear, they jumped
into the river and drowned. Farooq Ahmad, a
mechanical engineer who was watching the
demonstration, was wounded. Presumed dead,
he was put into a lorry filled with bodies,
'I was fortunate, my back was hit by six
bullets... but my head was safe, I was
conscious also. I saw the bridge was
completely full of dead bodies... there was
chaos, people running here and there.
Whereas the Indian press played the incident
down, the foreign press reported the
massacre and its repercussions to the world.
'Thousands of Muslims, chanting "Indian dogs
go home", 'We want freedom', reported the
Daily Telegraph. As a result, foreign
correspondents were banned from the valley.
A curfew was imposed indefinitely. Several
other towns were put under curfew. In
defiance of what came to be called
'crackdown' by the authorities, the people
continued to come out on the streets: 'There
were loudspeakers in the mosques encouraging
people to come out. Everyday, all day people
were shouting slogans', recalls Haseeb. 'Azadi,
Azadi...Allah-o-Akbar - Freedom, Freedom,
God is Great' was broadcast from the
minarets. Even I was thinking within ten
days, India will have to vacate Kashmir.
Teachers, doctors, lawyers, civil servants,
students all came out on the streets in
protest. For the first time the Indian flag
was not hoisted to celebrate India's
Republic Day on 26 January, which was
observed as a 'black day'. Those journalists
already in Srinagar remained confined to
their hotel rooms; their curfew passes were
withdrawn. Restrictions on the press,
however, prevented genuine information from
getting through to the valley. With the
exception of foreign radio, the Kashmiris
were obliged to relay on press release
issued from Jagmohan's office in Raj Bhavan.
The same stories appeared in different
newspapers with the same content under
different by-lines. At the end of February
an estimated 400,000 Kashmiris marched on
the offices of the United Nations Military
Observer Group to hand in petitions
demanding the implementation of the UN
officials were obliged to point out that
their presence in the valley was only to
monitor the line of control. Nearly every
day a procession of lawyers, women,
teachers, doctors marched through the
streets of Srinagar. On 1 March more than
forty people were killed in police firing
when a massive crowd, estimated at one
million took to the streets. The continuing
curfew led to severe shortages of food,
medicines and other essential items. The
hospitals were becoming so full of the
victims of the insurgency that the name of
the Bone and Joint hospital in Srinagar was
changed to the hospital for bullet and bomb
blast injuries. In a mass exodus, at the
beginning of March 1990, about 140,000
Hindus left the valley for refugee camps
outside Jammu. The more affluent took up
residence in their second homes in Delhi,
but the vast majority were housed in squalid
tents in over fifty camps on the outskirts
of both Jammu and Delhi. Their story is as
familiar as any the world over. Used as
propaganda material by the Indian government
to demonstrate that Muslims were not the
only ones suffering during the insurgency.
There was and still is, however, a
widespread feeling that the departure of the
Hindus was not necessary and that Jagmohan,
who had a reputation for being anti-Muslim,
attempted to give the Kashmiri problem a
communal profile by facilitating their
departure in government transport. Two
eminent jurists, V.M. Tarkunde, now in his
eighties, and Rachinder Sachar, as well as
the educationalist, Amrik Singh, and balraj
Puri, toured Kashmir in March and April
1990. Parts of there report read: 'The fact
is that the whole Muslim population of the
Kashmir valley is wholly alienated from
India and due to the highly repressive
policy pursued by the administration in
recent months, especially since the advent
of Shri Jagmohan in January 1990, their
alienation has now turned into bitterness
and anger'. Mirwaiz Farooq Assumed the role
of respected elder, someone whom in the
present crisis, both the government and the
militants could approach. As chief preacher
at the Jamia Masjid in Srinagar, his
religious influence was considerable.
However, on 21 May 1990 he was shot dead at
his home. His teenage son, Omar, blamed
'those elements who were working against the
interests of the Kashmiri movement' for his
death. During his funeral procession as the
crowd passed Islamia College, where the 69th
battalion of the CRPF was quartered, some
officers opened fire. Officially, the
government acknowledged twenty seven dead,
but unofficial sources claimed as many as
100 died, possibly more. The Mirwaiz's
coffin was also pierced with bullets.
Outrage at the murder turned into hysteria
against the government. The valley under
Jagmohan became a closed war zone. When the
Punjab Human Rights Organisation
investigated Maulvi Farooq's death, they
described' a complete iron curtain'
separating the Kashmir valley from the
outside world. "The regime of the curfew is
all pervading. There are severe restrictions
on outsider Indians seeking to enter the
valley". Although Jagmohan's tenure as
Governor lasted less than five months,
during this period, the alienation of the
valley against the Indian government became
almost total. After Mirwaiz Farooq's death,
Jagmohan was replaced as governor by Girish
"Gary' Saxena. He had spend seventeen years
with the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW),
India's intelligence agency. Human Rights
organisation, although restricted in their
access, condemned the violations of human
rights in the valley. In 1991 Asia Watch
stated that the government forces 'have
systematically violated international human
rights law by using lethal force against
peaceful demonstrators. The Armed Forces
(Jammu and Kashmir) special Ordinance,
introduced in July 1990, provided the
security forces with extraordinary power to
shoot and kill, search and arrest without a
warrant, all under immunity from
prosecution. The security forces were
reported as going on 'a binge' of arson,
burning shops and houses in retaliation for
a recent ambush by the militants". In April
1990, David Housego filed from Malangam in
the Kashmir valley the following report:
'Indian security forces tied up and shot
seven men and boys, all members of the same
Kashmiri Muslim family in this remote
village at the weekend; in what seems to
have been a calculated act of brutality to
deter villagers from helping Kashmiri
separatists'. The apparently cold-blooded
reprisals by India's Border Security Force
BSF, against villagers they believed to be
shielding militants or weapons is further
evidence of breakdown in discipline among
Indian forces in Kashmir'. In June 1991,
Tony Allen-Mills reported how the
inhabitants of Kulgam were subjected to
indiscriminate firing in the streets in
reprisal for a rocket attack on BSF
barracks, when two soldiers were slightly
injured: Abdul Hamid Wazi, a baker's
assistant, saw soldiers poring gunpowder on
the outside walls of his house. They fired a
shot and set the place alight. The thatched
roof collapsed on him. Wazi jumped through
the flames, badly burning his leg and face.
by the time the soldiers' wrath was spent,
twenty-eight shops and two houses had been
torched, there were bullet holes in the
mosque and several women claimed to have
been raped. One of the most serious
allegation of excess which Governor Sexena
faced happened in the small town of kunan
Poshpura. In February 1991 there were
reports of fifty-three women being gangraped,
while the men were kept ousted in the
freezing cold or locked in houses and
interrogated. 'What happened in Kunan
Poshpura is seen as the greatest single
atrocity by security forces,' wrote
Christopher Thomas in the Times. The
soldiers were identified as members of the
4th Rajput rifles. Indian army ad
paramilitary were initially estimated to be
150,. The belief that 'half a million Indian
troops' were stationed in Kashmir became an
established fact in the opinion of all
opposition groups. Hindu communalism
remained a factor during this period. It
reached alarming proportions at the end of
December 1992 with the destruction by Hindu
extremists of the mosque at Ayodha in Uttar
Pradesh, Southnof Nepal. 'After Ayodha',
commented one Kashmiri activist, 'we did not
understand why the Muslims in India did not
do like us and ruse up against the Indian
government.' One of the towns to suffer most
at the hands of the security forces was
Sopore. On 6 January 1993, at least
forty-three people were killed and a whole
section of central Sopore was burnt to the
ground. It was considered to be the largest
reprisal attack by the security forces
during the insurgency. According to Asia
Watch, witnesses reported seeing the BSF
soldiers pour houses and shops. Witnesses
also stated that the BSF prevented fire
fighters from putting out the blaze. On 18
February 1993 Dr. Farooq Ashai, chief
orthopedic surgeon at the Bone and Joint
hospital in Central Srinagar, was killed
while returning home in his car with his
wife and daughter. A respected doctor, he
had acted as a spokesman for injured
civilians in Kashmir. His students later
erected a monument in his memory outside the
hospital. They commemorated their "beloved
teacher and humanist patriot who fell to the
bullets of security forces". In March
another renowned doctor, Dr. Abdul Ahad
Guru, a heart surgeon, was shot in Srinagar.
Once again there was an outcry but no
inquiry took place. During his funeral
procession, a large crowd assembled. 'There
were 5000 to 6,000 people but the BSF had
cordoned off the area to the Martyrs
graveyard and said that only a hundred
people will go', said a relative. In the
encounter which followed, the police opened
fire and Dr. Guru's brother-in-law, Ashiq
Hussain, one of the pallbearers, was shot in
the head and died instantly. "Although the
evidence does not indicate that the police
targeted Hussain, it is evident from the
testimony and photographs that they fired
directly into the crowd', stated Asia Watch.
Amnesty International was persistently
forbidden access to the troubled valley.
HEARTS AND MINDS
In October the
government set up the National Human Rights
Commission under the Protection of Human
Rights Act, 1993. But, according to Amnesty
International, Whose observers were still
not allowed into the valley, its efficacy
was reduced by the fact that it was not
empowered to enquire into complaints of
human rights violations by the army and
paramilitary forces. 'All it can do when
faced with complaints of this nature is to
call for official reports from the
government, effectively functioning as a
'post box' of official views. In October
1993 the mosque at Hazratbal once more
attracted international attention. by the
autumn, the Indian government decided to
take action. Azam Indquilabi, whose
Operation Balakote militants were also at
Hazratbal, said that the intention of the
Indian army was to destroy the mosque. They
wanted to humiliate the religious sentiments
of the Kashmiris, to the extent that, once
the shrine would have been demolished
through shelling, they would then tell the
Kashmiris. "You see even after having this
shrine demolished, Pakistani forces could
not intervene. So they do not express
solidarity with you struggling people. They
are leaving you in the lurch; so this is
hypocrisy of the Muslim world, therefore why
should you fight for the Muslim world and
you should reconcile yourselves to the
situation as it was in 1989. Pakistan
condemned the Indian action in surrounding
the mosque as sacrilege and onlookers, both
domestic and foreign, feared the outcome
would be similar to the storming of the
Golden Temple in Amritsar when the Indian
army moved against Sikh militants in 1984.
The image of Indian restraint was, however,
undermined by the actions of the border
security forces in Bijbihara when they shot
at least thirty-seven unarmed demonstrators
who were protesting against the siege of
Hazratbal. Fourteen BSF members were held
responsible. According to the Indian
Government, a Magisterial Inquiry and a
Staff Court Inquiry were undertaken. The
SCOI blamed four security force personnel
for excessive use of force, while the
Magisterial Inquiry indicated twelve
people'. The magistrate also concluded that
the shootings were unprovoked. The Indian
government posted security forces in bunkers
around Hazratbal. The Kashmiris objected to
the mosque being 'fortified' by Indian
troops. International concern over Kashmir
reached a high point in February 1994 when
the Pakistani prime Minister, Benezir
Bhutto, who had returned to office in
October 1993, raised the issue in the United
Nations Commission for Human Rights in
Geneva. The situation in Kashmir was
intolerable, she said, as was the world's
silence. Despite its repression, India had
failed to impose its will on the indomitable
people of Jammu and Kashmir. When election
speculation was at its height during the
spring of 1995, one by one the members of
the All Parties Hurriyat Conference a loose
coalition of some 34 Kashmiri political
parties and groups in the freedom struggle
said they would not participate. l 'The
Indian government has thrust this election
process on us because they want to convey to
the external world that they believe in the
democratic system', said Yasin Malik a
prominent Kashmir Leader. He felt so
strongly about the proposed election that he
threatened to immolate himself: 'I am not
doing this act against India. If the world
conscience will come forward, they can stop
the Indian government in this so-called
election process. If they do not come
forward then I will do this act against the
world conscience, then I will be convinced
that there is no one who can listen to the
voice of the oppressed people'. Shabir Shah,
believed to be one of the few leaders who
could be a unifying force throughout the
state, said that he would not take part in
the election. 'We have no trust in Delhi.
They have eroded our rights since 1953 and
therefore we don't believe they will return
us these rights". Professor Abdul Ghani of
the Muslim Conference described the Indian
government's attempt to hold elections as
'political prattle as opposed to political
initiative'. Even Farooq Abdullah, who is
committed to finding a solution within
secular India, placed stringent conditions
on his participation. The political parties,
represented by the Harriet, indicated that
they would no be willing to participate in
an election process within the frame-work of
the Indian constitution. 'Their idea of
elections is just to create a government, a
chief minister, an administration and then
stop', says Omar Farooq. 'While our stand is
that elections cannot be a substitute for
self-determination. If elections were a
solution to the problem we have already had
eight or nine elections. But still the basic
issue is unresolved'. 'India realizes that
they cannot make a dramatic change with
elections, but they want to impress upon the
international community that they are doing
something and divert attention from the main
issue of self determination.
TORTURE
Opponents of
India's military occupation of the valley of
Kashmir continue to maintain that 600,---
troops are stationed throughout the state in
what is the highest troops to civilian
population density ratio in any region in
the world. This figure is taken to include
over half of the 33 divisions of the regular
army, border security forces (100,000) and
Jammu and Kashmir police (30,000). A 'crack'
corps of Rashtriya (National) Rifles (RR)
was also brought into the valley to deal
specifically with counter-insurgency. The
report of the International Commission of
Jurists after their visit in August 1993
noted: There is a long way still to go to
overcome undiscipline and misconduct of the
security forces, particularly the BSF, the
persistent and regular use of torture in
interrogation and the practice of
extra-judicial militants and suspected
militants has been a feature of Indian
counter-insurgency tactics as a means of
extracting information, coercing confessions
and punishment.
According to
Amnesty International, 'the brutality of
torture in Jammu and Kashmir defies belief.
It has left people mutilated and disabled
for life. The severity torture meted out by
the Indian security forces in Jammu and
Kashmir is the main reason for the appalling
number of deaths in custody'. The torture
generally includes electric shocks,
beatings, and the use of a heavy roller on
leg muscles, which can result in extensive
muscle damage, leading to acute renal
failure. Other forms of inhuman treatment on
various parts of the body, including sexual
molestation have also been reported.
According to one victim, quoted by amnesty,
'You always know in advance about the
"current" because they send in the barber to
shave you from head to foot. This is
supposed to facilitate the flow of
electricity. After he finishes shaving you,
he hands you a cup of water to drink and
then they attach the electrodes'. Other
common methods, described by the US Human
Rights Agency, Asia Watch, include
suspension by the hands or feet, stretching
the legs apart and burning the skin with a
clothes iron or other heated object. Victims
have also been kicked and stamped on by
security forces wearing spiked boots.
Sixty-three interrogation centres where
torture is routinely carried out are
believed to exist in Jammu and Kashmir,
mostly run by the BSF and the CRPF. Army
camps, hotels and other buildings have been
taken over by the security forces as
detention centres. One BSF center is located
in one of the Maharaja's old guest houses
overlooking Dal lake and the mountains. With
faded wallpaper, worn carpets and stags'
antlers on the walls, the luxuries of the
past intrude inappropriately on the
brutality of the present. Whereas an officer
on duty will admit to the necessity of
giving 'a few slaps' to captured militants
to make them reveal where they have hidden
their weapons gruesome photographs of
mutilated bodies are part of any press kit
given to concerned journalists by human
rights activists and militant sympathizers.
In its December 1993 report, Amnesty
International produced information about
disappearances in Kashmir. Another report by
Amnesty in January 1995 regarding 705 people
who, since 1990 had died in custody as a
result of torture, shooting or medical
neglect, produced yet another rebuttal from
the Indian government. Amnesty, however,
described their response as 'evasive and
misleading'. Complacently, the government
refuses to recognise that there is an urgent
need to take decisive action to put an end
to the appalling human rights violations in
Jammu and Kashmir. "Such practices clearly
contravene international human rights
standards which the Indian government is
bound to uphold. Amnesty also notes that,
court orders to protect detainees are
routinely flouted. Despite promises of
enquiries into custodial deaths, official
investigations are rare. When they have
taken place, the evidence is not made
public, which diminishes the credibility of
government findings. 'It also makes a
mockery of its expressed intention to
eradicate human rights violations.
The Jammu and
Kashmir Republic Safety Act (1978) permits
people to be detained for up to two years on
vaguely defined grounds to prevent them
acting 'in any manner prejudicial... to the
security of the state and the maintenance of
public order. Detention without charge is
possible for up to one year. In 1990 the act
was amended in order to exempt the
authorities from informing the detainee the
reason for his arrest. In its report, the
ICJ concluded that the law has led to
'hardships among those arrested under its
scope. Its highly discretionary tone
undermines efforts to discover the
whereabouts of arrested persons and the
quest for habeas corpus. The Terrorist and
Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act 1987
(TADA) prohibits not only terrorist acts but
also broadly defined 'disruptive'
activities. The act established special
courts to try those arrested. The term
'disruptive activities' is defined as
including: Any action, whether by act or by
speech or through any other media or in any
other manner, which questions, disrupts...
the sovereignty or territorial integrity of
India, or which is intended to bring about
or supports any claim for the cession of any
part of India or the secession of any part
of India from the union. As the
international jurists pointed out. The
definition of 'disruptive activities' is 'a
blatant contravention of the right to
freedom of speech'. The discretionary nature
of the Armed Forces (Jammu and Kashmir)
Special Powers Act, introduced by Saxena in
1990, which gives the governor or the
government in New Delhi the authority to
declare all or part of the state a
'disturbed area' and to use the armed forces
to assist the civil power, means that the
military can be used 'to suppress legitimate
political activity' and according to the ICJ
cannot possibly be justified. Since the
military have the power to shoot and kill,
'this involves a potential infringement of
the right to life. Additional laws have been
either introduced or revived 'with negative
impact on human rights'. Pakistan's official
stand has been to highlight the abuse of
human rights on the international stage and
point to the alienation of the Kashmiris of
the valley from Indian rule while putting
the issue in its historical context and
referring back to the UN resolutions.
Traditionally, Azad Kashmiris have been
sympathetic to the Kashmiris of the valley
where many still have relatives. A
'liberation cell' has been operating in
Muzaffarabad, capital of Azad Jammu and
Kashmir since 1987, which retains close
links both with the AJK government in
Muzaffarabad and Islamabad. Its
representatives guide foreigners through the
political issues at stake as well as the
refugee camps which have been set up to
accommodate those who fled from the border
towns of Kupwara, handwara, and Baramula in
the early years of the insurgency. 'We eat
and are clothed', said one refugee from
Ambore camp outside Muzaffarabad, 'but
everything gets distasteful when we remember
out bothers and sisters in occupied
Kashmir'. 'We notice the need for women to
have psychiatric help', says Nayyar Malik,
who works as a voluntary social worker in
the camps. They have been through such
terrible thing and they need to talk. A
radio station has been operating since 1960
in Muzaffarabad. It was initially set up to
publicise the development activities of the
Azad Jammu and Kashmir government. but, says
Masood Kashif, the station director, 'it was
not possible to keep our eye shut on the
situation in Occupied Kashmir, therefore, a
fair proportion of its broadcast was
reserved for broadcasting programs on the
subjects of freedom movement, freedom
history and other relevant topics'. He
believes that the Azad Kashmir radio is so
popular in "Occupied Kashmir' that the
Indian government has imposed a ban on
listening to the station and 'is making her
best efforts to jam the transmission.
LIVING UNDER SIEGE
The city of
Srinagar is dusty and dirty, with
uncollected rubbish dumped on the roadside
for dogs and cows to forage through. The
streets are full of potholes. The charred
remains of once revered buildings, such as
the library next to the mosque at Hazratbal,
are a visual reminder of past battles. Al
lake is thick and stagnant with weeds. The
lives of the Kashmiris have been convulsed
by bomb attacks, reprisals, cross-firing and
curfew. Their homes have been raided and
sometimes destroyed because of frequent
security operations. Sopore is still
half-gutted by fire. 'I used to be
frightened when the army came. but now I am
used to it', said a young girl from Sopore.
"The searching totally destroys our houses.
They scatter our belongings and break
things". For over eight years, the Kashmiris
have lived in fear of the gun. Whether it is
the militants or Indian security forces.
Suspected militants or sympathisers, have
been arrested, tortured, killed or just
disappeared." In practice any young Muslim
man living within a village rural area or
part of town noted for activities of any of
the pro-independence or pro-Pakistan groups
can become a suspect and a target for the
large-scale and frequently brutal search
operations', stated the Amnesty in 1993,
Extrajudicial executions of militants have
often been publicised as death in 'an
encounter'. Nearly every Kashmiri has a sad
tale to tell of a family member who had been
picked up by the security forces on
suspicion of being a militant. Dr. Rashid is
one of thousands who suffered personal loss:
My brother was twenty-five years old. He was
running a cosmetics shop. The BSF came and
took him. In front of my father and family,
he was killed. Someone had pointed him as
being a militant. He was not armed and in
the news that evening they gave that there
was an encounter, when there was no
encounter at all. Not long afterwards Dr.
Rashid's younger brother was also shot for
being a suspected militant. Then he heard
the news about his cousin's son: He was
eighteen year old-he was a student. He was
captured; I went to the police station and
asked to see him because I had heard he had
got some bullet injuries. They told me to
wait and they would see where he was. For
two hours I waited there. Then they brought
his dead body. The report said he was
running away and then they shot him. If he
was running away he would have had bullet
wounds on the back. but he had two bullet
injuries at 2cm distance just on his heart
in front. For the majority of the people the
ill-effects of living under siege are
tremendous. No one has yet been able to
evaluate the trauma of events on their lives
since 1989. Children have frequently been
unable to go to school and the standard of
education has declined. Schools in rural
areas have been occupied by the security
forces, who have also installed themselves
in university campuses. Medical facilities
are insufficient and the hospitals are
unhygienic. The doctors are overworked and
many have fled. In 1995 the bone and Joint
Hospital had only three senior medical
staff, besides nine registrars and six
consultants. Immunisation programmers for
children have fallen behind. On account of
the insurgency, there are twenty times the
number of psychiatric cases than in 1989.
Unofficial statistics estimate that 40,000
people have died since 1988. Amnesty bases
its figures on police and hospital sources
and assesses the number as in excess of
17,000. 'but we also believe there are
several thousand more for whom we have no
statistics', says a representative of
Amnesty. The martyr's graveyards in Srinagar
is full of fresh graves with weeping mothers
and onlookers standing by. In 1994 M.N
Sabharwal, the director-general of Police in
Srinagar admitted that at least 1,500
civilians had been killed in the crossfire,
with many more injured. Just one of those
casualties lay in a ward of the Bone and
joint Hospital in April 1994. He had been
out shopping with his wife on his
motorcycle. When firing began in a crowded
street, soldiers shouted at them to get off
the motorcycles and lie face down on the
ground. Both he and his wife received bullet
wounds. He was crying as he related his
story. 'My Mrs. is in the ladies hospital. I
am here. What have we done to deserve this?
His own injury, close to his heart, was so
serious that the doctor had only permitted
him to be interviewed on the understanding
that I did not tell him that his wife had
already died. 'The shock', warned the doctor
'might kill him'. All communities have
suffered during the insurgency. For those
Kashmiri Muslims of the valley who so
enthusiastically supported the demand for
Azadi, on the understanding that they had
been promised a plebiscite in order to
determine their future, the sense of
betrayal is perhaps greatest. The repression
of the 1990s, the indiscriminate and
unnecessary killings have merely added fuel
to their anger. Time and again I heard
people say: 'How could we ever accept the
Indian government again, after what the
military did to our people?' The record
numbers of nearly 80,000 foreign tourists
who visited the valley in 1989 are reduced
to about 9,000. Isolated incidents of
kidnapping foreigners who were either
working in Kashmir or had come as tourists,
as well as the rape of a Canadian girl in
October 1990 by two army officers, acted as
an obvious deterrent. So too the
miltarisation of the valley and the paradox
of enjoying a holiday, while the local
people were subjected to crackdowns and
cross-firing.
The lack of
tourists has, of course, meant that the
business of the local Kashmiris has suffered
accordingly: houseboat, the Rickshaw wallahs,
taxi drivers, tonga drivers hotel owners,
and those who depended on selling their
handicrafts to visiting tourists, have all
lost what was the only avenue of income open
to them. In July 1995 Six foreigners were
kidnapped. The Hurriyat and virtually all
the Kashmiri parties condemned the
kidnapping. Pakistan also condemned the
kidnapping and some commentators even
believed that the incidents was an elaborate
ploy by Indian intelligence to discredit the
Kashmiri movement and, indirectly, Pakistan.
The valley, surrounded by the magnificent
Himalayan mountains, whose beauty has, for
centuries, attracted visitors from far and
wide, is still the home of tragedy.
CONCLUSION
The Kashmiri
conflict, which has lasted half a century,
has been inherited by the next and the next
generation. Many of those in the forefront
of the struggle today were not born when it
all began, nor were those who have died
fighting in the cause of Kashmir. The State
of Jammu and Kashmir remains, as every,
poised strategically between powerful and
competing neighbors: China to the east, the
new Central Asian republics to the north and
west and the land mass of the sub-continent
to the south. The world, however, has become
much more dangerous since 1947. Yet the
basic demand of those Kashmiris challenging
the Indian government is the same; the right
to determine their future. The Kashmiris who
are challenging Indian rule, however,
believe that it is the moral duty of the
international community to support their
cause precisely because successive
resolutions, unanimously adopted by the
Security Council, called for the settlement
of the dispute by means of a free and
impartial plebiscite under the auspices of
the United Nations.
The Kashmiris
refute India's suggestion that if Kashmir
secedes it will lead to the break-up of
India. 'We have a legal case, supported by
United Nations resolution. There are
commitments made by India', says Omar Farooq
also believes that India does not have to
retain Kashmir for the sake of its 'secular'
image, 'There are over 100 million Muslims
in India, which make it secular, without
India having to hold onto Kashmir. The
Kashmiris are also apprehensive that adverse
publicity regarding the militancy means that
their struggle is misunderstood by the world
community. 'It is portrayed as a terrorist
and Islamic fundamentalist movement, while
that is not the case', says Omar Farooq. 'It
is important to understand the Kashmiris'
point of view. We are not fanatics'.
Kashmiris still see that the best solution
lies in pressure from he international
community. The Kashmiris who are opposing
India do not see themselves as remote and
rate their struggle on the same basis as
other trouble spots. 'We see issues like
Bosnia, Ireland, Middle East getting
solved', says Omar Farooq, 'Therefore we
have high hopes of getting the international
community involved to solve the issue in
Kashmir.' The Government of India has
strongly objected to Pakistan's
re-introduction of the Kashmir issue on the
international platform, be it at the United
Nations, the Organisation of Islamic
Countries, the Commonwealth or in meetings
with foreign leaders. The history of Kashmir
may be relevant to understand the depth of
feeling, but once understood, the challenge
is to move on. World parameters have
changed. They have also hardened.
Nationalist feeling, the braking republics
within the former Soviet Union, and
alienation towards the Indian government in
New Delhi have made the Kashmiris' demand
for self-determination even stronger. The
reunification of East and West Germany was
particularly symbolic. 'We felt if the
Berlin Wall could be dismantled so too could
the line of control', said Dr. Hamida Bano,
professor of English at the University of
Kashmir in Srinagar. What has not changed,
however, is the belief that a plebiscite is
the time-honored way to finalise the issue.
Regardless of prior elections, accords and
economic packages, the Kashmiris people have
never been allowed to exercise their right
of self-determination to which the peoples
of Jammu and Kashmir became entitled as
parto of the process of partition has
neither been exercised nor abandoned, and
thus remains execrable today. Unless the
Kashmiris themselves can be made to feel
that they have been given the freedom to
choose their destiny, the issue may never be
laid to rest. If this generation is
silenced, the next will learn the history,
read about the plebiscite and seek, perhaps
again through armed struggle, to achieve
their aims. Discontent in the Valley did not
begin with the insurgency of the 1990s. The
Government of India had nearly fifty years
to win over the hearts of the Kashmiris.
Even during periods of stability and
apparent calm the acquiescence of the people
was never wholehearted or unanimous. The 'riggid'
elections of 1987 and 96, combined with
economic grievances, corruption and
unfulfilled expectations, completed the
process of alienation. India's persistent
belief that Pakistan instigated the Kashmiri
problem has also prevented a thorough
analysis of the Indian government's handling
of the situation. 'I do not believe that any
foreign hand engineered the Kashmir
problem', stated Gorge Fernandes in 1990'.
The problem was
created by us. Is there a solution? Our
first goal should be that we should be in a
position to decide our future', says Omar
Farooq. In consultation with the political
leadership of Azad Kashmir, we could take a
decision. All Kashmiris should sit and
discuss what will be the future of the
state. Until we can discuss with our
brothers across the border it is very
difficult for us to take a single-handed
decision. Spoken so convincingly, it all
sounds easy. 'We have given proposals to the
Indian government', Farooq continues 'you
stop human rights abuses, allow in Amnesty
and other organisations, release political
prisoners and accept that Kashmir is part of
a dispute. Kashmiri political activists
continue to maintain that elections are no
substitute for a plebiscite. Without a
generally acceptable settlement, the Kashmir
issue is likely to remain indefinitely on
the international agenda of unresolved
conflicts, which may yet become more
explosive'.
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