Monday, October 14, 2019

India and Dissent in Kashmir.


The Indian government and the right wing nationalist media in India has taken pains to pretend that all is well in Kashmir. Indeed in some parts of Indian administered Kashmir, where Hindus are a majority or at par with the Muslim population things seem to have a semblance of relative calm. However, the majority of Indian Kashmir is seething with dissent over India revoking the special status of the state. This dissent would normally show up in street protests but with curfews and internet and phone lockdown it would seem such protests cannot be organized with ease.

Indian military has been stating that 'terrorists' from across the border, i.e. from Pakistan, are trying to infiltrate across the Line of Control to cause trouble. Pakistan for its account has been urging the Kashmiris on its side and their Afghan and Pakistani sympathizers not to cross the border for fear that such a move would play into India's hands of blaming foreigners for its troubles in Kashmir. Given the emotion on the issue it will be a tough ask for Pakistan to contain the many on its side who want to go and fight for the Kashmiris.

In as much as there has been much attention on the organized militant groups within Pakistan these have been the focus of pressure from Pakistan to rein in their actions. What must worry India is really the disorganized tribal groups, some from Afghanistan, who are more difficult to control. As the study of the Afghan war against the Soviet Union shows that one of the reasons the Mujahideen were so successful was because they were a disorganized force without a clear and hefty command and control structure. Local leaders, usually the tribal chiefs, were free to decide on tactics and timing of attacks and selection of targets. While the Mujahideen may have lacked a coercive strategy to fighting the Soviets, it was precisely this element which always kept the element of surprise on their side and nearly impossible to defeat and disband such Mujahideen forces.

For Indian forces, to ignore that there is no element of armed resistance to their administration of Kashmir is naive. One can argue that who supports them and to what extent, but if the Afghan Mujahideen model of fighting is adopted by these Indian Kashmiri groups then history tells us that it will be virtually impossible for the Indian forces to defeat them. This is why so long as the Indian narrative insists that any armed resistance is not only foreign inspired but foreigners themselves are involved in it, (Pakistanis in their eyes) then they feel they have the moral advantage to carry out whatever tactics the Indian forces use and the extent of the force they use.

Numerous independent sources and Indian Kashmiri leaders have stated empathically that there have been human rights violations in Kashmir. Indian investigations, primarily by the army itself, have not been substantive or independent enough to lend any credibility to such show of transparency. Whenever New Delhi has been questioned about its human rights track record in Kashmir it has been quick to point out others, like Pakistan, on their human rights record. This is very Trumpian in approach as it seems pointing a finger is the best defense. The question is simply Indian human rights record especially in Kashmir and nothing else.

While New Delhi is eager to show it is restoring telephone and internet services in Jammu and Kashmir, albeit it after a 72 day black out, there is no denying that it will monitor the situation and any signs of public protests might well lead to another black out. Kashmiris may well be disheartened by the lack of immediate support on the international stage, but slowly but surely more voices from the United States, the United Kingdom, the European Union and even within India are speaking out against India's handling of the situation. While its response has been that its a domestic matter, Indian decision makers can surely not assume that its a position the world will accept especially if India fails to bring calm to the Kashmir valley.

Pakistan could take the moral high ground and suggest a plebiscite (as per the UN Security Council resolutions of past decades) but add the option for Kashmiris to choose independence rather than only the choice of joining India or Pakistan! It is highly unlikely that India would accept such a proposal given it current stance but most certainly such a move would give the Kashmiri movement an impetus that would color the voice of dissent to one of true freedom.

We will see street agitation increase over the next few months, prior to the harsh winter setting in, and one must remember in the words of Martin Luther King 'the riot is the language of the unheard.' By locking up the Kashmiri leadership, even those who have worked within the concept of Indian Kashmir being a part of the Indian Union, the is no voice that can be heard. In this vacuum the direction of street protests without a leadership can turn ugly. Reason will surrender to passion and restraint will become absent in the face of violent blow back from the Indian armed forces.

I have a fair number of Indian friends and I ask them only one question "If the people of Indian Kashmir really are happy with this decision as the Modi government tells us then why do you need a lockdown and 900,000 armed personnel in Kashmir?' Their usual answer is to deal with terrorist threats. Fair enough, but I have always believed no terrorist even from abroad can operate in a country without some local support and encouragement. Secondly the nature of a terror threat is not mitigated by curfews and lockdowns and roadblocks, they choose their timing and place of attack.

I do believe that while support and encouragement from abroad may have been there for these militant groups, (much like India has supported such groups operating in its neighbors territory) the Kashmir dissent is home grown and for him to move from throwing stones to lobbing grenades is decided by how the Indian armed forces treat the people of Kashmir.




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