Kashmir conundrum

India can hardly be expected to hand over its occupied territory to Pakistan or vice versa.


Editorial February 20, 2014
AJK President Sardar Muhammad Yaqoob Khan has said that the option of an ‘independent Kashmir’ could be talked about with India. PHOTO: INP/FILE

One doesn’t know how much to read into a statement by the president of Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) that the option of an ‘independent Kashmir’ could be talked about with India. Still, though the statement was qualified by a seeming stipulation that India should come to the negotiating table and first “put forward the idea”, and despite the possibility that the remark was simply off the cuff, one would not be blamed for harbouring a sense of expectation.

That the area has been a sticking point for any and all peace efforts between the two countries needs no repetition. One of the main problems in the resolution of the six-decade-old standoff has been the preponderance of absolutist official stands in both countries — and possible solutions involve which of the two would get complete control of the disputed region. In fact, even in the United Nations Security Council’s Resolution 47, the recommended plebiscite to be held in the region was only to have two options: join India or join Pakistan. Realistically, neither of the two options is any longer viable: India can hardly be expected to hand over its occupied territory to Pakistan or vice versa. That effectively leaves us with one option on the table — independence or autonomy — which has never been publicly considered and is, in fact, illegal to even suggest in Pakistan. We are told that some form of autonomy was discussed when General (retd) Musharraf was in power, but for all practical purposes that headway exists only in rumour.

The public admission that the ‘third way’ was even an option is, therefore, welcome because it could represent a long-awaited opening in an impasse that has been a roadblock for peace in the region — even if it means it is not necessarily reflective of a policy change yet. That it was by the president of AJK, someone who wouldn’t, and indeed couldn’t, make such a statement without approval from the highest officials in Islamabad and Rawalpindi, makes it all the more exciting.

Published in The Express Tribune, February 21st, 2014.

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COMMENTS (7)

G. Din | 10 years ago | Reply

@Abdul: "Has anybody taken the opinion of Kashmiri Brahmins ?" Or, of Jammu Dogras? Or, of Ladakhi Buddhists? Or, of Kargil and Valley Shias? Or, of Gujjars and Bakkerwaals? Or, of all those Kashmiri Muslims who are invested in Kashmir as a part of India for all these 65 years like National Conference who have the most to lose? Or, of Muslims in Ghulam Kashmir whose sovereignty will be diluted? So, who remains that may want to be part of Pakistan or seek independence from both India and Pakistan? The few hundred thousand separatists of the Valley. India is certainly not going to risk its national security from the outside and allow a new, fundamentally weak entity in the neighourhood which will be quite vulnerable to external pulls and pushes. India cannot risk its internal national security by exposing its own Muslim population to victimization by the non-Muslims of India, should the bond between Kashmir and India be broken. One may say that it would be patently wrong of non-Muslims to victimize their Muslim compatriots but morality takes a back seat under those circumstances. As it is, relations between Muslims and non-Muslims of India have not been and are not that cozy, because of Pakistan.

unbelievable | 10 years ago | Reply

@Komal S: T

The best compromise both nations can come to is to change LOC to international border.

International borders haven't improved Pakistan's relations with anyone - so why should Kashmir be any different?

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