Blood, bluffs and (some) bullshit
India is a unique country, at least on one count. It harbours
more enemies and very less friends. Moreover, many times, enemies are seen in
friendly disguise. But India is habituated to accept enemies dressed as enemies
even. The enemies in this case, have many names viz. media, channels,
infotainment and so on.
Al Jazeera can’t be called our
friend, by any stretch of imagination. And as has to be expected, it has been
engaged in twisting facts, stretching meanings of the normal words and even
forcing ulterior agenda. A recent case is their reporting of Kashmir issue and
the most unfortunate part of the episode is the association of our learned elites
from Kashmir with Al Jazeera.
On 1st April this year,
(coincidentally the April Fool’s Day) one Anuradha Bhasin, the Executive Editor
of Kashmir Times, made her appearance in Al Jazeera and cried on India’s
attempts in ‘bringing the Israeli model to Kashmir’. The problem with these
self-proclaimed voices of Kashmiris is that they, many times, don’t realise
that they are exposing themselves, in an attempt to call others. This Anuradha
Bhasin, in her article, has deplored the demise of Article 370 and Article 35A.
She describes Article 370 as the one ‘…which gave the state its special status and
excluded it from the application of various constitutional provisions’ while
article 35A, she says, was one ‘… which limited certain residency rights to the
local population and granted them certain protections’. She agrees that ‘with the abrogation of
Article 370 and the removal of its status as a state, the region was fully
integrated.’ But top to bottom, the whole article doesn’t have a single word on
why the constitutional provisions that are applicable to every single citizen
of India outside J&K, shouldn’t have been made applicable to J&K
population. What’s so bad about the provisions after all? As a matter of rule,
shouldn’t all citizens be equal? Why not, if not? What could be the
justification for not allowing political reservations for STs in J&K? She
has cried a lot that the change was brought in ‘…without fulfilling the
constitutional requirement of participation of the state legislature,’ but
doesn’t utter even a word on why the successive assemblies didn’t bring in
these pragmatic changes for over 70 years, so as to deny any justification to
the ruling elite to scrap the articles.
But the worse is to follow. Ms.
Bhasin says, these ‘articles had
guaranteed that the right to buy and own land or apply for government jobs was
the sole prerogative of those who had inherited permanent residency by
descent.’ What world is she in? A right ‘inherited by descent’? In 2020? What
kind of a system is she longing for? And still, this is not complete account of
everything that she stands for. J&K has been a full state for 70 years now.
But at no point of time, they looked like trying to bring a better and modern
system. After the changes were forced on them, she is so much worried on the
removal of both the articles that put ‘a bar on business
investments by outsiders or attempts by monopolistic companies to take control
of J&K's lands and economy’. But for 7 decades, nobody was talking
about putting brakes on any of the existing monopolies in the state. What
prevented the state from creating a law that prevented any person – individual or
legal – from holding land beyond the threshold decided by the state? The answer
is simple. They were never interested in any better system of rules and laws.
Even today they are not. All that they desire is protecting the system that
offers everything by decent and allows inheritance even of the rights of
non-existing population at the expense of the living folks.
Shall we ask her who are these outsiders who should
be prevented from having the right to buy and own land or apply for government
jobs? I may not agree, if she means somebody who was born and brought-up in
Mumbai, Pune, Delhi, Lucknow, Bangalore, Hyderabad and so on. But at least I
can understand. I can see the logic in the demand and argue on how could the
best of both worlds can be married. In the present situation, that is not
possible. Ms. Bhasin wants to prevent even those who were born and brought up
in valley, but have no 100-year-old roots there. Even they are ‘outsiders’.
Worst of all, even those who came in J&K during the partition or during the
war of 1947-48 and who belong to some other part of the undivided J&K of
the Maharaja regime are also outsiders. She deserves to listen to Barrister
Hamid Bashani, a Kashmiri Muslim himself, who quipped, ‘Pakistan scrapped restrictions on settling in
Gilgit-Baltistan during 1975 itself. So, a lot of ‘outsiders’, without any
requirement of minimum stay, have already settled, bought lands and set-up
their businesses in Kashmir. But nobody called it demographic change……. On the
other hand, Indians are not doing any demographic change at all. Kashmiris
decided of not doing a few menial jobs themselves and brought poor people from
outside to get them done. It was understood ab initio that these people will be
in Kashmir for generations, so that fresh search will not be required again. In
spite of that, if you say that these people have no right on the jobs and
property in Kashmir, that’s a very fascist way of thinking. It cannot be called
demographic change’. Bashani is right. The Union Government has notified the
rules for domicile certificates where the entitlement comes only with a minimum
15 years stay in J&K. If this is wrong, what’s right? Denying residency
right to those who are in Kashmir for generations together, but allowing it for
a fraction that may or may not have stayed in Kashmir even for three or four or
five years out of last 70 years- is that what Ms. Bhasin thinks right? Looks
like. Further down, she again calls everyone, who can get domiciled status in
new rules, as outsiders. In the same article, she says, ‘The new domicile rule …… stirred
up anxieties, particularly among the J&K youth, irrespective of their
ethnic and communal identities or their political ideologies, as it meant they
would be losing government jobs, they earlier had a monopoly over, to
outsiders.’ So people who were brought in to do menial or ‘dirty’ jobs, should
do those jobs for generations together. Never ever should they aspire to do
anything better, because they do not inherit the right for ‘better’ jobs. What
could be more horrific than this approach?
Al Jazeera, followed this with news
items that kept harping upon the demographic shift theme, equating the new
domicile rules with Israel’s efforts in Gaza strip. They have, however, overlooked
completely that Israel’s invitation to come to Gaza strip has no minimum
residency tag. Barrister Bashani has stated vary categorically in his video
that he would have called it an attempt of changing the demography, had India
extended an invitation to any and every Indian to come and settle in Kashmir. But
that’s not the case. So, nobody is trying to force a demographic change in the
valley. What’s actually happening, is correction of a deliberate mischief,
created for suppressing the actual demography of Kashmir. What’s on in J&K
is the restoration of justice, by overturning deliberate injustice.
Never in the whole 4500+
words-article, Ms. Bhasin talks of the ‘insiders’ who were driven out of the
state at gunpoint. Al Jazeera also is completely silent on the rights of these
Pandits that were forcibly driven out. Looks like Al Jazeera and its columns
have only one lens to their glasses and therefore can see only one set of
population of Kashmir- the set that is in minority, but had been enjoying
majority artificially, by misusing rules and laws. How should the other
elements of the population exercise their ‘inherited right’ on the government
jobs? No replies! Ma’am, whatever you say and however hard you try to fool
everybody around, your ‘right’ is not right. If that is your attitude and you
think only inheritance is right, well, the only reply could be- thank God, we
are not on the right side.
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