Mufti Sayeed Rides A Tiger
http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/toi-edit-page/mufti-sayeed-rides-a-tiger/
Ahmed Ali Fayyaz
By ceding space to separatists, his government is
snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.
April 21, 2015
THE TIIMES OF INDIA | Editorial Page http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/toi-edit-page/mufti-sayeed-rides-a-tiger/
For
good reason, namely that they have been competitively apologetic to Kashmir’s
Pakistan-supported separatists and neither of them has politically contested
the secessionist ideology after Farooq Abdullah’s exit as chief minister, Mufti
Sayeed’s Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Omar Abdullah’s National Conference
(NC) are suffering a credibility deficit in their pleading for ‘some space’ for
hardliners like Masarat Alam and Syed Ali Shah Geelani. Not once but umpteen
times, their political ambitions have lit fires that took months and years to
subside.
Ironically,
even after assembly elections that recorded the highest turnouts, it is the
boycott fringe that is setting the agenda for an elected government.
Until
becoming chief minister with 16 PDP MLAs in a House of 87 in 2002, Mufti had
never succeeded in entering the assembly after his Congress party withdrew
support from Sheikh Abdullah’s government in 1976. Even in its best
performance, PDP got 28 seats last year.
It
has a clear purpose in being ‘soft’ to separatists as that helps the party
sweep polls in south Kashmir’s Jamaat-e-Islami dominated Pulwama and Shopian
districts. NC’s copycat tactics is attributed to the junior Abdullah’s lack of
self-confidence and disconnect with Kashmiris.
Notwithstanding
Mufti’s history of being India’s home minister when security forces committed
the worst human rights abuse in 1990, Mufti in 2002 and thereafter succeeded in
getting a chunk of the separatists’ vote. This has helped him become chief minister
twice.
He
brilliantly demonised Farooq and his NC for excesses perpetrated by armed
forces and the Special Operations Group (SOG) of the J&K Police. What
helped him don the mantle of messiah for a section of the pro-Pakistan
population was that Mufti promised revocation of AFSPA, disbanding SOG,
punishment to delinquent police officials and involvement of separatists and
Pakistan in a dialogue process.
He
just had to touch on the scars of the 1979 ‘persecution’ when Sheikh Abdullah’s
followers trooped into Jamaat villages, torched properties, devastated orchards
and molested women over Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s execution by Zia-ul-Haq’s
military regime in Pakistan.
Sheikh’s
party and progeny being for them “the first and last evil”, Jamaat in the two
districts boycotts elections but lends some support to PDP to beat NC. So it
was not for nothing that Mufti publicly acknowledged the separatists’ “help”
after taking over as CM.
But
his predicament is that there are other separatist constituencies – Geelani’s
Sopore and Palhalan, Masarat Alam’s uptown Srinagar, Mirwaiz Umar’s
Shehr-e-Khas and Yasin Malik’s Lalchowk – which have not been under his
influence or control.
This
time around, Mufti’s ambition of extending PDP’s base to the capital’s
ultra-radical swathes in exchange for Masarat’s release has boomeranged.
Followers of Geelani and Alam spoiled the gameplan with a strong pro-Pakistan
show in front of J&K police headquarters, unprecedented in the last several
years.
It
embarrassed BJP and forced the home ministry to ensure Masarat’s detention and
an end to “all anti-national demonstrations”.
With
the first civilian fatality in a protest in the last four years, Mufti’s
government is now caught between a rock and a hard place. Questions are being
raised in New Delhi over the long rope Mufti has retained in buttressing the
secessionist constituency since his daughter Rubaiya Sayeed’s abduction in
1989.
Release
of five hardcore militants brought a sense of victory to insignificant
guerrilla groups who soon after involved entire Kashmir in their “Crush India”
campaign. That laid the foundation for endless spells of armed insurgency and
separatism.
Again,
in 2008, two PDP ministers put the state on fire over allotment of land to a
Hindu shrine board, followed by Mufti’s pressure on Ghulam Nabi Azad’s
government to rescind the order. It brought down Azad’s government and
triggered the state’s worst communal and regional strife at a time when
separatists and militants had been rendered virtually irrelevant. Both got a
fresh lease of life.
Masarat’s
release and the turbulence thereafter came ironically at a time when the
Kashmiris had completely marginalised the secessionists with their massive and
enthusiastic participation in arguably the state’s fairest assembly elections.
The valley was awaiting the much promised flood relief and even a promising
tourist season. Even the death of two young students in unprovoked army firing
at Chhatergam did not lead to a mass uprising.
Few
in Srinagar have been able to comprehend the logic of expanding space for
separatists without seeking an assurance that it does not lead to a situation
where the government itself would be begging for space from them.
Rather
than a seemingly clandestine arrangement, the PDP-BJP coalition could have
initiated a transparent dialogue process with the separatists while making it
clear that nobody would be permitted to vitiate the atmosphere of peace and
tranquility. Perhaps more confidence building could have been done with the
symbolism of granting permission to prosecution of scores of the armed forces’
personnel involved in violation of human rights and fake encounters which have
been pending with the Centre for years.
Instead
the situation has been brought back to square one, creating conditions for a
fresh round of pro-Pakistan euphoria in Kashmir.
[The writer
is a senior journalist]
END
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