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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, June 30, 2001 |
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Opinion
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The casualties of peace
By Balakrishnan Rajagopal
The coming summit between the Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari
Vajpayee and the Pakistan President, General Pervez Musharraf, is
hailed as the harbinger of hopes for a transition to peace in
Jammu and Kashmir and a thaw between the two neighbouring
countries. Yet the tragic irony of this process is that it seems
to have trampled upon the principles of democratic legitimacy
that are necessary for the process itself, an issue that will not
go away in the contentious post-summit years.
At one end, General Musharraf's unilateral and abrupt decision to
appoint himself as President has effectively ended Pakistan's
flirtation with democracy and at the other end, the failure to
include any representatives of the Kashmiri people in the summit
makes it unlikely that the summit will be seen as legitimate
during the coming years.
Yet, the Indian side seems to be utterly oblivious to the need to
respect the principles of democratic legitimacy; instead, the
Prime Minister is reported to have called General Musharraf,
before the official announcement was made, to congratulate him on
his self-appointment. The Indian establishment interprets this as
a strategic message from the Indian side about the effectiveness
of its intelligence about Pakistani high politics, which it may
well be. But it is also a callous disregard for the elementary
norms of democracy.
What is doubly ironic is that this anti-democratic attitude is
adopted by the world's largest democracy. Indeed, India has
always maintained a total disregard for the democratic
credentials of the countries that it deals with since its foreign
policy has traditionally been dictated by a realist focus on
geopolitics.
One must question this apparent incongruity of commitment to
democracy in the domestic policy and a disregard for it in the
foreign policy. While there is no need to flaunt one's
credentials and lecture others as the U.S. often does, a
principled foreign policy in India can no longer ignore the
consequences of its own political and constitutional character as
a democracy. This means that at the least, the Prime Minister
should not be congratulating General Musharraf for dousing the
embers of Pakistan's democracy. In fact, there is no reason why
India should not raise the need to restore Pakistan's democracy
as an issue in future summits and meetings. A militarised
Pakistan, ruled by generals, will never be a real partner for
peace with India. While the restoration of democracy can not by
itself lead to peace, India can ill-afford to ignore the yawning
gap in political culture between itself and Pakistan.
The failure to invite any representative of the Kashmiri people
to the summit may be a consequence of complex factors but that
too opens the summit to charges of illegitimacy in the future.
Experience from around the world shows that it is impossible to
negotiate peace in ethnically or religiously divided societies
without a genuinely open negotiating process that attempts to
accommodate the legitimate demands of all key actors. Negotiating
the future of Kashmir over the heads of the Kashmiris is hardly a
recipe for lasting peace.
If it was not possible to engage all the key representatives of
Kashmiris (including PoK) directly in the summit, ways could have
been found to involve them in some other manner, perhaps through
a series of mini-summits between working groups of senior
officials from both Governments and Kashmiri representatives. The
key objective must have been to clearly indicate a willingness to
recognise Kashmiri people as dialogue- partners. Without even
such a minimal involvement, it is hard to see how any deal struck
in the summit between India and Pakistan will be seen as
acceptable by all key actors in Kashmir, especially over the
years. This is not only a principal requirement of legitimacy,
but also a necessity of practical politics.
Negotiating a lasting peace in deeply divided societies is an
arduous task, as the world has witnessed in the Balkans most
recently. That task becomes simply impossible if the key
combatants are not truly represented, or if the framework for
peace is not sufficiently democratic. On both counts, the
forthcoming India-Pakistan summit offers little hope.
(The writer is Director, MIT Program on Human Rights and
Assistant Professor of Law and Development, MIT.)
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