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Ceasefire offer
Sir, - The Prime Minister, Mr. A. B. Vajpayee, announcing a
unilateral ceasefire in Jammu and Kashmir during Ramzan and the
Hizb-ul-Mujahideen and the Lashkar-e-Taiba rejecting the peace
offer soon after, gives one a feeling of deja vu as it is darkly
reminiscent of the ceasefire offer from the Hizb and the dramatic
withdrawal of the peace initiative last August (``Hizb, Lashkar
reject peace offer'', The Hindu, Nov. 21).
Pakistan and the Pakistan-backed militants, after having shrewdly
played the religious card against India at the OIC summit at Doha
- notwithstanding the fact that India is home to the second
largest Islamic community in the world - are now contradicting
themselves by blasphemously ridiculing the peace offer that would
have at least brought temporary respite to the long-suffering
Kashmiris, during the holy month of Ramzan. The near panic
reaction and the violent response from some of the militant
groups that every peace initiative evokes is indicative of an
abject lack of sincerity among the representatives of the
separatist groups of J&K to resolve the Kashmir issue.
Not wanting to take chances about a wedge being driven between
the indigenous militants and the foreign-backed militants, unlike
during the Hizb's peace offer, this time Pakistan wasted no time
in beating about the bush about its insistence that any peace
talks that the militants might have with the Centre be tripartite
- and also ensured that the militants insist on the same.
It would be no exaggeration to state that under the military
rule, bilateral relations between India and Pakistan seem to have
deteriorated to a point of no return. Knowing fully well that
bilateral ties between the two countries are at their lowest ebb,
it seems unreasonable to insist on tripartite talks, with the
involvement of India's warring neighbour in the first phase
itself. With Gen. Musharraf's rather ill-concealed hatred for
India, tripartite talks to solve the J&K issue cannot be anything
but a fruitless endeavour. Apparently, this is just an excuse to
deny the Kashmiris even a remotest chance for peace in their
embattled State. What is pathetic is that in spite of their
bravado, the J&K militants are cutting a sorry figure today by
being reduced to mere puppets on their sponsor's strings and
parroting its sentiments. By insisting on the involvement of
Pakistan, they are only undermining their own ability to make
decisions for themselves.
Nalini Vijayaraghavan,
Thiruvananthapuram
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