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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, February 13, 2001 |
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Opinion
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The imperatives in Kashmir
THE KILLING OF 15 innocent persons, including seven children, in
Rajouri district on February 9/10 night is perhaps the most
heinous of the attacks mounted by the jehadi militant groups in
the Jammu region over the past two months and more since the
Government of India's unilateral ceasefire came into operation.
Earlier in the day and elsewhere in Srinagar, a four-member squad
had stormed the control room of the police headquarters and the
encounter left nine police officials and two armed assailants
dead. To say that the Rajouri carnage and the Srinagar incident
were a part of the pro-Pakistani pan-Islamic outfits' grand
design to sabotage the peace initiative is to stress the obvious.
The targets they pick - security personnel, members of the
special police force involved in anti-insurgency operations and
village defence committee members or their families (as in
Rajouri), besides the symbols of Governmental authority - are
intended to underline that they are the ones who call the shots
and therefore can strike at will. Second, that they are
determined to frustrate the ongoing, as yet incipient - and vague
- peace process and, in pursuance of that objective, will
continue to provoke the Government into calling off the
ceasefire. The February 3 episode in Srinagar, which accounted
for the death of six persons belonging to the Sikh community, was
predictably seen as reinforcing, post the Chattisinghpora
massacre (March 2000), a sinister aspect of the `jehadi'
elements' gameplan - to `cleanse' the Valley of minority
religious groups by generating panic among them through periodic
killings. It was just as well that the Centre, even if it be
under pressure from the Akali Dal - a partner in the ruling NDA -
got a plan of action worked out in consultation with the Chief
Minister, Dr. Farooq Abdullah, for beefing up the Sikhs-specific
security arrangement; its adequacy and effectiveness on the
ground, of course, remain to be tested.
The spate of killings by the foreign-based militant outfits,
quite a few of which have right from the beginning made their
intention clear, has undoubtedly brought the ceasefire under
tremendous pressure and the chances of this easing are obviously
not particularly bright. Needless to say that it is imperative
for the administration and the security agencies to identify the
weak spots in the security framework and remove them forthwith.
At the same time, it needs to be remembered that ceasefire - an
undoubtedly laudable initiative by India - is not an end in
itself but only a step in the search for a political solution and
must be backed by appropriate follow-up moves, both political and
strategic. This is precisely where the NDA regime seems to be
floundering. Take for instance the question of a Hurriyat
delegation's visit to Pakistan. Having gone along with, if not
actively promoted, the unexceptionable idea of letting a Hurriyat
team interact with the leaders of the various `jehadi' outfits as
also the Pakistan Government, it makes little political or
diplomatic sense to stall the initiative by not clearing the
travel documents for the reason that the proposed five-member
squad included Syed Ali Shah Geelani, a diehard exponent of
merger with Pakistan. And this, despite the Prime Minister, Mr.
Atal Behari Vajpayee's declaration in his Kerala musings that the
Government ``shall not traverse solely on the beaten track of the
past''. Given that the stated mission of the Hurriyat is to
explore ways of strengthening the peace process, it is only fair
that the team should be given the chance to undertake the trip.
Noteworthy in the context of the Hurriyat's consensually positive
approach is the JKLF chairman, Mr. Yaseen Malik's passionate plea
against `Sikh migration' out of the State in the wake of
perceived insecurity.
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Section : Opinion Next : Safety in the pits | |
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