Monday, October 17, 2016

Understanding Nehru’s vision of a just society

Nov 20, 2014: On the 125th birth anniversary of the first prime minister of India Jawahar Lal Nehru have been kicked across the country and is celebrated as the Children’s Day. I have my differences with Pandit Nehru, as he was fondly called by the masses, but I want to express my gratitude for his conviction to the see the Hindu Code Bill through in Parliament.


But for his dedication the Hindu women would still be helpless without any legal resort. For those who are unaware I would like to refresh their memories. Only as recent as 60 years ago, the Hindu women did not have the right to divorce (Hindu Personal Law does not have a conception of divorce, you get married forever) or her husband can have as many marriages as he wants with Polygamy having the sanction of the ‘holy scriptures’.

It was the persistent efforts of PM Nehru that Hindu Marriage Act 1955 was passed granting the right to divorce to women, banning Polygamy and having provisions for inter-caste marriages was passed despite much opposition from the Hindu religious leaders, who saw it as an attack on the Hindu cultural freedom.

The Hindu Code Bill later paved way for granting women the share in the ancestral property and other such provisions which today we just take for granted. But what saddens me is that his vision of extending those rights to the Muslim women remains unfulfilled.

In 1955, Nehru said that the Muslim population, aggrieved from a brutal partition, was not mentally prepared for a Uniform Civil Code that will formulate socially acceptable codes for the purposes of marriages and successions. However, even as the UCC remains a name without a concept, its mere mention evokes a sense of hatred from the so called ‘custodians’ of the Muslim community.

I thought of doing a little survey of my own to find out the reasons driving the Muslim community’s opposition to the reformation in marriage laws. I spoke to many Muslim friends of mine who can be put in a highly educated class. Their main grievances ranged from that the reformation has to come from within the people, why you want to impose Hindu culture (read monogamy and easy divorce) on the Muslims; it will be an existential threat to Muslims and Hindus still have more polygamous marriages than Muslims.

The most hideous argument was that what if the wife was barren, at least second marriage should be allowed. The lone woman supporter of UCC among my friends said, ‘Given the fact that Muslim personal law has not been reformed since the early 20th century, I personally believe Uniform Civil Code is the right thing to have. The Muslim Personal Law Board of India supports archaic rules like unilateral divorce, Triple Talaq which are not even applicable today in Islamic countries.’ It is to dispel the various notions that made writing of this article imperative. First of all the provisions of UCC are still debatable and a consensus needs to be made on them according to the prevalent social value that the country as a whole wants to promote. Stress on monogamy and granting equal rights to women in matters of matrimony and divorce are certainly not Hindu values or traditions, rather they are the modern values that a society based on the premises of equality of man and woman has to promote.

 Family is a social institution backed by legal authority; it provides the nurturing ground for future citizens of the society. So it is in the interest of the State to intervene if the prevalent family values are promoting inequality and subordination instead of basic principles of justice. It was this logic that justified banning of ‘sati pratha’ (where women burned themselves alive at the husband’s pyre) and sanctioning of widows remarriage.

The practice of instant verbal divorce by man with merely uttering ‘Talaq’ (divorce) three times is cruel and places women at an awfully unequal footing vis-à-vis man. It has been banned in several Islamic countries such as Egypt, Iran, Jordan, Morocco, Yemen and Sudan; and even in Pakistan and Bangladesh. India, which grants the freedom to profess any religion to individuals and not to communities, is yet to stand up to the stiff opposition from the self-professed leaders of the community.

Polygamy in a highly patriarchal society of India often reduces the status of the women as one of producing a male heir to the family. Muslim leaders have contended that a ban on polygamy has not weeded out the practice from the Hindu society so it is not required for the Muslim community.

It is like arguing that a law against murder is not required because the crime has not stopped. Laws pertaining to social institutions are required to give a nudge to the society in the required direction.
The third issue is that of alimony. The denial of post-divorce alimony to a large section of Indian women in the name of religion is the violation of their fundamental right of equality. India had the chance to rectify this, but how Nehru’s grandson Rajiv Gandhi floundered this opportunity in 1984 Shah Bano case is well known.

The question now is which government would dare to put its hand in the hornet’s nest and implement the ambit of the Nehru’s vision to the whole country.

Sunday, October 16, 2016

Putin, Modi make up with a bear hug

New Delhi, October 15: When India and Russia got together on Saturday before the BRICS Summit they were like long lost friends, who needed to spend some time together to accommodate each others concerns as evident in the joint statement. While Russia echoed India's sentiment of “zero tolerance” for terrorists and their abettors; New Delhi appreciated Moscow's efforts in Syria.

The Indo-Russian ties got a major shot in arm with the inking of 16 big ticket pacts ranging from defence to energy. The cementing of ties come at a crucial juncture as India saw Russia getting uncomfortably closer to Pakistan, and Moscow cringed at the tight embracing of Washington by New Delhi.
A stellar example of Indo-Russian cooperation - INS Chakra an Akula class submarine give on lease to India by Russia

Not taking each other for granted any more, Prime Minister Narendra Modi used a Russian proverb to describe the bilateral ties spanning over seven decades. “One Old Friend is better than two new ones,” Prime Minister Modi said as Russian President Vladimir Putin could not suppress a smile.

It was clear that the two leaders have ironed out the irritants in the bilateral ties that were cropped up as New Delhi was caught in a diplomatic bind as its “all-weather” friend was gearing up for first military drill with Pakistan as its Army base in Uri was under attack by terrorists supported from across the border. Touching upon India’s concerns about cross-border terrorism, Prime Minister Modi said: "Russia's clear stand on the need to combat terrorism mirrors our own. We deeply appreciate Russia's understanding and support of our actions to fight cross-border terrorism that threatens our entire region. We both affirmed the need for zero tolerance in dealing with terrorists and their supporters."

President Putin also said that the countries were working in tandem to counter terrorism.

The joint statement issued by the two countries after the completion of the 17th Indo-Russian Annual Summit is a testimony of the commitment of India and Russia to the relationship despite forging ties with other countries. The lengthy statement sought to accommodate issues important for both the countries – nuclear energy, defence, cross-border terrorism, India’s bid to become member of the UN Security Council and Nuclear Suppliers’ Group; and Russia’s concerns about the deteriorating situation in Afghanistan and cessation of hostilities in Syria.

On countering terrorism the two countries underlined the need to deny safe havens to terrorists and stressed “the need to have a strong international legal regime built on the principle of ‘zero tolerance for direct or indirect support of terrorism’”. India also took notice of the unconditional condemnation of the Uri terror attack by Russia. India also expressed satisfaction at Russia understanding its interests and reservations about holding exercises with Pakistan, which “sponsors and practices terrorism as a matter of State policy".

"We are satisfied that Russia understand India's interest and they will never do anything contrary to India's interest and I think there was a strong meeting of minds on this subject," Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar said addressing a press conference in Goa after the conclusion of the India-Russia bilateral Summit.

Ahead of proposing a reconstruction fund for Syria, India also found its views converging with Russia as far as the war-torn country was concerned. Both sides stressed for a peaceful resolution of the conflict in the country within the ambit of the UN Security Council’s resolutions. “Both Sides underlined the necessity of strengthening the cessation of hostilities, delivery of humanitarian aid to besieged areas, and the continuation of intra-Syrian dialogue under UN supervision. India recognized Russian Side's effort towards achieving a political and negotiated settlement of the situation in Syria,” the joint statement read.

Saturday, October 15, 2016

Suu Kyi’s first visit to India after democratic elections in Myanmar

October 12: Six months after her Party swept elections in Myanmar, State Counsellor the symbol of the country’s fight for democracy – Aung San Suu Kyi will be coming to India on her maiden visit, albeit her first visit abroad was China. 

The National League for Democracy (NLD) has spent its initial period strengthening its position in the country that has seen over five decades Military Junta rule and Suu Kyi assumed the role of State Counsellor. She would be visiting India on October 14 and after taking part in the BRICS’ outreach programme for members of the Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral and Technical Cooperation (BIMSTEC) she will be in Delhi till October 19.

“At the invitation of Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi, State Counselor of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar Daw Aung San Suu Kyi will pay a State Visit to India from October 17-19, 2016. The State visit will take place immediately after the conclusion of the BRICS-BIMSTEC Outreach Summit to be held in Goa on October 16, to which the State Counselor will lead the Myanmar delegation,” a statement of Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) announced.

Suu Kyi is expected to meet President Pranab Mukherjee, Prime Minister Modi and External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj among other dignitaries. The visit assumes significance as Myanmar is pivotal for India’s “Act East” and “Neighbourhood First” policies as India share 1600 km long borders with it. The country also has enhanced significance with its proximity to the north-eastern states of India and can serve as a gateway for the geographically isolated region of India with the South-East Asian countries. India is already working on roads and bridged to link North-East India with Myanmar.

Border management in general is high on the agenda for discussions between the two countries. Myanmar has given assurance that activities of insurgent groups would not be “countenanced” from its territory.

Suu Kyi’s visit has come a after sometime and the importance of Suu Kyi, who has lived in India for her higher studies, choosing China as her first destination abroad after the democratic elections has not been lost on the Indian diplomatic mandarins. The geo-strategic location of Myanmar as an entry point to the Indian Ocean and its isolation following sanctions from the West since the military took over in 1988 was taken full advantage by China. And in the last decade there were some reports of China setting up listening posts on Coco Islands belonging to Myanmar.

With these considerations in mind, Sushma Swaraj visited Myanmar in August followed by a visit by Myanmar’s President U Htin Kyaw.

China keen to revive its hydro-power projects has found favour with Suu Kyi. On the other hand, India has been trying to push the Indian businessmen to take notice of opportunities in Myanmar coming with liberalisation of its procedures for Foreign Investment. The MEA has been observing the “reticence” on the part of Indian industry.

Thursday, October 6, 2016

THE KASHMIR CONFLICT AND THE MUSLIM IDENTITY IN INDIA


INTRODUCTION

Sixty-six years after independence, the peace in the Valley of Kashmir continues to be fragile. The dispute involving the only Muslim-majority state in the country – Jammu and Kashmir – has been a common thread in the Master Narratives of Indian politics – the Hindu Nationalism, the Muslim political identity and the Secularist discourse.

The Kashmir dispute is a heady mix of contentions along ethnic, religious and territorial lines, irredentism, hyper-nationalism and; interstate and intrastate conflict. The movement in the Kashmir that has its genesis in 1931 owing to the unequal relationship between the ruler (the Hindu Dogra King) and the ruled (a poor Muslim Peasantry), over a period of time aligned itself along the communal lines (Talbot, 1949). The Indian secularists considered the state’s accession to the Union of India as imperative for the four pillars of the its foundation – Secularism, Democracy, Federalism and Nationalism (Ganguly and Bajpai, 1994). Pakistan, on the other hand, staked its irredentist claim on Kashmir as a Muslim-majority territory contiguous to it. The vigour of Pakistan’s claim increased more so after East Pakistan broke off in 1971 to form Bangladesh, discrediting the very idea of Pakistan as the home to the South Asian Muslims.

It is accepted that it was not the differences between the two religions – Hinduism and Islam – that resulted in communalism but “communal politics and ideological practices that transformed religious differentiation into communal cleavage” (Chandra, 1996 and (Brown, 1997). But the failure of the ‘secular-nationalist’ forces to deal with the communal problem despite its commitment to secularism and national unity, in the pre-independence country played an instrumental role in the rise of communalism. Also, the rise of political self-consciousness among the elites in the second largest community in the country – that has been rulers of the country during what is popularly termed as the Mughal Era suddenly projected itself as minorities (Akbar, 2011) - led to the partition of the country into India and Pakistan.

The bloodshed that ensued partition bequeathed both the countries with a heavy burden of the past. And, as Muslims projected themselves as National Minority – a political stance to claim certain collective cultural or political rights – they created a triadic nexus between India-Pakistan and the Muslim community (Bowem, 2002). This triadic nexus also got extrapolated in the politics of Kashmir and the players involved – India and Pakistan – got bound by their intractable positions and the clamour for independence gets stronger among Kashmiri Muslims.

Further, the manifestation of the Kashmir dispute along religious lines has bolstered the strength of the Hindu nationalists across the country, who have pinned the issue to the question of the loyalty of Muslim community as a whole towards India (Varshney, 1991). While it is absolutely fallacious to assume Muslims as ‘homogenous’ entity, what cannot be ignored is that modernity has increased the political consciousness and widened the boundaries communities encompassing masses cutting across geographical boundaries (Chandra, 1996). For India, a polyethnic society that embarked on the process of nation-building only 67 years ago, Kashmir’s ‘inalienable’ association with it is an important part of its Nationalism – defined as a set of ideas, both learned and manipulated (Bowem, 2002).

The Essay will be an examination of the role played by the Kashmir dispute outside the state of Jammu and Kashmir formulating the larger discourse between communal forces from both the Hindu and Muslim Communities. The paper will deliberate on the impact of the Kashmir Conflict on the Muslim Identity in the rest of the India using Rogers Brubaker’s triadic configuration of nationalizing states, national minorities and external national homelands, to explain why issue of Kashmir remains one of the biggest bones of contention between the Hindus and Muslims. The model of ‘the Macedonian Syndrome’ will also be discussed to explain the situation. The schism between the two communities remain starkly crystalised and wide on the contrary to that with the Sikh community, which had also witnessed in 1980’s waged a fairly violent secessionist movement for Khalistan.

Within the state of Jammu and Kashmir there has been heavily polarized today like not time in history, as evident from the mass protests of Hindus and Muslims that arose following the Amarnath Yatra Land transfer issue in 2008 (Tremblay, 2009). The Kashmiri Pandits (Hindus) continue to be in exile since their exodus from the Valley of Kashmir in 1990, the generation of Kashmir Muslims since then has grown without any memory of co-existence with other community. Moreover, the Hindus of the Jammu region for long have been grieving against the social, economic and political partisan politics played by the politicians of Kashmir. Seeing no future outside the Union of India and; fearing subjugation and meeting same fate as Kashmiri Pandits in a Muslim-majority-independent Jammu and Kashmir, the Hindus in the Jammu region rose up in an uprising in reaction to the Kashmiri Muslims agitation against the transfer of 99 acres of land of Amarnath Hindu Shrine Board.

HISTORY OF KASHMIR

The history and context of Jammu-Kashmir played an important role in shaping the development of events in the Valley. Islam was not brought to Kashmir by attackers and the people were not converted at gun point. Rather, the people willingly converted and started following the Sufism strand of Islam. The Islam practiced in the Kashmir valley differs from the one practiced in the rest of the country and also in Pakistan. It was this difference that gave the Valley its clarion call for freedom in the name of Kashmiriyat – a set of values it shared amongst its residents. However, it was the context and demography of the state that eventually necessitated the use of religion (Sharma, 1985).

At the time of independence, the Hindu ruler of the Muslim-majority state signed the Instrument of Accession with India on October 26, 1947, in lieu of the New Delhi’s military support against the Pakistan-backed tribesmen from the North Western Frontier Province (NWFP). The tribesmen had attacked Jammu and Kashmir to forcibly liberate the Muslims of Kashmir.  The subjects of Hari Singh, who have started an uprising in 1931, under the leadership of Sheikh Abdullah accepted the Instrument of Accession along with the assurance of the Indian government to protect the autonomy of the state. By November 1947, both India and Pakistan formulated public positions that would make difficult for both of them to retreat (Lamb, 1993).
In making the decision to accede to New Delhi, Sheikh Abdullah identified more similarity between the basic tenets of the Idea of India that is Secularism and Kashmiriyat. Nearly a year after Jammu and Kashmir leader Sheikh Abdullah defended India’s stand in his speech in the UN Security Council Meeting by saying: “It was because I and my organization never believed in the formula that Muslims and Hindus form separate nations. We do not believe in the two-nation theory, nor in communal hatred or communalism itself. We believed that religion had no place in politics. Therefore, when we launched our movement of ‘Quit Kashmir’ it was not only Muslims who suffered, but our Hindu and Sikh comrades as well.”

In popular imagination, the dispute of Kashmir is all about the ‘cohesive and homogenous’ people of a shared ethnicity seeking the right of self-determination. But presently the assumed cohesiveness and homogeneity of the populace of Jammu and Kashmir is contrary to the ground reality. The religion-wise breakup of the population as per the 2001 census showed that the Muslims constituted the predominant religious community of the state at 67 percent, Hindus came next at 29.6 percent, Sikhs 2.23 percent, Buddhists 1.16 percent, Christians 0.14 percent, and others form the remaining part.

The population was also divided into three main geographical regions of Hindu majority Jammu, Muslim-dominated Kashmir Valley and Buddhist-populated Ladakh. While the denial of the right of self-determination has led to the alienation of the population of Kashmir Valley, the neglect of the other communities socially, economically and politically – Hindus and Buddhists - have created schism between Jammu and Ladakh’s relations with the state government-based in Kashmir. The situation can be summed up that contrary to the assumption of Kashmiris being a ‘homogenous, monolithic’ group; it has many small communities each striving for a better socio-economic development and a political space for itself (Behra, 2006). This mistaken impression often results in assessing the relation of only the Kashmir valley with the Indian state and not that of the whole state of Jammu and Kashmir.

On one hand, the continuous encroachment of the Indian government of the promised autonomy to Jammu and Kashmir and the meddling with political institutions in the valley has alienated the now educated and better informed youth of the valley (Ganguly, 1996). The rise of insurgency in Kashmir found an ally in the radicalisaition taking place in Pakistan. On the other hand, the constant refusal of the Kashmir-Muslim headed government to share power with other communities forced Jammu and Ladakh regions to seek a greater integration with India (Behra, 2006). This eventually- led the leaders of Kashmir to seek a separate homeland for the Kashmiri Muslims – which constitute nearly 99 percent of the population of the Kashmir Valley after Kashmiri Pandits were driven out by the violent campaign against them in 1990 by militants. The crystallized divisions became evident in 2008 as the protests of the Kashmir Muslims against the land transfer to the Hindu Amarnath Shrine Board were met with not only equal but more vocal protests by the Hindu in Jammu Region.

In a nutshell initially the Kashmiris – both Hindus and Muslims- had considered themselves vitally different from their counterparts in the rest of the country. But, the movement that started against the “unequal relationship” between the rulers and the ruled that gave way to communal bias as “political consciousness spread to Kashmir.

INDIA, KASHMIR DISPUTE AND THE MUSLIM IDENTITY


The idea of nation itself has undergone a sea change and today nations can be accepted as a set of ideas around which an identity is being constructed to define who belongs to the country and who do not. But for India the restructuring of nationalism took place just at independence as Pakistan was carved out as Muslim Homeland. India instead of choosing the nationality of race decided to opt for the nationality of territory cutting across religions (Varshney, 2002) and was home to nearly 13 percent of Muslims at the time of independence.

Despite the narrative of secular nationalism derives its power form the Constitution of India, the Hindu-Muslim cleavage had never healed in the post-independent India in the presence of the nationalizing host state of India, presence of national minority of Muslims, in whose name an external national homeland was claimed in 1947 in the name of Pakistan (Brubaker, 1996). And the revival of Kashmiri freedom movement aided by the insurgency from across the Line of Control dividing India and Pakistan (Swami, 2007) considerably shaped the Muslim Identity in the rest of the India as well. Symbol selection and manipulation by politically active elites of both Hindus and Muslim communities have shaped the Muslim Identity in the country (Copland, 2014) and Kashmir has been an important symbol that has epitomized this struggle.

The predicaments of the Muslims in the rest of India owing to the Pakistan’s intervention in Kashmir were duly expressed by a group of non-Kashmiri Muslims in a Memorandum to the United Nations in 1951. Signed by 14 distinguished Indian Muslims of that time, the memorandum questioned Pakistan’s constant announcement about their “determination to protect and safeguard the interests of Muslims in India”. “This naturally aroused suspicion amongst the Hindus against us and our loyalty to India was questioned,” said the memorandum. Regarding Kashmir and its impact on the fortune of Muslims it said: “In its oft-proclaimed anxiety to rescue the 3 million Muslims from what it describes as the tyranny of a handful of Hindus in the State (Jammu and Kashmir), Pakistan evidently is prepared to sacrifice the interests of 40 million Muslims in India - a strange exhibition of concern for the welfare of fellow Muslims. Our misguided brothers in Pakistan do not realise that if Muslims in Pakistan can wage a war against Hindus in Kashmir why should not Hindus, sooner or later, retaliate against Muslims in India?”

At the same time failing to gain support of the minority communities of Hindus and Buddhists in Jammu and Kashmir, the leaders of Kashmiri Muslims, even Sheikh Abdullah, pitted the movement against the subversion of the right of the self-determination of the Muslim-dominated Kashmir by the Hindu-majority India(Varshney,1991). The divide along communal lines became more evident during the summer of 2008 as the whole valley broke out in agitation and a stone-pelting population was dealt with heavy hand by security forces. Booker Prize winner and political activist Arundhati Roy talking against the Indian occupation in the Valley in her Essay said: “It allows Hindu chauvinists to target and victimise Muslims in India by holding them hostage to the freedom struggle being waged by Muslims in Kashmir.”

Many scholars, including Samuel Huntington, have pointed out that the economic modernization generates a politically conscious community that seeks greater opportunities for physical, social and economic mobility. Others have also identified that in most of the contemporary poly-ethnic societies developmental needs expressed in terms of cultural values, human rights and security (Brown, 1997).  This could not be more evident in the situation of the Kashmir Valley. A close scrutiny of the situation shows that the employment among the youth remains abysmally low, in stark resemblance of the situation for the majority of the population during the rule of the Hindu Dogra King (Ganguly, 1996).

Just like the Valley of Kashmir many secessionist movement was waged in Punjab. The economically strong backbone of Punjab helped it bounce back as opposed to Kashmir where one crop season and the militancy had destroyed the economy. Sikhs who have been victims of the carnage of 1984 following the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, are performing really well and are respected across the country. This is in complete contrast to alienation faced by the Kashmiri Muslims and the aspersion it casts on the Muslim Community in the country as general.

The antinomies of nationalism of India and Pakistan and the question of Muslim Identity in India can be extrapolated to the Myron Weiner’s model explaining ‘The Macedonian Syndrome’. The model has three actors - an irredentist state, an anti-irredentist neighbor, and a shared ethnic group crossing the international boundary (Weiner, 1971). The ethnic group has to be in minority in the anti-irredentist neighbor. The situation gets exacerbated as the two neighbors have a disputed territory. Since Partition Pakistan continues to have irredentist claims on the Kashmir Valley and the rest of the Muslim population of the anti-irredentist India. The Muslim being the national minority of the country is also a key actor in this triadic relation.  

The situation can also be understood in the light of the triadic configuration used by Rogers Brubaker while explaining the National Question in the New Europe as the boundaries were drawn cutting across communities similar or different from each other. Brubaker saw the relation between nationalizing state, national minorities and external homelands. As per this configuration, nationalizing states are poly-ethnic and are still in the stage of nation-building making it imperative for them to promote to varying degrees the language, culture, demographic position, economic flourishing or political hegemony. Then there are self-conscious national minorities striving for greater cultural or territorial autonomy.  Muslims are the national minority of India and not Sikhs, Jains or Buddhists. A manifestation of such a demand is embodied in the Kashmiri Muslim’s demand for more freedom. And the triad is completed by an external national ‘homelands’ of the minorities. Pakistan on the basis of common religion with the Muslims of India have been closely monitoring their situation and closely protest alleged violation of their rights and assert its obligation to defend their interests. A case in point would be the resolution passed by the Parliament of Pakistan to denounce the anti-Muslim communal riots in Gujarat in 2002.

The separatist leaders have been constantly invoking the common religious thread between Kashmir and Pakistan to assert secession from India.  In 2008 separatist leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani said during one of the protest that Islam would guide the struggle and that it was a complete social and moral code that would govern the people of a free Kashmir. He said Pakistan had been created as the home of Islam, and that that goal should never be subverted. He said just as Pakistan belonged to Kashmir, Kashmir belonged to Pakistan (Roy, 2008). It is such stances of the Kashmiri leader that given fodder to the Hindu chauvinist outside the Valley and then the ensuing stereotyping of the rest of the Muslims and their putative nationalism towards Pakistan.

The triangular relationship is also exhibited in the clash of the informal symbols of nationalism prevalent in the Valley and the formal nationalism as promoted by the Central Indian government. For instance as the insurgency started in the Valley in 1990s, celebrations of events associated with the Indian nationhood such as Independence Day and Republic Day are not celebrated by the masses. Whereas, the Pakistan backed militant groups designed social calendars to mobilise the masses and included events like Paksitan’s Independence Day. In the same fashion, cricket matches between India and Pakistan served an important political function as the Kashmiris cheer the Pakistani team. The efforts of the Indian Central government in generating national symbols have also been thwarted by the exposure of the Kashmiri population to Pakistan radio and television that have been instrumental in giving an alternative version of the Kashmir issue and strengthening the religious bond between Pakistan and the Kashmir Valley. This aided with the alienation of Kashmiri Muslim masses has put up questions around the legitimacy of the Indian authority(Tremblay, 1996).

While Pakistan can hardly afford to give formal citizenship to the Muslims of the country, its continuous monitoring of their situation and interference in their affairs; and privileges given to the Muslims from the Kashmir Valley and the rest of the country has given rise to two mutually antagonistic nationalisms – one towards India and other towards Pakistan. The recent example has been the suspension of 67 Kashmir Muslim students from a university in Northern India after they rooted for Pakistani team during a cricket match on March 3, 2014 and the immediate response from Pakistan and Pakistan-based terror outfit Jamaat-ud-Dawah (JuD) separately offering scholarship to the expelled students highlighted this third party intervention attempting to exploit the existing fissures in the society.

CONCLUSION


The popular assumption among the masses in India about the “Muslim Separatism” that got manifested in the partition of the country is that Muslims had a choice of political identity but they chose one based on religion (Robb, 1991). The assumption got impetus with the turn of events in the Kashmir valley and the constant irredentist claim of Pakistan.

Under international Law, a state has the right to protect its citizens even when they live in other states. But they cannot legitimately claim to protect their ethnic co-nationals leaving in other state and holding the legal citizenship of that state. While Kashmiris right to strive for self-determination is indisputable, Pakistan’s irredentist claim on the basis of a movement that saw a resurgence in 1990s (considerably long time after Maharaja Hari Singh signed the Instrument of Accession with India) complicates the situation.

Monitoring is the key aspect of the triadic relation and Pakistan- projecting itself as the homeland of South Asian Muslims – take complete leverage of that situation. Pakistan backing the movement in Kashmir, can react back on the nationalizing state that is India, where the minority might be accused of disloyalty in reaction. Hindu fundamentalists have already been holding the “attitude of Muslims that Muslims were different from the nation” as the main reason of the country’s partition (Varshney, 2002). The success of movement in Kashmir is deemed pernicious for the secular fabric of India and will have a ‘domino-effect’ in the poly-ethnic society of India.

Pakistan might be exploiting its ethno-religious ties with the Kashmir valley driven by geo-political reasons. But the idea of Pakistan is under question as it became the world’s one of the most violent country and not because Hindus are killing Muslims, but because Muslims are killing Muslims (Cohen, 2012). In such a scenario, claiming Muslim-majority Kashmir is to strengthen its position as the home for the Muslims of South Asia.


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