Memorandum, Regional
Autonomy Committee
COMMITTEE
TO BUILD RESPONSE ON AUTONOMY (CBRA)
INTRODUCTION
Jammu and
Kashmir is a heterogeneous state, with a number of
geographical regions and sub-regions, representing
different climates, fauna and flora. People
possessing different ethnic backgrounds,
professing different faiths, and a variety of
cultural traditions and speaking different
languages, reside in the State. What is more
significant, is that the people living in these
regions have not still attained a uniform level of
development.
In the middle of the
nineteenth century, Maharaja Gulab Singh and his
son Maharaja Ranbir Singh did a commendable job by
welding the diverse hilly areas on the south east
of Palmir Plateau, stretching from river Ravi in
the east up to Indus in the West, and bordered in
the South by the plains of Punjab, into a single
administrative entity under British suzerainty,
known as "Jammu Kashmir Wa Tibet Ha".
After the British Government created two
independent dominions of India and Pakistan and
withdrew their suzerainty over the Indian princely
states on August 15,1947, Maharaja Hari Singh of
Jammu and Kashmir acceded to the Dominion of India
on October 26,1947, by signing the Instrument of
Accession.
TERMS OF REFERENCE OF
THE REGIONAL AUTONOMY COMMITTEE
The purport of the
Terms of Reference of the Committee set up by the
Government for Regional Autonomy, is the better
involvement and participation of people in the
institutions and power structure, that exist. The
purpose is to make recommendations in order to
remove discrimination suffered by the people so
that justice, economic, social, cultural and
educational, becomes easily available to them, and
the people are able to live with a full sense of
security, free from fear and exploitation. In this
con text, we expect the Committee on Regional
Autonomy to delve deeper within the geographical
confines of the regions, so that the labour put in
by the Committee proves really fruitful, vis-a-vis
improving the life of an individual human so that
he or she does have an opportunity to develop his
or her potential to the maximum possible extent.
The regions are not to be
developed for their own sake. The development of
the regions has to be affected for the benefit of
the people, residing therein. There are regions
where some sections of the population have got
better chances of development, living in the same
region while others have continued to be deprived
from the fruits of development. Therefore, it is
hoped in the real spirit of regional autonomy, due
attention will be paid towards the development of
the ignored sections of the populace.
Due care has also to be
exercised in determining the index and perimeters
of progress and development, backwardness and
under-development of various segments of
population, residing in a region. While
determining backwardness, usually such factors as
education, and professions depending upon academic
qualifications were taken into account, and very
little consideration was attached to factors like
possession, control and monopoly over means of
production, such as ownership of land, orchards,
modes of transport, industry, trades, etc. There
are also segments of population within these
regions who are ignored in view of caste,
religious and social bias against them. It shall,
therefore, be in the fitness of things that such
sections of the people living in respective
regions, are identified, who instead of forging
ahead have suffered retardation due to certain
administrative policies.
EMERGENCE OF MUSLIMS
AS A POLITICALLY DOMINANT FORCE IN THE STATE
After termination
of emergency administration (Oct;28,1947 to March
5,1948), the interim government with a Council of
Ministers was constituted by a proclamation,
issued by the Maharaja on March 5,1948. In his
proclamation, the Maharaja declared that the
Council of Ministers would make arrangements for
constitution of a National Assembly to frame the
Constitution for the Government of the State. It
was also ordained in this proclamation that the
deputies to the National Assembly would be elected
on the basis of adult franchise ostensibly because
of the heterogeneous character of the state and a
dispersal settling down of the minorities in
various regions of the State, the Maharaja further
desired that in the Constitutional structure to be
evolved by the proposed National Assembly, the
minorities shall be "provided adequate
safeguards".
On account of various
reasons, the Maharaja relinquished his office on
June 9,1949, in favour of his son, Yuvraj Shri
Karan Singh. On October 27,1950, the National
Conference by a resolution asked for holding of an
election to the State Constituent Assembly. On May
1,1951, the Yuvraj issued a proclamation convoking
the Constituent Assembly through adult franchise
by direct and secret ballot. Interestingly, this
proclamation made no reiteration of the Maharaja's
intention of providing special representation to
minorities. On the other hand, it was laid out in
this proclamation that the government would make
rules, instructions and orders, to give affect to
the terms of the Proclamation. Thus, it fell upon
the government, in the first instance, and,
ultimately, on the Constituent Assembly, to evolve
and establish instrumentalities, in order to
protect the interests of the minorities.
The State Constituent
Assembly ignored to take note of the heterogeneous
character of the State and the protection of the
interests of the minorities and other weaker
sections of the population. The ignored sections
of the population expressed their grievances from
time to time, and even launched agitations, to
press for the acceptance of their demands. To
pacify the agitationists, the Government at times,
appointed Commissions of Inquiry to look into
regional and other grievances. The recommendations
of these Commissions, particularly those headed by
Justice Sikri and Justice Gajandhargadkar involved
a restructuring of administration at the district
level and providing adequate representation to the
deprived people of the various regions in the
Council of Ministers, were not implemented. Even
after the constitution of the Ladakh Hill
Development Council, under proper legislation, its
functioning has not been free from conflict. Every
attempt has been made to make this institution,
non-functional and redundant. The District
Development Boards which have been set up under
orders of the executive for formulation,
execution, implementation and monitoring of the
district development plans, have been rendered
ineffective by the government through manipulation
and indifference. The local self governing
institutions have been superseded and their
working has got controlled by the officers of the
Government. The mismanagement and manipulation of
these institutions have been engineered by the
vested Muslim majority interests of the valley,
whose ascendance and dominance in position of
power has been assured through legal and political
means.
The last Delimitation
Commission has carved out 87 constituencies, on
territorial basis, for election of 87 members in
1996, to the Legislative Assembly. The table given
below reflects the average population and area,
per constituency.
Region |
Estimated
population* |
Area in Sq.kms* |
No.of Const |
Average pop. |
Av. area Sq.Kms |
Kashmir |
40,10,202 |
15,948 |
46 |
89,352 |
346 |
Ladakh |
1,70,541 |
59,146 |
4 |
42,635 |
1,486 |
Jammu |
35,37,957 |
26,293 |
37 |
95,620 |
719 |
Total |
77,18,700 |
1,01,387 |
87 |
88,709 |
1,165 |
*Source:
Government of Jammu and Kashmir Digest of
statistics (1993-94)
Dominance of the Kashmir
region over the Jammu region, in the Legislative
Assembly, is visible on the twin basis of
population and area. Whereas, Kashmir has 4.73
Lakh more population than Jammu, it could on basis
of 89,000 average population per constituency in
the State claim 5 more seats than Jammu against
which it has been allocated 9 seats, viz. 80% in
excess that of due. Area-wise also, Jammu has been
discriminated against in the matter of allocation
of Assembly seats.
To perpetuate a complete
and continuous dominance of Muslims even within
the Valley, the Assembly constituencies where
Kashmiri Hindus could politically be represented,
were restructured. Accordingly, the localities of
Rainawari, Habbakadal, and Karan Nagar in Srinagar
city, were fragmented in order to reduce them to
an insignificant part of the contiguous Muslim
dominated constituencies, thereby depriving the
Hindus to elect representatives to the Assembly,
on their own strength. While three Kashmiri Hindus
were returned to Assembly in 1957, 1962 and 1967,
the number was subsequently restricted to one
member only in 1972, 1977, 1983, 1987 and 1996, as
shown in the following table:-
Year |
Constituency |
Name
of Legislator. |
1957 |
Amirakadal |
Shri
Sham Lal Saraf |
|
Habbakadal |
Shri D P
Dhar |
|
Kothar |
Shri
Manohar Nath Koul |
1962 |
Kothar |
Shri
Manohar Nath Koul |
|
Amirakadal |
Shri
ShamLal Saraf |
|
Habbakadal |
Shri D P
Dhar |
1967 |
Devsar |
Shri
Manohar Nath Koul |
|
Pahalgam |
Shri
MakhanLal Fotedar |
|
Habbakadal |
Shri
SriKanth Kaul |
1972 |
Pahalgam |
Shri
Makhan Lal Fotedar |
1977 |
Pahalgam |
Shri
Piyarey Lal Handoo |
1983 |
Pahalgam |
Shri
Piyarey Lal Handoo |
1987 |
Habbakadal |
Shri
Piyarey Lal Handoo |
1996 |
Habbakadal |
Shri
Piyarey Lal Handoo |
It is significant to note
here, that Kashmiri Hindus launched an agitation
in 1967, against the majoritarianism of the
Muslims in the Valley. The numerical reduction of
Kashmiri Hindu MLAs to only one, can be defined as
a direct consequence of the above agitation. Both
on basis of their population and in view of their
historical role in the freedom struggle, at the
national and state level, there was no
justification for their political exclusion to
make them politically insignificant especially in
a State that professes a secular and democratic
set-up.
No sooner the accession
of the State with the Union of India was brought
about, the power was transferred to the people and
the State government was reconstituted. The Muslim
majority in the State enforced its precedence in
the governance of the state. The ruling elite of
the State succeeded in establishing a separate
political organisation for the state, outside the
constitutional organisation of India, on the basis
of the Muslim majoritarian character of the
population, thereby foisting a Muslim precedence
and domination in the State. The period from
1947-1957, is of great significance and the
development that took place during this period
needs careful study and analysis, for a better
understanding and framing of right perceptions.
The state was ruled by decrees and ordinances
during this period of ten years and this
dispensation did not accept (i) Right to equality,
(ii) Right to equality of opportunity (iii) Right
to protection against discrimination, on the basis
of religion, race, place of birth, sex or caste;
(iv) Right to legal remedies against any
discrimination on the grounds of religion, race,
caste or place of birth, and sex (v) Right to
freedom of faith, (vi)Right to own and manage
religious endowments, religious places, religious
property and religious institutions, (vii) Right
to protection against persecution of minorities.
The Legislature and Executive of the Government of
the State, exercised arbitrary powers of
classification of population in effecting the
rights of the minorities, in almost all the
spheres of life.
THE EXCLUSION OF
KASHMIRI PANDIT COMMUNITY FROM TOTAL STRUCTURE
OF KASHMIR
In Kashmir Valley, a verbal
campaign was started soon after the take over of
power by the new ruling elite in 1947, to the
effect that Kashmiri Hindus had 'greener pastures'
available outside the state. This had a
double-edged pernicious effect on the entire
population of the Valley. For the Kashmiri Hindus,
it resulted in their destabilization in their
Homeland, while for Muslims it created a
separatist psyche. "Greener pastures"
term was given currency as a cover-up mechanism
for the slow but steady exodus of Kashmiri Pandit
community from Kashmir. This proved ominous for
their future prospects, stability, peace and
security within state. Kashmiri Hindus had
participated in large numbers in the freedom
struggle and also helped to evolve the
Nationalistic Movement, with its progressive
economic programme in the state. There could,
therefore, have been no reason for launching a
campaign which virtually put the Kashmiri Hindus
on the hit list of the Government. Kashmiri Hindus
also fully appreciated the justification and need
for giving relief to the peasantry, who were
overwhelmingly Muslims in Kashmir, from the
crushing burden of debts and out-dated land tenure
system. There was, therefore, no justification for
the ruling elite to create misgivings in the minds
of the majority community, against minority
Hindus. It is significant that prominent Kashmiri
Hindus like Shri Damodar Bhat, well known lawyer
of Badgam and Shri Reshi Dev, played a major role
of revival of peasant economy in early fifties, by
associating themselves with debt conciliation
work. The ruling elite of Kashmir launched another
vilification campaign against Kashmiri Hindus,
labelling them as symbols of exploitation worth to
be condemned and punished. The fact was that
Landlords were a definite class comprising of
Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs etc; products of a feudal
society. The rulers aroused hatred of Muslim
peasantry against the Hindu land owners as
oppressors. The fact, however, was that Shri D P
Dhar and Shri Jia Lal Tamari, had them selves on
their own distributed among the tenants their
ancestral land held by them in ownership through
inheritance, well before the Land Ceiling Act was
passed. The magnanimity of these Kashmiri Pandits
was never brought within public notice, by the
rulers. There is no evidence to show that any
Muslim, including advocates of Naya Kashmir, to
have taken such a step. Their (K.Ps') sense of
patriotism and commitment to democratic way of
life was ridiculed. It is with deep anguish and a
heavy heart, that mention needs to be made about
the fact that even a leader of the stature of
Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah, could not avoid becoming
a party to Kashmiri Pandit hate-campaign by
labelling them as "fifth column of
India" which was used as an instrument by
Muslim fundamentalists against the helpless
community.
The Kashmiri Hindus were
eager that social and economic condition of
Kashmiri Muslim masses of the valley be improved.
For this purpose, they launched a relentless
effort in the pre-independence era, so that modern
education, among Muslims of the valley could
spread and take roots. Shri Govind Koul and others
founded National School at Baramulla and a similar
school at Shopian was founded by Shri Swaroop Nath
Raina, a veteran freedom fighter. Earlier, Prof.
Srikanth Toshkani had founded a girls school at
Srinagar for spreading of female education, under
the Women Welfare Trust. Besides all this, there
were many Kashmiri Hindus, who in their individual
capacity, did their best to spread modern
education among Muslim masses. Even the Islamia
School at Srinagar, was mostly manned by Kashmiri
Hindus. In the field of medical care, it was Dr.
Shamboo Nath Peshin and others who founded
National Hospital, for providing medical facility
to the masses, which generally included Muslims.
Pandit Kashyap Bandhu became the pioneer of the
idea for establishment of Labour Board, to improve
the miserable plight of Kashmiri Muslim labourers,
working as porters in Jammu and the plains.
Kashmiri Hindus dissuaded the business community
in Jammu and other northern Indian cities of the
Punjab, from using the despicable nomenclature of
'hato' for Kashmiri Muslim labourers. All this and
other similar contributions to ameliorate the lot
of their Muslim brethren, on part of the Kashmiri
Hindus, were totally ignored and forgotten. Apart
from rousing malice and hatred, of the majority
Muslim community against Kashmiri Hindus, the
rulers of the State in the post-1947 period took
special policy decisions to harass and destabilize
them in the valley. The implementation of land
reforms legislation brought about a change not
only in the social relationship but also exercised
a deep impact upon the economic condition of the
people. The landlords whose lands were
appropriated as a result of these reforms, in
1950, suffered a curtailment of their incomes,
that they used to derive from land. For Muslim
landlords, other avenues of earning their
livelihood were made available, but it was not so
in the case of the Hindus of the valley, as a
community. Soon after assuming power, the rulers
ordered pre-mature retirement of the government
employees who had attained fifty years of age or
had a total service of 25 years. Simultaneously,
as a matter of policy, fresh recruitment in
Government services, was by and large restricted
to their ratio of population. Not only that, a
similar policy was adopted in respect of selection
and nomination for higher and technical education,
outside the state. As a result of retrenchment
from Government service and drastic curtailment of
fresh recruitment, and no alternate avenue of
livelihood being available to them in the forties
and early fifties, Kashmiri Hindus, to save
themselves from starvation, were left with no
option but to leave the State. Earlier, in the
wake of raids on the State sponsored by Pakistan,
a large number of Kashmiri Hindus of the valley
had already left the state. In addition, due to
the decision of the state Government, not to allow
Hindu refugees, including Sikhs, from Muzaffarabad
district and those areas of Baramulla which came
to be occupied by Pakistan, to settle in the
valley, the population of Hindus in Kashmir got
substantially reduced. Significantly, the Muslims
from Sinkiang province of China were allowed to
live in the valley. This brought about a
significant demographic change in the valley,
reducing Kashmiri Hindus to the status of an
ineffective minuscule minority.
The policy of
discrimination against Kashmiri Hindus was
followed by their exclusion from the economic,
social, political and administrative set-up of the
state, a policy ruthlessly followed by the rulers
from 1947 up to 1989-90, which paved the way for
their ethnic cleansing, subsequently. The Big
Landed Estates Abolition Act, 1950, did not at all
keep an opening for a landlord to work as a
tenant, in case he would like to do so. According
to this Act, land held by a landlord beyond the
fixed ceiling, w as transferred to the tiller
without payment of compensation to the landlord.
The Agrarian Reforms Act, 1976, however, while
providing an opportunity for the landlord to
become a self-cultivating tenant, restricted this
option to him by imposing the domicile condition
that worked against the landlords particularly the
Hindus, who had already in consequence of a social
and economic bias and discrimination and
security/compulsions, been forced to leave the
villages to live in the nearby towns, within the
valley or leave the state for good. The chance for
the Hindus of the valley to work as
self-cultivating tenants was closed and they had
no option but to accept payments, in lieu of
extinguishment of rights on land. The chances for
retreat and reform were denied to this community,
in various economic fields. No initiative was
taken to diversify the Kashmiri Pandit community
into other sectors of economy, where their absence
was conspicuous.
Government employment
avenues for Kashmiri Hindus had already been
restricted. They were not encouraged or helped by
Government to take to business, tourism, including
hotels and houseboats, transport, industry, forest
etc. The result was that there was negligible or
no presence of Kashmiri Hindus in these lucrative
avenues. In respect of Government services, fresh
recruitment of Kashmiri Hindus was restricted to
the ratio of their population, which was
deliberately and willfully understated. Even those
who managed their entry into services under
extremely and adverse difficult conditions, were
continuously suppressed and discriminated against
which they had to fight long legal battles in the
High Court and even in the Supreme Court, for
restoration of t heir rights. Even after obtaining
favourable judgments, the rulers of the
state did every thing to delay the implementation
of Court decisions.
The rulers of Kashmir in
the post-1947 era, systematically and in a planned
manner, initiated the process of bias and
discrimination resulting in the elimination of
Kashmiri Hindus from the social, economic, and
administrative set-up and cultural structures of
the valley. This action of the rulers was
supplemented by the Muslim fundamentalists and
secessionists by rousing the sentiments of
majority community against the Hindu minority of
valley. Disputes regarding lands attached to the
shrines, temples and cremation grounds of Hindus,
were initiated. With the help of the executive
power of the government, these lands were allowed
to be grabbed. The Jamat-i-Islami Madrasas
preached and instilled open hatred against the
Hindus, among the Muslim children attending these
Madrasas. Everything possible was done to harass
the minorities in the valley and create an
atmosphere of insecurity for them.
LAST NAIL IN THE
COFFIN
The happenings of 1989-90,
were the logical culmination of the process, that
had been set in motion since 1947. The genocide
and exodus of Kashmiri Hindus from the valley was
not an aberration or an isolated happening. The
seed of this sordid event which had been sown in
1947, 1967 and 1986 were well nurtured to bloom
fully, in 1989-90. It would be wrong to attribute
the genocide and ethnic cleansing of Kashmiri
Hindus, to gun culture alone. The narration of the
details leading to genocide and ethnic cleansing,
will be time consuming and voluminous. Therefore,
the details have been omitted but the mention of
the events is necessary.
Due to the domination of
Islamic fundamentalist and secessionist elements
in the State administration of the valley,
particularly in the sensitive positions, the
administrative structures collapsed with ease in
no time, without offering any resistance, as soon
as green signal of going ahead was received. This
not only facilitated the rise of terrorism against
Hindus of Kashmir, but also helped to strengthen
insurgency against the Indian Union through all
possible means available to the subversives in the
valley. Even the press in the valley acted as a
mouthpiece of terrorists and insurgents and
eulogized and even glorified terrorist and
insurgent operations. A submissive and emasculated
press encouraged passive submission of political
workers of various hues, by publishing their paid
advertisements, disowning their association with
such political parties which had vouched for
secularism, democracy and the integrity of India.
Such political parties and set-ups were even
condemned. The role of the so-cal led mainstream
political parties which had been the beneficiaries
of power and influence, from 1947, onwards in the
state, was not only dubious but proved helpful in
encouraging violence by their observing steadied
silence. Their top leadership left the v alley for
Delhi and elsewhere, soon after January, 1990,
leaving the field open for the terrorists and
their secessionist political leaderships, in the
valley. No resistance, whatsoever, was offered by
these mainstream parties to the anarchy and mayhem
that prevailed.
Along with the selective
killings of prominent Kashmiri Hindus, the
terrorists resorted to intimidation of Hindus,
loot of their property and the rape of their
women. These insurgents pasted names of Kashmiri
Hindus, listed on their hit lists, on lamp-posts
in Hindu localities, to terrorize the community.
Notices, fixing the dates for Hindus to quit the
valley, were issued through local papers. Above
all, anti-Hindu and pro-secession and Islamic
fundamentalist slogans were blared for nights
together, over loud-speakers from mosques,
throughout the valley. No one in the valley spoke
against what was happening. Everyone was
overwhelmed and drifted along with the current of
terrorism. Lakhs of people demanding secession
chanting slogans of "Nizami Mustafa "
and led by armed terrorists, paraded in streets of
Srinagar. Hell was let loose on the Hindu
minority. They had no place to hide themselves,
except to obey the terrorist dictate to quit the
valley, leaving behind their valuable immovable as
well as movable properties, worth several thousand
crores. They were compelled to give up their jobs,
business, income yielding assets, etc; in full
knowledge of the fact that they would face hostile
weather and starvation outside the valley, which
is their ancestral habitat and with which they
have both material and spiritual attachment. This
concluded the process of liquidation of K.P.
community from Kashmir.
The Committee on Regional
Autonomy is broadly expected to work out plans for
creating instrumentalities for the equal regional
development and for the upliftment and development
of the population living in various regions of the
State. It is quite understandable as well as
possible, that Kashmiri Pandit Community will be
bracketed with the majority of Muslims living in
the valley. Paradoxically, they have been denied
coexistence by the majority community in the
valley. The agenda of exclusion of Kashmiri
Pandits on part of the Muslims, has virtually been
completed after the ethnic cleansing. Any plan or
mechanism for the development of the valley and
its people will never mean anything for this
displaced community. The first and vital problem
for the Kashmiri Pandit community is its
rehabilitation in the valley as per a plan which
has to take into consideration, security of life,
property and honour, continuity of community
culture and faith, besides the economic
rehabilitation of Pandits. It has also t o be
ensured that the community does not face another
ethnic cleansing in the future, a cleansing that
came as sequel to their marginalization and
exclusion from the total life of the valley. It
will not be out of place to mention here, that
most of the Kashmiri Pandits who had gone to
Baramulla, to live in their homes in 1992 and 1996
did not find any place in the established
theocratic set-up in the valley, and most of them
are again living as displaced people outside the
valley. Till date, government has not come out
with any genuine or feasible plan of their
rehabilitation, for reasons not too far to seek,
after going through this memorandum. Kashmiri
Pandits have formulated the plan of
rehabilitation, vis-a-vis the Homeland resolution
of 1991 and January 1997 (copies enclosed) in
which the K.P. community has resolutely demanded:-
- The establishment
of homeland for Kashmiri Hindus in the Kashmir
valley, comprising the regions of the valley
to the East and North of river Jhelum (Vitasta);
- that the
Constitution of India be made applicable in
letter and spirit in this homeland in order to
ensure the right to life, liberty, freedom of
expression, faith, equality and rule of law;
- that their homeland
be placed under Central Administration with a
Union Territory status so that it evolves its
own economic and political infrastructure;
- that all the seven
lakh Kashmiri Hindus, which includes those who
have been driven out of Kashmir in the past
and yearn to return to their homeland and
those who were forced to leave on account of
the terrorist violence in Kashmir, be settled
in the homeland on equitable basis with
dignity and honour.
It will be a betrayal of the
spirit of regional autonomy concept and a travesty
of justice if Kashmiri Pandits are bracketed with
the Muslims of the valley. we hope that the
Hon'ble chairman and other members of the Regional
Autonomy Committee, will take into consideration
the facts and ground realities and deliver justice
to the worst victims of discrimination, ensuring
them a life full of security, cultural
preservation and freedom from majority oppression.
1. |
Bansi Lal Kaul |
Chairman |
2. |
Dr. M.K.Teng |
Member |
3. |
O.N. Pandita |
Member |
4. |
Prof. K.B. Razdan |
Member |
5. |
Ashwani Kumar |
Member |
6. |
S. Raina |
Member |
7. |
Vijay Kaul |
Member |
COMMITTEE
TO BUILD RESPONSE ON AUTONOMY (CBRA)
Date : 25-02-1997,
Jammu (INDIA)
|