It is an undeniable fad of history that it was India and not the ‘people
of Kashmir or their chief supporter, Pakistan, that took up the issue
of Kashmir with the United Nations Security Council and sought its
indulgence under Article 35 of the United Nations Charter.
The
Security Council passed various resolutions, including the most
important of them all, the one dated 21st April, 1948,
which envisaged a solution of the issue of Kashmir by a free and impartial
plebiscite under UN auspices. India accepted the UN resolutions reluctantly,
with the mental reservation that it would sabot-age them and not
allow their implementation because she was sure that the result of
the plebiscite would be against her.
Pandit
Nehru’s confidential correspondence, which has been published
from New Delhi by the Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund through the courtesy
of the Oxford University Press only last year, reveals that Nehru wrote
to Abdullah in reply to the latter’s letter that Kashmir would not vote
in favour of India in the plebiscite, on 12th January
1949. Thus only one week after the passage of second resolution of
the UNCIP on 5th January 1949, that he agreed with Abdullah
that result of plebiscite in Kashmir would not be favourable to India,
and in due course India would have to back out from it but in order to
keep the UN Security Council in good mood, it was imperative to pay lip
service to the plebiscite scheme because running away from that so
early would make India’ position challengeable. in the world.
But
the UN resolutions on Kashmir are now hanging round the neck of India
as Albatross, whom the Ancient Mariner the sailor in Coleridge’s
poem of the same name has killed, but hung round his neck all the
same. The UN resolutions will continue to haunt India till such time
as India does not leave the Kashmiris to their fate and does not come
out of Kashmir lock, stock and barrel.
It
is obvious that the reference by India of the Kashmir case to the
UN has boomeranged. The latest self-defeating action of India
and her stooges in Kashmir is the imprisonment without trial of the
leaders of the APHC, including the ailing Chairman Sayed Ali Gilani,
Muhammad Yasin Malik and many more, in the notorious jails of Jodhpur
in India and Udhampur in the Jammu region. Kashmiris have decided
to face the Indian onslaught on every front and this is why they have
challenged the detention by writ petitions in ‘the Srinagar High Court,
which has admitted the petitions and sent notices to Farooq Abdullah,
who said in a Press conference that these leaders would remain in
prison for at least three years, and to the Indian and IHK agencies to
show cause why the APHC leaders have been detained without legal
action.
Back
in the 1950s, a similar case was launched against Sheikh Abdullah
by the Indian and Kashmir regime, when he was not seeing eye to eye
with India. The case continued in the court of sessions Judge of Srinagar
and Abdullah was charged for having conspired with Pakistan to subvert
the occupied Kashmir regime (of Bakhshi Ghulam) and making it
part of Pakistan and all that. The case went on for several years
but, after that, it was withdrawn unconditionally. In his defence,
Abdullah and other accused like Mirza Afzal Beg, who had formed the
Plebiscite Front, argued that their only crime was that they wanted
implementation of the resolution under UN in Kashmir, which international
decision had been taken at the instance of the Indian government by the
UNSC. Statements and speeches of Nehru, not less than two dozen
in number, saying that Kashmir’s fate could be decided by the Kashmiris
only in a UN supervised plebiscite were produced by Abdullah and
Ben and the other accused Kashmiris whose number was more than a
hundred, in their defence.
They
said that if the demand of plebiscite in Kashmir was a crime, even
Pandit Nehru was a culprit as it was his government, which referred the
Kashmir case to the UN and initiated the resolution of plebiscite. They
also quoted the reply of Lord Mountbatten, the last British GG to
the Subcontinent, to Maharaja Han Singh’s letter to him, in October 1947,
in which Mount-batten said that the issue of accession could finally be
settled only by a referendum of the people. This made India’s
position pretty awkward in the Srinagar Sessions Court and the proceedings
were flashed the world over, making India’s position in Kashmir vulnerable
and challengeable.
History
is going to be repeated now with the writ petitions of the APHC detenues
against the Indian and Kashmir regimes’ detentions order against
them. This is most certain that like Sheikh Abdullah and Afzal Beg, and
all the detenues of the Kashmir conspiracy case of the late 1950s, the
APHC leaders’ counsels will also pile up all UN resolutions on Kashmir,
the statements of Nehru and his ministers inside and outside the Parliament,
in which they asserted that even if the result to the plebiscite
would be against India, they would gladly abide by the verdict of
the people of Kashmir. As such it would be India that would be the loser.
Very
recently a referendum was organised by the UN in East Timor on the
issue of independence and 22 per cent people voted in favour of the island
remaining with Indonesia and 78 per cent voted in favour of independence.
In the elections in Kashmir valley, 87 per cent people did not cast
their votes while the Indian Election Commission claimed that 13 per cent
votes had been cast. Most of these 13 per cent votes, even according
to Indian Press reports, were bogus. Thus the position on the ground
is that 87 per cent of the people of the Kashmir Valley, the most thickly
populated area of Jammu and Kashmir which comprises three constituencies
of the Indian Lok Sabha, have refused to cast their votes as Indians
and they do not agree with the Indian claim that Kashmir is an integral
part or utoot ang of India.
This
is a simple case of arithmetic In Indonesia,. the decision of 78
per cent of the voters to separate East Timor from Indonesia over—ruled
that of the 22 per cent. India herself supervised the pools in Kashmir,
with the help of seven lac of her forces, but the result was a complete
failure for India. Even in the remaining three constituencies the
polling was less as compared to last year’s polling in the same constituencies.
It
is generally said by observers of the political situation in Kashmir
that the polling exercise of the 6 Lok Sabha seats in Kashmir has been
a sort of referendum, which was organized by India herself, and which
gave the net result that Kashmiris alienation from India is complete.
The elections have been a farce and the anti-Indian leader and groups
of Kashmir, under the banner of the APHC, and otherwise also , have
proved that Kashmir is not a part of India like Tamil Nadu, West Bengal
or Uttar Pradesh and the Indian Claim of Kashmir being her utoot
ang or inseparable part, is a lie which has no legs to stand
on.
The
Writ petitions of the leaders of the APHC will bring into international
limelight the original stand of India in Kashmir and the UNSC and UNCIP
decisions. There are a considerable number of Indian thinker, writers
and observers, as also human rights observers, who have eyes to see
and ears to hear. Their stand of Kashmir is almost the same as that of
the APHC leaders of Kashmir.
Law
is after all law. It should be known to everybody that the former Chief
Justice of Jammu Kashmir High Court of Judicature, Mr. Justice Bhauddin
Farooquee, who formed the Jammu and Kashmir Human Rights (Protection)
Forum a decade ago, has already challenged all the laws that have
been promulgated in Kashmir by India with the connivance of the puppet
Legislative Assembly of Kashmir, after the dismissal of Sheikh
Abdullah in August 1973. He has pleaded in the High Court that all
encroachments on the autonomy of Kashmir are ultra vires of the Constitution
of Jammu and Kashmir and even against Article 370 of the Indian Constitution.
This
case of Kashmir versus India has been pending a judgement before the High
Court of Jammu and Kashmir all these years. According to the last clause
of Article 370 of the Indian Constitution, only the Constituent Assembly
of Kashmir, which has ceased to exit after 1957, could change the
Kashmir- India relation-ship. The Legislative Assembly has been used
by the Indian government as a rubber stamp of curtail the autonomy of
Kashmir during the past 46 years. The writ of Justice Farooquee
has been in the Srinagar High Court pending judgement for the last
decade. The detailed petition was reproduced some years a-go in a publication
of the Kashmir Liberation Cell, Muzaffarabad / Rawalpindi, in
a book named Kashmir Holocaust
The
best way for India to face the realities on the ground in Kashmir. It
is merely political bankruptcy to argue that the UN resolutions on Kashmir
are old and not workable. There is no mention of any time limit in
the UN resolution. The Charter of the UN is three years older than the
Kashmir resolutions, but nobody ever said that the UN Charter be relegated
to the dustbin because it is 54 years old. Indians should know the
old saying that old is gold. The UN resolutions on Kashmir are still workable
. A fitting example of the people deciding the future of an area was provided
only last month by the referendum in East Timor.
What
is good for East Timor is not bad for Kashmir. Indian leaders should sum
up courage and abide by the commitments of the founders of independent
India regarding Kashmir. That is the only way out. They should also
forget that anybody in Pakistan or Kashmir will abandon the struggle
of Kashmir. Kashmiris are like the sword in the hands of destiny.
lqbal has rightly said about Kashmir. Zarbate Paihum say ho jata
hai aakhar paash paash/ Haakimiyat ka butey sangeen dil-o-aaeena roo (
By constant hammering, ultimately the stone-hearted and mirror- shaped
dol of imperialism is broken to pieces).
Courtesy “The Nation”
Nov. 3,1999, reported!.
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