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India declares unilateral ceasefire
A renewed diplomatic push for negotiations over Kashmir
By Sarath Kumara
12 December 2000
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Moves are once again being made to initiate talks to end the
armed conflict in Kashmir and find a settlement to the disputes
that have triggered two of the three wars between Pakistan and
India since independence in 1947.
On November 19, Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee
announced that Indian troops would halt all offensive actions
against Kashmiri separatist groups in the state of Jammu and Kashmir
during the Islamic month of Ramadan. While the military would
remain on full alert against any attack, it would
suspend combat operations as of November 28.
Pakistan cautiously welcomed the move and, responding to mounting
international pressure, announced on December 2 that its armed
forces would exercise maximum restraint along the
Line of Control that separates Jammu and Kashmir from Pakistan-controlled
Azad Kashmir. Pakistan's military ruler General Pervez Musharraf
called for tri-partite talks between the two countries and Kashmiri
groups, and offered to fly to New Delhi on 24-hours notice to
meet with Vajpayee if an invitation was forthcoming.
Pakistan's Foreign Minister Abdus Sattar hinted in a statement
to the Times of India on November 24 that Islamabad might
be prepared to accept a greater status for the Line of Control.
He said his government was prepared to stand by the July 4, 1999
statement signed by the then Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and US
President Bill Clinton, which commits Pakistan to respect the
sanctity of the Line of Control. Previously Pakistan has insisted
that Kashmir's future be decided by a referendum in both the Pakistani-
and Indian- controlled parts, as laid down in a 1948-49 UN resolution.
But the tentative nature of the process was underscored when
India ruled out any tri-partite talks. Indian external affairs
spokesman Raminder Singh commented last week that, while India
was ready to negotiate with all groups in Kashmir, there was no
role for Pakistan. India has always insisted that Kashmir is an
internal matter and has repeatedly opposed any Pakistani or international
involvement.
Attempts earlier this year to start negotiations floundered
on the same issue. Hizbul Mujahideen, the largest armed Kashmiri
separatist organisation, declared a unilateral three-month ceasefire
in July. Unprecedented talks between representatives of the group
and the Indian government took place in the Kashmiri capital of
Srinagar but rapidly broke down when the Indian government rejected
Hizbul's demands for Pakistan to be included in any negotiations
over a permanent solution.
Hardline Kashmiri groups such as Lashkar-e-Taiba have denounced
the latest Indian ceasefire, criticised the Pakistani offer of
restraint, and called for an intensification of the jihad
or holy war against Indian forces. At least 35 people have died
since November 28 in separatist attacks on both military and civilian
targets. The worst incidents took place within days of India's
initial announcementfive Hindu and Sikh truck drivers died
in the first on November 22, and five Hindu bus passengers in
the second.
But Vajpayee insisted in parliament that while the government
had taken a risk, there is no going back on the ceasefire.
The Indian government is clearly calculating that its initiative
will enable it to open up and take advantage of divisions within
the ranks of the Kashmiri armed groups and political parties committed
to separatism. All of them exploit the widespread hostility in
Jammu and Kashmir to India's repressive rule of the state but
substantial differences exist over political objectives: some
accept local autonomy as part of India, some demand an independent
Kashmir and others seek a merger with Pakistan.
The All Party Hurriyat Conference (APHC)an umbrella organisation
of the separatist parties and groups based in Kashmirsupported
India's ceasefire announcement and called for negotiations. APHC
leaders say they should be allowed to initiate talks with the
Indian and Pakistani governments, and with other separatist groups
who oppose any talks, in order to make the political process
meaningful and result-oriented.
The APHC has been seeking a compromise with the Indian government
for some time. The Indian bi-weekly journal Frontline reported:
One of [APHC leader Abdul Gani] Lone's closest associates
told Frontline, on condition of anonymity, that the least
the Hurriyat could accept would be the grant of quasi-independent
status to the Kashmir Valley. But any settlement would have
to go beyond the autonomy proposals announced in June by the present
National Conference-led state government headed by Chief Minister
Farooq Abdullah.
The APHC leaders have called on the Indian government to allow
them to travel to Pakistan for talks with the military regime
and with armed separatist groups that are based there. While it
has not agreed to such a visit, New Delhi has allowed Lone to
attend his son's marriage to the daughter of the separatist Jammu
and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) chairman Amanullah Khan in
Pakistani-administered Kashmir. The Indian government also gave
permission to two APHC leaders, Mirwaiz Farooq and Moulvi Ansari,
to participate in the OIC (Organisation for Islamic Countries)
summit in Qatar.
There are indications that divisions exist in Hizbul Mujahideen
over possible negotiations with the Indian government. According
to the Indian press, Hizbul leader Syed Salahuddin had said before
the Indian ceasefire announcement that Hizbul should reciprocate
any offer of meaningful dialogue. But under pressure from the
Islamabad-based Muttahida Jihad Council, the group rejected the
ceasefire when it was announced, only to soften its position in
early December. The Hizbul leader said the organisation had
not outrightly rejected the ceasefire but was weighing
options before taking any final decision.
Just as the Pakistani regime is under pressure from Islamic
extremist groups to make no concessions to India, so the Indian
government led by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which is based
on Hindu fundamentalism, faces opposition from Hindu chauvinist
organisations. After Kashmiri separatists attacked and killed
truck drivers on November 22, 15 parliamentarians belonging to
Shiv Senaa Hindu extremist grouping and a partner in the
ruling National Democratic Alliance (NDA)staged a parliamentary
walkout in protest against the ceasefire.
About 150 Shiv Sena supporters later held a demonstration and
burnt an effigy of Vajpayee, accusing him of selling out to the
Islamic groups. At this stage Shiv Sena has kept its protests
muted and is remaining in the ruling coalition, in which it has
three cabinet posts. Minister of Heavy Industry Manohar Joshi
said his party would not pursue the matter any further.
Substantial sections of the Indian ruling class are, however,
backing the ceasefire. All the other major parties in the NDA
coalition have expressed their support, along with the opposition
partiesCongress and Communist Party of India (Marxist) or
CPI(M). According to Frontline, CPI(M) parliamentarian
Mohammad Yusuf Tarigami first floated the idea of a unilateral
halt to fighting and sources say he was a key figure in
subsequent discussions on the issue. The idea was backed
by the Chief of the Army Staff General S. Padmanabhan and was
reluctantly approved by Home Minister L.K. Advanione of
the BJP's Hindu fundamentalist hardliners.
US involvement in diplomatic moves
Both India and Pakistan have been under pressure from the US
and European powers to settle the Kashmir conflict. As soon as
India announced the ceasefire, Washington began to pressure Islamabad
and the Kashmiri groups to reciprocate. US Assistant Secretary
of State Karl Inderfurth has recently visited the subcontinent
and held talks in New Delhi and also Colombo, where the US is
applying pressure to the Sri Lankan government to reach a deal
with the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to
end that country's long-running civil war.
The Indian ceasefire has been welcomed by the major European
powers. Britain's junior foreign minister Peter Hain, who also
visited India and Sri Lanka last month, said London would exert
its influence on Pakistan. France, which has been trying to develop
a closer relationship with Pakistan, supported the Indian move
after a noticeable delay. The leader of a visiting European Union
(EU) delegation to Pakistan, Dominique Girard, said EU is in favor
of a negotiated settlement.
The diplomatic push for a resolution to the conflicts in Kashmir
and Sri Lanka reflects the heightened interest by the major powers
in South Asia following the end of the Cold War. The US signalled
a shift away from its former Cold War ally Pakistan in July 1999
when it pressured Islamabad to withdraw Kashmiri separatists from
the Kargil region of Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir. Earlier
this year US President Clinton visited the subcontinent, spending
the bulk of his time in discussions in India and stopping off
only briefly in Pakistan. Since Clinton's visit, other international
leaders, including Russian Federation President Vladimir Putin,
have toured India.
The focus on India is a product of its growing economic importance
as an arena for trade and investment, including in the hi-tech
computer and software industries. New Delhi is also seen as a
possible strategic ally in a region, which as well as being significant
in its own right adjoins both the Middle East and Central Asia
where the major powers are jockeying for control of oil and mineral
resources. The ongoing conflicts in Sri Lanka and particularly
Kashmir, which has the potential to trigger another war between
nuclear-armed Pakistan and India, both threaten the stability
of the region.
While, in deference to India's opposition to international
involvement, the US administration has not officially been involved
in the drive for talks on Kashmir, Washington has been closely
engaged behind-the-scenes. US businessman, Mansoor Ijaz, has been
one of the key go-betweens. He is a member of the US Council on
Foreign Relations, chairman of the New York-based Crescent Investment
management and is reportedly personally close to Clinton. He is
also the leader of the Kashmir Study Group, consisting of US Congressmen
and former diplomats, which has been formulating options for US
policy on Kashmir.
In an editorial in the International Herald Tribune
on November 22, Ijaz outlined his involvement in talks with top
officials and political figures in Jammu and Kashmir and New Delhi
in Junejust weeks before the Hizbul Mujahideen announced
its unilateral ceasefire in July. He said that during his visit
he had spoken to both Vajpayee and Pakistani leader General Musharraf
about a possible framework for negotiations that had Clinton's
backing. He also explained that he had delivered a letter from
the Hizbul chief Salahuddin to Clinton asking for verification
that the plan had US backing.
Ijaz gave the keynote speech at a recent symposium held near
Delhi entitled Next Steps in Jammu and Kashmir: Give Peace
a Chance. The meeting was organised by the Delhi-based Peace
Initiatives organisation in conjunction with Lord Eric Avebury,
head of Amnesty International and a prominent member of the House
of Lords in Britain.
The high-powered symposium brought together a number of key
leaders from various Kashmiri groups, including the JKLF Jammu
and Kashmir chairman Yasin Malik, the son of the prime minister
of Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, Sardar Attique Ahmad Dhan, and the
chief executive councillor of the Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development
Council, Thaupstan Chaewang.
The US has undoubtedly been exerting pressure through other
means as well. Since the military seized power last year Pakistan
has been isolated diplomatically and its economy has been teetering
on the brink of collapse. A much-delayed International Monetary
Fund (IMF) loan $US596 million which Islamabad desperately needed
to shore up the country's finances, finally came through in late
November, just days before Pakistan announced its own policy of
maximum restraint along the Line of Control.
The conflict in Jammu and Kashmir between the Indian military
and armed Kashmiri separatist groups that began in 1989 has had
devastating consequences. More than 30,000 people have died and
many more have been injured or left homeless. India has over half
a million troops stationed in Kashmir directed both against the
Pakistani army and the insurgents. According to international
human rights groups, the Indian security forces have carried out
widespread detention without trial, torture and extra-judicial
killings in a bid to terrorise the local population and stamp
out sympathy for the separatist groups.
The fighting is also costly for both the Indian and Pakistani
governments. Jane's Security News indicates: The
approximate annual cost of defending Kashmir [for India] is over
54.75 billion rupees ($US1.24 billion). The 11 weeks of
fighting in the Kargil heights area in 1999 cost India an estimated
$450 million. According to India, Pakistan spends $110 million
a year in funding, arming and training separatist guerilla groups
operating in Kashmiran allegation Pakistan denies.
While considerable international influence is being brought
to bear, the outcome of the present diplomatic process is highly
uncertain. The origins of the Kashmir dispute are deeply embedded
in the partition of the subcontinent along communal lines in 1947
following the end of British colonial rule. Kashmir, one of India's
princely states, was controlled by a Hindu maharaja but the majority
of its population was Muslim. The maharaja initially attempted
to proclaim independence, but when Pakistan fomented a rebellion,
he acceded to union with India, leaving the state divided between
the two countries.
Far from the tensions over Kashmir having lessened over the
last half century, the political establishment in both India and
Pakistan have increasingly resorted to religious fundamentalism,
thus exacerbating the conflict and the dangers of war. More than
50 years after independence, Kashmir is a constant reminder of
the reactionary character of the partition and the inability of
the ruling classes throughout the subcontinent to resolve in a
progressive fashion any of the region's outstanding political
and social problems.
See Also:
US insists on resumption of
talks between India and Kashmir separatists
[14 August 2000]
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