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More than 600 dead in Indian Kashmir as election draws to
a close
By Deepal Jayasekera and James Conachy
7 October 2002
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Elections in Indias border state of Jammu and Kashmir
have seen ordinary people caught between a large and intimidating
Indian military presence on the one hand, and bloody violence
by Kashmiri separatists and pro-Pakistani groups seeking to disrupt
the voting on the other. More than 600 people have been killed
since campaigning began in late August.
In the most recent incidents, the Indian military killed 10
alleged separatist terrorists last week, as they sought to enter
the state across the disputed Line of Control border
with Pakistan. Over one million Indian and Pakistani troops have
been deployed along the border since December and tensions between
the two nuclear-armed states remain high. During the election
the Indian government has stepped up its bellicose rhetoric against
the Pakistani regime, accusing it of sponsoring terrorism and
instability in Kashmir in order to split the state away from New
Delhis control.
Headed by the Hindu-chauvinist Bharatiya Janatha Party (BJP),
the Indian government has declared it is doing everything possible
to ensure a free and fair election. In fact, in order
to thwart the election boycott called by the All Party Hurriyat
Conference (APHC)a loose coalition of 23 legal Muslim, separatist
or pro-Pakistani parties opposed to Indias rule over predominantly
Muslim Kashmirand pressure the population into voting, the
Indian government has placed Jammu and Kashmir under virtual military-police
siege.
Some 45,000 extra troops have been deployed into the state,
in addition to the permanent garrison of 600,000 military, paramilitary
and police. The election itself has been regionally staggered,
to allow an overwhelming presence of the security forces in each
area on polling day. The first region voted on September 16, the
second on September 24, the third on October 1 and the final region
votes on October 8. The election result is scheduled to be announced
on October 12.
While the APHC is continuing to call for negotiations on a
referendum over Kashmirs status, none of the major parties
contesting the election supports any change to the territorys
inclusion within India. The current state government, the National
Conference (NC), is part of the national Indian coalition government.
There are numerous allegations that Indian troops and police
have engaged in coercion to push up the voter turnout, particularly
in majority Muslim areas. In the last state election in 1996,
military intimidation and vote rigging were rampant. This year,
the BJP national government has been determined to achieve a high
turnout so that it can substantiate its claim that Indian rule
has majority support.
At the same time, Islamic fundamentalists and separatist extremists
are attempting to terrorise the population into staying away from
the polling stations. One of the main Islamic fundamentalist movements
opposed to Indian rule in Kashmir, the Lashkar-e-Tayyaba, issued
a reactionary threat to murder anyone participating in the election.
The organisation and its offshoot, Al-Arifeen, have claimed responsibility
for a series of political murders and violent attacks. On September
6, Sheik Abdul Rehman, an independent candidate in the Kashmir
valley, was gunned down with two of his supporters. On September
11, Mushtaq Ahmad Lone, a minister in the NC government, was assassinated.
Dozens of other candidates and campaigners for the ruling NC have
been targeted.
Indiscriminate bombings, land-mining of roads and machine-gun
attacks have killed and wounded not only Indian troops and police,
but dozens of civilians. On October 1, nine polling stations in
one area were attacked with grenades and machine-guns. On the
same day, gunmen threw grenades and fired into a bus carrying
Hindu pilgrims. Seven people died, including two rickshaw drivers
who were shot as they attempted to assist the wounded.
Media reports have testified to the alienation, fear and loathing
felt by ordinary people in Jammu and Kashmir toward both the Indian
establishment and the terror campaign mounted by the separatists.
Abdul Ghaffar, a shop keeper in the Baramulla border district,
told the news portal rediff.com: The Indian security
forces come to our homes and say if you will not come to vote,
we will kill you. But if you do go and vote, then the militants
say we will kill you. This is their free and fair
election.
Ghulam Qadir, a shawl weaver in the village of Charangam, told
the site: The army came into our village at six in the morning
and banged doors. We were not interested in voting, but they forced
us out. In a nearby village, a middle-aged peasant woman
said: Militants [armed separatists] will be mad if we vote
and if we do not, the army drags us out. Why dont they kill
us once for all?
A young electricity department worker in the Hazratbal District
told the San Francisco Chronicle: Up through yesterday,
you saw all kinds of people, politicians, coming here and promising
to help solve our problems, but come tomorrow you wont be
able to find a single one. They fight to protect their jobs, not
our rights.
Another resident of the area, Farooq Ahmad, told the paper:
Things here have been bad for 50 years. Elections have come
and gone. Another vote is not going to change anything. We want
aman and azadi (peace and freedom), not to cast
votes that will only help maintain unemployment, violence and
suffering.
The official turnout has been low in the three regions that
have voted so far. In the districts of Poonch and Rajouri in Jammu,
Kargil in Ladakh, and the Kupwara and Baramulla districts in Kashmirall
of which border Pakistanjust 46 percent of the population
voted, compared with 61 percent in 1996. In the Srinagar, Jammu
and Budgam districts, the turnout was 42 percent, while in the
Pulwama, Anantnag, Kathua and Udhampur districts, the figure was
just 41 percent.
Low as they are, boycott advocates are disputing the official
figures, claiming the actual turnout has been no higher than 20
percent. In some areas where the Islamic fundamentalists are known
to be active, less than a dozen out of several thousand registered
voters took the risk of casting a ballot. In the Muslim city of
Sophore, turnout was just five percent. The Pakistani military
dictatorship, while issuing multiple declarations that it opposes
the terrorist violence and has sought to prevent incursions by
separatists over the border, has already declared the elections
in Kashmir to be a farce and unrepresentative.
No progressive solution
While the election boycott call by Hurriyat, combined with
the terrorism of the separatists and Islamic fundamentalists,
appears to have been successful in keeping voter participation
down, the two campaigns are guided by an utterly venal political
perspective. Both are aimed at pressuring the Indian government
to accept a re-division of the states borders that will
benefit a narrow Kashmir Muslim elite that has been marginalised
under New Delhis rule.
There have been signs during the election that the BJP government
is considering such an agenda, under conditions where both India
and Pakistan are being pressured by the US Bush administration
to reach a settlement in their conflict. The BJP has backed calls
for the formation of new regional councils with administrative
and financial powers in the largely Hindu Jammu and Muslim
Kashmir, and possibly the Buddhist region of Ladakh. The main
opposition party, Congress, has given tentative support to talks
on the issue.
This would amount to a de-facto implementation of the policy
of the national Hindu extremist organisation, the Rastriya Swyamsevak
Sangh (RSS), which calls for the trifurcation of Jammu
and Kashmir into three, communally-based states, all under Indian
control.
A Muslim-controlled Kashmir regional council may
satisfy the aspirations of many of the organisations within Hurriyat.
Despite the boycott, the organisation has continued talks with
the Kashmir Committee, a non-governmental body led
by former law minister Ram Jethamalani and operating with the
approval of New Delhi. Even before the election, the prospect
of talks led to a split in Hurriyat, with a rebel group from the
Peoples Conference party deciding to reject the boycott and take
part.
The governing National Conference (NC) opposes any cantonisation
of the state, fearing it would benefit the more extreme communal
forces, both Hindu and Muslim, and undermine the current ruling
strata in Jammu and Kashmir. Instead, the NC has made greater
autonomy its main election plank. NC president Omar Abdullah,
who is a minister in the national government, told a press conference
on September 30 that he would resign from the BJP-led coalition
after the elections. He said that the NC would not form a coalition
with either the BJP or Congress in Jammu and Kashmir.
Although the NCs well-oiled political machine will probably
win the election, the low voter turnout undermines its ability
to claim any legitimacy or broad popular support. Its call for
autonomy is utterly devoid of any concern for the democratic and
social aspirations of the masses and is viewed with considerable
cynicism. The NC based its 1996 election campaign on the autonomy
demand, but dropped it in 1998, after entering a national coalition
with the BJP. The NC only resurrected its interest in the issue
in mid-2001, when the BJP-led government suggested it would hold
talks with Muslim separatist groups over some type of settlement.
Whatever the final outcome of the election, it has highlighted
the organic incapacity of any section of the bourgeoisie on the
Indian subcontinent to provide any solution for the people of
Kashmir. Since the bloody 1947 partition of the Indian subcontinent
into a Hindu-dominated India and Muslim Pakistan, Kashmirs
status has remained unresolved. But neither redrawing the borders
established by British imperialism, nor leaving them intact, will
end the conflict that has raged for more than 50 years. Both paths
leave the masses at the mercy of competing bourgeois factions,
using communalism and sectarian violence to gain control over
privileges, resources and territory.
The only solution lies in the development of a unified political
movement of the working class and oppressed masses of the entire
subcontinent, fighting for the complete abolition of all existing
borders and the reorganisation of society on the basis of genuine
social equality.
See Also:
India prepares another anti-democratic
election in Kashmir
[6 August 2002]
Brutal killing in Kashmir
threatens to raise India-Pakistan tensions
[19 July 2002]
A socialist strategy to oppose
war on the Indian subcontinent
[31 May 2002]
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