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Living under the shadow of Article 370
Sunil Fotedar, Subodh Atal and Lalit Koul
There have been numerous suggestions that the Indian government needs to grant
'special powers' to the state of Jammu and Kashmir to defuse the ‘nuclear
flashpoint’. What 'special powers' are left to be doled out to the state
government? It already has sufficient autonomy under Article 370 to run
roughshod over minority rights and keep them segregated from the rest of India
five decades after Partition. The RSS has recently demanded abrogation of
Article 370.
So what is this Article 370? A detailed analysis is necessary as a new debate
heats up about the status of the state within the Indian nation.
In the Beginning: Article 370 Lays the Roots
Article 370 is a special clause in Indian Constitution, a prize that was
extracted out of India in 1950 by Sheikh Mohammed Abdullah for throwing
his lot with India, after lengthy negotiations with Indian leaders. Article 370
made Jammu and Kashmir a country within a country, with its own flag, emblem,
constitution and Sadr-i-Riyasat (Prime Minister). The architect of the Indian
Constitution, Dr. Ambedkar, opposed granting Article 370 but it was on India's
first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru's insistence and personal guarantee that
it was granted to the state.
This Article specified that except for Defence, Foreign Affairs and
Communications, the Indian Parliament needed the State Government's concurrence
for applying such laws to Jammu and Kashmir as did not fall under the heads of
Defence, Foreign Affairs and Communications. Parliamentary laws pertaining to
these three subjects required consultation with the J&K State Government.
Over the years, this procedure was followed to bring the state under the purview
of Article 356, the Supreme Court, the Election Commission, the Comptroller and
Auditor General, thus providing some level of order in the state. However, much
else was left to the whim of the state rulers.
Thus the state's residents lived under a separate set of laws, including
those related to citizenship, ownership of property, and fundamental rights, as
compared to other Indians. An interim arrangement, the Constituent Assembly, had
been convened to run the state while considering the ratification of the
Instrument of Accession and framing the constitution. That Article 370 was a
temporary arrangement is evident from its wording, which allows its abrogation
by the President of India in consultation with the now long-defunct Constituent
Assembly. The Constituent Assembly was dissolved in 1957 prior to the first
State Assembly elections and after it ratified the state's accession to India
and framed the state's constitution adopted on 17th November and coming into
full force from 26th January 1957.
The trouble began even before as Article 370 was promulgated, and the omens
that were seen in 1951 presaged the damage half a century of Article 370 would
do. The Kashmiri Muslim-dominated National Conference opposed the extension of
India’s citizenship laws, fundamental rights and related legal rights to the
state. They also began to question the finality of the accession of the state to
India. Hindus in Jammu rose up in protest in a movement known as the Praja
Parishad agitation. The Praja Parishad movement strongly opposed any moves
towards independence of the state. Its slogan was 'Ek Vidhan, Ek Nishan, Ek
Pradhan' (One Constitution, One flag, and One President).
The National Conference led by Sheikh Abdullah used the leeway granted to it
by India to grab all the seats of the Constituent Assembly, squeezing out
representatives of Jammu and Ladakh, and those of Kashmiri Hindus and Sikhs. The
Praja Parishad candidates in Jammu found their election papers rejected before
the election, and appealed to Indian leaders including Nehru to set up an
enquiry into the election conduct and to prevent the state administration from
openly aiding the National Conference candidates. The Indian leadership, perhaps
mindful of the unstable situation in the state, sided with the National
Conference. The already narrow base of the National Conference among minorities
was further eroded due to the manner in which the elections were conducted to
the Constituent Assembly. The conditions set the stage for the intensification
of the Praja Parishad agitation and the open communalization of the state. In
the end the misgivings of non-Muslims and residents of Jammu and Ladakh were
ignored.
Thus Article 370 and other crucial constitutional issues were effectively
negotiated ignoring the wishes of nearly half of the state's population which
was non-Muslim, or from outside the valley. Article 370 was designed to maintain
the separate character of valley Muslims at the expense of all other groups in
the state, and at the expense of the stability and future of the subcontinent.
The Fruits of Article 370: Political and Socio-Economic Discrimination
against Hindus
Religious oppression of Kashmiri Hindus (also known as Kashmiri Pandits and
embodying a distinct character, culture and historic tradition), and forced
conversions, had already dwindled the number of these original inhabitants of
Kashmir valley to about 800,000 by 1947. After 1947, while the rest of India
enjoyed the fruits of secular independence and religious equality, Kashmir
valley was gradually and steadily converted into a hotbed of Islamic
fundamentalism, a mini-Afghanistan. The Kashmiri Hindus, the largest minority in
the valley and its original heirs, were clearly an impediment to this
transformation of the valley. Every possible mean was employed by the outwardly
secular National Conference to exclude Hindus from society, politics and the
economy, and the primary tool used was Article 370.
With constitutional protections of India for minorities not applicable or
constrained due to Article 370, Hindus were eliminated from the economic
organization of the State, its government and administration, and relegated to a
condition of abject servitude within a year after the exit of Maharajah Hari
Singh. After 1957, when the Constituent Assembly gave way to the state
legislative assembly, the National Conference government perpetually
gerrymandered electoral districting to ensure a heavy weightage in favor of
Kashmir versus Jammu and Ladakh. Within Kashmir, pockets of Hindu majority were
combined with Muslim majority districts so that no Kashmiri Hindu was ever
elected to the assembly.
The political hegemony quickly filtered down to the administrative level. The
rapid process of summary removal of the Hindus from the State services was
initiated on the pretext of communal imbalances in the services. The admissions
of Kashmiri Hindus to various academic institutions, were restricted to a
negligible 2-8 percent of the total admissions made every year. In effect, an
unprecedented and unfair affirmative action program was instituted for the
majority in the state. The total domination of Kashmiri Muslims extended to the
media, with over 95% of the outlets controlled by them and used heavily for
propagation of fundamentalism and secessionism. Again, due to the umbrella of
Article 370, the Kashmiri Muslims could dominate all spheres of life in the
state with impunity. The minorities had no recourse to many fundamental rights
to equality and due process available in the rest of India. In fact in its
latest demand of autonomy passed in a resolution by the state assembly in 2000,
the state’s Muslim leaders have again asked for a different set of fundamental
rights in what may be a renewed attempt to perpetuate discrimination and
oppression of the state’s minorities.
The Fruits of Article 370: The State Subject Law
Taking full advantage of Article 370, the National Conference government, first
led by Sheikh Abdullah, then by others, perpetuated the archaic, exclusionary
and highly discriminatory rule known as the State Subject law. In 1890, the then
Maharajah had instituted a law disallowing outsiders from owning land and
property in the state. This law was further strengthened in 1927. The law made
sense in those days, since it was meant to prevent the colonial British from
establishing their presence in the state.
In 1947 and later, however, this rule has been used with surgical precision
by the National Conference governments to gradually and decisively eradicate the
Kashmiri Hindu population. Many of this community had already moved out in the
decades and centuries before 1947, and now with full religious and political
freedom and opportunities in the rest of India contrasting with severe
oppression in the valley, many Kashmiri Hindus, especially young men, started
moving out of the valley.
The State Subject law has a unique feature to it that acted as a double
pincer in squeezing out a majority of the Pandit population. Women who marry men
(including those who are Kashmiri Hindus) domiciled outside the state,
automatically lose their right as a ‘State Subject’. Even if their children
are born in the state, those children have no rights and are destined to live
elsewhere in India.
As a result, generation after generation of Kashmiri Hindus started losing
rights to their ancestral homeland. And no more than 400,000 of them were left
in 1989 in the valley out of the over 800,000 at Partition, while the Kashmiri
Muslim population grew steadily. Compounding the injustice was the denial of
rights to the hundreds of thousands of Hindus who fled from areas in Pakistan
soon during the 1947 Partition and settled in the state.
Not only the minorities of the state, but the entire state’s economic
progress has been adversely affected by this uniquely retrogressive law. The
same law that has dispossessed hundreds of thousands of Kashmiri Hindus of their
ancestral homeland has also acted as a hindrance to the entry of industry and
technological advancement into the state from the rest of India. It wasn’t the
militancy alone, but the same State Subject law applicable under Article 370,
that prevented the revival of the Indian economy to filter into the state. And
without the influence of the rest of India, the fundamentalist malaise has grown
unabated in parallel with the situation in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
The Fruits of Article 370: The `Kashmiriyat' Red Herring
With the help of some intellectuals within the community, Kashmiri Muslims
invented the word `Kashmiriyat', which was ostensibly an attempt to preserve
unique Kashmiri identity and focus on common culture of the Hindus and Muslims
over centuries of co-existence, and mutual respect for each other's traditions
and religious practices. In reality `Kashmiriyat' was coined successfully to
fool the rest of the world, especially the media. The rest of India slumbered on
for four centuries up to 1947, content in its belief that the state represented
true religious coexistence. In the meanwhile, the communalists worked behind the
curtain of Kashmiriyat to systematically eradicate minority rights and establish
a Talibanic system long before Afghanistan was turned into a medieval wasteland
by the group of that name. If Kashmiriyat had existed, it would certainly have
prevented the National Conference from eroding the rights of Hindus in the
state.
The unsuspecting media as well as so-called foreign ‘experts’ devour the
term ‘Kashmiriyat’ today, as they did in the past, without asking questions.
It has even been used as the basis for offering some untenable and dangerous
solutions such as those offered by the Kashmir Study Group.
Is Abrogation of Article 370 Possible?
If Article 370 has created so much havoc, the question is how can it be removed.
While some have tied the existence of Article 370 to the state’s accession to
India, Kashmir experts like ex-Governor Jagmohan and state constitutional expert
M. K. Teng have opined that the article can be abrogated without any
constitutional hurdles. The article stipulated that India’s President needed
to consult with the state’s Constituent Assembly before abrogating it.
However, this by itself points to the Article’s temporary nature. As noted
above, the Constituent Assembly was a temporary arrangement with its main task
being the ratification of the Instrument of Accession. It was disbanded in 1957,
thus invalidating this clause. The President can use Article 368 to remove the
defunct provision of taking the Constituent Assembly’s consent. After this
deletion is carried out, the President can then abrogate the Article forthwith.
The Politics of Article 370
If abrogation of Article 370 is a readily available solution, why hasn’t any
Indian government taken the step to alleviate the oppression of Kashmiri
minorities and help the state integrate with India? The answer is that it’s
the politics, stupid. The Congress governments, heavily dependent on a solid
block of Indian Muslim vote, never even considered the step that might have
alienated any of them. The BJP, in its 1998 election plank, declared that
abrogation of Article 370 would be one of its goals. However, using the excuse
of coalition politics, it immediately abandoned this item from its agenda, thus
betraying the Kashmiri Hindu refugees who had supported it en masse due to this
promise.
Now the current state chief minister Farooq Abdullah is demanding even more
autonomy, cloaking it in the guise of ‘honor’ for Kashmiris. One needs to
ask Dr. Abdullah what more honor do they need, and indeed why do they need
anything beyond the current level of autonomy which has been enough to deprive
Hindus, Sikhs, Jammu Dogras and Ladakhis of their rights, as well as to create a
mini-Pakistan within India? But in a repeat of history, and to its own
detriment, the Indian government is again succumbing to such thinly disguised
secessionist demands.
Beyond Article 370
Abrogation of Article 370 would be a first step in solving the Kashmir
imbroglio, but by no means enough. The damage done is too deep and wide that
this step would have little effect on the restoration of minority rights and the
defeat of fundamentalist elements in the state. The control of Kashmiri Muslims
over society, religion, politics, administration and the economy is so complete
that returning valley minorities, and people from Jammu and Ladakh would find it
impossible to gain back any lost ground.
In order to permanently and justly settle the issue of Kashmir,
abrogation of Article 370 should be immediately followed by re-organization of
the state into four distinct entities, Jammu, Ladakh, Panun Kashmir and Kashmir.
Panun Kashmir, as noted in the Homeland Resolution of 1991, would comprise
regions of the valley to the east and north of Jhelum River, and would allow the
return of all 700,000 Kashmiri Pandits to their rightful homeland. The territory
would also be converted into an economic zone attracting the best of Indian
industrial talent, especially high technology. Kashmiri language, culture and
traditions would be preserved within this territory, which would integrate with
the rest of secular India at a much faster pace than the remaining portion of
the valley. It would be the only effective means for India to regain the
foothold it lost decades ago in the valley.
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