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Srinagar - consider this. Saddam Hussain's goose is waiting to be
cooked because of a questionable election in the United States,
more specifically the garbled verdict in a small district of Florida.
Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharief must sit it out in the cold, goodness
knows for how long, because a military dictator has got himself
democratically validated, no matter how unscrupulously or how unnecessarily
cynically he has gone about doing it.
Contrary to the widely acknowledged axioms, elections can
have bizarre equations with democracy, depending on the circumstances.
When Islamic fundamentalists were in Algeria through a fair and
free process, the whole world ganged up to cancel them out. On the
other hand, when the pro-China military junta, taking a cue from
Algeria, throttled Aung San Suu Kyi's spectacular success in Myanmar,
the world growled with rage.
Take Iran and Israel, the two rare countries in the Middle
East that hold elections at regular intervals. One is the cynosure
of American eyes even though it is seen by much of the world as
a usurper of Arab rights. The other has been in the doghouse in
perpetuity over, of all the reasons, a mere turn of phrase that
equates the worldís most powerful democracy with Shaitan
i Buzurg, the 'Great Satan.'
Saddam has to be removed because he is not a democrat. At least
that's what the Americans say. And yet they are the same people
who had, less than 50 years ago, removed, through a simple surgical
coup, the Muslim worldís first elected liberal government,
that of Iranís Prime Minister Mosaddegh. Why? Because it
did not suit US oil companies to have a democratically elected government
in Iran that believed in nationalising oil assets.
Consider this seriously. In the era of a unipolar world, it may
become common, even fashionable, for elected leaders of sovereign
countries to be simply kidnapped if they are not liked by important
marshals of our destiny, usually found in Western capitals. The
recent signal from Venezuela could not be read any other way.
It is in this context that the state assembly elections in
Indian-administered Kashmir have to be seen. The Americans are applauding
them. The Indians are claiming success even before the race is over.
But what is the race all about? To elect a new chief minister for
Jammu and Kashmir ñ is that the idea? Or are we waiting for
something more serious, more meaningful, as the cliche goes? In
which case why have elections first, particularly when they are
so patently dubious?
Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari and all his neighbours and colleagues
have described all the elections held in Kashmir so far, as having
been rigged. Pakistani leaders should applaud, for this is indeed
the most likely fact as far as polls in Kashmir go. Ask anyone from
the Bhartiya Janata Party or any other associated group; they will
tell you that the Kashmir polls that elected Farooq Abdullah in
1996, as well as other preceding ones, were all fraudulent and stage-managed.
So let us see what the BJP has done this time to hold their version
of free and fair polls in Kashmir.
There is this lingering image of a Congress party candidate that
captures the essential metaphor. This gentleman is wearing a flak
jacket on a nippy morning in Shopiyan, a constituency that was once
known for its fine liquor, but has become notorious for the rule
of the gun. The two sides that dominate the equation here are the
militants and the Indian security forces ñ or ëIndian
occupation forcesí as Pakistanis would say.
Fair enough. So this Congress candidate in a flak jacket, with a
loud hailer in hand, surrounded as he is by a dozen heavily armed
paramilitary men to protect him, is holding a meeting in a city
square. There is not one man or woman in the audience. There is
no audience. But at the end of the day he is going to either win
or lose the election. The election, in which no one came out of
their homes to hear him out.
There could be several reasons for this apparent lack of public
interest in our friendís meeting. People are frightened,
either of the militants or of the armed police. There could be a
third reason, an equally valid reason for their absence ñ
their lack of interest in the polls.
Does the last question ipso facto mean that the lack of interest
in the polls is an endorsement of either 'azadi' or Kashmirís
alignment with Pakistan? It is very difficult to say, although there
are good reasons to believe that to a large extent, this may be
so.
Two or three factors are in play in Kashmir at this juncture in
its history. First of all, it is not a historical moment at all.
The polls are, at best, some kind of a holding operation until something
more substantial can be thrashed out. Those in the fray are not
people who even remotely, have anything to do with the loudest echo
reverberating in the valley. The echo for the riddance of Indian
rule, Indian troops and Indian arrogance.
This is the heat-of-the-moment kind of expression. Ask the
people what they mean by shouting Pakistan zindabad while refusing
to vote. You may not get a complete rounded answer, but you will
get a hint. "We are thanking that country for helping us, supporting
us," says Halima, a shawl weaver in Beerwa, a constituency
neighbouring Srinagar. But that doesn't mean we want to join Pakistan.
So what do the Kashmiris want? They do not know if there is
any one answer. If they do, it is too early for them to spell it
out. But what they are sure of, they donít mind sharing with
you. They say they want 'azadi' from India. Why? The reasons are
rooted in history as well as contemporary events.
"You cannot have a gaurav yatra in Gujarat and
also hope to keep Kashmir as part of your country," says an
activist of the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front accusingly. His
reference is direct. You cannot have communal carnage in Gujarat,
target Muslims, talk of "Hindu Rashtra" and try to assimilate
a uniquely Muslim-majority region like Kashmir into the mainstream
of rightward leaning India.
That is one good reason that explains the Kashmiris' contempt
for the Indian-backed polls now under way. Yes, there has been coercion
too from the security forces to make people cast their vote. The
report by the Coalition for Civil Society in Kashmir confirms the
widespread incidence of coercion.
But coercion will usually work against the government in power.
An angry, alienated voter is least likely to cast his vote in favour
of a chief minister who forces him or her to vote. Yes, coercion
in Jammu and Kashmir was widespread in the polls, but who was staging
it? Was it New Delhiís way of getting even with Chief Minister
Farooq Abdullah who had been laying into every BJP minister in sight
in recent weeks? Or were Lal Krishan Advani or George Fernandes
simply trying to meet their target of a high voter turnout, whatever
the result.
Or was the army forcing people to vote so that they could bring
in an opposition group to force Farooq Abdullah out? If that was
the case, then the same logic must also apply equally to the All
Parties Hurriyet Conference which has its own reasons for boycotting
the polls. But any boycott would help the Hurriyetís chief
quarry: Farooqís National Conference party. This is the oldest
political party which has roots in Kashmir and a cadre who will
vote if asked to, regardless of who else does or doesn't. Did the
Hurriyet therefore deliberately seek to bail out Farooq. If so,
why?
Others in the fray are the Congress party across the state, the
BJP, mostly in Hindu-dominated Jammu areas, and Mufti Mohammed Sayeedís
PDP, fairly widespread. Some so-called reformed militants, surrendered
militants, are also in the fray. Not one of them is going to the
polls with their minds open to the idea of plebiscite.
In a very subtle way this is an election that seeks to change the
discourse from the original Kashmiri demand, a UN-backed demand,
in fact, for a plebiscite. This new discourse, as initiated by India
and then backed by the United States, centres on anything but a
referendum on the future of Kashmir.
In other words the much hyped polls do not address the essential
issue of Kashmirís future. Yet, these are backed by the United
States, and with it, by much of the world. Not only that. There
are few in the Hurriyet leadership today who would be willing to
talk about any solution to the Kashmir issue that comes even close
to their own earlier demand for plebiscite. The Americans do not
support it any more, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan has hinted
that it is beyond his ken to get India to accept the 1948 UN Security
Council resolutions.
Whatever else they achieve or donít, these elections have
helped to banish the ghost of plebiscite in Kashmir. The Hurriyet
leadership is now talking about a need for flexibility to address
the issue, although they are clear that elections within a patently
Indian framework are a no-no. After claiming victory in the polls,
the Indian government is going to be under pressure from its western
interlocutors to resume its quest for a dialogue with Pakistan as
well as with the Hurriyet leadership.
There is a saying in Urdu: Shaikh bhi khush rahey, shaitan
bhi naraaz na ho. In Kashmir the best known Shaikh was Shaikh
Abdullah. But look what happened to him. His grave is the only grave
in Kashmir that is guarded by armed security personnel. Such is
the venom that many people have for him.
In fact, Shaikh Abdullah, and by association, his son and grandson,
are seen by a majority of Kashmiris as less Shaikh and more shaitan.
But this is the word the Iranians use for the Americans, and the
one that the Americans would like to use for Saddam and the other
members of the "axis of evil".At some point, Kashmiris
will be asked to express their solidarity with either the shaitan
or the Shaikh. When that time comes, they may not know the difference.
If indeed there is any.
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