Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
India

Don't View Kashmir Issue Through Communal Lens: Jaishankar

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Sep, 2019 07:55 PM

    External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said the Kashmir issue should not be seen through a communal lens as the Jamiat-Ulema-e-Hind, one of the leading Islamic organisations in India, had backed the changes there, and the fact that India's relations with the Muslim nations of the Gulf have seen an upward trajectory in the past five years negates the idea that the government is anti-Muslim.


    Speaking at the Council on Foreign Relations, Jaishankar, to a question on the "rise of politicised Hindu nationalism" in India, said he did not agree with the analysis of the questioner.


    "I would put it differently. What we have seen after 70 years of independence is the result of the democratisation of India. Today political power, social power and to some extent economic power has shifted out of the big cities, the more cosmopolitan cities, where people speak English and have a global comfort level, and moved to a different set of people; to those who are comfortable speaking in their own languages, to a milieu far more rooted on the ground."


    He said the changes in India "actually demonstrate the successes of democracy, and what it has meant in terms of consequences on the ground".


    He said he does not accept the view that secularism is under threat in India.


    "At the end of day, secularism was not promoted by a law or by a constitutional belief, it was promoted by the ethos of the society. If the ethos of a society was not secular, no law, or constitutional provision would have ensured it. I don't think the ethos of our society has changed, and the ethos of India, the Hindu ethos, is very secular."


    To another question that there is a "deep perception of Hindu nationalism" in the country, and a view that Prime Minister Narendra Modi is "nationalistic and anti-Muslim", Jaishankar debunked the view.


    He said the Jamaiat-Ulema-e-Hind, a "national organisation of great influence and weight in Indian, at their annual meeting, have spoken out very clearly in favour of changes in Kashmir. I would not agree that the Kashmir issue should be seen through a communal lens".


    He was referring to the allegations of Pakistan that India is out to change the demography of Kashmir from a Muslim majority one to a Hindu majority, under what Imran Khan calls a "fascist, Hindu supremacist" government led by Modi.


    "If you look today at changes in India, probably the word that captures it best is, India is modernising, in a very interesting way. And it's not necessarily state driven. Anything the state does is overshadowed by what the smartphone does. The moment people have money, when I had money the first thing I dreamt was having a car. Today someone who is 16, 17,18 wold think of getting a phone and improving the phone.


    "Today we are seeing a more urbanising society, a society that is more meritocratic, the social gains are spreading, but at the same time, there is more internal mobility, which was not there before. I would predict that you would have a society where increasingly traditional identities matter less than they did in the past."


    Jaishankar also said: "In terms of how to approach the Indian state of the ruling political party.. today if there is one area of where we can boast of visibly good relations in the last five years is the Gulf, and you know the dominant faith in the Gulf.


    "I think they (Gulf nations) see it, there is an objectivity about them, they don't have vested interests in what is essentially an Indian domestic discourse.


    "I would not be comfortable with the view that we are headed for some kind of a collision with the Muslim community globally. That is not the case."

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Shah Faesal Was Not Going To Us To Study, Says J&K Police

    In an affidavit filed on August 23 in the Delhi High Court on Faesal's petition seeking his release from custody, Jammu and Kashmir Police claimed that all he had with him was a ticket from Delhi to Turkey to Germany's Frankfurt to Boston.    

    Shah Faesal Was Not Going To Us To Study, Says J&K Police

    Smriti Shares Story, Turns Rajasthani Model Insta-Famous

    "There is a story behind many faces at the Lakme Fashion Week. You see the glamour, you see the glory. They also hide a lot of tears," said Smriti Irani  

    Smriti Shares Story, Turns Rajasthani Model Insta-Famous

    MS Dhoni Arrives In Jaipur, Sporting New Look: Picture Goes Viral

    Even when he is not on field, former India skipper MS Dhoni manages to be in news be it with his commercial commitments or for his looks.    

    MS Dhoni Arrives In Jaipur, Sporting New Look: Picture Goes Viral

    CBI Reduced Bargari Sacrilege Cases To ‘Charade’: Punjab CM Capt Amarinder To Legally Oppose CBI In Sacrilege Case

    CBI Reduced Bargari Sacrilege Cases To ‘Charade’: Punjab CM  Capt Amarinder To Legally Oppose CBI In Sacrilege Case
    Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh here on Monday asked Advocate General Atul Nanda to legally oppose the CBI plea for keeping its Bargari closure report in abeyance.

    CBI Reduced Bargari Sacrilege Cases To ‘Charade’: Punjab CM Capt Amarinder To Legally Oppose CBI In Sacrilege Case

    Sanitary Napkins To Be Sold For Rs. 1 At Jan Aushadhi Stores

    With reduction of prices by 60 per cent, he said, Modi-led government has fulfilled the promise made by the BJP in its manifesto for 2019 general elections.  

    Sanitary Napkins To Be Sold For Rs. 1 At Jan Aushadhi Stores

    ISRO Releases New Photos Of Moon Craters Taken By Chandrayaan-2

    ISRO Releases New Photos Of Moon Craters Taken By Chandrayaan-2
    Sharing the pictures, the ISRO said in a statement that the photos captured by the lunar spacecraft are those of craters Somerfeld, Kirkwood, Jackson, Mach, Korolev, Mitra, Plaskett, Rozhdestvenskiy and Hermite.

    ISRO Releases New Photos Of Moon Craters Taken By Chandrayaan-2