Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
India

Kashmir Government Makes Secret Contact With Separatists

The Canadian Press, 15 Jul, 2016 12:32 PM
    Apprehensive that the ongoing violent unrest may prolong - as in 2008 and 2010, the Jammu and Kashmir government has quietly reached out to separatists, seeking their help to calm anger on the streets following the killing of a top Hizbul Mujahideen commander, informed sources said on Friday.
     
    However, none in the separatist leadership has agreed to engage with the government of Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti amid the current volatile situation that has left 38 people dead and over 1,500 injured in the last one week, the sources told IANS.
     
    They said emissaries were sent to Syed Ali Shah Geelani and Mirwaiz Umar Farooq - chairmen of the respective hardline and moderate factions of the divided separatist conglomerate Hurriyat Conference.
     
     
    The government also tried to establish contact with Yaseen Malik -- head of the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) - lodged in a Srinagar lockup.
     
    But, the sources said, none of them have agreed to ask people to calm down or call off their protests in the wake of civilian killings in firing by police and paramilitary forces.
     
    "They (separatists) have expressed their helplessness, saying they are not in control of what is going on in the valley," one of the sources told IANS.
     
    The separatist leaders, according to the source, have demanded from the government to lift curbs on them, remove curfew and allow them to hold protest marches before they "can issue appeals for peace".
     
     
    However, the government has not agreed, fearing that if protest marches were allowed at this juncture, the situation may spin out of control.
     
    On July 10, when the unrest was still building up, the government's chief spokesperson and senior Cabinet minister Naeem Akhtar had publicly said that "we need the support of the Hurriyat Conference" to end the crisis.
     
    Geelani and the Mirwaiz - both detained in their houses - have in separate interviews to IANS said they were not in control of the situation as the current wave of violent protests in the Kashmir Valley was "spontaneous and not sponsored".
     
    Some political experts, who spoke on condition of anonymity to IANS, said the hands-off approach of the separatist leaders indicated they have "no" or at the most "very little" sway over the situation right now.
     
    "It is sort of a leaderless mass of frustrated Kashmiri youth who are pitted not only against the State but also against themselves. They don't care about the physical losses they incur by throwing stones to attract live bullets," a university professor told IANS here.
     
    He said "these youth were enraged at the government and enthused by a false vigour of self-righteousness (jihad) and they are rampaging on everything.
     
     
    "If anybody tries to sort of control them, they would turn against him or her. I don't think separatist leaders can afford that."
     
    But another political expert, who has in the past been in the separatist camp, said: "The anti-India resistance leadership cannot afford to let the situation slip into absolute chaos.
     
    "We already have nearly 40 dead in six days. After sometime the martyrs become mere numbers. The situation has escalated to separatists' advantage. It has to and will de-escalate for sure. But then they (separatist) won't have the advantage to bargain. Therefore, I think it is time for them to engage with the government, secretly or otherwise, and try and take control of the situation on the streets."

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Delhi Traffic Rationing To Be Stopped, If Causes Inconvenience

    Delhi Traffic Rationing To Be Stopped, If Causes Inconvenience
    Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said on Saturday the decision of allowing private vehicles with even-odd registration numbers on alternate days was contingency step and would be discontinued if it inconvenienced the public.

    Delhi Traffic Rationing To Be Stopped, If Causes Inconvenience

    Chennai Staggers Back To Normalcy, Anger Grows At Lack Of Relief

    Chennai Staggers Back To Normalcy, Anger Grows At Lack Of Relief
    An intermittent drizzle since Saturday morning added to worries of Chennai residents, battling the worst floods in a century, and now facing a shortage of drinking water and power amid mounting anger about absence of relief.

    Chennai Staggers Back To Normalcy, Anger Grows At Lack Of Relief

    Delhi Police Still In Dark Over Kejriwal's Odd-Even Number Decision

    Delhi Police Still In Dark Over Kejriwal's Odd-Even Number Decision
    Delhi traffic police is tasked with managing vehicular movement in the national capital.

    Delhi Police Still In Dark Over Kejriwal's Odd-Even Number Decision

    Delhi To Restrict Vehicles On Roads To Beat Pollution

    Delhi To Restrict Vehicles On Roads To Beat Pollution
    To curb unbridled pollution in the national capital, the Delhi government on Friday said odd and even number vehicles will ply on alternate days in the city from January 1 - a move which drew flak far and wide.

    Delhi To Restrict Vehicles On Roads To Beat Pollution

    Delhi Assembly Passes Jan Lokpal Bill

    The Delhi assembly on Friday passed the Delhi Jan Lokpal Bill, 2015, which the AAP government has described as the "strongest" anti-graft legislation in the country.

    Delhi Assembly Passes Jan Lokpal Bill

    Rains In Chennai Again, 325 Dead As Waters Recede

    Rains In Chennai Again, 325 Dead As Waters Recede
    Heavy rains battered Chennai again on Friday evening just as life began to limp to normalcy amid persisting power cuts and food shortages here and three other Tamil Nadu districts where floods and downpour have claimed 325 lives.

    Rains In Chennai Again, 325 Dead As Waters Recede