Not at home in Jammu and Kashmir – World Latest News Headlines – Bharat Times Hindi News

On his first visit to Jammu and Kashmir after the state’s special status was abolished and bifurcated into two union territories, Union Home Minister Amit Shah participated in several “outreach” programmes. But these events and the visit overall have raised further questions about the government’s long-term plan for the former state. Over the course of three days, it bordered on a sort of disconnect in the show. I have come here to be friends with the youth of Kashmir. Join hands with Modi ji and Government of India and be a partner in the journey to take Kashmir forward. But friendships can hardly be forged or coerced in an environment where the state administers repressive laws and mass arrests, and takes away people’s rights on the Internet. Shah asked those whose “partnership” he tried to swallow as the “bitter pills” of the underprivileged and the heavy use of state power that saved lives. But the slap of cases under the harsh UAPA on students at a medical college for allegedly waving Pakistan’s flag after a cricket victory is another example of the ruling establishment’s reaction that is only likely to deepen the cynicism on the ground.

Several security reviews headed by Shah during the visit were evidence of challenges in Kashmir, dismissing claims by him and other ministers that “terrorism ended” on August 5, 2019. The stone-pelting may have disappeared and there may have been less “encounters”. . “Now, but the recruitment of terrorists is on, and they have changed their ways. Pistol killings of civilians by “hybrid” terrorists in the Valley this month and prolonged standing by terrorists in Jammu’s border district of Poonch are indicators that can only be ignored at the risk of the nation.

The Home Minister also hit back at the “three families looted and ruined in Jammu and Kashmir”. But the question is, why were the same families and the parties associated with them considered so important that no one, except the Prime Minister, invited them to Delhi for talks in June? Even though it was for the limited purpose of obtaining their consent for the ongoing delimitation exercise, it was an acknowledgment that without them, there could be no viable political process in the state. Plans to replace them with new or specially reared politicians and parties have not progressed – elected members of district development councils are confined to hotel rooms for their own safety. The absence of mainstream politicians and political parties from the public life of Jammu and Kashmir is being felt since August 5, 2019. There is no option to hold elections without delay. But if the practice is to be legalized, it has to include everyone, including the “family of three”. First and foremost, the government needs to be transparent about the justification of its chronology of “elections first, then statehood”.