Non-territorial
Settlement
By Prof. M.K. Teng
Engagement with
Pakistan, which the Indian Prime Minister, Dr Man
Mohan Singh has commended to the Indian People as
“a way forward” to establish a relationship of
peace, is in real terms a prescription for the
second partition of India. The composite dialogue
between the two countries and the long Track Two
negotiations held behind the scene for over a
decade now, have been centered round the quest for
a settlement on Jammu and Kashmir, which is
acceptable to the Muslims of Pakistan and the
Muslims of Jammu and Kashmir.
The claim made by the Indian Prime Minister to
have formulated proposals, envisaging a
non-territorial solution on
Jammu and Kashmir,
which does not involve any territorial adjustments
and which would be acceptable to Pakistan and the
Muslims of Jammu and
Kashmir,
is deceptively simple. In essence Man Mohan
Singh’s approach underlines the recognition of
Jammu and Kashmir as a separate sphere of Muslim
interest in the Republic of India. The proposed
non-territorial settlement seems to essentially
envisage the inclusion of Jammu and Kashmir
in the territories of
India but at the same time exclude it from the
secular political organization of India. The
approach further envisages the exclusion the state
of Jammu and Kashmir
from the territories of
Pakistan while at the same time including it in
the political organization of the Islamic republic
of Pakistan.
The methods and means of balancing the act of the
inclusion of Jammu and Kashmir in the territories
of India and its exclusion from the Indian
political organization and the exclusion of the
state from the territories of Pakistan with its
inclusion into the political organization of the
Islamic Republic of Pakistan, are spelt out in the
proposals made by General Musharraf , the then
President of Pakistan. Musharraf by no means a
friend of
India,
had the opportunity of a life time, perhaps the
one he had never expected to come his way, to
accept the formula of a non-territorial settlement
on Jammu and Kashmir
which virtually opens the way for the second
partition of
India.
Musharraf accepted the formula of a
non-territorial solution on
Jammu and Kashmir
exactly the way the founder of Pakistan Mohammad
Ali Jinnah had accepted the Cabinet Mission plan.
The principles, underlying the non-territorial
concept as envisaged by Man Mohan Singh, are
identical with the principles which underlined the
Cabinet Mission Plan. The Cabinet Mission Plan
underlined the recognition of a separate sphere of
influence with a separate political organization,
constituted of the Muslim majority provinces of
the
British India,
within a broad structure of a future confederation
of India. Ironically enough, the British
historians of the partition of India, later made
the startling revelation that the Cabinet Mission
Plan was originally conceived by the senior Muslim
leadership of Indian National Congress. When the
Muslim League accepted the Cabinet Mission Plan,
Jinnah exclaimed that he had accepted the Plan
because it recognized the principle of Pakistan.
History proved Jinnah right. The Cabinet Mission
Plan led straight to the partition of India in
1947.
Musharraf had no reason to be dissatisfied with
the non-territorial solution of
Jammu and Kashmir.
Like Mohammad Ali Jinnah, he was wise enough to
understand, where, the recognition of
Jammu and Kashmir
into a separate Muslim sphere of interest in
India,
would lead to. India, he must have felt, was the
one country, where the history would repeat
itself.
The Cabinet Mission Plan was a prescription for
the complete balkanization of
India. The British officials and men, who were
close witnesses of the events in India those days,
wrote later that had the Cabinet Mission Plan been
implemented India would have broken into several
fragments. The Government of Pakistan must be
fully aware that the de jure recognition of Jammu
and Kashmir into a separate Muslim sphere of
influence in India, would disrupt the Sanskrit
content of the northern frontier of India and
shift the battle front from the line of control in
Jammu and Kashmir to the Shivalik plains situated
to the east of river Ravi.
Neither the Prime Minister of India , nor the
Indian Foreign Office, have provided the people of
India a clear exposition on the content and
contours of the non-territorial settlement on
Jammu and Kashmir. The Indian Prime Minister has
publicly only stressed the necessity to render the
Line Of Control irrelevant as the basis of their
perspective. But Indian Prime Minister has
unambiguously stated that some sort of final
settlement had already been arrived at between
India and Pakistan during the rule of Pervez
Mushrraf which could not be given a practical
shape because of the internal instability in
Pakistan.
However a clear exposition of the terms and
conditionalities of the proposed settlement on
Jammu and Kashmir
was made by the former President of Pakistan
Pervez Mushrraf. The broad structure of the
proposals he made underlined:
-
Demarcation of the Muslim majority regions of
the state including those situated to the west
of river
Chenab
from the Hindu majority areas situated mainly to
the east of river
Chenab.
-
The dissolution of the Line of Control in
Jammu and Kashmir.
-
The demilitarization of the State.
-
Self-rule.
-
Joint management of the State by
India and Pakistan.
Pervez Musharraf left no one in doubt about the
fact that the proposals he made formed the broad
framework of the negotiations which took place
between the two countries almost up to the time
Musharraf was forced to step down from his office.
Whether or not, the new Government in
Pakistan
which replaced the military regime of General
Mushrraf, accepted to continue the negotiations
with the Indian Government on the basis of the
Musharraf Plan, is not yet clear. It is, however,
clear that the Indian Government did not abandon
its commitment to implement the proposals
Musharraf had made.
An overall assessment of Musharraf Plan leaves no
one in doubt about its import. The plan is an
ingenious road map to bring about the unification
of
Jammu and Kashmir
with
Pakistan within a period of ten Years. Musharraf
plan has specified ten years after which the whole
process would be subject to review. The
demarcation of the Muslim majority regions of the
state and their reorganization into five Muslim
majority zones and the reorganization of the two
and a half districts of Jammu, Kathua and Udhampur
into a Hindu majority zone, is aimed to confine
the Hindu and Sikh population of the State, nearly
four million, towards the east of river Chenab.
The dissolution of Line of Control through the
stratagem of creating porous border and joint
management is actually aimed to integrate the five
Muslim majority zones of the State with the
occupied territories of POK. These occupied
territories have been used by Pakistan as a
springboard of Jihad against India The
demilitarization of the State, which forms the
most prominent part of the Mushrraf Plan, is aimed
at the withdrawal of the Indian security forces
from the Muslim majority zones of the state and
their replacement by the militarized separatist
forces, which have been fighting against India for
the last two decades.
The most deceptive of the conditionalities
envisaged by the Mushrraf Plan, is the
implementation of the self-rule in the State.
Self-rule underlines the transfer of power in the
state to the Muslim separatist regimes through the
instrumentalities of multiple legislative bodies
constituted to fortify Muslim demographic domains.
The last, and in fact, the least conspicuous part
of the Mushrraf Plan underlines the transfer of
the de facto control over the State to the
Government of Pakistan, which after the period of
ten years, would be followed by the transfer of de
jure control over the State.
When the army of the Sikh Monarch, Maharaja Ranjit
Singh, chased the Durrani Afghans, across the
river Attock in the north-west of India and fought
its way up to Daulat Beg Ouldi in the north of
Ladakh the Sikhs closed the routes of invasion
into India from the north. The dissolution of the
Line of Control will only shift the battlefront
with Pakistan to the Shivalik plains of Jammu
situated to the east of river Ravi.
Source: Kashmir
Sentinel
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