Stake Holders in Jammu
and Kashmir
By Dr. M.K. Teng
When the Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh
expressed the decision of the Government of India
to to take on board all the ‘stake holders’ of
Jammu and Kashmir in order to reach a settlement ,
he was in real terms proposing a paradigm shift in
the Indian stand on Jammu and Kashmir. The
reference by the Prime Minister to the ‘stake
holders’ is a dangerous interpolation in the
vacillating positions taken by the Government of
India on the very unity of India.
The partition and the upheaval which accompanied
the founding of Pakistan, cost millions of lives
of people who had fought for the freedom of their
country and were consumed by the process which
commenced with the Direct Action campaign the
Muslim League launched in August 1946. The
transfer of power led to the emergence of two
countries, India and Pakistan , with their
territories defined by the partition plan and the
process of integration of the States, the lapse of
British Paramountacyover the princely States, set
into motion. The accession of
Jammu and Kashmir
State
to India was accompalished by the ruler of the
State, Maharaha Hari Singh, in accordance with the
procedure laid down by the Indian Independence
Act, enacted by the British Parliament and the
Instrument of Accession drawn by the State
Ministry of India.
It must be known that after the partition plan was
announced on June 3 1947, the States’ Department
of Government of India was divided into two parts:
the States’ Ministry of India and the States’
Ministry of pakistan. Sardar Patel took over the
charge of of the States’ Ministry of India while
the Muslim League appointed Sardar
Abdur-Rab-Nishtar to head the States’ Ministry of
Pakistan. The Indian Independence Act and the
partition plan did not incorporate any provisions
in respect of the Instrument of Accession. Infact,
the two divisions of the States’ Department, the
States’ Ministry of India and the States’ Ministry
of Pakistan drew up the form of the Instrument of
Accession for the rulers of the princely States in
order to enable them to join either of the two
Dominions. The States’ Ministeries provided for
such exigencies as well in which the princely
States were unable to take a decision on the
accession of the State till the transfer of power
was completed and the ruler wanted more time to
take a decision, but sought to continue the
existing arrangement of trade, transport,
communications, currency etc. that subsisted
between the British India and the princely States
during the British rule. For such exegencies the
States’ Ministeries drew up separate instruments
known as Standstill Agreements. The Standstill
Agreements were strictly restricted in their
content and application and provided for the
continuation of the existing arrangements between
the States and the
British India.
It needs to be mentioned again here that the
princely States were Kingships of the native
Indian potentates, which formed an integral part
of the British empire in India and were liberated
from the british Paramountacy with the dissolution
of the British Empire in India. The princely
States did not become a part of the two Dominions
with the lapse of Paramountacy, but they did not
fall apart from the political arrangements, the
transfer of power in India envisaged. The British
Government made it clear that it would neither
recognise the independence of the States nor admit
them as independent Dominions of the British
Commenwealth. Not only the British, the Americans
too, refused to recognise the independence of the
princely States, when some Muslim rulers
approached the American Diplomatic Legation in
New Delhi
to solicit the recognition for the independence of
their States.
Evidently the princely States were not land masses
over which their rulers exercised proprietory
rights. They were actually a part of the Indian
nation, which the British divide into two separate
constitutional organisations. Nor did the States
form a no-man’s land in india, which any of the
two Dominions or any other foreign power could
claim on account of the religion of their
rulers.The transfer of power in India did not
divide the whole of india. Actually the partition
was confined to the British Indian provinces,
leaving the princely States out of its purview.
It also needs to be clarified here that the
accession of the princely States underlined the
irrevocable meger with the Dominions they acceded
to . The accession made them a part of the
Dominion and subjected them to its sovereignty.
Accession of the States formed a part of the
process which described the territorial
jurisdiction of the two successor states of India
and Pakistan.
The Jammu and Kashmir State, which had oferred a
Standstill Agreement to the two Dominions was
invaded by Pakistan. The accession of the State to
India followed as a matter of course. Nehru was
misled by Mountbatten, when the later advised the
indian Prime Minister, to secure the accession of
the State to India as an incumbent condition for
the deployment of the indian troops in the State.
India could not have left the State undefended.
The British had not provided for any exigency in
which a princely State needed to be defended from
external threat and invasion. So long as the
British were in
India,
the responsibility to defend the States fell upon
them. But after the British left the Indian
shores, the responsibility to defend the States
fell upon India.
Inside the Security council as well as outside the
Security Council the Indian Government insisted
upon the finality of the accession of the State to
india and its inviolability. The Indian Government
refused to recognise the contention of Pakistan
that the Muslim majority composition of the State
of Jammu and Kashmir accord that country any right
to claim it.
India
could not have allowed pakistan to jeopardise its
freedom as well as its strategic interests in the
Himalayas
which formed the hinterland of the Indian frontier
in the north.
The partition was foisted on Indian people against
their will by the Muslims with the support of the
British. The British were no longer the masters in
India, and India was under no constraints, to
allow Pakistan achieve its territorial ambitions
in Jammu and Kashmir and Hyderabad where the
Muslim ruler was invoved in intrigues to align
with Pakistan in order to keep his State out of
India. Jammu and Kashmir was vital to India
because it formed the central spur of the northern
frontier of India and crucial to the security of
Himalayas. Hyderabad was situated deep inside
India, south of the Vindhyas.
The lapse of Paramountacy was an unilateral
process which underlined the withdrawal of British
power from India. The Princes as well as the
people of the States, the religious communities
forming ethnic majorities in the States, were not
a party to the lapse of Paramountacy. The two
successor states of
India
and Pakistan, formed by the division of the
British India, as well, were not a part of lapse
of Paramountacy. Who does the Manmohan Singh
Government indentify as the ‘stake holders’in
Jammu and Kashmir?
There cannot be any stake holders to the unity of
India, which is indivisible and inalienable.
The recognition of the right of any people in any
part of India, to claim a veto on the unity of
India is a negation of the nation of India. The
Indian nation does not rest on the proportion of
the population of the many communities which form
the indian people. The Indian unity is an
expression of the secular integration of the
Indian people on the basis of the right to
equality. The British divided India because they
were a colonial power. No government of India, not
even the government headed by Manmohan Singh, can
preside over the vivisection of India on the
ground that the Muslims in Jammu and Kashmir
claim a separate freedom.
The transfer of power in india in 1947, envisaged
the liberation of the Indian nation from the
colonial rule of the British, which the British
refused to concede without recognising the
corresponding claim made by the Muslims in
India
to a separate nation. The lapse of the
Paramountacy, as explained here, underlined a
parallel process for the liberation of the
princely States and their integration with the
successor States.
The partition of British India, the lapse of
Paramountacy and the accession of the princely
States were a part of the process of the transfer
of power in India. Who, except India, is the
‘stake holder’in jammu and Kashmir. It is
pertinent to note that when the National
Conference leadership claimed separate charge in
the Constituent Assembly of the State, independent
of the accession of the State, the Indian
Government refused to recognise any such claim.
*(The writer heads Panun Kashmir advisory).
Source: Kashmir
Sentinel
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