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JAMMU & KASHMIR - ARTICLES
THIRD ROUND TABLE CONFERENCE: PUBLICITY STUNT OR TOWARDS PEACE?
The third Round
Table Conference (RTC) on Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) will be held in
New Delhi on 24 April 2007. Ghulam Nabi Azad, Chief Minister, J&K,
announced the date after a meeting with the Prime Minister, Manmohan
Singh and the Home Minister, Shivraj Patil. Given the recent
coalition crises on troop withdrawals from the state, is the RTC an
attempt to divert attention from internal differences within the
government? Is it meant to gain political mileage before the next
elections? Will it rope in the separatists'?
The concept of Round Table Conferences was introduced in January
2006 to initiate an internal peace process in J&K. However, in the
absence of the separatists' and of the ethnic groups and minorities
from Jammu and Ladakh, previous RTCs have achieved limited success.
Discussions remain the monopoly of mainstream parties.
The five Working Groups (WGs) set up by Manmohan Singh at the second
RTC were to present their reports and recommendations at the third
RTC. However, the WG on Centre-State relations has not prepared its
report due to lack of consensus on demands for 'autonomy, 'self
governance,' and 'self-rule' in the state. Initially, there were
disagreements over the formation and leadership of this WG as A.M.
Ahmadi, Supreme Court Chief Justice (retd), declined to chair it.
The first meeting was held long after the date for submission of its
findings. Moreover, the group is yet to discuss the issues of 1946,
1965 and 1971 refugees, and of backward areas of Ladakh and parts of
Jammu. Then what was the urgency to schedule the third RTC without
this WG report?
The third RTC needs to be seen in the context of the
Congress-People's Democratic Party (PDP) coalition crisis. The
crises began when Ghulam Nabi Azad rejected the PDP demand for
demilitarization and withdrawal of the Armed Forces Special Powers
Act from the state. The crisis was resolved earlier this month when
the PM decided to set up an expert panel and a committee to review
the feasibility of troop relocation in the state. The rising
dissatisfaction of the PDP leaders with the Congress raised doubts
on the stability of the coalition and the possibility of early
elections. Therefore, the suggestion to hold the third RTC is an
attempt to restore their political alliance.
The National Conference (NC), led by Omar Abdullah, has condemned
the PDP's demand for troop withdrawal, thereby increasing tensions
between the Opposition and the PDP. Abdullah has been insisting on
inclusion of Sayed Salah-u-din, United Jihad Council Chairman in the
dialogue process, arguing that peace can only be achieved by
involving the militant groups without pre-conditions. Earlier, it
was the Mirwaiz faction that had demanded this.But, the PDP is
against the inclusion of the separatists' and militants in the third
RTC and dialogue as it wishes to create space for its own
leadership. The demand by competing political parties, to involve
militant groups in the Round Table Conferences, is more an attempt
to gain the political high ground.
The separatist groups have yet again decided to boycott the upcoming
RTC. The reasons given by the Mirwaiz Hurriyat and Yasin Malik's
Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) for declining the invitation
remain unchanged since the first RTC in 2006. Yasin Malik announced
the launch of a mass programme, 'Safer-e-Azadi,' from Kokernag on 6
May 2007, saying the RTC exercise did not really involve the people
of Jammu and Kashmir. Only if the JKLF participates will it expand
the RTC membership beyond the so-called 'pro-India' groups.
Differences, however, within the separatists' on participation are
evident from Hashim Qureshi's (Chairman, Democratic Liberation
Party) criticism of Malik's mass programme as a 'publicity stunt.'
The Mirwaiz faction has put forward two conditions for its
participation in the RTCs. These include discussions on Musharraf's
four-point formula on Kashmir and the involvement of Azad Kashmir
leaders at the RTC. The Mirwaiz has praised Musharraf for his
flexibility on resolving the Kashmir issue and is critical of the
Indian government for not reciprocating. However, when 'fexibility'
is the key word, why does the Mirwaiz faction not show the same? The
Mirwaiz has been critical of the RTCs since they only concern
relations between Srinagar and New Delhi, although, at the third RTC,
Centre-State relations are not being discussed. Then why can it not
participate if it claims to be a 'true representative' of the
people? Is it not in its interest to review the reports submitted by
the four WGs? The continuous refusal by the separatist groups to
join the RTCs has allowed mainstream political parties in the state
to gain a monopoly over deciding the 'path to peace.'
Is it not an irony that while Khurshid Kasuri, Pakistan Foreign
Minister, has declared that India and Pakistan are close to a
Kashmir solution, political groups and the separatists' in J&K are
unable to sit down around a round table? What can the RTC achieve
when parties cannot think beyond their selfish political interests?
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