By Reema Shaukat
While making pronouncements, very
few decision makers or authorities notice their impact in the long term.
History reveals that occasionally, wrong decisions prove to be very drastic,
though at that time, they seem quite enthralling. One such wrong choice, which
has an astounding impact, was the day in history when the Treaty of Amritsar
was signed. This treaty was signed on March 16, 1846 and has ten articles which
suggest how Kashmir was cleverly vended. March 16, therefore, is noticeable as
a day on which the beautiful valley of Kashmir was sold for just seventy-five
lakh rupees.
Against the desires of its
inhabitants, Gulab Singh Dogra, the ruler of Jammu at the time, sold this
valley to the British Government in India under a contract. Gulab Singh Dogra
had long-term relations with the British Indian government and to further
strengthen ties, he worked as the British wished. It is worth noting that under
the suppression of Gulab Singh Dogra, the wishes of Kashmiris were never
addressed by the British government, nor this whole business of the Amritsar
Treaty was in their knowledge. According to Article 1 of this treaty, the
British Government transferred independent possession to Maharajah Gulab Singh
and the heirs male of his body all the hilly or mountainous country with its
dependencies situated to the eastward side of the River Indus and westward of
River Ravi, including Chamba. Under Article 3 of this treaty, Gulab Singh was
to pay 75 lakhs (7.5 million) of Nanak Shahi rupees (the ruling currency of the
Sikh kingdom at the time) to the British Government, along with other yearly
honours. History actually narrates that the Treaty of Amritsar is the
foundation of Dogra rule in the state of Jammu and Kashmir. During Dogra raj,
the plight of Kashmiri Muslims is known by the act of brutalities on them as
they were ruthlessly tortured and were deprived of basic human necessities. So
this seed of oppression was sowed centuries ago by the Indians against Muslims,
which has stronger roots today and proves how this wrong decision taken to
please authorities of the time had drastic consequence even after more than a
century has passed.
Going a little back in history
will help to understand the Kashmir predicament. During the partition of the
Sub-continent, the people of Muslim majority State, Jammu and Kashmir (JK)
decided to join Pakistan according to the British-led formula. But, Dogra Raja
Hari Singh, then Hindu ruler of JK, in connivance with the Indian Prime Minister
Jawaharlal Nehru and Governor General Lord Mountbatten, joined India. The real
design to forcibly gain Kashmir began to unfold on August 16, 1947, with the
announcement of the Radcliffe Boundary Award. It gave the Gurdaspur district,
which was a Muslim majority area, to India to provide a land route to the
Indian armed forces to move into Kashmir. This led to a rebellion by state
forces, which stood against the Maharaja and were joined by Pathan tribesmen.
When Pakistan responded militarily against the Indian aggression, on December
31, 1947, India made an appeal to the UN Security Council to intervene and a
ceasefire ultimately came into effect on January 1, 1949, following UN
resolutions calling for a plebiscite in Kashmir. On February 5, 1964, India backed
out of its promise of holding a plebiscite. Instead, in March 1965, the Indian
Parliament passed a bill, declaring Kashmir a province of India, an integral
part of the Indian union.
The bloody tragedy of poor
Kashmiris had started after 1947 when they were denied their legitimate and UN
approved right to self-determination. As a natural outcome of Indian injustice,
people of Indian Occupied Kashmir (IOK) organised themselves and launched a war
of liberation which India tried to crush through coercion and brutalities.
Later, in 1988, India positioned a very large number of its armed forces to
suppress the Kashmir struggle at gunpoint. With the advent of Indian
occupational forces, the ethnic cleansing campaign against the Kashmiri people
has intensified manifold. So far, more than 100,000 people have been killed at
the hands of the Indian occupational forces. The number is growing
logarithmically as Indians are using increasingly brutal methods to suppress
the people of IOK and their legal struggle for freedom. Many human rights
organisations including Amnesty International in their reports have mentioned
the sufferings of Kashmiris at the hands of Indian forces. The recent Amnesty
International Report of 2016-17 shows that Indian security forces used arbitrary
or excessive force against demonstrators on several occasions. Many people were
killed and hundreds blinded by security forces’ use of pellet-firing shotguns,
which are inherently inaccurate and indiscriminate. Likewise, after the death
of Burhan Wani, a curfew was imposed, private landlines, mobile and internet
service providers suspended their services for weeks on orders from the state.
The communication shutdown undermined a range of human rights and residents
reported being unable to reach medical assistance in cases of emergencies.
Hundreds of people, including children, were placed in administrative detention
and dozens of schools were set on fire by unidentified people. India has been
victimising Kashmiri leaders off and on through dirty tactics to break their
will and resolve. They have been repeatedly harassed and physically
intimidated. Instead of accepting the existing reality, India has sought to
blame Pakistan for allegedly promoting the Kashmiri uprising. These Indian
accusations against Pakistan is a tactic to delude the international community
on the Kashmir issue and a concealment of their state sponsored atrocities
against the innocent people of IOK.
A peaceful, negotiated settlement
of the Kashmir dispute in accordance with UN resolutions has always persisted
as Pakistan’s foreign policy. In order to find an early and just solution to
the decades old Kashmir dispute, Pakistan has always urged the international
community to play an active role. So the long past mistake of signing a treaty
and handing over a territory without the consent of its people must now be
resolved according to the will of its dwellers.
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