Kashmir is normal in the sense that there are no stone-throwing incidents. Militancy, too, is on its last leg. Yet, the Valley is seething with discontent. You can feel it once you land there. It is difficult to ascribe a single reason. Many factors are responsible for it. The most important one is the general feeling that India is all over, while Kashmir had given its control only over three subjects: Defence, Foreign Affairs and Communications.
The complaint is justified because it is for a unit to surrender as much sovereignty as it likes. The federation cannot usurp more subjects on its own. But New Delhi has precisely done that. This is what came in the way of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and Shiekh Abdullah, who were close friends. The Sheikh spent 12 years in confinement. Nehru realised his mistake and had the Sheikh to stay at the Prime Minister's house to make amends.
A similar problem plagues relations between New Delhi and Srinagar. How does a Chief Minister stay in the good books of the Centre and give the Valley a feeling of independent identity? This is the thinking that worries the political parties of the State all the time.
Those who consider Kashmir as India's inalienable part and want to undo Article 370, which gives a special status to Kashmir, are betraying the Constitution on the one hand and the confidence of Kashmiris on the other. Unfortunately, the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has a different point of view, although Prime Minister Narendra Modi has not done anything which would whittle down Kashmir's autonomy. But the fear pervades in the Valley.
This is the main reason why accession to India has come to be questioned seriously. Those who seldom received any response to their slogan of independent Kashmir in the past have many ears to listen today. And, not surprisingly, their number is increasing by the day.
What New Delhi has to appreciate is that the Kashmiris' desire to distance themselves from India may not be considered in any meaningful transfer of power from New Delhi to Srinagar. Yet the impression that the Kashmiris rule themselves has to be sustained. The National Conference waged a long war to get rid of Maharaja Hari Singh and had an icon like Sheikh Abdullah to provide a secular and democratic rule to the State. But the party suffered defeat in the Assembly polls because it was seen as being too close to New Delhi.
The People's Democratic Party (PDP) won because its founder, Mufti Mohammad Sayeed, kept a distance from New Delhi, without alienating it. The Kashmiris voted for him because he gave them a feeling of defiance. Omar and Farooq Abdullah had to pay the price of the National Conference's image of being pro-Delhi. Kashmir's links with India are too close to challenge it beyond a point. Still the opposition, however small, gives the Kashmiris a vicarious satisfaction of defying New Delhi.
Lord Cyril Radcliffe did not attach any importance to Kashmir. He was a judge in London who drew the line between India and Pakistan to establish two separate countries. He told me many years later during an interview that he never imagined that Kashmir would assume so much importance as it did.
I recalled this instance when I was in Srinagar a couple of weeks ago to preside over the first anniversary of an Urdu magazine. Urdu has been unceremoniously ousted from all the States, including Punjab, where it was the main language until some years ago. In fact, the language lost its importance in India soon after Pakistan made it its national language.
Kashmir feels strongly about New Delhi's step-motherly treatment meted out to the language. And it is generally believed that it is languishing in neglect because Urdu is considered the language of Muslims. If New Delhi were to own and encourage Urdu, the Kashmiris would have at least one reason less to feel aggrieved.
People are generally poor like the rest of India and they want jobs which they realise will come through only development, including tourism. But they are not themselves picking up the gun or any other weapon to drive the militants out. One, they are afraid of them, and, two, there is a feeling that what the militants are trying to do is to give them an identity. Therefore, the criticism that there is no resistance to the militants from within the Valley should be understandable because it is part of alienation. It is unfortunate that New Delhi did not give the package which it had announced after the devastation through floods in Kashmir. There was no criticism of not honouring the promise by the media. There was also no Indian leader to point out to New Delhi that it had reneged from the promise. All these are interpreted in Kashmir as a deliberate sign of cursory attitude.
I still believe that the 1953 agreement which gave India the control of defence, foreign affairs and communications can improve part of the situation in the State. The Kashmiri youth, who are angry over the State's status as well as the situation, can be won over by the assurance that the entire Indian market is available to them for business or service.
But this alone may not do. New Delhi will have to withdraw all the Acts relating to the fields other than defence, foreign affairs and communications. The Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, which was promulgated some 25 years ago to meet the extraordinary situation in the State, is still in operation. Were the government to withdraw the Act, it would placate the Kashmiris on the one hand and make the security forces more responsible on the other.
Normalcy is also a state of mind. The Kash-miris must feel themselves that their identity is not under attack and that New Delhi realises the importance of what the Kashmiris desire. The restoration of the 1953 agreement giving New Delhi the control of only three subjects may retrieve the situation which, if not attended to, may deteriorate.
The author is a veteran journalist renowned not only in this country but also in our neighbouring states of Pakistan and Bangladesh where his columns are widely read. His website is www.kuldipnayar.com