The ongoing failure in J&K
The hopes for party coalitions to improve the Kashmir situation have all failed.
By Daanish Bin Nabi
Published by Newslaundary on July 2, 2018
The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) patron, late Mufti
Mohammad Sayeed, was considered to be an astute politician, who started his
political career from scratch. However, at the fag end of a career spanning
over 50 years, he was ditched by his own wisdom. He tried to stitch together an
alliance, which he himself referred to as an alliance between “the North and South
Pole”.
Three-and-half years down the line, Mufti Sayeed’s
dream—which his daughter Mehbooba Mufti tried hard to keep together—lies
shattered.
It’s said that in politics, timing is important. After the
alliance between the PDP and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)—called the
“unholy alliance”—speculations were ripe that one of the partners would soon
make a move to leave the coalition government. This was the move the PDP
possibly miscalculated. It was the BJP which moved first, leaving its coalition
partner red-faced.
Professor Siddiq Wahid, political commentator and former
Vice-Chancellor of Islamic University of Science and Technology (IUST), said,
“The PDP did not miscalculate. Rather, its political intelligence quotient has
been near zero for the last three years. So it fell victim to the astonishing
vacuum.”
The Congress card
A lot has been said about the Congress joining hands again
with the PDP. While the Congress high-command has rejected the claims, the
State Pradesh Congress has kept its doors open for an alliance. A Congress
meeting is scheduled to be held at Congress headquarters in Srinagar on July 3.
The meeting will be chaired by Ghulam Nabi Azad, Congress general secretary and
the leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha.
Jammu and Kashmir Pradesh Congress Committee (JKPCC) Vice
President, Ghulam Nabi Monga, told Newslaundry, “Everything is open as of now.
Forming government with the PDP will be discussed in the meeting.”
He said the Congress aim is to keep Hindutva forces like the
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and the BJP at bay. “We will check out our
options; only then can we decide whether or not to go for an alliance with the
PDP,” he said to Newslaundry. “We are in constant touch with Rahuji also, and
will wait for instruction from him as well.”
Both the Congress and the PDP have had bitter experiences in
the past. They were the coalition partner ruling J&K from 2003 to 2008.
There was an arrangement of a rotational chief minister between the two
parties. When Mufti Sayeed completed his three-year term as chief minister, the
PDP ditched the Congress and left the coalition, leaving no option with then
Congress chief minister Ghulam Nabi Azad but to resign.
Talking about stitching an alliance between the two parties,
Wahid said, “The report of the coming of the PDP-Congress together is more of a
trial balloon hope on the part of some in the PDP than a practical possibility.
Apart from the formal denial by the Congress of such an intent, it also runs
counter to common sense that to support a hugely discredited political party
adds its baggage to your own.”
The grand alliance
When the fractured election results came out in the state in
2014, Mufti Sayeed took two or three months before forming an alliance with the
right-wing BJP. Parties across the political divide requested Mufti Sayeed to
forge a grand alliance to keep the BJP out of the state. However, the senior
Mufti did not budge.
The grand alliance between the National Conference, Congress
and PDP as of now seems to be a distant dream. National Conference spokesperson
Imran Nabi Dar told Newslaundry, “We had given unconditional support to Mufti
Sahab in 2014. But he did not take it. It’s them (PDP) who needs to approach us
and not vice versa. I don’t think there is scope for the grand alliance in the
state this time. No one wants to go with the PDP now.”
He said that the reports of the Congress and PDP joining
hands have been planted by the PDP themselves so it, as a party, does not
disintegrate.
“They (PDP) plant such stories so that they can keep their
flock together,” he said.
As governor’s rule has been imposed in J&K for the
fourth time in the last 10 years, the
state seems to be functioning normally, at least on day-to-day governance. On
the security front, it’s gone from bad to worse. A Parliament seat in south
Kashmir is still vacant, as the government has been unable to hold an election
in the past year due to the prevailing security situation.
Wahid said, “The structural changes in its electoral
process—that Delhi attempted to achieve in the last decade and a half—has come
back to bite. J&K is now even more unpredictable politically, and Delhi's
only answer is more army.”