Kashmiri Pandits are privileged refugees
By Daanish Bin Nabi
By now no one disagrees
that Vivek Agnihotri’s The Kashmir Files is a rather one-sided story, full of
halftruths, blacked out facts and depending on fiction to whip up communal
sentiments against Muslims.
It would not be too
far-fetched to presume that the film stinks of a facilitation of genocide in
India. There is, of course, no doubt that the film vilifies Kashmiri Muslims,
distorts facts and brings back haunting memories of the days of violent
militancy that are best forgiven, even if not forgotten.
“I heard a journalist on
national television say that the world should know what transpired in Kashmir.
But ‘Kashmir Files’ only vilifies Kashmiri Muslims and distorts the truth,”
Kashmiri Pandit author and columnist Badri Raina told National Herald.
What the film also covers
up is the fact that Kashmiri Pandits who were driven out of their home state
are really not so badly off. They continue to receive ample funds and material
help from the governments, both central and various states where they are resident,
they have reservations in medical,engineering and other courses that they might
be deprived of if they cease to be refugees, and they have a far better status
as migrants than they would have as residents of their own state.
The story of their homelessness
and dire straits is clearly a myth that needs to be busted.
“It seems reasonable to
assume that Kashmiri Muslims were severely disaffected and their faith in India
seemed to have been eroded, but whereas they held India responsible for the
plight of Kashmir, only those Kashmiri Pandits and Muslims were killed by
militants who were thought to be Indian agents in one form or another,” Badri
Raina said.
He said that in the first
killings, three noted Pandits and also the Muslim vice chancellor of Kashmir
University were killed. “Many Muslims had a lot to fear as well from the new
sectarian turn of events.”
So, it is not quite fair
that the film depicts only the plight of Kashmiri Pandits to the exclusion of
similar fate suffered by Kashmiri Muslims. With one difference-- the Kashmiri
Pandits never had it so good.
Hefty compensation
According to the official
data of the Government of Jammu and Kashmir Relief and Rehabilitation,
approximately 60,000 families migrated from the Kashmir valley and settled in
Jammu and its adjoining areas. Out of these families, 23000 migrant families
settled outside the state of Jammu and Kashmir.
In 2004, the government
announced construction of two-room concrete houses at Muthi Camp Phase-I in
Jammu and subsequently sanction was accorded for construction of 5,248 two-room
sets including allied facilities like community halls, higher secondary
schools, primary health centres, water and electricity supply, a 40-bed
hospital, roads and drainage, STP plant, and parks. Likewise, the government of
India also sanctioned the project for construction of 5248 flats for the
welfare of the Kashmiri Pandits in two phases, the data reveals.
“Initially, when they
migrated, they were given a stipend of Rs. 250/- per household per month (in
the year 1990) which subsequently has been increased to Rs.13,000/- per
household. Electricity, ration and other day-to-day eatables are being provided
entirely free to them. They further divided their families into nuclear
families to derive more benefits,” Kashmir-based civil society member Shakeel
Qalandar told National Herald.
He said that after the
Gujarat riots, the displaced Muslims families were given a stipend of only Rs.
500/- and that too was discontinued shortly thereafter and their camps forcefully
shut down.
As per the Ministry of Home
Affairs (MHA) dry rations (9 kg rice, 2 kg. Atta per person per month and 1 kg
sugar per family per month) to eligible families living in Jammu are too being
given.
“Government provides Rs
13,000 per month to the families of 44,000 Kashmiri Pandits who have relief
cards,” Home Minister Amit Shah has said while replying to the discussion on
the Jammu & Kashmir Reorganization (Amendment) Bill of 2021 in the Lok
Sabha.
Likewise, Phase-I of 1024
flats was taken up at Muthi, Purkhoo and Nagrota during the year September
2005. “A total of 4224 flats had been taken up at Mini Township JagtiNagrota
during the year 2007,” the data shows.
The government data also
reveals that from 1998 to 2004, around 979 registered families of migrants
hailing from hilly regions of district Doda, Udhampur, Rajouri and Poonch were
rehabilitated.
Qalandar, who has also
worked on the process of the rehabilitation of Kashmir Pandits, says that
government jobs were reserved for them, so were seats in various colleges and
universities across the country.
“After they left the
Valley, many states gave them seat reservations to take up medical or
engineering courses which continues to this day. On the other hand, a Kashmiri
Muslim family has to send their children outside India and spend nearly Rs. 50
lakh to secure their admission in foreign countries,” he said.
As per MHA, around 20,000
Pandits are settled in Delhi/NCR and about 2000 families are settled in other
parts of the country.It said that the Government of Delhi is also providing
cash relief of Rs.2500/- per head per month (maximum Rs.10,000/- per family per
month) to eligible families living in Delhi/ NCR.
A comprehensive package was
announced by the Government of India in 2008 for return and rehabilitation of
Kashmiri migrants. Under this package, so far state government jobs have been
provided to 2,461 Kashmiri migrants and 505 Transit accommodations have been
constructed in the Kashmir Valley and allotted to the newly-appointed migrant
employees under the package.
On November 18, 2015, the
Government of India had also approved another package, for providing additional
3,000 state government jobs to the Kashmiri migrants and construction of 6,000
transit accommodations in the Kashmir valley. The package/scheme was
implemented by the State Government of Jammu and Kashmir.
In the same year in 2015,
the government of India had said that there were about 1054 registered Jammu
migrant families who were living in various parts of the Jammu region of the
State. The State Government of Jammu and Kashmir was providing cash relief of
Rs.400 per head per month plus ration to such families from its own resources.
Why are Pandits not returning to Kashmir?
Kashmir did witness
relative ‘peace’ from 2003 to 2008. And since then the security agencies and
the Government of India have always claimed that ‘peace’ has returned to
Kashmir. The only question that remains is – then why aren’t the Kashmiri
Pandits returning back to their native places?
The answer is aptly
answered by the Kashmir-based civil society member Shakeel Qalandar,“If they
[Kashmiri Pandits] come back, they will have to give up all the perks and
privileges being provided to them by the government.They will never do that.”
Qalandar suggests that the
incentives should be for returning to the Valley and not for staying outside.
“GoI should stop all the
stipends and other privileges to Kashmiri Pandit living outside. Once they are
back to their ancestral place, the government should continue to give them
stipends and other perks till they settle down at their ancestral places,” he
said.
“This is the only way of
getting our Pandit brethren back to Kashmir.”
He could be right. If the
material compensation to continue as refugees is what is leading them to stay
away, then it stands to reason the temptation of more money to return will
bring them back in hordes. And the myth of the Kashmir Files will be finally
busted.
Published
by National Herald on Published: 26 March 2022, 2:00 PM