NH exclusive: Tourist inflow no sign of normalcy in J&K, says Tarigami
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ujyvNIHIBAI
By
Daanish Bin Nabi
Arrival of tourists in
large numbers in Kashmir do not reflect that all is well and that there is
normalcy, says Muhammad Yusuf Tarigami, the spokesperson of People’s Alliance
of Gupkar Declaration, a former legislator and a former state secretary of CPI
(M) in erstwhile J & K.
“There were large number of
tourists in Kashmir even on August 4, 2019,” he points out in an interview with
NH, “there were a large number of Amarnath Yatris too in Kashmir in 2019 but it
was the Union Government which drove them out of the state (on the pretext of
threat of a terror strike) so that it could take unconstitutional measures”.
Kashmiris had always been hospitable to tourists and pilgrims, he added.
What the Union Government
did on August 5, 2019, he says, was not a dilution or abrogation of autonomy
but an assault on the basic structure of the Constitution and an assault on the
people of J & K.
Even those who had felt in
2019 that the move might help them are now deeply dissatisfied and which is why
the Buddhists of Ladakh and Muslims from Kargil last week again demanded
restoration of statehood, residency rights and land rights, he points out.
People in Jammu too are unhappy, he maintained, and which is why there has been
no election in the state and there is no elected assembly in the state since
2019.
The Constitution of India,
said the veteran legislator, provides that if a new state is to be created or
if a state is to be bifurcated, the issue must be referred to the people
concerned. But in the case of J & K did the Union Government do so? No
consent was taken from the people, no consultation was done—which is why the
reorganisation of J & K is unconstitutional and has been challenged in the
Supreme Court, he explained.
Describing the
recommendations of the Delimitation Committee as unconstitutional, Tarigami
pointed out that Government of India in 2002 had frozen the constituencies
throughout the country till 2026 and provided for delimitation exercise after a
census after 2026. The J & K Assembly had accordingly amended the J & K
Constitution to be in sync with the rest of the country.
Why then is the Union
Government making an exception in the case of J & K, he wondered. On the
one hand New Delhi claims to be integrating Kashmir with India, while on the
other hand it is out to disintegrate J & K and make it an exception, he
quipped.
Accusing the Union
Government of acting in bad faith, Tarigami recalled how the J & K Assembly
was first kept in suspended animation when the PDP-BJP alliance fell through.
But when a new coalition staked its claim to form the Government, all fax
machines in the Government and Raj Bhavan stopped working. But the very next
day the Assembly was dissolved and all fax machines miraculously began to work,
he sarcastically added. “They don’t want a legislature here”, he went on to
add.
Asked to comment on the
Government of India declaring that it would derecognise degrees obtained from
Pakistan and deny jobs to such degree holders, he asked, “Didn’t they have a
valid passport ? Didn’t they go to Pakistan legally like many go to other
countries and Bangladesh to study?” A large number of Kashmiri students who
studied Medicine in Pakistan would naturally be adversely affected.
Published
by National Herald on Published: 30 May 2022, 1:01 PM