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HOME | NEWS | COLUMNISTS | ARVIND LAVAKARE |
August 29, 2000
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Arvind Lavakare
An e-mail to lkadvani@nic.inDear Mr AdvaniThis is about J&K and therefore within your portfolio. However, since Prime Minister Vajpayee seems to talk as much if not more than you do on the subject, I wanted to send him a copy of this. What has prevented me from doing so is that, strangely, the BJP's Mumbai offices have only your e-mail address, not Mr Vajpayee's. Whether that fact tells its own story is a different matter. Now to the basic issue. I recall that when the AIADMK was an ally of yours, it had taken Ms Jayalalitha to draw your attention to a significant press report. Obviously, you don't have the time to read newspapers even selectively, and your staff, it seems, is not trained to put up important news clippings for your eyes. Hence, I am today entreating you to read the article by Narendra Singh Sarila published on the edit page of The Times of India, Mumbai edition, dated August 14, 2000. That article, based on the US State Department's secret archives, establishes the following:
I am imploring you to brief the PM immediately on the above so that on his forthcoming visit to the USA, he can convince President Clinton, George Bush and others about how the American nation's attitude towards India's rightful claim to the whole of J and K has, for over 50 years, been contrary to what their own records reveal its conviction first was. Secondly, there is pain in many an Indian's heart when Pakistan and several others, including Indians themselves, talk of India defying the UN resolutions on plebiscite and of denying the J and K people their right of self-determination. They do so because the Government of India has been naïve in just not realising the critical importance of widely circulating a thorough fact sheet about India's case on J&K. One can understand why the Congress didn't do that --- it was incarcerated by the monumental blunder of its deity, Jawaharlal Nehru, in committing the nation to a plebiscite in J and K without having the common sense and decency of consulting even his home minister, leave alone his law ministry or Cabinet on the subject. And the Indian media of his era were nowhere near as nosy and hyper-critical as they are today; besides, our press in those years (there was no TV then, remember) had such a soft corner for Nehru that it would probably have allowed him to get away with the murder of Mountbatten for Edwina's sake. But that is no reason why the BJP-led governments should have kept quiet about the matter. By now, you should have repeatedly told the entire world the whole real story about J and K as was actually promised by Prime Minister Vajpayee when he met the Indian American community in New York on September 28, 1998. However, better late than never. We still possess Srinagar, thank god. And the Times article by Sarila ought to be fully exploited by the PM on his forthcoming visit to the USA. To strengthen our country's case, kindly allow me to draw your attention to the following excerpts from the invaluable, but little-known, book of the present Chief Justice of India, Dr A S Anand, titled The Constitution of Jammu & Kashmir -- Its Development & Comments. (Universal Law Book Publishing Company, New Delhi, 3rd edition, 1998.) Below then are those invaluable assertions that simply must be told to the whole world in a loud and clear manner at the United Nations and from every other platform, national and international. (For quick reference, the relevant page number in Dr Anand's book is given in brackets.)
The above extracts from Dr A S Anand's book (based on his dissertation that was awarded the Ph.D. degree by the London University in 1963) have never till now been used by any government in New Delhi to present its case to Indians, to the UN and to the major powers of the world that go on harping on the UN resolution of plebiscite while forgetting everything else, including that the same UN resolution required Pakistan to first withdraw its tribesmen and nationals from the J and K territory they had entered in October 1947 for the purpose of fighting. Those extracts, combined with the revealing material from the US State Department's archives now made available, our position on J&K becomes even more unassailable in the eyes of the USA. Under the circumstances, Mr Advani, I implore you to quickly arrange a meeting at which our Chief Justice can brief the PM on all the legal and constitutional nuances of our case on J&K. Our attorney general should also be present at the meeting. (In fact, the two legal luminaries must accompany the PM to the US.) And with your characteristic precision guiding that meeting, you all can work out a watertight brief to at last convince the US of our case on J and K. If the US raises the Nehru government's commitment to plebiscite, it will have to be told that -- apart from Pakistan's above failure to comply with the first requisite of the UN resolution -- India's old commitment is like the Clinton administration's signature on the UN's CTBT: not binding on the nation until constitutionally approved. Our fanatically Islamic neighbour will, of course, never accept legality and its hatred of us is a guarantee that it cannot be expected to honour a bilateral pact with us excepting the one that first gifts them J and K. Its betrayal after the Lahore Agreement of 1999 is ample proof of that. We will, therefore, have to give up our long-held belief in solving the J and K problem through bilateral accords. The time has come to accept international intervention in the matter. And now is the best time to press for it when the world accepts Pakistan as a source of terrorism and us as a mature nation on the path of peace, democracy and economic growth through liberalisation. The time has therefore come to persuade the US to pressurise Pakistan into accepting an international agreement. The following seem to be the only four alternatives for such an international agreement: 1. Pakistan returns to India that portion of J&K held by it since its invasion of that State in October 1947, or 2. Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (PoK) should be declared an independent sovereign entity under a full-fledged UN administration for the first five years, with people from our part of J&K being allowed to migrate there in that period, or 3. A UN-supervised plebiscite within a year in PoK to determine whether residents of Kashmir origin presently living there want PoK to join Pakistan or India or be independent, or 4. PoK is proclaimed a part of Pakistan and a permanent international border drawn between India and Pakistan along the existing LOC with $ 5 billion as compensation payable by Pakistan to India in three years from the date of such an agreement. Think over it, Mr Advani, but remember to discuss the options with all the other political parties. Without their support, the J and K conundrum just cannot be solved. Meanwhile, apologising for this long mail, I remain Yours faithfully An Indian citizen |
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