ABOUT THE BOOK
fjrigjwwe9r0pp_Books:Description
Kashmir has been in turmoil since
the past three decades or so. The state of dissatisfaction in that part of a
free, democratic, secular Indian nation is a rather perplexing development, the
question being that how can any well groomed group of citizens, anywhere in the
world, want to complain about their political rights in such a free and
tolerant environment. The answer is not straightforward.
There are many layers of kaleidoscopic events
which have marred the Kashmir scene – Kashmir Valley in fact, a small
terrestrial part of Kashmir that hosts the majority population - over
the past seven decades. It began with Pakistan instigated and aided rapine by
co-religionists in the name of consolidation of Pakistan`s religious identity.
Kashmir is then sought the safety of the Indian Union. For the next three
decades they prospered under more or less self-governance with the Union`s full
support. The sense of security and freedom, instead of consolidating
democratisation of the society, led to the Union`s callous overlook of
Pakistan`s overt and covert instigation of the Kashmiri people with a promise
of Islamic way of life and great rewards that would supposedly bring them. The
Union`s political apathy and endorsement of massive corruption among its local
favourites reinforced the people`s distraction from democratic India.
Lastly, over the two decades or so, as the
situation slipped from staged protests, sedation, insurgency, terrorism, and
now fanatic religious radicalisation of the younger generation, the Union used
force to keep Kashmir in control. But it overlooked the more salient follow-up
imperative – offering the people a right nationalist narrative and
follow it up with good governance.
It is unfortunate that as the situation went
from bad to worse, barring few, there was very little formal effort to delve
into the roots of the problem. This book fills that gap.
ABOUT Author
fjrigjwwe9r0pp_Books:aboutAuthor
Abhinav Pandya is a graduate in Public Policy from Cornell
University. He has worked in political affairs, refugee rehabilitation, social
capital and sustainable development in India and USA. He is interested in
political affairs, counter-terrorism, religious extremism, international
security, spirituality and comparative religions. He has been a regular
contributor to the Vivekananda International Foundation (India) on issues
relating to radicalisation, and security affairs.