Friday 19 September 2014

Scotland’s referendum stirs Kashmiri demands for vote

Scotland’s referendum stirs Kashmiri demands for vote
* Kashmiri leaders demand India follow through on a promise to grant a similar vote in disputed region * Geelani says London should now put pressure on India
·         Reuters   September 19, 2014

SRINAGAR: Kashmiri separatist leaders have seized on Scotland’s referendum on independence to demand that India follow through on a promise to grant a similar vote in the disputed Himalayan region.

Scotland was voting on Thursday on whether to split away from the United Kingdom in a ballot moderate Kashmiri separatist leader Mirwaiz Umar Farooq said was an example of how Kashmiris’ demands for a say on their future could be solved peacefully. “We hope India will also change its approach and realise the fact that people’s rights can’t be trampled upon,” Farooq, the head Muslim priest in the Indian-held Kashmir, where a violent insurgency against New Delhi’s rule raged through the 1990s and resentment still runs high, said on Wednesday.

“It is encouraging that in a peaceful manner people will be deciding their future.” Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since a war after independence from Britain in 1947, and the two nuclear-armed neighbours have fought two of their three wars over the territory. India has never carried out a promise made more than six decades ago to hold a plebiscite that would determine the wishes of the Kashmiri people. It now considers the entire region of snow-capped mountains and fertile valleys an integral part of its territory and maintains a massive military presence in Jammu and Kashmir, its northernmost and only Muslim-majority state.

Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj blurted out her horror at the thought of New Delhi’s former colonial master splitting apart, when questioned at a news conference last week. “A break-up of the UK? God forbid,” she said.

 “I don’t think any such possibility exists at the moment.” After a senior civil servant whispered in her ear, Swaraj corrected herself, commenting: “It is up to the people of Scotland to decide.” Another Kashmiri separatist leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani praised the United Kingdom for giving Scotland the vote, adding that London should now put pressure on India to grant Kashmiris a referendum. “India should learn lessons from UK and honour its commitment of granting right to self-determination to people of Kashmir,” Geelani said.

About 150,000 people are stranded in their homes a week after Indian-held Kashmir’s worst flood in over a century and fears grow of an outbreak of diseases from vast fields of stagnant brown water. Indian army and civilian boats trawled through the streets -now water channels - of the state capital Srinagar – picking up residents and delivering water, food and basic medicine to people who chose to remain camped out in the upper floors of their houses.



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