Humanity and
Kashmir into the global debate, By
Mekaal Hassan.
The Kashmir
dispute has once again been brought into the global consciousness. Earlier this
month a plane flew over Headingley Stadium in Leeds during the Cricket World
Cup, with a banner urging India to “free Kashmir”. Then Donald Trump made his
unexpected offer this week to “mediate or arbitrate” over the conflict. The
intervention has not only prompted strong remarks on both sides of the Line of
Control, but also engaged political commentators, academics and diplomats
across the world.
Timing is
everything. The end of July marks two decades since the guns fell silent on the
three-month Kargil war, which claimed the lives of nearly 400 Pakistani
servicemen and over 500 Indian troops. It was the last official time the
conflict between the two nuclear actors turned hot.
Renewed foreign
interest in one of the world’s most critical flashpoints can only be a good
sign – since any chance of peace or resolution will depend in large part on the
support of the international community. The US Correspondent for British
newspaper The Independent recently argued that Trump “could be the clown who
solves the 70-year Kashmir crisis. India and Pakistan should [at least] let him
try”.
And yet all this
political posturing and diplomacy masks the reality of life on the ground. It
can be easy to forget that behind the maps, borders and political speeches
there are real people who are trying to get on with their lives. Even in one of
the world’s most militarised zones, life goes on.
But when
disaster and hardship threaten, the need for humanitarian response transcends
border disputes.
The Kashmir
earthquake is a case in point. In 2005, India and Pakistan put aside their
differences for the sake of humanity, and opened five crossing points on the
Line of Control in order to ease of the flow of humanitarian and medical aid to
the region. The world responded: international aid teams assisted in the relief
efforts; even the British and American military sent aid from their bases in
Afghanistan.
Alshair Fiyaz,
an investor and philanthropist, remembers the time well. He provided aid for
the emergency distribution of winter shelter for 1,600 families suffering from
the destruction of their homes by the quake in Kashmir’s Azad area, near the
epicentre. As well as contributing to short-term emergency accommodation, the
funds enabled long-term planning for permanent housing projects for those
families still living in camps.
But Fiyaz
believes philanthropy knows no borders: indeed, his own humanitarian work has
crossed the Line of Control. In India, Fiyaz’s philanthropic ALFI Foundation
has supported single-parent families in sending their children to school
instead of work, and organised funds for private tuition for students,
regardless of their ability. It has also sent resources to address youth
unemployment, by helping young mechanics, cab drivers and builders to buy the
cars and tools they need.
20 years after
Kargil, political disputes over Kashmir continue to rumble on. The
international community is once again becoming more aware. But for the world’s
humanitarians, people – not borders – remain the focus.
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