The Rediff Special / Kanchan Gupta
Farooq, Ajatshatru are defying nation's integrity
As a nation we do not miss any opportunity to berate those who
seek to defile or defy the Constitution of India. Indeed, great
emphasis, both moral and political, is laid upon the need to
not only swear loyalty to the Constitution but also the inviolability
of its letter and spirit. The emphasis is all the more when it
comes to defining our nationhood, geographical as well as political;
we do so by thumping the Constitution of the Republic of India.
Those who question the very identify of the Indian nation by defying
the Constitution or violating its tenets, are labelled as 'anti-national.'
The less polite resort to a harsher expression, describing the
violators as 'secessionists' who are guilty of nothing less than
'treason', an act defined by the OED as 'violation by a subject
of allegiance to the sovereign or to the state'. Thousands of
men and women were put behind bars under the provisions of the
Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act on the charge
that they chose to commit this violation with the help of AK -
47s and bombs. How does one describe a person who is guilty of
committing a similar act through the spoken word? And what about
an entire government that challenges the inviolability of India's
territorial integrity?
Ajatshatru Singh, grandson of Maharaja Hari Singh who signed
the Instrument of Accession with the specific purpose of preventing
his princely state's forcible and bloody annexation by Pakistan,
has dropped a bombshell by announcing that the National Conference
government headed by Dr Farooq Abdullah is not only willing to
secede territory to Pakistan, but will pass a resolution to this
effect, following it up with a referendum.
Dr Abdullah,
realising the implications of his tourism minister's utterance, has sought
to minimise its impact by claiming that the callow politician
has been misquoted. He, however, has failed to offer a convincing
clarification as to what exactly did Ajatshatru Singh say.
In a sense, Ajatshatru Singh has merely expanded upon Dr Abdullah's
much-repeated view that the Line of Control between India and
Pakistan should be recognised as the de jure international border
and Islamabad allowed sovereign rights over occupied Kashmir.
Dr Abdullah's 'practical and realistic solution' was no 'off-the-cuff
remark', as he described it after airing his appalling views at
Chhindwara. In any event, any individual who owes allegiance to
a state, more so somebody who occupies public office, does not
make 'off-the-cuff remarks about the territorial integrity of
that state.
For the past three years now Dr Abdullah has been talking about
this 'practical and realistic solution'; to that extent, he has
been consistent in questioning the inviolability of the nation's
territorial integrity. Notwithstanding his contrived contriteness
after his Chhindwara statement fetched howls of protest, Dr Abdullah
reiterated his seditious 'solution' in a belligerent interview
to the Indian Express.There was not even a mild word of censure
from the United Front government of which his party is the exalted 14th member.
Therefore, there is no reason to believe that Ajatshatru Singh
was misquoted. Ajatshatru Singh, who is politically naive,
jumped the gun and spilled the beans when cornered by reporters
at Chandigarh's Garden Festival. A seasoned politician would have
stuck to the subject at hand -- gardening instruments, plant varieties
and the benefits of organic manure.
What, however, is surprising is that both he and his leader, Dr
Abdullah, should be unaware of the contents of the opening pages
of the Constitution of India, the state to which they owe allegiance
by virtue of the fact that they are Indian citizens, as well as
the Constitution of Jammu and Kashmir to which they swore undying
loyalty while being sworn in as ministers. The territorial identity
of the nation, as defined by Article 1 of the Constitution of
India -- 'India, that is Bharat, shall be a Union of States'
'specified in the First Schedule' -- includes the entire
State of Jammu and Kashmir. This Article is applicable to Jammu
and Kashmir, notwithstanding Article 370.
The Constitution of Jammu and Kashmir goes further, leaving
no doubts whatsoever about the state being an integral part of
India and its territorial identity. Defining the 'relationship
of the State with the Union of India', Article 3 of Part II says:
'The State of Jammu and Kashmir is and shall be an integral
part of the Union of India.' The next Article defines the
'territory of the State'; 'The territory of the State shall
comprise all the territories which on the fifteenth day of August,
1947, were under the sovereignty or suzerainty of the Ruler of
the State.'
By working towards the secession of that part of Jammu and Kashmir
which has been in Pakistan's illegal occupation for the past five
decades, Dr Abdullah and his minister are prima facie guilty of
violating the sanctity of both the Constitutions. Worse, Ajatshatru
Singh, by seconding Dr Abdullah's obnoxious 'practical and realistic
solution', has questioned the sovereign and suzerain powers of
his grandfather; first it was Dr Karan Singh who virtually helped
Sheikh Abdullah to force Maharaja Hari Singh into abdication and now it is
Ajatshatru Singh who has questioned the very legitimacy of the former ruler's
sovereign powers.
In a sense, this
puts a question mark on Maharaja Hari Singh's actions as
the ruler of Jammu and Kashmir, including the act of his signing
the Instrument of Accession which he did on the strength of his
sovereign powers that are now sought to be cruelly denied by his
own grandson.
Had any other chief minister or one of his colleagues been guilty
of questioning the sanctity of the Constitution of India or the
inviolability of the nation's territorial integrity, retribution
would have been swift and pitiless. Many a state government has
been sacked on the assumption that it will fail to 'uphold the
Constitution'. Ordinary citizens have been punished, and cruelly
though rightly so, for committing a similar crime.
Punjab's fields
are stained with the blood of those who sought to violate the
nation's territorial integrity; a bloody battle rages in the North-East
against those who preach secession; the graveyards of the valley
of Kashmir are littered with headstones dedicated to those who
challenged the Indian State.
Yet Dr Farooq Abdullah and Ajatshatru Singh have got away scot-free.
One reason is that their thinking is shared by many in the United
Front government, including the prime minister who is willing to
'make minor adjustments on Jammu and Kashmir' with Pakistan
and his foreign minister who is willing to make any adjustments
at any price in order to score brownie points with the lib-left
both at home and abroad.
Meanwhile, tucked away in some dusty file on some dusty shelf
of Parliament lies a piece of paper which contains the lines.
'The State of Jammu and Kashmir has been, is and shall be an
integral part of India and any attempts to separate it from the
rest of the country will be resisted by all necessary means...
Pakistan must vacate the areas of the Indian State of Jammu and
Kashmir, which they have occupied through aggression....'
This piece of paper forgotten by all is the unanimous resolution
adopted by Parliament on February 22, 1994.
Kanchan Gupta, formerly a senior journalist at The Pioneer, is
now a member of the Bharatiya Janata Party's think-tank
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