The Rediff Special /B K Nehru
Farooq, Indira Gandhi complained, said 'Mummy Mummy' to her, promised to
do exactly as she wanted and then went back and did exactly the opposite
B K Nehru, Indira Gandhi's cousin, was governor of Jammu and Kashmir when the prime minister decided that she wanted to get rid of Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah in the autumn of 1983. She disliked Abdullah so much that she even supported the chief minister's pro-Pakistan brother-in-law G M Shah in
a palace coup.
In this fascinating extract from his much acclaimed recent biography, Nice Guys Finish Second,Nehru reveals what really happened during those tumultuous months, the aftermath of which is felt in the valley to this day.
The bitterness with which the (1983 assembly) election was fought
was not due entirely to the failure of the National Conference
to come to terms with the Congress party. It seems to me, with
the benefit of hindsight, that Indira Gandhi had decided to get
rid of Farooq as chief minister of the state even before the election.
One reason she gave to me when she came out in the open was that
he was unreliable, he said 'Mummy Mummy' to her and promised to
do exactly as she wanted and then went back and did exactly the
opposite.
Further, he was incompetent in the administration
of the state which was going to the dogs. Both these charges I
could certify from personal experience were totally correct. The
question, however, was whether they were enough to get rid of a
chief minister, particularly of a state as sensitive as Jammu
and Kashmir.. Unreliability was (and is) not an unusual characteristic
among the politicians of India; if Farooq was unreliable, said
one thing and did another, he was not exceptional. Nor was he
the only chief minister who maladministered his state; there could
be found examples of worse maladministration even among the states
ruled by the Congress.
It was difficult for me to discover the real reason
for what clearly had become a personal vendetta against Farooq.
The only explanation I could think of, and which has been given
to me by other people also, was an ugly incident that took place
during Indira Gandhi's last election tour of the state. Just before
her departure, she addressed a meeting in Iqbal Park in Srinagar.
During the meeting some people, standing at the back of the audience
which was large, lifted their phirans and displayed their nakedness
in an obvious affront to Indira Gandhi.
Fori and I had gone straight
from Raj Bhavan to the airport to see off the prime minister and
were, of course, unaware of any such happening. But what we did
notice, quite without doubt, was that she was in a rage. Her face
was flushed in anger, she spoke to nobody (which was quite contrary
to her usual behaviour) and entered her aeroplane without the
normal civilities having been observed.
This incident was blamed on Farooq by the very interested
gentlemen who surrounded her in Delhi and were her advisers on
Kashmir. Their word was believed by her implicitly; that of the
neutral and more objective observers, including the governor,
was not. Farooq vehemently denied his involvement and this denial,
in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, I fully believe
simply because organising vulgarity like this would be completely
contrary to his character.
Whatever Farooq's faults might have
been, he was a thorough gentleman; it was impossible for him even
to think of doing something so vile. He suggested that it might
have been organised by Gul Shah. There was again no proof about
this but I was and am quite prepared to believe that it was Gul
Shah who was responsible, for that would be completely consistent
with his normal behaviour. Strange to say that in all the continued
discussions and arguments on Kashmir that I had with the prime
minister in the ensuing months, no mention was ever made by her
of this incident.
Mir Qasim says in his memoirs that his experience
has shown 'that whenever New Delhi feels a leader in Kashmir is
getting too big for his shoes it employs Machiavellian methods
to cut him to size... Tale tellers, of whose black arts one
heard in Mughal courts, play a magic role in this kind of conspiracy.'
The prime minister's principal advisers on Kashmir were Mufti
Sayeed, Makkhan Lal Fotedar and Arun Nehru.
As for Arun, on my
asking, he denies that he was giving her advice on Kashmir. She
had ordered him to get rid of Farooq; this was what he was doing
without asking why; it was not for him to ask questions. Arun
may well be correct as he saw the situation himself. But viewed
from Kashmir where Delhi's actions were having effect, it did
not really matter whether an individual was the originator or
only the implementer of those actions.
Excerpted from Nice Guys Finish Second, by B K Nehru, Viking, 1997, Rs 595, with the publisher's permission.
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