The Rediff Special /B K Nehru
'Kashmiris were convinced that India would never permit
them to rule themselves'
I thought it my duty to brief my successor before
I left about the charge he was taking over. Accordingly I invited
him, on my next visit to Delhi, to have breakfast with me. I tried to
explain to him what I thought was the factual situation in Kashmir
which was very different from what Delhi must have told him.
What struck me was that he made not one single comment nor
asked one single question. It might have been that he accepted
the latest Delhi propaganda -- that the governor was senile. Or,
which I thought more likely, as he had his order it was no longer
for him 'to reason why'.
I do not normally take much interest in what happens
in my charge when I have left it. But in Kashmir the stakes were
so high that I did try and follow what happened in the next few
months.
I was not surprised when Farooq was dismissed and
Gul Shah installed. Nor was I surprised, when I learnt later,
that the play enacted was one hundred per cent identical with
the scenario that had been rehearsed to me over and over again.
Although the governor's appointment with them was at seven am,
the group arrived before first light; the journey was completed
by stealth and in the darkness of the night. None of the defectors
left the compound of Raj Bhavan till they were all sworn in as
cabinet ministers late in the afternoon.
What I could not explain to myself when I read my
successor's book My Frozen Turbulence, was why he was
taken by surprise and had to study the Kashmir constitution half
the night. If I had four regular informants to keep me abreast
of the developments in the Gul Shah camp, how was it that all
these sources of information had suddenly dried up for the new
governor.
I can understand that Tirath Ram Amla and D D Thakur
did not tell him anything because in the short period of two months
the trust necessary for the exchange of confidences could not
as yet have been developed. But how could the director general
of police, a thoroughly professional civil servant, fail in his
duties of informing his boss about what was happening around him?
And if even he had failed, how could the deputy director of the
Intelligence Bureau, who knew well Delhi's vital interest in the
dismissal of Farooq, fail to inform the governor of what was happening?
And if all these sources of information did suddenly dry up, how
did the operation of manufacturing the defection which was public
knowledge in Kashmir not come to the notice of the governor?
The seriousness of the long-term damage of the dismissal
of Farooq has never really been assessed. My own view is that
the Kashmiris, who had recovered considerably from their anti-Indian
feelings when their chosen representatives, the Sher-e-Kashmir,
and his son, ruled over them, were convinced now at the second
dethronement of their elected ruler that India would never permit
them to rule themselves.
It was the alien rule of Delhi (which
was, additionally, that of the kafirs) under which they
would have always to live if they remained part of India. It is
my belief that it was this disastrous dismissal which was the
last straw that broke the camel's back and to which the intefada,
which has already lasted six years, can be traced.
Excerpted from Nice Guys Finish Second, by B K Nehru, Viking, 1997, Rs 595, with the publisher's permission.
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