POLITICS: HOW INTRACTABLE AN ISSUE IS KASHMIR?
More than any other modern country, India has been beset by separatism. Though data sets on secessionism suggest that, historically, Burma and Indonesia have come close to matching India, they lag for a simple reason: India is an incredibly large and diverse state. More importantly, unlike, say, the United States — another big and diverse democracy — India’s ethno-national groups are geographically concentrated. This means that a country or autonomous region of their own would be a nonsensical cartographic proposition for African Americans, for example, but an entirely reasonable one for Assamese, Nagas, Kashmiris, or Punjabi Sikhs.
Of course, not all of India’s separatist movements are created equal. The Indian centre has had a reasonable amount of success in retarding, if not entirely stamping out, secessionism in places such as Punjab or the Northeast, at least relative to their heydays. Once the site of an insurgency consuming thousands of lives annually, Punjab today sees no vestiges of such a movement; references to a Sikh state are much more likely to emanate from diaspora communities in Canada than locals in Chandigarh. In Assam, admittedly only one of several states in the Northeast, where the intensity of such claims ebb and flow, the full-blown rebellion led by United Liberation Front of Assam in the 1990s is a shell of its former self after persistent military action and internal splits.
But India-held Jammu and Kashmir is unique: both in the persistence of cries for self-determination, and in the centre’s policies addressing those demands, the Valley differs considerably from Punjab or the Northeast. Unlike in other parts of the country, where deals and accords are a central element of New Delhi’s strategy, Kashmiris are rarely the recipient of negotiated concessions. To the contrary, they consistently see the roughest and toughest version of the Indian state.
A scholar looks at Kashmiri separatism in the context of other separatist movements around the globe
Partly, this is a consequence of India-held Kashmir’s (IHK) place in the Indo-Pak rivalry. The collective thinking goes that any inch given to Kashmiris will be taken as a mile by Pakistan. Remarking upon the centrality of geopolitics to the Kashmir issue, Indira Gandhi pointedly noted in 1973 that “If there is friendship, well, all the borders can be soft, not just Kashmir!”