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Modern Indian History

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April 03, 2018

A steady erosion of faith in Indian democracy by a large number of Jammu and Kashmir people had led to the unending turmoil in J&K. Comment. (200 words)

Refer – The Hindu

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KEY POINTS

·        Hindu communal forces, led by the Jan Sangh, began agitating from 1950 for the removal of Article 370, which was seen as a threat to the Kashmiri identity.

·        This had a major psychological impact on the Valley’s population which marked the beginning of internal strife.

·        While Mr. Sheikh Abdullah became Kashmiri Prime Minister in 1951 (the head of the Kashmiri state was called PM then), his government was dismissed in 1953.

·        He was also imprisoned by the Nehruvian government on the suspicion lobbying internationally for creating an independent Kashmir.

·        For two decades after that, New Delhi rigged elections and appointed its own proxies as Chief Ministers, eroding the valley’s faith in Indian democracy.

·        While the Indian state was engrossed with Pakistan’s foray in Kashmir, it failed to rectify its meddling in the valley’s polity, which strained its legitimacy.

·        An agreement reached between PM Indira Gandhi and Sheikh Abdullah in 1975 granted some autonomy to the valley and did promise a new beginning.

·        But with Abdullah’s death and his son Farooq’s rise, the India government under PM Rajeev Gandhi soon backtracked and the progress was stalled.

·        These actions eroded the legitimacy of the Abdullah clan, which was the face of moderate Kashmiri sub-nationalism and provided impetus to extremists.

·        The elections of 1987 were openly rigged in order to diminish the anticipated performance of the extremist party “Muslim United Front” (MUF).

·        But this action contrarily increased the popularity of the MUF, and people came to the streets and subsequently took to arms from 1990 onwards.

·        In the midst of this internal churn, Pakistan, unsurprisingly threw its weight behind the proponents of “Free Kashmir”, although it was against its stand.

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