Can Abdullah emerge unscathed from AFSPA logjam?
November 16th, 2011 - 5:01 pm ICT by IANS
Srinagar, Nov 16 (IANS) Is it the end of the road for Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah’s proposal to partially revoke the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA)? Most Kashmiris believe so.
Having announced last month that the AFSPA would be withdrawn from some areas of the state to begin with, Abdullah is today a lone ranger campaigning for something he willingly or unwillingly staked his credibility on.
“How does he move forward on his assurance from here? It is a pretty unenviable situation. With the centre almost refusing to grant his request for an immediate partial revocation, Abdullah is in a political dilemma,” said Muzaffar Ahmad, a college teacher here.
“Would he scale down his earlier commitment? Would he stick to his commitment and thereby take the centre head on? Both these options are unlikely.”
The man on the street, however, believes Abdullah will have to go along with what he is told by New Delhi.
A state cabinet meet scheduled for Thursday to discuss partial revocation of AFSPA has reportedly been postponed.
Abdullah’s visit to Delhi where he met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Home Minister P. Chidambaram, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, Defence Minister A.K. Antony and the army chief, General V.K. Singh proved inconclusive. Abdullah has evidently been given no concrete assurance regarding a timeframe for partial revocation of the act, so it is now highly unlikely the state cabinet would take a final call on the issue.
The knives are also out as the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) president Mehbooba Mufti has blamed Abdullah for “enacting a drama over the sensitive issue of the AFSPA”.
Mehraj-ud-Din, a fruitseller in the Residency Road area of Srinagar city, said: “It has always been the same story for Kashmiri politicians in power.
“Delhi did not come to the rescue of Omar’s grandfather, Sheikh Muhammad Abdullah, even when he only wanted to change the nomenclature for the governor and the chief minister’s post to ‘Sadr-e-Riyasat’ and ‘Wazir-e-Azam’.
“They humbled his father Farooq Abdullah more than once when he was in power and now Omar Abdullah learns his lesson the hard way.”
People in the countryside also believe that Abdullah should not have taken Delhi’s support for granted on this contentious issue. AFSPA gives sweeping powers to the army to help fight insurgency but has been blamed for human rights violations.
“He must understand Delhi has its compulsions, both political and otherwise,” said Shabir Ahmad, 43, who lives in north Kashmir’s Ganderbal district, the constituency represented by Omar in the 87-member state assembly.
“To give Omar credibility among his people would not be a priority for the powers at the centre. They have other more pressing reasons. Otherwise it is difficult to understand why there should be reservations on a small goodwill gesture he wants to make in areas where the army has not operated for many years now.”
Bashir Manzar, editor of a local English daily here, said: “The issue has been hyped to a level from where a turnaround would be something the chief minister cannot politically afford.
“In the absence of a firmer response from the centre, Abdullah could be on a solo flight seeking AFSPA revocation. His Congress allies would now oppose any move on part of the state government in the absence of a green signal from Delhi.”
For the youngest chief minister of the country who is ruling its most difficult state, a rollback on AFSPA’s partial revocation might not come in handy now.
Whether or not he can come out unscathed from the present controversy would be yet another test of Abdullah’s political wisdom.
- Omar meets Antony on AFSPA ahead of state cabinet meet - Nov 13, 2011
- Omar disagrees with army chief on special powers act - Jan 02, 2012
- Omar has reduced AFSPA issue to gimmickry: Mufti - Nov 28, 2011
- Can Kashmir afford Omar-army confrontation? (Kashmir Newsletter) - Nov 13, 2011
- Omar briefs governor on AFSPA meetings - Nov 16, 2011
- Omar angry at media leaks on security meeting - Nov 10, 2011
- Kashmir cabinet meet on AFSPA postponed? - Nov 16, 2011
- No public debate on AFSPA revocation: Omar - Nov 21, 2011
- AFSPA: Omar meets PM, Chidambaram; no time limit, says Antony - Nov 15, 2011
- Revoking AFSPA will aid Kashmir terror groups: Army chief - Jan 01, 2012
- AFSPA will be revoked one day: Farooq - Nov 25, 2011
- Omar briefs cabinet on Delhi talks on AFSPA - Nov 24, 2011
- Revocation of AFSPA inevitable: Mufti Sayeed - Nov 11, 2011
- Removing AFSPA no reflection on army, says Omar - Oct 27, 2011
- A diabolic extremist leadership is emerging in Kashmir - Sep 14, 2010
Tags: afspa, army chief, chief general, college teacher, home minister, jammu and kashmir, kashmir chief minister, kashmiris, man on the street, manmohan singh, mehbooba mufti, p chidambaram, partial revocation, political dilemma, pranab mukherjee, prime minister manmohan, prime minister manmohan singh, residency road, srinagar city, state cabinet