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People
on both sides want peace,
Kuldip
Nayar
Gulf News, New Delhi
| 24-05-2003
One top Indian foreign ministry official asked me the other day:
"What has people-to-people contact achieved so far?" It is
difficult to quantify its achievement but people-to-people contact
between India and Pakistan has sustained hope that the two countries
will one day normalise their relations because people on both sides want
to live in peace.
This is despite the negative attitude of their governments.
People-to-people contact means contact between ordinary men and women on
both sides, the freedom to come and go, without police surveillance and
without a visa – only an identity card should be required for entry.
Obviously, this will take time because the mistrust has to go first. But
in the meanwhile, the so-called "élite" groups have surfaced
again. They are the same old people who, during their tenure as military
or civil servants, did their worst to spoil any attempt at conciliation.
Blessed by the foreign office, they went over the same exercise for
years. They will repeat the same observations when they meet again. Even
their faces have become a cliché.
What I have in mind is a soft border, which Indian Prime Minister Atal
Bihari Vajpayee advocated when he was foreign minister (1977-79). Then
Prime Minister Morarji Desai shot down the proposal on the plea that it
would be an open invitation to spies to come in hordes. He did not know
that spies do not use the checkpoints to enter each other's territory.
They have their own "checkpoints".
True, borders cannot be soft until cross-border infiltration stops.
Islamabad has to be convinced about its futility. Certain quarters there
believe a proxy war is the only way to make India bleed. The situation
has to be normal to have normal relations. Guns, open or secret, do not
make for peace.
However, we should hasten the process to restore the status quo, the
state of relationship prevailing before the attack on the Indian
parliament. After having done so, New Delhi should take stock of
cross-border infiltration, which from all accounts, is less than before.
The Pakistan parliamentarians came to India a bit too soon. The
government distanced itself from them, not because it was unwilling but
because it was unprepared. It wanted to let the fallout from Vajpayee's
initiative settle down.
Indeed, a request was made to defer the visit by a few days. But some
among the organisers on both sides did not agree to it. Their contention
was that they wanted to utilise the presence of Indian parliamentarians
in Delhi before the adjournment of the two houses on May 9. The
Pakistani parliamentarians reached on the eighth night. However, when
the visit was mooted three months ago, the purpose was to create some
movement in the otherwise static situation.
Indian parliamentarians were to go to Pakistan first but this did not
materialise. MPs from both countries can cross over from any checkpoint
without permission and without a visa under the rules of the South Asian
Association for Regional Cooperation (Saarc).
None knew then that Vajpayee would say at Srinagar that he wanted to
have a dialogue with Pakistan. His observation provided the much-needed
momentum. By the time the parliamentarians arrived the PM had initiated
the thaw.
The general impression is that the parliamentarians came as a follow-up
to Vajpayee's initiative. This is not factually correct. Theirs was an
independent visit, planned much earlier. Nonetheless, it has further
helped soften the rigid position the two sides had taken.
The response to the parliamentarians in New Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata
was electrifying. They were hard-pressed for time to attend the
functions people wanted to arrange in their honour. They themselves were
touched by the love and affection shown.
What it really means is that the natural reaction of the Indian people
towards the people of Pakistan is that of closeness. They are sick and
tired of the distance that has been growing for the last 55 years. The
people's attitude in Pakistan, which I visited three months ago, is no
different.
When just a speech by Vajpayee and a telephone call from Pakistan Prime
Minister Zafarullah Khan Jamali can change the entire climate, it is
obvious that the hostility is a forcibly contrived thing. People on both
sides want to be friends. Their desire for proximity will force their
governments to sit across the table soon.
Unfortunately, the BJP's spokesman has thrown cold water on all the
optimism that Vajpayee has generated. The spokesman runs down those who
arranged the visit of parliamentarians. He used the sneering phrase
"pseudo secularists" about the organisers. It indicates that
the party is far from happy over their visit.
In fact, a battle is raging within the party on making up with Pakistan.
Both the "pseudo-secularists" and the PM are on one side,
furthering the cause of building relations with Pakistan. The criticism
may well be the party's polite tick-off, which the prime minister must
have noted.
The BJP is the ruling party. It should not be seen taking conflicting
postures in public. It cannot commend the PM's initiative on the one
hand and criticise those who involved the parliamentarians on the other.
The effort is to strengthen the initiative. If the BJP's criticism is
serious, the talks are doomed.
How far is it willing to give up its anti-Pakistan stance, which the
party believes adds to its votes? Hindutva as a poll plank may sound the
death-knell of rapprochement. Can the party afford to give up its
fundamentalist stand before elections are over in four states this year
and the general elections in 2004? That is the question.
Pakistan's problem is different: how far are the armed forces prepared
to give up the territory they have occupied in the political field? Real
power lies with Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf. For more
than four decades, the armed forces have been an arbiter in Pakistan.
Are they willing to vacate that position? The military faces another
problem: if there is a settlement there will be demands for a drastic
cut in defence spending. Are the armed forces prepared for it?
Will the National Security Council, which has the three service chiefs
as its members, be adequate for the military to safeguard its interests?
It is difficult to imagine it at this point of time. Still this is the
scenario which will take shape one day. The armed forces will have to go
back to the barracks. The pressure of public opinion will make it
happen.
India, too, is under pressure. There is increasing realisation that the
majority of its problems stem from its relations with Pakistan. The
enthusiasm with which the parliamentarians were received shows how
anxious the people are to bury the hatchet. In fact, people in both
countries seem to be ahead of their governments.
Maybe, wide and frequent contact will throw up a solution of Kashmir as
well. The first requirement is to open borders to all those who want to
visit each other's countries. How to facilitate and sustain the contact
is the core of the problem.
Since everyone is talking about roadmaps these days, let the line of
control (LoC) be the "line of peace", as Zulfikar Ali Bhutto
suggested to me in an interview before the Shimla conference. The onus
of maintaining it will be on Islamabad because the terrorists are using
its territory to cross into India.
People-to-people contact has to reckon with the reverses. But it is
heartening to see a few who ask for the impossible and strive for it.
The writer, a former Indian High Commissioner to the UK and a Rajya
Sabha MP. He can be contacted at knayar@-gulfnews.com
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| The Israeli
apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers
in the West Bank (Ran Cohen, pmc, 5/24/03). |
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