NEW DELHI: Kashmiri leaders from pro-India parties on Thursday urged the prime minister to restore the region's special autonomy and engage in dialogue with Pakistan during their first meeting with him since the region lost its autonomy and saw many of its leaders jailed in a crackdown.
Muslim-majority Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan, with both claiming it in its entirety.Â
It became a flashpoint between the neighbors at the end of British colonial rule in 1947, when the Indian subcontinent was divided into predominantly Hindu India and mainly Muslim Pakistan. India and Pakistan have fought two of their three wars over control of Kashmir.
In Aug. 2019, Prime Minister Narendra Modiâs Hindu nationalist government abolished Article 370 of the constitution ending Kashmir's autonomy. It split it into two federal territories â Ladakh and Jammu-Kashmir â and placed its entire population under lockdown and a communication blackout.Â
In a series of administrative changes that followed, India removed protections on land and jobs for the local population, which many likened to attempts at demographically altering the region.Â
Leaders of 14 pro-India political parties were invited for Thursday's meeting in New Delhi. Many of them, including Kashmir's former chief minister Mehbooba Mufti, had been under house arrest for months.
âPeople of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) feel very humiliated after what happened on Aug. 5, 2019,â Mufti told reporters. âThe way Article 370 was removed from the constitution â unconstitutionally, illegally and immorally â this is not acceptable to the people of Kashmir, and we will struggle for the restoration of Article 370 because this is the question of our identity.âÂ
Home Minister Amit Shah, while not commenting on the restoration of Kashmir's autonomy, confirmed that the restoration of its statehood â with a state being of higher administrative importance than federal territory â was discussed.
âThe future of Jammu and Kashmir was discussed and the delimitation exercise and peaceful elections are important milestones in restoring statehood as promised in parliament,â he tweeted after the meeting.Â
Indiaâs main opposition Congress party demanded that the restoration of the territory's statehood be carried out soon.Â
âStatehood should be restored at the earliest,â Congress leader and former Kashmir chief minister Ghulam Nabi Azad told the media. âThe prime minister and home minister had made a promise that the government would restore statehood.âÂ
The meeting took place against the backdrop of reaffirming a 2003 ceasefire accord between India and Pakistan in February. The Kashmiri leaders said India should engage in talks with Pakistan for the sake of the regionâs economic condition.
âI complimented the PM on (the) ceasefire with Pakistan and told him to hold talks with Pakistan for peace in Kashmir,â Mufti added. âNew Delhi should talk with Islamabad for the resumption of the stalled trade between both parts of Kashmir because many peopleâs lives are involved in this.âÂ
Omar Abdullah, another former chief minister of Kashmir and leader of the region's oldest political party the National Conference, also supported talks with Pakistan. âWe can change friends but not neighbors,â he said. âPakistan is our close neighbor and we should use the back channel to address the existing tensions between the two nations.âÂ
But, among observers and Kashmiris themselves, there was little hope about the meeting.
âModi needed a photograph to convey to his international audience that he is engaged with the Kashmiri leadership, that is what (he) has got on Thursday,â Srinagar-based political analyst Prof. Sheikh Showkat Hussain, who teaches at the Central University of Kashmir, told Arab News. âIt was not meant for something serious, and this is the common impression in Kashmir.â