Raising alarm over India’s hegemonic designs and its colonial policies towards Kashmir, speakers at a webinar in Islamabad termed Indian setter colonial-ism as the biggest threat the Kashmiris have faced ever since India took control of the territory illegally way back in 1947.
The webinar titled “The Impacts of Settler Co-lonialism in Indian occupied Jammu Kashmir’’ was organised by the World Muslim Congress (WMC) in collaboration with Kashmir Institute of Interna-tional Relations (KIIR) on the sidelines of 48th session of UNHRC.
The webinar was attended and addressed by noted human rights activists, international law ex-perts, social activists and academicians including Shahani Hamid, rights activist Muhammad Ahsan Untoo and others whereas the event was moderated by the KIIR chairman and WMC permanent repre-sentative Altaf Hussain Wani.
The speakers while highlighting the dangerous dimensions of the Indian setter colonialism said that abrogation of Kashmir’s special status was further evidence that Kashmir has moved from Wolfe’s first to the second model of colonialism.
Pertinently, on 5 August 2019, the Indian government revoked the limited autonomy provided to Kashmir through Article 370 of the Constitution.
The panelists observed that the repeal of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir was purposely made to grant the Indian government the much needed political and legal leverage to bring material change in the region through the wholesale extermi-nation of the indigenous populations.
Referring to the changes made to article 35-A and Kashmir’s age-old domicile law, they said, “Abrogation of these constitutional provisions have been top priority of the BJP government because the racist regime knew that these provisions were the legal hindrances in its way to establish hegemonic control over Kashmir”.
Drawing parallels between Indian apartheid regime’s imperialistic policies on Kashmir and Wolfe’s first model of colonization to the second model, the speakers said that marginalization of majority population in Kashmir, policies of land-grab, wholesale extermination of the locals, exploi-tation of natural resources, rampant aggression, killings, arbitrary arrests, extra-judicial killings, forced disappearances and systematic genocide of Kashmiri youth by the Indian forces were obvious manifestations of the racist regime’s apocalyptic vision and attitude towards Kashmir and Kashmiris.
the Modi government’s communal policies, the panelists regrettably noted that the cur-rent dispensation in India viewed settler colonialism as a final solution to the Kashmir dispute.
They said that the successive Indian governments have always treated Kashmir as a colony and exploited its natural resources, killed and maimed its population through heavy militarization, with full impunity.
Terming Indian hegemonic designs as a biggest threat to regional peace, the speakers said that it was high time that the international community.—INP