Exclusive: India considers resettling Kashmiri youth who give up arms
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[August 12, 2020]
By Devjyot Ghoshal and Fayaz Bukhari
NEW DELHI/SRINAGAR (Reuters) - India is
considering offering young Kashmiri militants an escape from a life of
violence by temporarily resettling them in more peaceful parts of the
country, according to the top military commander in the Kashmir Valley.
Lieutenant General B.S. Raju revealed the plan for a new scheme to offer
a way out of militancy during a telephone interview from his
headquarters in Srinagar, Kashmir's main city.
He told Reuters recommendations had been submitted to Prime Minister
Narendra Modi's government and that the plan, while not finalised, was
in an advanced stage.
"These are young boys who need to be taken care of for a period of
time," Raju said, adding that could involve temporarily settling them
outside of Muslim-majority Kashmir.
Past efforts to persuade fighters to put down their guns have had mixed
success. But Raju said the military had recommended the schme take a
longer-term approach to rehabilitating ex-militants.
"The bottom-line is that it will have a structure that will help and
give confidence to the people who are opting to surrender," Raju said.
More than 50,000 people have died during more than three decades of an
insurgency that New Delhi accuses neighbouring Pakistan of fuelling, by
using militant groups to wage a proxy-war across the disputed border
dividing the Himalayan region.
India has flooded the valley with security forces - about 200,000
military and paramilitary troops are deployed there. And Raju said
militant attacks have dropped by nearly 40% compared to last year.
AROUND 180 ACTIVE
Last August, Prime Minister Modi changed the political landscape by
taking away Jammu & Kashmir's status as India's only Muslim majority
state, splitting it into two federally-controlled territories and
removing the special privileges afforded to Kashmiris.
Promising a concerted effort to develop the region economically, Modi
said the move was need to integrate Kashmir more fully with the rest of
the country, but critics said it would further alienate Kashmiris.
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People surround the body of Adil Ahmad Dar, a suspected militant,
who according to local media was killed in a gun battle with Indian
security forces, during his funeral in Arwani, in south Kashmir's
Kulgam district, January 7, 2020. REUTERS/Danish Ismail/
Pakistan, which maintains a long-standing territorial claim on
Kashmir though it denies accusations that it materially helps the
militants, has denounced Modi's action.
Since the start of the year, Indian security forces have killed
around 135 militants, most of them recruited locally.
The military estimates that there are currently around 180 militants
operating with various groups active in the valley, Raju said. Some
70 local Kashmiris are reckoned to have been recruited by these
groups since the start of the year, about a dozen less than during
the same period a year ago.
"We wish that this should drop further, and finally cease
altogether," Raju said.
Currently most surrenders are conducted in line with a 2004 policy
that provides a lump sum payout of 150,000 Indian rupees ($2,000), a
small monthly stipend, free vocational training and cash payments
for weapons handed over.
The New Delhi-based South Asia Terrorism Portal estimated that more
than 400 insurgents have surrendered since 2004, but after 2007 the
numbers came down to a trickle, with only two dozen men giving up
arms in the last three years.
Kuldeep Khoda, a former Kashmir police chief, said the scheme had
partly failed because the vocational training provided by the
government was inadequate.
"If you ask me very frankly, there was hardly any training being
given. They were just kept there for a few months," he said. "It was
just a formality which was being completed."
(Reporting by Devjyot Ghoshal in NEW DELHI and Fayaz Bukhari in
SRINAGAR; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani & Simon Cameron-Moore)
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