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Panun Kashmir upsets BJP's applecart, says separate homeland is its motto | | | Early Times Report Jammu, Dec 29: The committed leadership of Panun Kashmir, frontline organization of the persecuted and hounded-out Kashmiri Hindus, the other day resolved at Delhi to achieve its goal of separate homeland in the Kashmir Valley. It happened two days after Prime Minister Narendra Modi landed at Lahore to meet Mian Nawaz Sharif much to the surprise of the Indian nation and BJP national general secretary Ram Madhav made an atrocious statement during his roundly condemned interview to international news channel Al Jazeera that the BJP will "take care of political demands in Kashmir" and it was ready to meet all the demands, barring the demand seeking separation of J&K from India. Very significantly, the PK leadership got the fullest support from such organizations as Hindu Samhati (West Bengal), Shri Ram Sena (Karnataka), Sanatan Sanstha (Mumabi), Hindu Makal Katchi (Tamil Nadu), Shiv Sena and Hindu Gouansh Rakshan Samiti. It was its great achievement that not only punctured the Kashmiri separatists' claim that they represented the Kashmiris' will, but also defeated the whole game plan of the BJP, which had been working overtime to create dissensions within the hounded-out community so that it could succeed in motivating at least some internally-displacement Kashmiri Hindus to return to Kashmir. The BJP think-tanks and their supporters, like the Kashmiri separatists, say time and again that the internally-displaced Kashmiri Hindus have to live in Kashmir among those who disgraced, abused and insulted them. The BJP even wants the Kashmiri Hindus to get them "absorbed in the Kashmiri milieu" (read Islamic milieu). Even a cursory glance at the PDP-BJP Agenda of Alliance would be enough to find what the BJP thinks about the internally-displaced Kashmiri Hindus. It bears recalling that it was on December 27, 1991 that the Kashmiri Hindus had first raised their demand for a "distinct homeland" within Kashmir valley and called it Panun (our) Kashmir. They sought to be governed as a centrally-administered territory under the Indian constitution. The community observes December 28 as "Homeland Day"' when the 'Margdarshan Resolution' was passed. The Resolution passed in 1991 advocates a separate homeland for seven lakh displaced Kashmiri Pandits on the north and east of river Jhelum. On this day, the Kashmiri Hindus reaffirm their demand for a separate homeland, a union territory under the Constitution. On that exodus on January 19(1990), not us Kashmiri Pandits but spirit of India had left, and we want to restore that spirit," they also say. |
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