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Displaced Hindus from Kashmir Eye Return After India's Scrapping of Special Status


FILE - A Hindu pilgrim prays at Nunwan Pahalgam base camp, 110 kilometers southeast of Srinagar, July 26, 2019, during a pilgrimage to the Hindu holy cave of Amarnath.
FILE - A Hindu pilgrim prays at Nunwan Pahalgam base camp, 110 kilometers southeast of Srinagar, July 26, 2019, during a pilgrimage to the Hindu holy cave of Amarnath.

Indian Hindus forced out of Muslim-majority Kashmir decades ago are jubilant at the government's decision to allow all citizens the right to settle there, with many considering an eventual return home if conditions are secure.

Aiming to integrate the revolt-torn region fully into India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has scrapped rules restricting property purchases, state jobs and college places to residents only.

"It is a welcome first step," said Surinder Koul, international coordinator of the Global Kashmiri Pandit Diaspora, which represents displaced Hindus from the region.

Forced out in 1989

Hundreds of thousands were forced out of Kashmir, losing homes and many lives, when a revolt erupted against Indian rule in 1989. Many of them were Hindu minorities — known as Kashmiri Pandits — who later lived in camps across India.

Most have not gone back. Now they want the government to propose a concrete plan for their resettlement.

FILE - Kashmiri Hindu (Pandit) offer alms at the Mata Kheer Bhawani Temple during its annual festival in the village of Tullamulla, some 20 km from Srinagar, June 10, 2019.
FILE - Kashmiri Hindu (Pandit) offer alms at the Mata Kheer Bhawani Temple during its annual festival in the village of Tullamulla, some 20 km from Srinagar, June 10, 2019.

A 2015 blueprint by Kashmir's local government to resettle Pandits proposed guarded colonies with schools, malls, hospitals and playgrounds, people with knowledge of the plan said.

Many from the community rejected that, saying it was insufficient to ensure their security.

Resettlement will take time

Despite Hindu delight at Modi's move, rapid resettlement does not look likely. Ashok Hak, a Kashmiri Hindu and retired brigadier general in the Indian army, said any return would depend on how Kashmiris react.

Hours before Monday's decision, Indian authorities arrested local leaders and cut off mobile, internet and cable television networks to prevent protests.

"For some time there will be trouble there, but in the past India has controlled such unrest," said Hak, who lives close to New Delhi.

The Pandit community says nearly 400,000 of them had to flee Kashmir. Many want accountability for violence back then.

"Finally Kashmiri minorities, particularly the Kashmiri Pandits, will receive justice," Vijay K. Sazawal, representing the Indo-American Kashmir Forum, said in a statement.

The Global Kashmiri Pandits Diaspora praised Modi's move as a vindication of their members' aspirations. "It brightens the prospect of a return to their homeland with honor and dignity and restitution according to their free will," it said.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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