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Heights of Simla

ito

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IT is a small desk, ornate but unexpectedly small. Forty-two years ago, it bore the weight of two hands that signed the 1972 Simla Agreement. Today, that desk bears the lighter burden of two framed photographs — one of the Indian and Pakistani delegations in congress, and the other of their leaders Mrs Indira Gandhi and Mr Zulfikar Ali Bhutto signing a common document in the pre-dawn of July 3.

The desk in Simla’s Raj Bhavan has been made the focal point of a mini-shrine to commemorate the event, just as the Simla Agreement itself has become the source, the Ganga-dhara of India’s attitude to Pakistan vis-à-vis Jammu & Kashmir.

From the heights of that Simla accord flowed downstream the Lahore Declaration, signed on July 2, 1999 by prime ministers Atal Behari Vajpayee and Nawaz Sharif. It reiterated “the determination of both countries to implement the Simla Agreement in letter and spirit”. The letter of the agreement was public knowledge; its spirit remained amorphous, changing meanings into nuance.

Modi’s next steps at diplomacy will be of significance to Pakistan.
Signing it, both Mrs Gandhi and Mr Bhutto understood that Pakistan had conceded that the Line of Ceasefire had hardened into the Line of Control and that the undertaking to “settle their differences by peaceful means through bilateral negotiations” precluded any reference to third parties, particularly the United Nations.

According to P.N. Dhar (secretary to Mrs Gandhi), “When Mrs Gandhi, after recounting their points of agreement, finally asked Bhutto, ‘Is this the understanding on which we will proceed?’, he replied: ‘Absolutely, ‘aap mujh par bharosa keejiye [you can trust me.]’

Each subsequent Indian and Pakistani government has chosen to treat that clause as a malleable Rubik’s cube, rotating it to yield different patterns of meaning. The Lahore Declaration has fared no better. Its clause — that both countries “shall intensify their efforts to resolve all issues, including the issue of Jammu and Kashmir” — has given licence to numerous interpretations. Some political cynics assert that cross-border sniping is hoping to do just that.

The sanctity of all international protocols is underwritten by an enduring commitment to execute them, regardless of change in national governments. It is precisely because Nawaz Sharif was a signatory to the Lahore Declaration (and by association the seminal Simla Agreement) and because he was involved directly in letter, in body and in spirit, that the Indian government finds his recent speech at the UN General Assembly so discordant.

Advisor Sartaj Aziz went a step further. He contacted UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and asked him to retrieve the dust-laden UN Resolution 47/1948, which called for a plebiscite in Jammu & Kashmir. Realists would give this appeal as much a chance of success as the South Korean Ban Ki-moon being able to reunify the two Koreas.

Mr Sharif’s volte-face at the UN took place after his avuncular trip to New Delhi to attend Narendra Modi’s swearing-in ceremony. It has been perceived in India as an almost Kargil-style betrayal of the bonhomie generated by his earlier heart-warming gesture.

Five months have passed. Much has happened since. Mr Sharif has been beleaguered by demands from his opponents at home to resign, while Mr Modi has received an invigorating mandate in the state elections in Maharashtra and in Haryana.

In Maharashtra, his BJP won 122 seats out of a total of 288. This was almost three times more than the seats the BJP garnered in 2009. In Haryana, he gained 47 seats out of 90, more than 10 times the BJP’s paltry four in 2009. Mr Modi is not one to gloat — at least not publicly. He has good reason to, though. Sonia and Rahul Gandhi’s Congress has been trounced in both states, dropping in Maharashtra from 82 seats (2009) to 42 now. If worse could be worse, BJP commands a majority in the bulging wallet of India — Mumbai.

Fortified by these results, the BJP can expect to be supported ideologically by Shiv Sena which captured 63 seats, 21 more than Congress. But he that sups with Shiv Sena….

Mr Modi’s next steps at diplomacy are of vital significance to Pakistan. Extremists have been heard on Indian television channels demanding that Mr Modi should rescue the ‘oppressed people of Balochistan and Sindh’ from their brutal ‘masters’. Gen Musharraf was dismissed by one rabid anchorman as being a ‘coward’ for not answering yet another question about Kargil. And most frighteningly, voices that were once regarded as pro-Pakistan moderates are being denounced now as anti-Indian.

There is a sinister echo of a 1971 jingoism in the air. Saner ears prefer to recall the Simla Agreement and the Lahore Declaration. They spoke of hope, of a “durable peace and development”, to enable both peoples “to devote their energies for a better future”.

The writer is an author and art historian.

www.fsaijazuddin.pk

@AgNoStiC MuSliM
@Syed.Ali.Haider
@toxic_pus
 
I will predict that increasing realization of its predicament is likely to lead Pakistan to ever more desperate measures. It will be rough for the next few years.
 
now pakistanis members should not have any problem accepting shima and lahore agreements overruling UN resolutions.
 
now pakistanis members should not have any problem accepting shima and lahore agreements overruling UN resolutions.
Why? I have already debunked the Indian argument (and the argument made by some Pakistani sell-outs) that the Simla Agreement invalidates the UNSC Resolutions in any way.

The author of the piece above offers no justification or analysis of the Simla Agreement to support his contention that the Agreement invalidated the UNSC Resolutions, and the Government of Pakistan certainly does not agree with his views either.
 
I will predict that increasing realization of its predicament is likely to lead Pakistan to ever more desperate measures. It will be rough for the next few years.
Actually, the author points to the rise of extremists in India and makes the case that it is that rise of Hindu extremism and Hindu-extremist-nationalism that is likely to result in the Indian State engaging in "ever more desperate measures", desperate measures such as the unprovoked violence across the LoC and IB and the associated vitriol by the Hindu-nationalist Indian political class, laying the groundwork for a brainwashed populace supportive of the aforementioned "ever more desperate measures".
 
Actually, the author points to the rise of extremists in India and makes the case that it is that rise of Hindu extremism and Hindu-extremist-nationalism that is likely to result in the Indian State engaging in "ever more desperate measures", desperate measures such as the unprovoked violence across the LoC and IB and the associated vitriol by the Hindu-nationalist Indian political class, laying the groundwork for a brainwashed populace supportive of the aforementioned "ever more desperate measures".

What I have said is in addition to what the author has said above.
 
What I have said is in addition to what the author has said above.
I don't see any evidence of the Pakistani State "resorting to ever more desperate measures" - the Pakistani response to the vitriol and unprovoked violence initiated by the Hindu-extremist-nationalist government in India has been a mature and responsible one, highlighting Pakistan's position in the international community, and responding militarily where necessary.

It is the Indian side that is displaying signs of "ever more desperate measures".
 
I don't see any evidence of the Pakistani State "resorting to ever more desperate measures" - the Pakistani response to the vitriol and unprovoked violence initiated by the Hindu-extremist-nationalist government in India has been a mature and responsible one, highlighting Pakistan's position in the international community, and responding militarily where necessary.

It is the Indian side that is displaying signs of "ever more desperate measures".

Sir, the situation is clearly not as one-sided as you claim.
 
Why? I have already debunked the Indian argument (and the argument made by some Pakistani sell-outs) that the Simla Agreement invalidates the UNSC Resolutions in any way.
Whats with Pakistanis and chimp like chest thumping?
 
Why? I have already debunked the Indian argument (and the argument made by some Pakistani sell-outs) that the Simla Agreement invalidates the UNSC Resolutions in any way.

The author of the piece above offers no justification or analysis of the Simla Agreement to support his contention that the Agreement invalidated the UNSC Resolutions, and the Government of Pakistan certainly does not agree with his views either.

the shimla agreement clearly says that disputes between india and pak are bilateral.

i know that you and the others are arguing in circles, but the indian government doesn't agree with your position. the indian government position is based on shimla when it say kashmir is bilateral. having caught pakistan in weak position after 1971 and made it to sign shimla, the indian government will not ever bulge from that position. #

fortunately for india, the world seems to agree with india
 
IT is a small desk, ornate but unexpectedly small. Forty-two years ago, it bore the weight of two hands that signed the 1972 Simla Agreement. Today, that desk bears the lighter burden of two framed photographs — one of the Indian and Pakistani delegations in congress, and the other of their leaders Mrs Indira Gandhi and Mr Zulfikar Ali Bhutto signing a common document in the pre-dawn of July 3.

The desk in Simla’s Raj Bhavan has been made the focal point of a mini-shrine to commemorate the event, just as the Simla Agreement itself has become the source, the Ganga-dhara of India’s attitude to Pakistan vis-à-vis Jammu & Kashmir.

From the heights of that Simla accord flowed downstream the Lahore Declaration, signed on July 2, 1999 by prime ministers Atal Behari Vajpayee and Nawaz Sharif. It reiterated “the determination of both countries to implement the Simla Agreement in letter and spirit”. The letter of the agreement was public knowledge; its spirit remained amorphous, changing meanings into nuance.

Modi’s next steps at diplomacy will be of significance to Pakistan.
Signing it, both Mrs Gandhi and Mr Bhutto understood that Pakistan had conceded that the Line of Ceasefire had hardened into the Line of Control and that the undertaking to “settle their differences by peaceful means through bilateral negotiations” precluded any reference to third parties, particularly the United Nations.

According to P.N. Dhar (secretary to Mrs Gandhi), “When Mrs Gandhi, after recounting their points of agreement, finally asked Bhutto, ‘Is this the understanding on which we will proceed?’, he replied: ‘Absolutely, ‘aap mujh par bharosa keejiye [you can trust me.]’

Each subsequent Indian and Pakistani government has chosen to treat that clause as a malleable Rubik’s cube, rotating it to yield different patterns of meaning. The Lahore Declaration has fared no better. Its clause — that both countries “shall intensify their efforts to resolve all issues, including the issue of Jammu and Kashmir” — has given licence to numerous interpretations. Some political cynics assert that cross-border sniping is hoping to do just that.

The sanctity of all international protocols is underwritten by an enduring commitment to execute them, regardless of change in national governments. It is precisely because Nawaz Sharif was a signatory to the Lahore Declaration (and by association the seminal Simla Agreement) and because he was involved directly in letter, in body and in spirit, that the Indian government finds his recent speech at the UN General Assembly so discordant.

Advisor Sartaj Aziz went a step further. He contacted UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and asked him to retrieve the dust-laden UN Resolution 47/1948, which called for a plebiscite in Jammu & Kashmir. Realists would give this appeal as much a chance of success as the South Korean Ban Ki-moon being able to reunify the two Koreas.

Mr Sharif’s volte-face at the UN took place after his avuncular trip to New Delhi to attend Narendra Modi’s swearing-in ceremony. It has been perceived in India as an almost Kargil-style betrayal of the bonhomie generated by his earlier heart-warming gesture.

Five months have passed. Much has happened since. Mr Sharif has been beleaguered by demands from his opponents at home to resign, while Mr Modi has received an invigorating mandate in the state elections in Maharashtra and in Haryana.

In Maharashtra, his BJP won 122 seats out of a total of 288. This was almost three times more than the seats the BJP garnered in 2009. In Haryana, he gained 47 seats out of 90, more than 10 times the BJP’s paltry four in 2009. Mr Modi is not one to gloat — at least not publicly. He has good reason to, though. Sonia and Rahul Gandhi’s Congress has been trounced in both states, dropping in Maharashtra from 82 seats (2009) to 42 now. If worse could be worse, BJP commands a majority in the bulging wallet of India — Mumbai.

Fortified by these results, the BJP can expect to be supported ideologically by Shiv Sena which captured 63 seats, 21 more than Congress. But he that sups with Shiv Sena….

Mr Modi’s next steps at diplomacy are of vital significance to Pakistan. Extremists have been heard on Indian television channels demanding that Mr Modi should rescue the ‘oppressed people of Balochistan and Sindh’ from their brutal ‘masters’. Gen Musharraf was dismissed by one rabid anchorman as being a ‘coward’ for not answering yet another question about Kargil. And most frighteningly, voices that were once regarded as pro-Pakistan moderates are being denounced now as anti-Indian.

There is a sinister echo of a 1971 jingoism in the air. Saner ears prefer to recall the Simla Agreement and the Lahore Declaration. They spoke of hope, of a “durable peace and development”, to enable both peoples “to devote their energies for a better future”.

The writer is an author and art historian.

Welcome to the website of F.S. Aijazuddin

@AgNoStiC MuSliM
@Syed.Ali.Haider
@toxic_pus

History books are waiting for you Modi ji, for ultimate glory :coffee:
 
History books are waiting for you Modi ji, for ultimate glory :coffee:

any prime minister that compromises on india's territorial integrity would be forever a villain in india's history books, may be he will be hero in pak history books.
 
the shimla agreement clearly says that disputes between india and pak are bilateral.
Not it does not - the Simla Agreement reiterates the commitment of both States to the UN Charter, which allows for UNSC Resolutions, and it also explicitly leaves open the option for third party mediation as long as that mediation is "mutually acceptable".
fortunately for india, the world seems to agree with india
If the world agreed with India's interpretation of the Simla Agreement, then the UNSG would not have offered to mediate in the LoC violations just a couple of weeks ago, and the UN would have declared the UNSC Resolutions on Kashmir as null and void.
 
Not it does not - the Simla Agreement reiterates the commitment of both States to the UN Charter, which allows for UNSC Resolutions, and it also explicitly leaves open the option for third party mediation as long as that mediation is "mutually acceptable".

If the world agreed with India's interpretation of the Simla Agreement, then the UNSG would not have offered to mediate in the LoC violations just a couple of weeks ago, and the UN would have declared the UNSC Resolutions on Kashmir as null and void.

Yes, meditation is open, but when both Pakistan and India opt for third party mediation, but why would India agree for such a mediation?
 

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