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Contentious Kashmir domicile law raises fears of losing land, culture

Srinagar, July 29, 2020 (PPI-OT): At 75 years old, Zareef Ahmad Zareef has been witness to several major events that have shaped Indian held Kashmir – for the worse, he says – since 1947. Now, the historian and poet worries for the future of Kashmir’s culture and its people, after India passed a new law in May that allows non-locals to become permanent residents of the Muslim-majority territory.

“Our Kashmir is a garden. The new laws have thrown the doors open for plunderers to ruin it,” said Zareef in a phone interview from Srinagar, Kashmir’s main city. “The days are not far when we will be left with no job opportunities or economic resources, including land and forests,” he added. “Kashmiris will become second-class citizens in their own homeland.”

The law makes it possible for people from outside Kashmir to become permanent residents, sparking fears among locals that non-locals will get priority when it comes to housing, jobs and education. It follows India’s unilateral annexation of Jammu and Kashmir in August 2019, which opened the door for non-Kashmiris to buy land and property, get government jobs and attend institutes of higher education.

Those receiving domicile certificates include war refugees from Pakistan, Gurkha soldiers from Nepal who had served in the Indian army and marginalised groups such as sanitation workers from the state of Punjab, noted Haroon Reshi, a freelance journalist based in Srinagar.

“Our distinct social and cultural identity, whether it’s our languages or traditions – everything is in danger,” Reshi told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. Speaking to reporters this month, Girish Chander Murmu, lieutenant governor for Jammu and Kashmir, said the aim of the law is to encourage investment in the region.

“Our one-point agenda is the development and creating [job] opportunities for the youth. Our target is a prosperous Jammu and Kashmir,” he said. In another move officials said would generate jobs and boost development, the Indian administration on July 24 approved setting aside 488 hectares (1,205 acres) of state land to build industrial estates in about 35 locations across the region.

Raja Muzaffar Bhat, chairman of the J and K RTI Movement, an anti-corruption charity, described the decision as “disastrous” in a statement on Monday, saying the government should instead focus on establishing more agricultural land and creating green jobs.

For more information, contact:
Kashmir Media Service
Phone: +92-51-4435548, +92-51-4435549
Fax: +92-51-4861736
Email: info@kmsnews.org
Website: www.kmsnews.org

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