Resettlement Act -
Would it repeat the horrors of partition?
Way back in 1982, a young National
Conference legislator was moved by the plight of
the people who had come from Pakistan and wanted
to stay on in the valley in their own houses but
could not do so as there was no legal provision
for the same. They could not stay beyond the
specified period in “their own land where they
were born and brought up”. This “human
tragedy” moved the NC legislator so much that he
studied Jammu and Kashmir Constitution and also
the Constitution of India and discovered that
there were provisions recognizing the state
subject and citizenship rights, but there was no
specific Act. There he took up the gigantic task
of ‘removing this barrier for the sake of
the reunion of those wishing to come and stay
back’. And the J&K Resettlement Bill came
into existence. The Bill was introduced in
the Assembly as a private member’s Bill in March
1982. Though the Assembly first passed the Bill in
April 1982, the then Governor B.K.Nehru had not
given his assent at that time. In an unprecedented
move, he had referred the Bill to the Attorney
General of India for legal opinion and after
receiving the same; he sent the bill back to the
legislature for reconsideration on the ground that
it suffered from certain deficiencies. The Bill
was reconsidered by the assembly and after a
heated debate, re-passed on 4 October 1982,in its
original form. and had sent it back to the
legislature for reconsideration. On 30 September,
1982, the then President Giani Zail Singh had
placed the Resettlement Bill, also know as Bill no
9, to the constitutional bench of the apex court
seeking advice after a political storm raged
throughout the country. But during the pendency of
the reference, the legislature passed it in its
autumn session within a month of Dr Farooq
Abdullah becoming chief minister on 4 October
1982. The Governer, left with no option, gave his
assent to the Bill on 6 October.Thus the Act was
twice passed by the state legislature in April and
October 1982. It was a major issue during the June
1983 Assembly elections. Abdul Rahim Rather
- that young National Conference legislator who is
now the state finance minister, is a happy man
today. For the Supreme Court of India has returned
the Presidential reference on the Bill of 1982
that had raised a political storm in J&K. The
Resettlement Bill came to focus early last month
when the Supreme Court while returning the 19-year
old Presidential reference observed: ”Having
regard to the fact that that the Bill became an
Act as far back as in 1982, it appears to us
inexpedient to answer the question in affirmative,
we would be unable to strike down the Act in this
proceeding.” The Act enables J&K
residents who had left for Pakistan between 1
March 1947 to 15 May 1954 to return and claim
their property and resettle in the statement,
basically with the objective to reunite the
families divided during the partition of the
subcontinent in 1947. But the storm
created by the Jammu and Kashmir Resettlement Act
refuses to subside in the state. There has a
strong reaction, as many people in the state
believe that the issue that was in cold storage is
National Conference’s politics of communalism.
People of Jammu think that is a deliberate attempt
of the NC government to change the demography of
their region and to woo a section of society,
eyeing the forthcoming Assembly elections. Various
parties like Congress, BJP, All Parties Jammu
Statehood Movement (APJSM), Pathers Party etc have
warned the National Conference of serious
consequences if the Resettlement Act was not
repealed as they believe that the implementation
of the Act has dangerous implications and an
ulterior motive to divide the state on communal
lines. Many questions also haunt the people in the
state. Would anyone come back from Pakistan to
reclaim properties leaving behind the properties
that they own in that country? Would terrorists,
under the garb of the descendents of the Kashmiris
come and add to the volatile situation in the
state to fulfill Pakistan’s longtime agenda?
Would it not open floodgates for other undesirable
elements to come and settle in the state? What
will be the fate of those in occupation of the
land and properties of those who migrated to
Pakistan in 1947.And what about the recent
judgement of the Supreme Court delivered by Mr
Justice R.P.Sethi which says that anybody
occupying Evacuee property (property which was
left behind by those who went to Pakistan) for
more than 12 years, will have the right on it and
even if anybody from across the border comes back,
he would have no right on property. Other opinion
is that the permission to Pakistan or PoK migrants
to claim their properties and other rights in the
state would create an atmosphere of uncertainty
among the residents who have occupied evacuee land
for the last 54 years. They fear that the
original occupants would reclaim their properties
if they come back taking advantage of the
provisions of the Resettlement Act. While Jammu
has reacted very sharply to the Act, in Kashmir it
has failed to strike an emotional chord and people
have ignored it in Valley like autonomy resolution
which the state government had adopted in the
state assembly on 26 June 2000. But as SC’s
observations uphold the validity of the law, now
it is for the state government to implement it by
appointing a competent authority.
But before the implementation of this Act, many
other related questions still remain unanswered.
While the state government has been planning to
bring back Kashmiris who had migrated from the
state to Pakistan, hundreds and thousands of
refugees who had come from Pakistan to the state
of Jammu and Kashmir have still not been provided
their rights. These comprise of Mirpur refugees,
West Pakistan refugees and Chamb refugees. Quite
critical of the apathetic attitude of the state
government towards them, they have been demanding
their rehabiliation for the past 54 years. But all
these requests have fallen on deaf ears. ”What
is our fault that we came to India from Pakistan?
Even after 54 years, we could not get our
Permanent Resident Certificate from the J&K
government. Even though we have sacrificed our
children fighting three wars with Pakistan besides
terrorism, we are refugees in our own
country,”complained Surinder Singh, a migrant of
1947 from Pakistan adding that their children can
neither join government jobs nor get admission in
colleges .At the same time, the NC government is
trying to bring back those people who have
harbouring militants and imparting them arms
training. Many others in the state believe that
the Resettlement Act is nothing but the gameplan
of Farooq to blackmail the Centre to get more
funds. One of the most vocal voices against the
implementation of this Act in 1982 is of the Union
Food Processing minister Prof Chaman Lal Gupta.
While reacting strongly to the NC government
bringing back the controversial Act, he said that
it would meet same fate as that of autonomy. He
warned the NC government to desist from creating
controversies. The Act, it seems, has also
strained BJP ties with the NC government as the
state BJP has threatened the latter to be prepared
for a strong agitation if it does not repeal it,
but the ruling party is also in no mood to repeal
it. Says state Law minister Mr. Mushtaq Lone:
”There is no question of repealing the Act as it
is a law and it cannot be repealed.” The
voices favouring the Act argue that if the Indian
Parliament, as per its 1994 resolution, says that
the entire PoK is our and we have to take it back,
then there is nothing wrong if all those people
who migrated from India to Pakistan come back.
“Besides under article 370, we have kept vacant
Assembly seats for PoK people. Pakistan has
forcibly occupied our area, which is PoK, and we
are bound to get it back,” argued a National
Conference supporter. However, a petition
challenging the constitutional validity of this
controversial Act 1982 has been filed in the
Supreme Court by the Panthers Party on the ground
that the Act threatened the unity and integrity of
the country. The petition read:”The
implementation of the Act could bring more than
200,000 Pakistani including descendents of those
who were born in Pakistan and many trained under
Taliban. Even Taliban with fraudulent certificates
as descendents of any one can settle anywhere is
India and the consequences are obvious.”It also
said such legislation was the sole jurisdiction of
the Parliament and the state neither had the
competence nor jurisdiction to legislate with
respect with respect to citizenship rights. The
state chief minister Dr Farooq Abdullah, on the
other hand, believes that the issue has been blown
out of proportion by few vested interests in the
state politics. “Resettlement Bill issue is
over. It is a law in the state but I don’t think
anybody should get upset by it,”he said adding
it would not open floodgates for anyone to come to
J&K.It is not that anybody can just walk in.
It is the Government of India’s Home Ministry
that had to grant visa and determine the
citizenship. No one can come without the
permission of the Home Ministry. ”Those
Kashmiris who had migrated to Pakistan between
1947 and 1954 would have to seek proper
citizenship from the Government of India if they
intend to return,”he said refuting the
allegations that his party was trying to use it as
one of the poll issue s in the forthcoming
assembly elections.”Even in 1983 elections, I
never used it as a poll used. But the BJP and
Congress did so,”he added. During the 1983
assembly elections in the state, Congress had made
a big issue of this Act against the National
Conference and had got 24 out of 26 seats in the
Hindu-dominated Jammu region while the NC had
secured huge majority in the valley.
But the state Congress president Mohammed Shafi
Qureshi denies that his party had played the
Resettlement Act as an election card during the
June 1983 Assembly elections.”My party does not
believe in causing communal polarization in any
part of the country. Instead, National
Conference’s demand for greater autonomy and
that of implementing the regional Autonomy
committee report were aimed at causing “communal
and regional tensions”, he adds. In the days to
come, it seems the controversy surrounding the
Resettlement Act will linger on as the Jammu and
Kashmir government has firmly ruled out repealing
of the Act. Instead, it has now also decided to
set up a competent authority under the Act that
will take up the claims of PoK residents on their
property and right to live in their native place.
EOM
Few portions of the Resettlement Bill of 1982
The Resettlement Bill makes a provision for the
return of all those persons who were class I and
Class II state subjects before 14 May, 1954 and
had migrated to the territory now included in
Pakistan after 1 March, 1947, or for widows, wives
and descendents of such state subjects to the
state. The purpose of the Bill is to provide a
chance of reunion to the hard-pressed blood
relations who were separated by the crucial
circumstances of 1947.The permanent residents are
entitled to have *Employment under the state
government *Acquisition of immovable property in
the state *Settlement in the state *Right to
scholarships and such other forms of aid as the
state government may provide. Consequently,
“permanent residents” of the state who return
will need neither a passport nor an immigration
certificate. They will not even have to register
themselves after they come back to India. All that
the law requires of them is that they should be in
possession of a valid permit for resettlement or
permanent return issued by or under the authority
of any law of the state legislature in this
respect.
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