Pakistan Occupied Kashmir
& Northern Areas is a paper taken from the Bharat Rakshak Monitor (India
Defence Monitor), published on the net under copyright. It was excerpted by BRM
from from Indian Defence Review Vol.14 (3) 1999, with permission from © Lancer
Publishers.
Dr.Kasturi is currently
Defence Editor with the Deccan Herald newspaper. He has been a visiting fellow
at the Stimson Center and is a former editor of the Indian Defence Review.
The website for Bharat
Rakshak Monitor can be located from: www.bharat-rakshak.com
PAKISTAN OCCUPIED KASHMIR AND NORTHERN AREAS
Dr. Bhashyam Kasturi
The Kargil intrusions
brought into focus Pakistan Occupied Kashmir, or as they are known in Pakistan
- the Northern Areas. This large chunk of territory annexed by Pakistan in
1947, provided the bulk of the manpower for the intrusions, consisting of the
Northern Light Infantry of the Pakistan army. The area also provided the
logistic base from which operations were launched and sustained in the Kargil
region of Jammu and Kashmir on the Indian side of the Line of Control (LOC).
The area for intrusion and the military units chosen suggest that Pakistan had
in mind to put into practice a covert plan, which depended on surprise and
called for the non-participation of main part of the Pakistan army consisting
of Punjabi musalmans, in order that India did not become aware of the plan.
It is in this context that
this paper studies the region, its people and the military component. It argues
that the Kargil intrusions have brought into focus the NA and this India must
take advantage of as a foreign policy tool. In other words, just as Pakistan
keeps referring to Kashmir in international fora, India must also refer to POK
and the NA and the state of affairs there.
The Area, People and History
The Northern Areas of
Pakistan consists of the five districts of Gilgit, Ghizer, Diamer, Skardu and
Ganche. The total area is 28,000 sq miles with a population of 1.2 million. The
district of Chitral has always been a part of the Northern Areas till the
arrival of the British in the 19th century. Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (Azad
Kashmir as it known in Pakistan) on the other hand is just 4,494 sq miles with
a population of 1.5 million.
The Northern Areas border
Afghanistan, the Central Asian Republic of Tajikstan and Xingjiang province of
China. On the south it has 300 miles of border with Kashmir and Ladakh.
Ethnically the Northern Areas and Chitral have Tajik, Uzbek, Mongol, Turkmen
and Greek population. Also the area has Baltees, Shins, Yashkuns, Mughals,
Kashmiris, Pathans, Ladakis and Turks who speak the dialects of Balti, Shina,
Brushaki, Khawer, Turki, Tibetan, Pushto and Persian. Shias and Sunnis in the
area have their own sub-divisions. The Shias are sub-divided into Asharis,
Ismailis and Noor Bakshis.
The Northern Areas (NA) are
administratively not part of POK and are ruled directly by the Pakistan
government from Islamabad. It is governed by the Frontier Crime
Regulationframed by the British. The NA are ruled directly by the Minister of
State for Kashmir and Northern areas (Pakistan) with the help of six officers,
all non-natives. In 1990 a writ petition was filed in the High Court of Azad
Kashmir by various parties to bring the Northern Areas under the administrative
control of the Azad Kashmir government. In March 1993, the High Court gave its
verdict in favour of the petitioners.
The NA remains a neglected
area with no university or professional colleges. There is no industry and
subsistence is largely on tourism. While people from POK can emigrate, those
from NA need an exit visa rarely issued. According to one source adult
franchise is also a distant dream in the northern areas. No person or party can
call for self-determination even though the Pakistan government has itself
admitted to the courts that Northern Areas are not part of Pakistan.
In 1994 and 1999, Pakistan
Federal government announced reforms which included elections to the Northern
Areas Council. However these changes are cosmetic. A Pak commentator notes that
people of the northern areas are denied representation in the parliament and
unlike in the case of Kashmir, they are also denied a semblance of
self-government and have been forced to accept Islamabad's hegemony.
The earliest sectarian
clashes occurred in Chitral in 1981 when a mob led by Maulana Ubaidullah
stormed a hostel run by the Aga Khan Foundation. A year later, Sunni-Shia
clashes occurred in the area. The Shias organized themselves under the
Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Fiqah-e-Jaffariya (TNFJ). The Ismailis and Noor Bakshis,
though followers of the Fiqah-e-Jaffariya, were not accepted into the fold of
the former party. The two groups did however play a balancing role in the area.
The Aga Khan Foundation has been a premier institution working for
socio-economic development in the region. The Aga Khan is reported to have
commissioned a in-depth study of the region. The study says poverty and
economic deprivation have made the area a breeding ground for sectarian
militancy.The study also pointed to dangers that Ismailis faced in the Chitral
region. According to one Pakistani writer in Chitral alone, about 10% Ismailis
converted to sunnism, either out of financial motives or to save their lives or
escape the pressure of the social boycott imposed on them by Maulana
Ubaidullah's fatwa.
POK has also not been quiet
in 1998-99. Trends indicate an on-going power struggle on several issues. In
June 98, a no-confidence motion was passed with more than two-thirds majority
in the POK Assembly against the Speaker Raja Mumtaz Hussain Rathore chairman of
People's Party (N) and Raja Assar Ahmad Abbasi. The latter being the Deputy
Speaker in the Azad Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly. Actually Rathore
had alleged that the POK government was corrupt and he sought change of the
present govt. under Sultan Mahmud.
And towards the end of June
1998 came news that AJK Assembly debating the 1998-99 fiscal budget came down
heavily on the government for not coming up to the expectations of the people
and for not fulfilling its commitments to resolve their problems and
grievances.
Opposition party Amir
Jamaat-e-Islami Azad Kashmir leader Abdul Rashid Turabi criticized the AJK
government and said that corruption culture had developed in the area and funds
were being misused. The Minister for Forests Latif Akber demanded that the
Pakistan government pay the royalty for the Mangla dam to the AJK government
and shares in the income of the state's property in Pakistan.
Columnist Fahid Husain
paints a picture of POK that speaks two voices. At one level he writes of
migration from POK due to lack of employment opportunity. Second, is problems
of development, but high levels of community participation in development. Also
of note is mention of the fact that POK has little income generation of its
own, most of the revenue coming from Pakistan.
Two societal problems remain
and are on the increase. There is corruption in the top echelons of POK
government and society and there is a timber mafia that is rapidly denuding the
area of its forest cover. Where does that leave the area?
Politicians still have to
take an oath of allegiance to Kashmir's accession to Pakistan. They have to
sign a declaration that Kashmir is part of Pakistan. And no Prime Minister or
minister in POK can assume office unless a similar oath is taken. All high
ranking officials are appointed directly from Pakistan. These facts must be
highlighted to show the control that Islamabad exercises over POK. Under Art.
32 of the interim constitution, the Legislative Assembly cannot make any laws
relating to defence and security of the area, currency, external affairs and
trade.
It is worth noting that
while Jammu and Kashmir on the Indian side has a special provision in the
Indian constitution, Art. 370 to protect the interests of the state and its
people, there is no such thing in POK or in the Northern Areas. India has held
democratic elections in the state on several occasions. This has hardly
occurred in either POK or NA. The people in Northern Areas are neglected and
ruled with a firm hand by the Pakistan government.
The Northern Light Infantry
During the 1880's after the
annexation of the North West Frontier Province the British raised local tribal
units to manage the region. These were Pakistan militia and scout units, which
were employed in the front and on the flanks for gathering information and
protection.
Later the role of these
units was changed to picqueting and guarding of routes well before the main
military force could be deployed. At the time of the creation of Pakistan in
1947, the militia and scouts were gradually organised and equipped with modern
weapons.
At this time, the area had
the Karakoram Scouts with HQ at Skardu in Baltistan. The Northern Scouts with
HQ at Gilgit. And the Gilgit Scouts also with HQ at Gilgit. In 1973 all these
units were reorganised as the Northern Light Infantry (NLI) battalions. A 1993
study of the Pak army showed the recruitment to the NLI from Gilgit 55%, from
Baltistan 35% and from other regions 10%. The ethnic composition of the NLI
battalions shows they consist of 18% Sunnis, 49% Shias, 23% are Ismailees and
10% are Noor Bakshis.The NLI are actually special troops, trained in
anti-heliborne, commando operations and snow warfare. The commando trained personnel
are also deputed to the Special Service Group (SSG).
The Kargil operation was
planned and executed by the Pakistan army. It had been planned several years
ahead, but its final shape was given by Gen Musharaff and his Chief of General
Staff, Lt Gen Mohd Aziz Khan. Also involved were the Force Commander Northern
Areas (FCNA) and the GOC 10 Corps, under whom the NLI was operational. HQ FCNA
has under its command four infantry brigades, 32, 60, 80 and 323. To keep the
operation secret and to make use of the special training of the forces in the
area, the NLI was chosen for the task of intrusion and occupation of heights of
Kargil.
In order to further
strengthen security, the NA were placed under the operational control of the
Pak Army. This prevented media teams and others from asking too many questions.
The main aim of the employment of the NLI was secrecy, expertise in this
mission and to prevent any backlash of failure reaching the Punjabi heartland.
These troops stiffened by Special Services Group (SSG) companies organised the
intrusion backed by logistic support from the Mujahideen in POK. Military
estimates put this figure as 2,000. Of the NLI battalions who were active in
Kargil, 3th, 4th, 5th, 6th, 8th, 11th and 12th.
The enemy when initially
infiltrated had plans to occupy and stay. And then the purpose was to interdict
the Srinagar-Leh road. Once the Indian army and air force reacted to the
incursions, it became difficult for Pakistan to hide the facts. The soldiers of
the NLI fought well, and as they were placed on the ridgelines in well
entrenched positions they could and did launch counter-attacks when their main
positions were taken. Leadership was poor and logistic supply being difficult,
morale dipped in the pockets of intrusion once India put the pressure on. Radio
intercepts often spoke of the low rations and morale, but the Pak troops
managed to get reinforcements from areas which the Indian troops were unable to
seal.
It was only after the
decision to withdraw was taken, was it possible for the NLI troops to return
across the LOC. But even for this they had come prepared. The withdrawing
forces planted thousands of landmines across the path, to prevent the forward
movement of Indian forces. This has led to large number of casualties for the
army who have had to clear virtually every inch of the ground. The fact of the
matter is that Pakistan succeeded in tactically gaining ground in this
operation but failed to gain strategically. Once the intrusion was discovered
the choice before Pakistan was to either withdraw or to stay and fight. The
latter they chose to do but without apparent plans to force the issue.
The Northern Areas thus
suddenly came under the limelight and it witnessed the visits of Pak army chief
and prime minister Nawaz Sharif. Both promised major sops to the people and to
the men of the NLI. Monetary packages as also infrastructural development were
announced with much fanfare. It was also announced that every dead soldier of
the NLI would get a compensation of $10,000 while the families of officers
would be given a plot of land in any place of their choice in Pakistan. This
was clearly a move to reduce the resentment building up within the NA.
In fact, interrogation of
the soldiers taken prisoner by the Indian Army during OP Vijay in Kargil show
that NLI personnel resented the fact that they were being used as cannon fodder
by the Pak Punjabi musalman. The varied ethnic composition of the NLI provides
us now with some clues about the variety of linguistic groups found in the intercepted
radio conversations. The employment of the NLI served Pakistan's interest, both
in terms of operational secrecy and for the specialised training and equipment
of the NLI.
Recent Events
The Kargil situation brought
home the fact that Northern Areas were not being treated on par with the rest
of Pakistan. The Pak military took over Gilgit and Baltistan. The fear of a
popular uprising for the restoration of basic rights prompted Islamabad to
remove civlian rule.
In fact in a significant
development in May this year the Supreme Court in Pakistan directed Islamabad
to make the necessary amendments to the constitution to ensure that people of
the Northern Areas enjoyed their fundamental rights of ogverned through their
chosen representatives and to have access to justice through an independent
judiciary. The SC directed that this action be undertaken within six months.
The situation in NA was also
reflected in a letter written by a Senior Superintendent of Police Amir Hamza,
posted in Gilgit to Kofi Annan, the UN Secretary General. In it he compares the
present conditions in the areas as being worse than that of the East India
company. Additionally, he lists several areas in which Kashmir on the other
side of the LOC was much better off. The police officer picked on evidence from
an official statement in the Pakistani supreme court, which says that
Parliament "has by law yet to admit into the federation Northern Areas on
such terms and conditions as it thinks fit."
The post-Kargil environment
in the Northern Areas witnessed local uprisings against the Mujahideen who had
retreated from Kargil. Clashes between locals and militants belonging to the
Lashkar-e-Toiba in Skardu in August 1999 led to clamping down by the army.
Similar disturbances were also reported from Shigar, North East of Skardu and
Rondu, west of Skardu on the Skardu-Gilgit road.
Locals met with the 62
Brigade Commander and other local police officials, demanded that all the
remaining militants in the city be removed within 24 hours. The cause of the
unrest was the bitterness of the people of the Northern Areas about the
militants getting all the credit for doing nothing while the NLI took heavy
casualties. The local people made so many sacrifices but could not appreciate
that the army was disguising themselves as militants during the Kargil crisis
and paying them also.
The fact remains that focus
on the NA has increased due to Kargil, both in Pakistan and outside it. There
is an important lesson for India. It is for India to explain to the world how
the people of the region live, in comparison to which the state of Jammu and
Kashmir is better off and its people, though plagued by insurgency do manage to
make a living for themselves.
Dr.Kasturi is currently
Defence Editor with the Deccan Herald newspaper. He has been a visiting fellow
at the Stimson Center and is a former editor of the Indian Defence Review
Copyright © Bharat Rakshak.
Excerpted from Indian Defence Review Vol.14 (3) 1999. With permission from ©
Lancer Publishers.