Kashmir: Roots of Conflict, Paths to Peace.

AuthorDingare, Amiya
PositionFURTHER READING - Book review

KASHMIR: ROOTS OF CONFLICT, PATHS TO PEACE Sumantra Bose (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2003), 320 pages.

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan has assessed the dismal relationship between India and Pakistan as "one of the most perilous threats to global security" the world faces today. One of the main points of contention between the two neighbors is, of course, the territorial dispute over Kashmir. Sumantra Bose makes the case that post-partition events and population demographics are primarily to blame for the modern-day state of affairs in Kashmir.

Bose paints a damning portrait of the administration of democracy in Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir (IJK) from the early 1950s to the 1990s, when India barred opposition candidates and installed puppet governments. Since the early 1990s, IJK residents have taken up arms in a violent insurgency campaign, which has been further abetted by Pakistani infiltrators. Bose identifies the ethnic complexity of IJK as another reason for instability in the region. Matryoshka doll-like enclaves of ethno-linguistically distinct groups has fostered the development of three distinct meanings of self-determination: pro-Independence, pro-India and pro-Pakistan. The severity of political...

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