05 November Tuesday

What Shah Faesal's re-joining means to Kashmiri youth ?

Gulzar NakhasiUpdated: Tuesday May 3, 2022

Image : Greater Kashmir


Srinagar  :  After dabbling in politics, Shah Faesal is finally back in  bureaucracy .The move, however, did not come as a surprise to many in the Valley as pieces of information about his re-joining had been trickling through grapevine over the past one year.

The 2010 IAS topper was reinstated on Thursday. Faesal had resigned in January 2019  to protest against civilian killings in the Valley and formed his own political party Jammu and Kashmir Political Movement ( JKPM).

Faesal launched his party inside a well manicured park in Srinagar’s Raj Bagh area on March 17, 2019 along with student activist Shehla Rashid and others. Faesal,  spotted in a white Kameez Shalwar and coat, a political attire worn by many political leaders in the Valley, addressed a gathering of few hundred supporters amid the ear- splitting slogans Ab hawa badle gi ( the winds will change their direction now).  

Faesal said that he had sacrificed his elite service to serve people and they must understand his concept of sacrifice. He  praised Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kajeriwal for their unceasing efforts in the field of politics.

Faesal wanted to strike a chord with the youth of Kashmir by claiming that JKPM is a youth oriented party and to some extent he pulled it off. It was for the first time since the militancy broke out in Kashmir that youth began openly talking about a mainline  political leader. In the Valley where people mostly do not wear their political identity on their sleeve, hundreds of young men extended their support to Faesal using different social media platforms. Even when he began raising funds for his party, many youth contributed generously.

For Faesal, who saw himself in the role of next Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir, everything ran like clockwork until  Narindra Modi led BJP government stripped Jammu and Kashmir of it's constitutional autonomy on August 5, 219 and split the region into two union territories—Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh

A day before the Home Minister  introduced  Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Bill in the parliament, all the key political parties in the Valley formed an alliance-- Peoples Alliance for Gupkar Alliance ( PAGD)-- and signed a declaration to safeguard the special position of Jammu and Kashmir. Faesal was among the signatories.

A week after the Central government's radical move, Faesal flew to New Delhi and upbraided the BJP government for incarcerating an entire population. In an interview with BBC he said that people would respond to the development in a sensible and calibrated manner.  Faesal during his interviews with international media houses and slew of tweets made no bones about his dissatisfaction over the New Dehi's unilateral decision.

Even he tweeted that "there would no Eid in Kashmir till the last bit of insult is avenged and undone".

On August 14, Faesal was detained at Delhi airport and sent back to Srinagar where he was booked under PSA. On June 4, 2020, he was released after nearly 10 months from the detention. After his release, he bid good bye to the political party he had founded over a year ago and  almost faded into oblivion.

Last year, Faesal admired Modi's vaccination drive which led to the rumours that he may re-join  the coveted service as his resignation was yet to be accepted. The youth of Kashmir for whom Faesal was some one to look up to were disillusioned by his decisions--first giving up the politics and now re-joining the system. They see the development as a total surrender on his part. It appears that his sacrifice narrative was a ploy to advance his career in politics and when he found it difficult he changed the narrative. Politics in region like Kashmir, which is stuck in a morass of conflict, is not a cakewalk.  It is to dance on razor's edge.


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