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A week after the Pulwama suicide bombing attack by a fidayeen operative of terrorist group Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM)on a Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) convoy, which killed over 40 security personnel, the Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) police launched a major crackdown on Jamaat-e-Islami (JeI), on one of the Valley's well-known socio-political organisations.
The reason behind the ban as cited by the MHA was that JeI, better known as Jamaat, actively supports separatism and has links with the militant movement in Kashmir.
Given that on Kashmir’s Islamist political spectrum Jamaat is quite far from Jaish (believed to draw its inspiration from the Deobandi school of thought as opposed to Jamaat), the crackdown by the Centre and state authorities is bound to create further fault lines in Kashmir. To know exactly why the move might turn out to be counterproductive, it is imperative to visit Jamaat's inception, its character during the thirty-year-old insurgency, and its present.
Till date, many see him as someone who propounded the modern revolutionary brand of Islam whose prominent subscribers include the Egypt-based Muslim Brotherhood. Maududi wasn't completely convinced with the idea of Pakistan, when he was ameer of Jamaat in undivided India, and his opposition to the idea was well known. He believed that rather than creating Pakistan, Muslims should strive to enforce Islamic governance in the sub continent. This changed after Partition in 1947, and subsequently, the Jamaat split into Jama’at-e-Islami Pakistan and Jamaat-e-Islami Hind, with Maududi heading the Pakistani Jamaat.
Owing to the disputed nature of Jammu and Kashmir, a third split occurred in Jamaat in 1954, giving birth to JeI's Kashmir chapter. Maulana Ahrar and Ghulam Rasul Abdullah, two prominent Jamaat members from Kashmir drafted a new constitution, and Jamaat established itself as an autonomous body with a consistent stand on Kashmir being a disputed territory. Seen by the Indian state as under the influence of JeI Pakistan, the group passed through multiple crackdowns, and among their major opponents was the National Conference with whom Jamaat shares a bloody history.
Of the 22 seats the Jamaat contested, it won five. Jamaat's entry into electoral politics brought much needed peace between them and their nemesis NC. But this too, was short-lived; soon after, NC leader Sheikh Abdullah signed what is known as the 1975 Indira–Sheikh accord.
Abdullah had given up the demand for J&K’s right to self-determination, and as a result, constitutional changes took place in the state including removing the position of J&K's prime minister, a position at that time held by Abdullah himself. Jamaat became the most vocal voice against the accord. It is during this time that Jamaat gained ground beyond their constituencies.
According to one popular anecdote, several Qurans recovered from Jamaat men were also burnt by violent mobs, saying the same were ‘Jamaat Qurans’. Jamaat leaders, even till now, accuse Sheikh Abdullah of orchestrating the anger against them. There would be no reconciliation between Jamaat, and Abdullah was the chief minister of the state at that time, and till his death in 1982. Seven years after Abdullah's death, an armed insurrection began in the region.
When a full scale militancy erupted in J&K, for the first few months, the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF), a non-Islamist outfit, took the lead in the anti-India insurgency. The militancy however, left out those who advocated Kashmir's merger with Pakistan, unlike JKLF. In came Hizbul Mujahideen (HM). Though the group, like JKLF, received logistical support from the Pakistani state, HM, unlike the former, drew its rank and file from people who subscribed to the Jamaat ideology.
But complications developed for the Jamaat with the arrival of the Hizb. With many of its leaders in jail, due to a massive crackdown on separatists, one of the founding members of Hizb, Ahsan Dar, put the Jamaat in a fix when he declared the militant outfit as the "Aksari Bazu" (militant wing) of Jamaat.
The Jamaat leadership had to rebut the statements of Dar, and after years of crackdown, the group resumed its activities in 1996-97.
One of the most dominant separatist groups in the Valley is the Tehreek-e-Hurriyat (TeH), which was till 2018 headed by senior separatist leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani, a veteran Jamaat leader. He was one of Jamaat's five MLAs, who had won his seat in the state assembly elections. Besides being seen as someone who countered the legacy of Kashmir's first mass leader Sheikh Abdullah Geelani, Syed Ali Shah Geelani was also the most staunch supporter of the idea of Kashmir merging with Pakistan.
He was at that time, Jamaat's political representative in the Hurriyat Conference conglomerate of separatist groups. He was then allowed to form TeH, and remained its head till Ashraf Sehrai took the reins from him in 2018.
To understand the current crackdown on Jamaat, it is imperative to look at its non-political activities and the killing of Hizb commander Burhan Wani in 2016. Besides its intertwined history with Kashmir's politics, governance and insurgency, Jamaat, between 1996-2016, managed to propel its image as a socio-religious group working for and on a range of issues.
And even though hushed voices in Kashmir claim the group has provided tacit support to NC's rival Peoples Democratic Party, the Jamaat has worked hard to intervene in Kashmir’s affairs.
Hizb taking a backseat in the insurgency helped, and so did Lashkar-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad taking the lead. Lashkar draws its inspiration from the Jamaat-e-ahl-Hadees school of thought.
Hizb ranks swelled again to the extent that in 2017, according to a senior J&K police official, youth interested in joining militancy and Hizb in particular, were asked to join Jaish and LeT due to saturation in HM.
While the new recruits of militancy in general, and Hizb in particular, might not have the level of ideological affinity their predecessors had with Jamaat, the resurgence of a group filled largely with Kashmiri recruits, is something that the Centre was deeply concerned about. But the concern of the state is not only the youth with Jamaat-leanings joining militant ranks, or Jamaat's support to militants (who as of now number at around 275).
Former chief of Research and Analysis Wing ( RAW) AS Dulat, in the first week of February, while talking about the possibility of the Islamic State’s presence in Kashmir, said, “I don't see radicalisation happening in Kashmir in the name of ISIS. That doesn't mean there is no radicalisation in the region. The radicalisation there, is indigenous in nature”. Dulat also said that Jamaat was in fact the group that has managed to radicalise Kashmiri youth politically.
Perhaps it is this belief that has caused Jamaat to find itself again amidst a massive crackdown.
One theory in Kashmir related to the group’s crackdown, is that they were mobilising the ground in Kashmir for an unrest, in the event that Article 35 A is tinkered with. Another speculation is that the Centre is clearing the way for the general elections due to fears of a low turnout.
With tensions simmering between the two nuclear-armed neighbours, it would be interesting to see how the political landscape in Kashmir, with former J&K CM Mehbooba Mufti and People's Conference leader Sajjad Lone, coming out in support of Jamaat. The National Conference too “expressed dismay”. One might argue that it is political opportunism, but that doesn't change anything on the ground for the government of India, who, besides facing the challenge of holding general elections peacefully, also has to walk on thin ice, while banning separatist groups left, right and centre.
(Azaan Javaid is a Kashmir-based journalist and has previously reported from New Delhi for Hindustan Times, DNA, Deccan Herald, Statesman and Caravan magazine. He can be reached at @AzaanJavaid. This is an opinion piece, and the views expressed are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses, nor is responsible for them.)
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