Sunday, September 19, 2010

A dance of lead and blood in Kashmir…

A father looks at his son’s lifeless body, unsure if he is dreaming or awake. Surely, the boy will soon go about his business as he has for 17 years; tears well up in his eyes. Fathers are not supposed to cry. And, where is his mother? Why is she silent? She looks strangely incapable of speaking. Who are these other people gathered here? They want Azaadi? The father only wants his son to wake up. That would be his Azaadi. A crushing weight sets on his heart. He wants to rip it out. Why won’t the boy’s mother say something? Anything? The boy was just playing with his friends 30 minutes back and now he refuses to get up. Hot lead in his veins has stopped the blood cold in its tracks. Oh this heartache; why won’t it stop? Will it ever stop?

As this father contemplates life without his son, there are countless other fathers and mothers who have fallen silent, their rage so immense that words cannot express the depth of their loss. Contemplating a lifetime without those young ones who they fed and washed and nurtured and…just loved, is just impossible. What will life be for these unfortunate people? Who will console the inconsolable? Who will make things whole? But, things will never be whole again.

Throw a stone and get a bullet. It wasn’t supposed to be like this. But, it is like this in Kashmir. Over a 100 lives later, there is still no stopping the hot lead from freezing the Kashmiri’s hot blood. How many fathers have to bury their children? How many mothers will have to sit stone-faced for the rest of their lives?

Until next time...

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Kashmir burns...

Three months and almost 70 lives later we are still in a zombie-like state in Kashmir. A government, irresponsible and callous; their opponents without a sense of direction. There are no easy solutions, otherwise we would have seen one emerge in the last 20 years. So, what is to be done? Not sure but perhaps we should not try to deal with everything at once but break down the problem into smaller pieces and see if some little progress might lead to a little progress further down the road. So, let's scratch our brains and see if we can come up with something half decent.

Until next time...

Friday, January 22, 2010

While I am on Omar Abdullah, where is the new employment policy?

I was impressed to learn that the government was coming out with a new employment policy. Half a million jobs were to be created and many good things were to happen. Of course, when I tried to get my hands on the policy document, I couldn't find it. Is it too much to ask that when our government announces a major policy, the public ought to know what is being proposed? Shouldn't we have easy access to such important documents? Of course, the government's website is in disarray and even the vaunted Google was unable to locate this document.

Newspaper accounts indicate that the young Chief Minister was exhorting the youth of the state to look for jobs in the private sector. That is a worthy message...but the new employment policy is about creating more jobs in the public sector. They've got to be kidding! Reducing the demand for government jobs by creating new government jobs...that is sound public policy. Not.

Until next time...

Modern Government? Surely Omar Abdullah is better than this.

When Omar Abdullah took over the Government of Jammu and Kashmir, there seemed to be an impression that the beleaguered state was getting a dynamic administration. Technology would be used more and business as usual would go by the wayside. Alas, how hard it is to change things.

One example of the sorry state of affairs is the website of the state government (http://jammukashmir.nic.in/). Simply put, it is a disaster. Does Omar Abdullah ever bother to go there. It doesn't even have basic information in there. If you can't even get your flagship website to work properly, what hope do you have in implementing policies and programs for improving the lives of millions of people in a complex governance environment? No chance!

Until next time.