Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05NEWDELHI2270
2005-03-24 12:36:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy New Delhi
Cable title:  

A SMALL STEP, A GIANT LEAP: FULL SPEED AHEAD FOR KASHMIR BUS

Tags:  PREL PTER IN PK 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 05 NEW DELHI 002270 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/22/2015
TAGS: PREL PTER IN PK

SUBJECT: A SMALL STEP, A GIANT LEAP: FULL SPEED AHEAD FOR KASHMIR BUS
Classified By: Polcouns Geoffrey Pyatt, for Reasons 1.4 (B, D)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 05 NEW DELHI 002270

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/22/2015
TAGS: PREL PTER IN PK

SUBJECT: A SMALL STEP, A GIANT LEAP: FULL SPEED AHEAD FOR KASHMIR BUS
Classified By: Polcouns Geoffrey Pyatt, for Reasons 1.4 (B, D)


1. (C) Summary: Preparations for what J&K Chief Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed has called the ""mother of all CBMs,"" the first bus to cross the LOC in 58 years on April 7, are on track, with the J&K government and GOI moving purposefully to ensure a successful launch. Initial passengers will be primarily from divided families in Srinagar, but there is huge pent-up interest in areas close to the LOC, where the vast majority of such persons live. Calls are growing for more frequent service and additional crossings. The Mirwaiz Umar Farooq and other senior All-Parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC) leaders have described to us a wave of popular enthusiasm for the bus. Nonetheless, hardline separatists, Hindu nationalist and Kashmiri Pandit groups, and assorted intellectuals continue to dismiss the bus as a diversion from the ""core Kashmir issue"" or flawed. Authorities express confidence that security measures will be sufficient to ensure the safety of the bus, while Kashmiris expect Pakistan to order jihadi groups to leave it alone. It will be difficult for either government to reverse this step, reflecting the degree to which popular sentiment is shaping the Indo-Pak peace process. End Summary.


2. (U) As April 7 approaches, the Srinagar-Muzaffarabad bus is increasingly seizing Indian imaginations in J&K and beyond. The national media are reporting daily, across the country, and in considerable detail about logistical and infrastructural improvements, the mechanics of the operation, and human interest stories, usually of elderly Kashmiris longing to see family members last seen many, many years ago.
Senior GOI attention is focused on the event, with the PM scheduled to travel to Srinagar to see it off, perhaps joined by Sonia Gandhi, who has reportedly rearranged her schedule for this occasion.


3. (C) Although Chief Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed has been careful about giving credit to New Delhi and Islamabad for their leadership in making it happen, he is treating the launch as the most important achievement in his tenure as Chief Minister. As the politician in India most associated in the public eye with the bus proposal, he has used it to highlight its potential for breaking down barriers between India and Pakistan, calling the service a ""bridge of friendship"" and a major step in creating the atmosphere to deal with the Kashmir issue, while stressing that it is also not a solution. In some speeches he has gone further, saying the ""softening of the LOC will transform South Asia."" This echoes the PM's oft-repeated notion of ""reducing the relevance of the LOC"" in Indo-Pak relations.

Modalities
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4. (U) The Indian media have carried extensive reports of military units from both countries working together to widen roads, clear mines, and repair bridges that have had no civilian traffic since Partition. Towns along the road, known colloquially in J&K as the ""Rawalpindi Road,"" are being given facelifts, and prefab facilities, including a tourist welcome and document checking station, a cafeteria and restrooms, are being erected at Adoosa, a hamlet located just before Kashmiri travellers cross the LOC. The infrastructure is scheduled to be completed by March 31.


5. (U) Information varies regarding the number of buses that will travel, with some reports suggesting that two will carry 19 passengers and four Intelligence Bureau (IB) officers each for a total of 30 persons, while other sources indicate that the buses will carry 30 passengers apiece, and that VVIPs and media may also accompany in separate buses. J&K has purchased four new vehicles, each with video/TV systems and refrigerators to ensure that the three hour, 130km trip on the Indian side, or total 4-4.5 hour 170km total journey, will be in comfort. A roundtrip ticket will cost Rs 1500 (USD 35). Travellers
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6. (C) Journalists in Srinagar tell us that 150 travel permit forms were issued on March 4 and 500 on March 21, on a first come, first served basis. Amidst widespread disappointment that the first tranche was so small, the number was increased, and long queues formed to meet demand, leading to protests, police lathi charges, and a nascent black market. To facilitate access to residents outside Srinagar, forms were also issued in Kupwara, Jammu, Pulwama, and Baramulla, but residents there have complained the number were far too few. Their format differs from visa applications, in that they do not ask for passport details, but require detailed information on places and persons to be visited. Permits will reportedly be valid for one month, and visitors from Pakistan will be able to travel throughout J&K, but must register with the police as soon as they reach their destination. They can only stay in locations declared in advance.


7. (C) Technically, all Indians are eligible to travel, but non-Kashmiris are not likely to be on the first buses, given the focus on re-uniting divided families. On March 23, the United Jehad Council reportedly issued a warning that only Kashmiris, and not Indians, should travel. Of the 62 completed applications received by March 13 by the Indian authorities, 50 were from Srinagar residents, with the rest from Rajouri and Poonch districts. On March 22, J&K and AJK authorities exchanged the first lists of some 40 Indian and 46 Pakistani names for verification by as many as five central and state security and intelligence agencies.


8. (U) Information on the mechanics of the crossing at the LOC is sketchy, contradictory, and in flux, journalists who have visited the site recently tell us. The bus will procede to the village of Adoosa, the last settlement about .5km from before the LOC where passengers will disembark and procede on foot across a series of three bridges (Lal Pool, Weak Bridge, and Wood Bridge, the last of which has been a relic of Indo-Pak animosity for decades) that are being repaired.
Thereupon, they will board a bus on the Pakistani side and continue their journey.
Security Not a Major Worry
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9. (C) In view of press and other reports that jihadis may attack the buses, Indian security forces have been taking special precautions. The bus will travel in something of a convoy, with lead and follow cars, after Road Opening Parties have traversed the road to clear it of IEDs. There have also been reports that residents along the road have formed vigilance committees to reduce the likeihood of ambushes, including by using the ""zimmewari system,"" by which civilians look out for suspicious items that could be explosives. J&K police officials say that should credible reports surface of IED threats, a jammer car may travel in the convoy.


10. (C) In a March 22 conversation with PolCouns, outgoing MEA J/S (Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran) Arun K Singh downplayed concerns about security, commenting that the security forces have taken the necessary steps. The Indian media have also carried reports quoting Pakistani officials who express ""100 percent confidence that nothing will happen."" Kashmiri separatist Javed Mir agreed, telling D/Polcouns March 22 that as long as Pakistan had bought into the bus and supported it politically, it would ensure that it would not be attacked. The overriding sentiment in J&K, journalists in Srinagar tell us, is that the Islamabad will instruct terrorist groups to behave, especially with President Musharraf expected in New Delhi in connection with the Delhi One Day International cricket match on April 17.
Increase the Frequency!
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11. (C) Kashmniri politicians and civic groups have begun to notice that few people will actually travel on the bus because of its low capacity and fortnightly service, and are now focusing on increasing its frequency. Mufti has already spoken of instituting weekly, and, later, daily service. He has also begun to urge that the route be opened to cars and trade. His daughter, PDP President Mehbooba Mufti, has been stressing trade opportunities for Kashmiri products in Pakistan, a traditional market for Kashmiri produce (particularly apples and saffron) as well as handicrafts until Partition.

12. (C) Not to be outdone, National Conference (NC) President Omar Abdullah has joined the bandwagon to advocate daily service, commenting that ""we must not waste the goodwill that this bus has created."" Quoting his grandfather, the legendary Kashmiri leader Sheikh Abdullah who had advocated opening the road before his death in 1982, Omar used the bus issue on March 21 to differ publicly for the first time with his father, former NC leader and Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah (who has not been effusive about the development),leading to speculation in the media about ""whether Farooq has become irrelevant."" The MEA's AK Singh confirmed that the GOI was open to increasing frequency, presumably after both sides gauged how the system was working, and subject to the overall tenor of the Indo-Pak relationship.
Other Roads
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13. (C) Experts in ethnic and linguistic patterns in Indian and Pakistani Kashmir have reminded us that the vast majority of divided families live in regions close to the LOC, with considerable concentrations also residing in the Jammu region (especially Doda District) and elsewhere. Demographer and human rights activist Balraj Puri estimated that 98 percent of extended Muslim families in the Jammu region are divided, as opposed to only two percent in the Valley. Hurriyat Chairman Mirwaiz Umar Farooq confirmed to D/Polcouns on March 23 that the distribution was much heavier closer to the LOC, but that the breakdown was probably closer to 80/20; almost all his friends and acquaintences in Srinagar had relations of one kind or another across the LOC.

14. (C) Puri and others argue that the concentration of divided families near the LOC made the current arrangement for the bus unusually cumbersome and inconvenient, as they have to travel all the way to Srinagar to apply, and then to travel, which can amount to 900km for what would otherwise be a hop, skip and jump as the crow flies. This also applies to tens of thousands of Hindu families in Jammu, who fled from what is now POK or Pakistan after Partition. The first reports are now surfacing of elderly Hindus residing in the Jammu region who originate from what is now Pakistani Kashmir and wish to visit their ancestral areas, and who complain of being ignored in favor of Muslims. On these grounds, Puri reported that pressure is building in the Jammu region to open the Jammu-Sialkot Road, which would enormously simplify contact between families there, he stated. We understand that this road is in good condition and could be opened in a matter of days, if the governments decide to do so.

15. (C) A recent story in ""The Week"" reported that at least 60,000 residents in the Uri and Baramulla districts have relatives across the LOC, as cross-LOC marriages have been common and there are myriad extended families. Residents in these areas come from similar socio-cultural milieux and speak Pahari and Gojari dialects. Corresponding patterns apply to ethnic and linguistic groups that straddle the LOC in Kargil and the Northern Areas, which increases calls for opening a Kargil-Skardu route, Puri stated. Jammu-based Kashmir correspondent for the ""Statesman"" Kavita Suri told us after a recent visit to the LOC that among Kashmiris in many of these isolated rural areas knowledge about procedures to obtain permits is still very rudimentary, but she expected it to grow.
Moderate Separatists OK with it
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16. (C) In meetings this week with D/Polcouns in Delhi, all major moderate All-Parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC) leaders expressed support for the bus, although they emphasized that it was not the answer to the Kashmir issue. Moulvi Abbas Ansari termed it a ""good step"" and ""a just beginning on the long road to peace."" The Mirwaiz, Prof AG Bhat, and Bilal Lone were unanimous that it was a good development, and said that their views were shared across the state, even by people with no extended family across the LOC. Javed Mir from the JK Liberation Forum also welcomed it, and did not disagree with a colleague of his who wondered out loud whether visits by Pakistanis from across the LOC might cause them to think twice about ""which country offers more."" JKLF leader Yasin Malik considered the family unification dimension positive, but expressed bitterness that New Delhi and Islamabad had chosed to freeze Kashmiris out of their dialogue.

17. (C) The moderate Hurriyat leaders have confirmed to us their interest in travelling on the bus, but said they would wait until the second or third trip in May or later, partly to allow divided families which have no other opportunity to travel to go first, but also to see how the process unfolds, as well as to allow arrangements for such trips to be made.
""We are not interested in going to Pakistan for tourism,"" the Mirwaiz stated.
Opponents Continue to Whine
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18. (C) Not all reaction has been positive, with criticism continuing to come from assorted hardline separatists, Hindu nationalists, Kashmiri Pandit groups, and intellectuals.
Hardline, pro-Pakistan separatist SAS Geelani has called the bus a ""non-issue,"" ""part of the Indian agenda,"" and ""merely a toy to pacify Indian slaves."" In fact, Geelani has become so angry with Pakistan that he has begun to criticize President Musharraf, accusing him of ""sprinkling salt on our wounds"" and ""giving a burial to our prolonged struggle for self-determination."" Geelani boycotted the high profile Pakistan National Day Reception in New Delhi on March 23 for the first time since 1989 in protest.

19. (C) The ""Panun Kashmir"" Pandit group has commented that the road will do nothing to improve their continued plight.
The Hindu nationalist RSS has termed the bus ""insane"" and ""fraught with serious consequences for the country's security,"" highlighting New Delhi's compromises over documentation and the potential for terrorist infiltration.
Mufti has dismissed these concerns, observing tartly that terrorists have not traditionally crossed over to J&K legally.

20. (U) Even liberal commentators on Kashmir and well-wishers of Indo-Pak amity like the Mumbai-based writer AG Noorani have joined the criticism, although their focus is more on flaws in the procedure than opposing the bus itself.
Calling the bus ""sheer symbolism,"" Noorani has highlighted the logistical difficulties for the rural, poor Kashmiris who live in border areas or in the Jammu region when they apply for permits and seats on the bus. Noorani has also attempted to diminish the significance of including Gilgit and Baltistan to the list of areas Kashmiris can visit, on the grounds that they will have to travel via Abbottabad in the NWFP. He also complains that visitors to Mirpur will have to visit via the International Border, because the old Muzaffarabad-Mirpur road no longer exists.
Comment
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21. (C) This is no ordinary road, and no ordinary bus; it is one of the biggest Kashmir stories in many, many years.
Although it is important to filter out the media hype, the enthusiasm in J&K and elsewhere in India for this development is genuine, palpable, and has done much to keep interest in the fledgling Indo-Pak peace process alive, despite the absence of other major achievements in the Composite Dialogue. The symbolic and political significance of the bus has reinforced the stakes India and Pakistan have in its success.

22. (C) Although it does not deal directly with the ""core issue"" of Kashmir, the bus has the potential to begin a new era in intra-Kashmir relations. Those who continue to dismiss it as a diversion or otherwise flawed sound increasingly cranky and out of touch with the march of history. The matter of more frequencies and more routes will depend on the larger Indo-Pak relationship, but there is no doubt about the popularity of such steps in the state. One of the few things that could affect the bus negatively is terrorism, but even a spectacular attack would be self-defeating, given the potential for causing a backlash among Kashmiris. With public views so positive, it will be difficult for either government to stop this bus.
MULFORD "