Nobel laureate says not proud as an Indian

By News Desk
August 21, 2019

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NEW DELHI: Indian Nobel laureate Dr Amartya Sen has vehemently criticised the government's move on Held Kashmir, saying it not only emphasised majority rule "as opposed to it sustaining the rights of all human beings". "I don't think ultimately you will have any resolution in Kashmir without democracy," he told an Indian TV in an interview.

Pointing out the loopholes in the government's decision on multiple levels, the 85-year-old said: "As an Indian, I am not proud of the fact that India, after having done so much to achieve a democratic norm in the world -- where India was the first non-Western country to go for democracy -- that we lose that reputation on the grounds of action that have been taken."

Amid anticipation about the possibility buying land in Jammu and Kashmir by people from other states, Dr Sen said it should have been "something for the people of the state (IHK) to decide".

"This is something in which Kashmiris have a legitimate point of view because it is their land," he said. "I don't think you will ever have fairness and justice without hearing the voices of the leaders of the people and if you keep thousands of leaders under restraint and many of them in jail, including big leaders who have led the country and formed governments in the past ... you are stifling the channel of democracy that makes democracy a success," he said.

The Modi government has described its decision to place IHK under a massive security blanket as "preventive measures" to prevent backlash that might cost lives.

"That's the classic colonial excuse. That's how the British ran the country for 200 years," Dr Sen said. "The last thing that I expected when we got our independence... is that we would go back to our colonial heritage of preventive detentions," he added.

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