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How India鈥檚 crackdown on Kashmir 鈥 and the blowback 鈥 transformed the region鈥檚 politics

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Sanna聽Irshad Mattoo/Reuters
People wait in line to vote outside a polling station during the second phase of the legislative assembly elections, in Kashmir's Budgam district, Sept. 25, 2024. These are the first local assembly elections since 2014.

Street vendor Javaid Ahmed Bhat has never voted in local elections. Now, he feels it鈥檚 imperative.

Jammu and Kashmir 鈥 the contested, north Indian territory he calls home 鈥 is facing myriad problems, most stemming from the armed insurgency that erupted here in the late 1980s. Over the past five years, India鈥檚 central government has stripped Kashmir of its statehood, delayed local elections, expanded its military presence, and jailed critics of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), all in the name of securing peace in the region.

碍补蝉丑尘颈谤鈥檚 highly anticipated legislative assembly elections run from Sept. 18 to Oct. 1, with results expected next week. They mark residents鈥 first shot to regain some semblance of local autonomy.

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India鈥檚 disputed Kashmir region is witnessing a political transformation, as Delhi鈥檚 curb on separatist militancy and other forms of dissent pushes new candidates 鈥 and voters 鈥 to participate in local elections.

Although early data from the first two voting phases suggest turnout has remained relatively static compared to the last assembly elections in 2014, the mood on the ground is markedly different. Gone are the calls to boycott elections and the looming terrorist threats which once deterred people from the polls, and many Kashmiris are feeling energized by a wave of 346 independent candidates challenging the region鈥檚 traditional parties.聽

Rashid Wani, a businessman from south Kashmir, says the past five years have left many Kashmiris desperate to express their anger. 鈥淧eople are participating in elections [and] joining rallies,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hese votes are against the BJP.鈥澛

Mr. Bhat agrees. The days of anti-India street protests are over, he says, and now 鈥渨e have to vote.鈥

Delhi draws a redline

The Kashmir conflict is a territorial dispute rooted in India-Pakistan tensions, as well as the fact that the Muslim-majority region was never allowed to decide whether it wanted to remain with India, join Pakistan, or become independent. It has claimed more than 100,000 lives since 1988, when the armed struggle began.

In August 2019, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his BJP government downgraded the semi-autonomous state to a union territory, ruled directly by New Delhi, and then imposed a six-month communications blackout to contain the ensuing chaos. Indian officials have been broadly criticized for using sweeping new security laws to jail hundreds of activists, journalists, and politicians in the years since. Any group that fundamentally opposed Indian rule in Kashmir has also been banned.

Fahad Shah
Sheikh Abdul Rashid, alias "Engineer Rashid," rides on top of a vehicle, waving to the crowd during a rally for his preferred candidate in central Kashmir's Budgam district Sept. 22, 2024. The popular politician is released on bail for charges related to terrorism funding.

鈥淭oday, we are trying to, in a sense, completely depoliticize the population,鈥 says Ajai Sahni, founder and executive director of the New Delhi-based Institute for Conflict Management. 鈥淲e are trying to undermine the traditional leadership over there.鈥

The BJP claims that peace and stability have now returned,聽but聽Mr. Sahni聽nuances that description,聽describing聽the armed movement as 鈥渧ery substantially contained.鈥

Data from his organization shows that dozens have been killed during at least 137 terrorism-related incidents this year, including gunfights and assassinations. Experts also note that the violence appears to be spreading from the Kashmir valley into the historically calmer region of Jammu.聽

Still, if Pakistan continues to weaken while Delhi maintains its military presence in Kashmir, Mr. Sahni doesn鈥檛 expect a resurgence in terrorism, and Delhi鈥檚 aggressive crackdown has certainly helped dismantle the network of separatist militants. But as long as separatist ideologies persist, the region remains vulnerable to political unrest.

That鈥檚 why, experts posit, Delhi has drawn a clear redline in local politics: No more separatism.聽

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 question [India鈥檚] sovereignty or try to incite people against the country,鈥 says a senior Indian security officer, who wished to remain anonymous as he was not authorized to speak to the press. 鈥淎nyone who crosses this line will have to be dealt with through law enforcement.鈥

Candidates and parties that once were sympathetic to separatism are now focusing instead on issues like improving the economy, fostering peace with neighboring Pakistan, and addressing Delhi鈥檚 mass imprisonments.

Fahad Shah
Hafiz Sikander Malik 鈥 an independent candidate backed by Jamaat-e-Islami Kashmir, a banned socioreligious organization 鈥 goes door to door with village elders, seeking votes in Bandipora constituency in north Kashmir.

Politicking from prison

Hafiz Sikander Malik, an independent candidate in northern 碍补蝉丑尘颈谤鈥檚 Bandipora district, has spent several years in prison for promoting Kashmiri independence. Now, he鈥檚 going door-to-door wearing a GPS ankle monitor, advocating for the release of fellow prisoners and trying to secure a spot in 碍补蝉丑尘颈谤鈥檚 90-member legislative assembly.聽

鈥淢ost of our supporters are victims of prison,鈥 says Mr. Malik, who is backed by a banned socioreligious organization that previously boycotted elections. 鈥淲e want these draconian laws to be revoked. We want to get youth released from prisons. This is part of our manifesto.鈥

Shopkeeper Malik Nayeem ul Hassan believes a vote for Mr. Malik is a vote against 鈥渁gainst oppression and coercion.鈥澛

He says many of Mr. Malik鈥檚 backers probably boycotted elections in the past, but times have changed. 鈥淚f we don鈥檛 join that change, then we will stay behind in society,鈥 says Mr. Hassan. 鈥淚t is the need of the hour for everyone to participate in the elections.鈥澛

Fahad Shah
Malik Nayeem ul Hassan, a shopkeeper, says he wants to vote "against oppression and coercion" in the Naidkhai area of north Kashmir's Bandipora district.

Sheikh Abdul Rashid, better known as 鈥淓ngineer Rashid,鈥 is also politicking on bail. Since his Sept. 11 release from Tihar prison, where he鈥檚 facing terror funding charges, Mr. Rashid has been campaigning on behalf of 34 assembly candidates who oppose Delhi鈥檚 crackdown.

The politician made headlines during India鈥檚 general election this spring when he won a parliament seat from prison, but his subsequent bail has sparked accusations that he has tacit support from the BJP, which benefits from a fragmented opposition. These聽allegations have sowed doubt into his base, including Mr. Bhat, the street vendor, who voted for Mr. Rashid in May.

鈥淩ashid talks about the right to self-determination, but it鈥檚 all theatrics for elections,鈥 he says.

And compared to the general election, when electing Engineer Rashid was seen as a bold statement against Mr. Modi and the BJP, Mr. Bhat says voters must now think more practically. How much can an assembly member really accomplish behind bars, or while out on bail?

When his district went to the polls on Sept. 25, Mr. Bhat cast his ballot instead for a candidate backed by 碍补蝉丑尘颈谤鈥檚 oldest party 鈥 Jammu and Kashmir National Conference 鈥 which has never allied with the BJP in regional elections, and poses the strongest threat to Delhi鈥檚 influence.

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