
She maybe good or bad but never indifferent: mehbooba is emphatic
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Jammu & Kashmir Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti came into her own at a press conference on Thursday. Feistiness has been Mehbooba’s chief characteristic through a political career that has
spanned more than 20 years (she won the Bijbehara seat in the state Assembly in 1996), and that feistiness was there for all to see. Home Minister Rajnath Singh, who shared the press
conference with her, tried to calm her more than once. He balanced her sharpness by being conciliatory and by reaching out. That was all to the good. But, in challenging times, putting one’s
best foot forward can sometimes mean taking on opposition squarely. There has been far too much taunting and tripping up (_gaibat_ and _taang-khichai_ in the local discourse), and too
little united effort to overcome a terrible season of violence and opposition — opposition that has stretched seamlessly from the geopolitical to the political to the local and personal.
TRYING TO EMULATE SENIOR MUFTI For the past few months since she became the chief minister, Mehbooba has tried to mould herself like her father and former chief minister, Mufti Sayeed. He
was phlegmatic, unflappable, placatory and low-key. He was never pugnacious, but he succeeded as chief minister. Nor did he take on the role of a combative opposition. Mehbooba did. In fact,
members of the household say that Mufti Sayeed often chided her for impetuosity. “_Bol aayiee? Kya jaldi thei? Thodi sabar karte_ (You spoke out? What was the rush? You must be patient,” he
would say to her — or words to that effect. However, she would still speak out with passion on issues she felt strongly about, even about arguably minor things such as ration quotas, or
electricity rates. As he tried to groom her for the chair she now occupies, he would at times ask her after one of her impetuous public statements what she would do when she had great
responsibility on her shoulders. Mehbooba has evidently been trying to exercise the caution he used to urge. While she should certainly learn caution, she must first be herself to practice
it. She is after all as different to her father as Indira Gandhi was from hers. And for all Indira’s legendary insecurities and waspishness, it is for her elegance, gumption and decisive
leadership that people remember her now. Citizens from marginalised communities remember her with particular fondness because her genuine care for them was reflected in her government’s
initiatives. IS THE CRITICISM AGAINST MEHBOOBA VALID? After Thursday’s press conference, much of the media, particularly channels that have been close to former chief minister Omar Abdullah,
panned Mehbooba for being ‘angry’, ‘irate,’ etc. Many Kashmiris across the Valley were disappointed that she did not announce a ‘political’ initiative to solve the `Kashmir issue.’ But
there were also sensible, insightful Kashmiri youth who welcomed her feisty style. While travelling across the Valley over the past few weeks, I came across many who complained that the
chief minister had become invisible. They wanted to see and hear her, to know what she had to say. Her arguments on Thursday may not please many, particularly not the cheerleaders of the
agitations that have engulfed the Valley since early July. But the thrust of what she told the press is true: The agitations have been hijacked, and a majority of Kashmiris are being coerced
into following a programme whether they want to or not. CM UNVEILS HER FEISTY SIDE It is also true that an orchestrated media campaign has presented a ‘committed’ view of what is happening
— a bias at least as strong, as the same media persons never tire of noting in the work of Western journalists. Not only have some journalists been biased, a few have written outright lies.
All of this has been calculated to not only keep the unrest alive but to fan the flames into bigger conflagrations. It is anti-national and inflammatory in intent and content. It was about
time the chief minister unveiled her characteristic feistiness. It was ironically appropriate that she did it while facing the press. Her impatience has already been expressed sometimes at
daily briefings, which are attended by top officers of security forces. She has sometimes demanded top police officers for feedback about what they have done about her orders the previous
day. BRIDGING THE DIVIDE Of course, Mehbooba is at one level paying the price for the feisty opposition role she played in the past. However, party activists argue that she played a
constructive role by assuaging the sentiments of distressed and bereaved people at the grassroots by consoling the families of those who were killed in those years. People first noticed
Mehbooba for having the guts to visit the families of those who were killed during the 1990s. She thus helped bridge the gap between the two fuzzy Kashmiri categories: Mainstream and
separatist. It was the beginning of a discourse which former prime minister AB Vajpayee labelled as _insaniyat_ (humaneness) and her father, Mufti Sayeed, took forward with what he called ‘a
healing touch’ when he became the chief minister in 2002. In fact, Mehbooba has never been at home in the corridors of power. She was reluctant last year when her father wanted to hand the
baton over to her. On more than one occasion, she refused the job. The argument that she was bargaining for funding and a free hand was probably valid by February or March, but few
eyewitnesses doubt that her refusal to take office soon after her father died on 7 January was rooted in genuine grief. She and her mother were devastated for a couple of weeks. She could
barely hold herself together for a few days. Now that she not only has the responsibility but faces an extraordinary challenge, she must put her best foot forward. And, although she might
stumble, she must be confident. While caution and maturity are called for, fear of naysayers can be the kiss of death in a troubled place like Kashmir; there will always be critics — bitter
ones, vicious ones. Even the ebullient Farooq Abdullah had gone into a shell, not talking to anyone for a couple of weeks during the autumn of 1989, when militancy was building up and he was
the chief minister. What Mehbooba now faces is arguably the biggest challenge any leader of the state has faced since that time. Abdullah did not have the support of two successive central
governments during that awful season, and the country paid a terrible price for several years. Whoever holds office now must be given as much support as possible. (_The writer is a
Kashmir-based author and journalist. He can be reached at__@david_devadas__)_ Also read: Unlike 2010, Coordination between Forces in Kashmir Augurs Well Capturing My Son Would Have Punctured
Movement: Burhan’s Father Misguided Nationalism: How the Government Lost the Plot in Kashmir Published: 26 Aug 2016, 8:03 PM IST