Kashmir leaders seek own referendum

20 Sep, 2014

A top Kashmiri freedom fighter Friday urged New Delhi to follow Britain's lead in allowing Scotland's independence referendum and let the Himalayan region hold a similar vote. The Scottish referendum in which voters rejected independence by a 55-percent majority shows "the democratic character in Britain is very much alive", veteran Kashmiri leader Syed Abdul Rehman Geelani told AFP.
"Freedom to choose is a basic right which should not be snatched from any nation as India has done in Kashmir for over six decades. It is inhuman," he said. "India should learn from Britain and Kashmir should also get its right to self-determination," Geelani added. India did not voice an official opinion about the way it wanted Scotland's referendum. Indian foreign minister Sushma Swaraj expressed horror last week in an unguarded moment at the prospect of Britain's break-up, telling reporters, "God forbid", before swiftly correcting herself and saying it was up to voters in Scotland to decide.
Indian newspapers said New Delhi had worried that a Scottish vote in favour of separation would fuel independence movements in held Kashmir and the north-east. In Azad Jammu and Kashmir, Uzair Ahmed Ghazali, a leader of Hizbul Mujahideen, also praised Britain's move to allow voters in Scotland to decide on their future. "The way Britain held the referendum proved that it is a great democratic country," Ghazali told AFP. "We will make this referendum in the UK a role model for our (Kashmiri) freedom movement," he said. Abdul Rasheed Turabi, head of the Kashmir chapter of the non-militant Jamaat-i-Islami, said, "India should not claim it is a democratic country because it is not respecting the peoples' opinion."

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