NEW DELHI: National Conference
president Omar Abdullah has ruled out
Azadi
as a solution to the Kashmir
problem and said the recent street protests in Valley were
spontaneous.
"ISI and Pakistan had no role in it," he said in an
interview with a private TV channel.
"What happened was a
spontaneous eruption arising out of the fear that the economic blockade brought
into people's minds. Let's not forget, even in the worst of times never was
there an effort to cut off Kashmir economically from the rest of the country,"
he said and added that it sparked off the reaction. "The protests are an
upheaval of people's pent up simmering anger," he said.
Omar said
Azadi
wasn't in the Kashmiris'
interest. "It's not a viable alternative to suggest
Azadi
or even accession to Pakistan,"
he said. "I believe you can give Kashmir independence but you cannot give it
freedom under the circumstances that prevail within the subcontinent. Even if
India and Pakistan were somehow to decide to give the state independence, it
will never be really free."
He said Kashmiris continue to remain
alienated. "Children from good English missionary schools are out on top of the
buses screaming:
Hum kya chahte hain,
azadi
, Kashmir
banega
Pakistan.
What more do you want to see; I think that is an indication of the alienation,"
he said.
Speaking about the wider Kashmir problem, Omar said Kashmir
needed political handling and not economic reconstruction packages and
confidence building measures.