Thousands of Pandit families are putting up here in the winter capital of Jammu and Kashmir, after their mass migration from the valley following outbreak of militancy in early 1990 which forced them out of their homeland.
Their hopes for a return to Kashmir was rekindled after formation of PDP-BJP government in March 2015 as the two parties had talked about "protecting and fostering ethnic and religious diversity by ensuring the return of Kashmiri Pandits with dignity based on their rights as state subjects and reintegrating as well as absorbing them in the Kashmiri milieu".
"The situation is not ideal right now for our return to the valley as even the policemen are unsafe. They are being killed and their weapons looted. The present (Central) government is pursuing the same policy (on Kashmir) as that of Congress. Those who don't know the ABCD of Kashmir are being consulted (on Kashmir) while we, the real stakeholders, are being ignored," he said.
"There was no move on part of the government to invite the Pandits, organise round table conferences, or reach out to the community to discuss and deliberate the issue of their return," he said.
However, he said his organisation would continue to fight for their return to Kashmir.
"How can we return to the valley in such a situation. A police officer is lynched, al-Qaeda is making inroads, dreaded militants are changing loyalties and openly threatening even the separatists. This situation coupled with unrest is so scary," All Party Migrant Coordination Committee (APMCC) president Vinod Pandit said.
"Initially, they said Kashmir is incomplete without Pandits but later said they will not allow separate colonies for us in the valley. It shows that they are not sincere," said Khosa, who unsuccessfully contested Lok Sabha elections from the valley in 2004.
He said the government dropped the proposal for separate colonies due to pressure from the separatist forces.
"Instead of redoubling efforts, the government gave up and shelved the plan," he said.
"Where will they go if these 70 per cent choose to return?" he asked, adding "the desire to return and live there was inherent and embedded in each and every Kashmiri Pandit".
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