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Disruptions in Kashmir in the past yet to be acknowledged: Retd justice S K Kaul on need for Truth and Reconciliation Commission

He explained that the principle of such a commission is that you are not punishing anybody; you are giving balm by acknowledging what happened.

December 30, 2023 / 12:29 IST
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Justice- SK Kaul speaks of why he recommended setting up a 'truth and reconciliation' commission

Speaking to Moneycontrol about why he recommended the government form a ‘Truth and Reconciliation Commission’ in Kashmir, retired Supreme Court judge Sanjay Kishan Kaul noted that the disruptions in the Kashmir valley during the late 1980s and early 1990s are yet to be acknowledged, adding that these disruptions were caused both by state and non-state actors.

He said, “There have been no acknowledgements of why it (disruptions) happened or how it happened. When endeavours are made on this front, it is labelled as only agenda but people suffered on both sides, and somebody has to acknowledge it. The whole principle of truth and reconciliation commission is that you are not punishing anybody, you are giving balm by acknowledging what happened.”

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Kaul, who hails from Kashmir, in his judgment upholding the government’s decision to scrap Article 370, suggested setting up a “Truth and Reconciliation Commission in Jammu and Kashmir. The commission should look into the acts of violation of human rights by state and also non-state actors since the 1980s, he had said.

During the late 1980s and early 1990s, many members of the Hindu community in the valley migrated out after some members of the community were targeted following the eruption of militancy in 1989. These members, who left in a hurry owing to a threat to their lives, left behind their properties.