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ID128516
Title ProperSocio-economic situation in Pakistan occupied Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan
LanguageENG
AuthorBhat, Anil
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)in 1947 the combined population of Pak-occupied Kashmir (POK) and the 'Northern Areas" of Gilgit and Baltistan was 25 percent of the total population of ]&K State. Today this percentage has gone upto 33 percent of the total population of ]&K. The per decade growth rate of the population on both sides of the Line of Control (LoC) has remained the same. The steep rise in population in POK is because of the heavy in?ux of Punjabi Muslims from the plains. Today the Punjabi Muslims outnumber the Kashmiris in POK by a ratio of 5:1. Not only is 'Azad Kashmir' not Azad (free) - it hardly remains Kashmir except in name. Taking a cue from what the Chinese did in Tibet - the Pakistani Army has followed suit in POK - it has flooded the area with Punjabi Muslims to outnumber the Kashmiris in their own land. Most of the new Punjabi Muslim settlers were former soldiers of the Pakistani Army sent on a simple mission -
colonise Pakistan Occupied Kashmir, stamp out its Kashmiri identity all together, make it 'Pak' (which in Urdu means pure) by making it fully Punjabi. The grass always looks greener on the other side of the hill. It is a great tragedy that the strident propaganda of the jihadis has created a smoke screen that obfuscates the simple truth. Today we need to look across the LoC to see what is the reality. Not only is 'Azad Kashmir' no longer Kashmiri anymore in terms of demographic numbers, it never really was 'Azad' or free. In 1991, POK Prime Minister, Mumtaz Rathore was dismissed, arrested and flown by helicopter to a Pakistani prison.
`In' analytical NoteHimalayan and Central Asian Studies Vol.17, No.1; January-March 2013: p.52-60
Journal SourceHimalayan and Central Asian Studies Vol.17, No.1; January-March 2013: p.52-60
Key WordsHistory ;  History - India ;  Socio-Economic Situation ;  Pakistan ;  Pakistan Occupied Kashmir - POK ;  Gilgit-Baltistan ;  Himalayan Region ;  India ;  South Asia ;  Border Conflicts ;  Colonial States ;  Colonialism ;  Line of Control - LOC ;  Indo - Pak Relations ;  Punjabi Muslims ;  Ethnology ;  Ethnic Community