dailyO
Politics

Kartarpur Sahib gurdwara: How Navjot Singh Sidhu is playing into Pakistan’s hands

Advertisement
Sushant Sareen
Sushant SareenSep 21, 2018 | 13:22

Kartarpur Sahib gurdwara: How Navjot Singh Sidhu is playing into Pakistan’s hands

Pakistan is trying to revive the Khalistan movement by raking up emotional issues, and people like Sidhu are gladly obliging.

Pakistan has always encouraged and nurtured a legion of “useful idiots” in India, who, wittingly or unwittingly, are ever ready to play the Pakistani game and push the Pakistani agenda, even if it runs counter to Indian policy and/or national interest.

The latest entry in this list is former cricketer and currently a minister in the Punjab government, Navjot Singh Sidhu.

Advertisement

In his attempt to raise his stock among Sikh voters, Sidhu is playing with important international issues.
In his attempt to raise his stock among Sikh voters, Sidhu is playing with important international issues. (Photo: PTI/file)

Known more for his grating garrulity — which is reflected in his penchant for being a purveyor of bad poetry and worse prose — Sidhu might be good for a comedy show, but is an embarrassment when it comes to sensitive foreign policy issues like India-Pakistan relations.

Sinister plan

But Sidhu decided to undertake his own private foreign policy initiative with Pakistan, which was aimed less at actually improving ties between the two countries and more at burnishing his credentials among the Sikh electorate in Punjab.

In other words, his foreign policy initiative was a political enterprise to enhance his vote-bank, by raising an emotional issue like unfettered access to Sikh pilgrims to Gurdwara Darbar Sahib in Kartarpur, Pakistan.

In the process, Sidhu either didn’t understand or didn’t care how he was being used and exploited to service Pakistan’s sinister plan of re-igniting the flames of terrorism in Punjab, by reviving the Khalistan movement.

How shallow Sidhu is can be made out from the fact that he quotes a tweet and a video interview of the Pakistan information minister Fawad Chaudhary, who claimed that “Pakistan was willing to open the Kartarpur corridor and was waiting for India’s formal affirmation”.

Advertisement

What is the worth of this non-entity of an information minister, who makes U-turns on his government’s policy on any number of issues on a daily, if not hourly, basis? Is Sidhu so ignorant that he doesn’t know that on issues like Kartarpur and Khalistan, it is not some insignificant minister, or indeed, even the Prime Minister of Pakistan who calls the shots, but the guys sitting in Rawalpindi and hatching plots against India?

In any case, is the government of India to react to twitter messages on issues of high policy? Sidhu has claimed that Pakistan was waiting for India to respond to its offer, but the reality is that there was no formal offer or official communication from Pakistan on the issue of the ‘corridor’.

Sidhu first created controversy in Pakistan Army Chief Qamar Javed Bajwa
Sidhu first created controversy by hugging Pakistan Army Chief Qamar Javed Bajwa. (Photo: Twitter)

What was there was a bait thrown, which Sidhu gladly swallowed, to try and open a political dialogue through the back door.

He didn’t really care that by doing the Pakistani bidding, he was undermining the position of the Indian government, which has emphatically stated that there can be no political engagement with Pakistan unless Pakistan takes demonstrable action against terrorists based in that country, and stops the export of terrorism to India.

Advertisement

The Pakistanis had earlier tried this tack with the Afghans, while negotiating the Afghan Transit Trade agreement. To a demand of the Afghans to allow Indian goods to move overland from Wagah, the Pakistanis, trying to be too clever by half, told the Afghans to ask the Indians to talk to them about opening this route.

Unlike Sidhu who adopted a cavalier and careless attitude to his own country’s sensitivities, the Afghans refused to fall for the Pakistani game plan, and told their Pakistani interlocutors to buzz off.

Corridor gambit

The Kartarpur corridor gambit has been tried by the Pakistanis earlier too. In 1999-2000, when the Pakistanis were trying very hard to revive the Khalistan movement, they set up the Pakistan Gurdwara Prabhandak Committee and appoint one of the most rabid, bigoted, prejudiced and jihadist generals, former ISI chief Javed Nasir, as its chairman.

And guess who appointed him? The man the useful idiots in India thought was the best bet for normalising relations — Nawaz Sharif.

Javed Nasir continued to stay the PGPC chief even after Nawaz was ousted in a coup in October 1999. In 2000, he announced that the regime of Gen Pervez Musharraf had “given the green signal for constructing a 1.5-km corridor along the India-Pakistan border connecting Gurdwara Kartarpur Sahib, as proposed by the Auqaf Board, where Sikh devotees will be able to visit without a passport/ visa”.

Only the most purblind would take this offer on face value and think that this was out of the goodness of the heart of the Pakistani ‘deep state’.

Khalistan movement

The proposal at that time didn’t take off, perhaps because the Pakistanis didn’t find a Sidhu to push their agenda.

This is not the first time that Pakistan has tried fake outreach attempts over Kartarpur Sahib gurdwara.
This is not the first time that Pakistan has tried fake outreach attempts over Kartarpur Sahib gurdwara. (Photo: YouTube)

In 2010, under the PPP government, the Pakistanis once again announced that they were ready for talks with India for establishment of a corridor and providing safe passage to Indian Sikh devotees to visit Gurdwara Kartarpur Sahib.

Then in 2013, the Sharif government once again claimed that it had proposed to India to build a bridge to connect the Gurdwara in Kartarpur with the Dera Baba Nanak Gurdwara. But no one ever heard what happened to this proposal.

Therefore, it is nothing short of ludicrous for Sidhu to act as though he was on the cusp of making a major breakthrough because of his friendship with the new prime minister of Pakistan, Imran Khan.

At a time when the Pakistanis are working double-time to revive the Khalistan movement, what with things like Referendum 2020, the political class in Punjab needs to tread with extreme care on emotional, religious issues, and not play the Pakistani game like Sidhu has done.

But rather than step back from this needless controversy, another of his party colleagues, Pratap Singh Bajwa, has gone a step further and proposed an exchange of territory to get the Kartarpur Gurdwara.

Given the dubious record of the Congress in setting fire to Punjab in the 1980s for political gains, questions naturally arise on whether it is once again fishing in troubled waters.

While Chief Minister Amarinder Singh has distanced himself from Sidhu’s shenanigans, perhaps the time has come for the Congress high command to also disavow him.

(Courtesy of Mail Today

 

Last updated: September 21, 2018 | 14:24
IN THIS STORY
Please log in
I agree with DailyO's privacy policy