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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, August 09, 2001 |
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These villagers may soon become landowners
By Shujaat Bukhari
TURTUK (LoC), AUG. 8. After a history of sufferings, the Baltis,
residents of Baltistan, may soon become the permanent owners of
the land which had been under Army occupation. The land records
concerning the region are being restructured after 20 years.
Baltistan is one of the five units of the erstwhile Jammu and
Kashmir which is torn apart like other areas of the State.
Some people chose to migrate before 1947 to Himachal Pradesh and
parts of Uttar Pradesh which now constitute Uttaranchal and
continue to live there for the last three generations.
One part is in Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK) and another in the
Leh district on this side.
With hundreds of acres being cultivated or owned by the people in
a cluster of five villages in the Turtuk area, legally they are
landless.
There is no revenue record here unlike the other areas of the
State. Since the five villages of Turtuk, Tyakshi, Chalunka,
Thang and Bogdan were part of Pakistan till 1971, their record
was maintained by the Pakistan administration in the tehsil
headquarter of Skardu. When the Line of Control was redrawn, the
people were in extreme distress and had no inkling about the care
to be taken for the land.
But none among the civil and army administration bothered to look
back at the history of sufferings. In the absence of revenue
records, the people were the biggest sufferers.
Most of the land was occupied by the Army for strategic purposes,
but the owners were not paid compensation. The State Government
has now decided to restructure the records on the basis of
witnesses to give a legal cover to a population of over 5,000
people.
The Revenue Minister, Mr. Abdul Qayoom, told The Hindu that his
department had started the process of consolidation of records.
A senior officer had visited the area and directed juniors to
demarcate the land. The permanent resident certificates, issued
to Jammu and Kashmir citizens, are also being given to people on
the basis of witnesses which otherwise should have the
authenticated record of land owned by them.
Due to acute poverty and inaccessibility of the area, people
migrated to Dehra Dun, Chakrota, Nainital and Almora which are
now in Uttaranchal and in Shimla in Himachal Pradesh.
During Partition, they were asked by the British Army to move to
Pakistan. ``They refused saying that they would like to go to
Baltistan which was by then in Pakistan,'' said an elderly
resident, adding that instead, they were kept in the Dehra Dun
camp for six months and later asked to return to their newly
settled homes.
None of them talked about their origin and even the redemarcation
of boundaries in 1971 had no attraction for them. Only a few
people returned and got jobs in the State Government. One of
them, Mr. Ghulam Haider Khan, is now an inspector in the Jammu
and Kashmir Police.
While around 50,000 Baltis have since moved to Hardas, Kargechu
and Latu in Kargil, Srinagar and a village in Bandipore, the rest
are permanently settled in other villages of Skardu, Partuk,
Kharnag, Pari, Charbat, Shiger, Goan and Morole in the Skardu
tehsil.
Gilgit and Baltistan are the areas ``illegally annexed'' by
Pakistan to its territory. There are hundreds of families on
either side of the LoC which have not met for decades together.
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