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Home OPINION

The Valley of Endless Narratives and Missing Governance

Dr Sanjay Parva by Dr Sanjay Parva
May 18, 2026
in OPINION
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In today’s Kashmir, politics is increasingly driven not by governance but by emotional spectacle. One week the Valley debates liquor. The next week Urdu. Then statehood. Then Darbar Move. Then another speech clip goes viral and dominates the public mood for three days. Politics has slowly transformed into a continuous cycle of outrage, reaction and perception management. Governance appears somewhere in the background while symbolism occupies center stage.

The liquor controversy exposed this reality with startling clarity. Television debates exploded overnight. Social media transformed into a battlefield of morality. Religious sentiment was invoked. Protest slogans emerged. “CM Residence Chalo” became a political performance in itself. Everyone suddenly discovered the need to protect society’s moral fabric. Yet amidst all this noise, one simple question disappeared entirely: who controls the liquor economy of Jammu & Kashmir?

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That question is uncomfortable because it moves the debate from emotion to economics.

The Bottle Is Visible, The Network Is Invisible

The real story behind Kashmir’s liquor debate is not the bottle but the business behind it. The excise system, contractor networks, licensing structures, revenue streams and silent beneficiaries remain largely untouched in public discourse. It is easier to shout slogans than examine financial ecosystems. It is easier to invoke morality than ask who profits from the trade.

This pattern is now visible across almost every major political issue in Kashmir. Narratives are carefully amplified while structural realities remain buried underneath. The louder the public outrage becomes, the quieter the real questions become. Modern politics increasingly rewards emotional visibility rather than administrative depth.

Identity Debates Replace Educational Debates

The Urdu controversy revealed the same tendency. The debate quickly became emotional. “Urdu is our identity” was countered with “Urdu was imposed.” Social media camps formed instantly. But almost nobody asked why Kashmiri youth are simultaneously losing grip over Urdu, Kashmiri and functional English at the same time. Nobody seriously discussed collapsing communication skills, declining educational standards or employability crises among educated youth.

Identity consumed the conversation while education disappeared from it.

Kashmir today suffers from a dangerous habit of reducing every issue into symbolism. The actual structural crisis hiding underneath is rarely discussed because it lacks emotional drama.

Statehood As Permanent Political Theatre

Statehood has similarly evolved into a recurring political performance. Every few weeks the subject returns with dramatic statements, Delhi meetings and emotional appeals. Statehood is undoubtedly important from a constitutional and democratic perspective. But ordinary citizens increasingly wonder what practical transformation accompanies the rhetoric.

Will water suddenly return to dry taps after statehood? Will garbage disappear from streams? Will unemployment reduce? Will drug addiction decline? Will institutions become efficient? Will private investment automatically emerge?

These are uncomfortable questions because they shift politics from symbolism to accountability. And accountability is far more difficult than emotional mobilisation.

The Governance Vacuum Nobody Wants to Discuss

The tragedy is that Kashmir is facing extraordinarily serious structural problems. Freshwater springs are dying. Urban planning is collapsing. Drug addiction is spreading silently into homes. Tourism remains seasonal and fragile. Mental health concerns are rising. Youth unemployment continues to deepen frustration. Municipal systems struggle to cope with waste management. Entire localities lack long-term developmental vision.

Yet these conversations rarely dominate public discourse because they are not theatrically attractive. A drainage masterplan cannot trend on Facebook. Groundwater mapping does not create emotional mobilisation. Solid waste management has no viral slogan. Governance is slow, technical and often boring. Outrage, however, is instant and addictive.

And therefore, politics increasingly adapts itself accordingly.

Kashmir’s New Social Media Democracy

Much of Kashmir’s politics now resembles content creation more than governance. Every statement is calibrated for social media extraction. Every controversy becomes viral material. Every protest becomes visual theatre. Public attention shifts at extraordinary speed from one emotional wave to another while long-term institutional decline quietly continues in the background.

The same society that once produced philosophers, poets, scholars and deep intellectual traditions now spends entire weeks trapped in reactive debates designed more for visibility than solutions. Politics is increasingly evaluated not by transformation but by narrative dominance — who trended, who appeared emotional, who looked resistant and who controlled the public mood.

The Biggest Bitter Truth

And perhaps that is the biggest Bitter Truth of post-2024 Kashmir.

The Valley is no longer facing merely a governance deficit. It is facing an attention deficit. Serious conversations are being buried under endless symbolic battles. There is too much outrage and too little depth. Too much performance and too little policy. Too many narratives above and too little governance below.

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Dr Sanjay Parva

Dr Sanjay Parva

Dr Sanjay Parva, who has authored ten books, doesn’t write to please. He writes because some truths, once seen, cannot be unseen. bindasparva@gmail.com

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