The recent review chaired by the Chief Secretary of Jammu and Kashmir on the status of Prime Minister’s Package Employees is a moment that demands reflection, resolve, and realignment. It brings renewed attention to a community whose return to the Valley was not just a logistical shift, but a leap of faith rooted in history, identity and hope.
These employees, many born and raised in exile, did not come back merely for government jobs. They returned to reconnect with a homeland that once turned unfamiliar. PM Package was envisioned as a bridge between displacement and dignified reintegration, offering employment, housing, and a pathway to healing. But over the time, that bridge has been weakened by delays, neglect and a lack of sustained institutional support.
The directive to enforce the 2022 Administrative Council decision on career progression is both timely and necessary. For years, PM package employees have faced professional stagnation, with departmental promotion committees either delayed or defunct. The call for department-wise compliance and identification of pending cases is a step toward restoring fairness and morale. These employees have served in remote, high-risk zones, often under difficult conditions. Their perseverance deserves more than symbolic recognition; it demands structural justice.
Equally urgent is the attention given to the Rehabilitation Assistance Scheme (RAS) for families of deceased employees. These are not just files awaiting clearance; they are grieving families awaiting closure. The loss of a loved one in service to the state must never be met with bureaucratic silence. Swift and compassionate resolution of these cases is not just an administrative duty; it is a moral obligation.
Yet, while the review offers hope, it also lays bare the distance yet to be covered. Many PM Package Employees continue to live in transit accommodations, separated from their families, under the shadow of security threats. Their children grow up in uncertainty, their futures tethered to a system that often forgets its own promises. The government must go beyond reviews and directives. It must institutionalize accountability, ensure regular monitoring, and create grievance redressal mechanisms that are transparent, responsive, and time-bound.
This is not merely about one cadre of employees; it is about the credibility of a policy that was meant to symbolize return, reconciliation, and renewal. If those who returned in good faith are left disillusioned, what message does that send to others still waiting in exile? The success of the PM Package cannot be measured in numbers alone. It must be measured in trust, in dignity and in the state’s ability to uphold its word.
The review must now become a catalyst for action. The concerned departments must pursue progress with urgency and empathy. The government has an opportunity, not just to correct course but to reaffirm its commitment to justice, inclusion, and healing.
PM package employees are not asking for special treatment. They are asking for what was promised: timely promotions, secure living conditions, and a future they can believe in. Delivering on these fronts is not just a policy obligation; it is a test of governance, of compassion and of the will to turn rehabilitation from rhetoric into reality.
Let this not be another moment that fades into the files. Let it be the beginning of a renewed promise; one that honours the courage of return with the dignity of action.
