
Bilal Bhat
The return of the Kashmiri Pandits—a community displaced, dispersed, and emotionally scarred for over three decades—has once again found itself at the centre of national debate as Parliament lists the Kashmiri Pandits (Recourse, Restitution, Rehabilitation and Resettlement) Bill, 2022, reintroduced by Rajya Sabha MP and senior advocate Vivek K. Tankha. For a community that has lived 36 years in exile, this legislation has resurrected a fragile yet powerful hope that justice, long delayed, may no longer be denied.
The petitioner behind one of the community’s sustained legal campaigns encapsulated this sentiment in a brief but loaded remark: “I have been waiting for this from the last 36 years… all migrants should get closure of this exile.” For thousands who left their homes in 1990, the bill is not just a legal instrument—it is a possible homecoming.
The proposed law seeks to give the rehabilitation process the statutory weight it has lacked for decades. Drawing on extensive consultations including the Global Kashmiri Pandits Diaspora Unified Declaration, the bill envisions declaring Kashmiri Pandits as victims of genocide, granting them the status of Internally Displaced Persons, and mandating a White Paper as well as a Special Inquiry Commission with prosecutorial powers into the events that forced the exodus.
Its provisions span political empowerment, economic rebuilding, cultural restoration, property restitution and a new security framework. It proposes reservation of legislative seats, creation of 10,000 exclusive government jobs for migrants, interest-free loans, revival of over 500 temples, eviction of encroachers from abandoned properties, and a three-month deadline for complete property restitution through a dedicated Custodian Committee. Monthly relief allowances, construction grants, arms licenses and recruitment of 3,000 security personnel from the community also form core elements of the bill.
In a rare structural shift, the legislation mandates community-driven oversight through a 21-member Advisory Committee representing the global diaspora alongside local stakeholders. MP Tankha, calling for bipartisan support, wrote that this initiative is rooted in “constitutional morality, human dignity, and natural justice.”
The bill has also found resonance in Kashmir’s political circles. Dr. Sandeep Mawa, Chairman of the United People’s Party said i have been waiting for this bill from the past 36 years, describing the exile as “a bleeding wound on the conscience of the nation,” adding that Tankha’s bill is the first serious legislative attempt to provide “closure, justice, and the restoration of Kashmiriyat in its truest, inclusive sense..” He said the community cannot be expected to live in exile indefinitely, and that “every migrant deserves this closure.”
But the road ahead is clouded with uncertainty. The bill has previously been introduced twice—in 2022 and again in 2024—yet remains in limbo. Its provisions around property, reservation, and security are likely to trigger political resistance, especially considering the financial and administrative overhaul it demands. Analysts note that while the moral argument is overwhelming, the political appetite for such a historic shift remains untested.
Amid these questions, the bill closes with the words of Kashmiri poet Dinanath Kaul ‘Nadim,’ a reminder of what is truly at stake:
“Son watan, gulzar Shalimar hyuv… my homeland, your homeland, our beloved homeland.”
For over 600,000 displaced Kashmiri Pandits, the bill is a mirror of hope—fragile, uncertain, but deeply cherished. Whether Parliament chooses to transform this hope into history, or let it fade into yet another cycle of unfulfilled promises, will decide if the exiled will finally walk back to the land they still call home.
