Shah Faesal reached out to NSA before he quit party; open to IAS return - india 
news - Hindustan TimesShah Faesal reached out to NSA before he quit party; open 
to IAS return - india news - Hindustan Times



https://m.hindustantimes.com/india-news/shah-faesal-reached-out-to-nsa-before-he-quit-party-open-to-ias-return/story-gzjuYwwztB5lNTg8tu141O.html?utm_source=Daily_Newsletter&utm_medium=HT_Email


Shah Faesal reached out to NSA before he quit party; open to IAS return
Faesal, 37, who hits the headlines in 2009, when he became the first person 
from Kashmir to top the Indian Administrative Services exam, acknowledged that 
he has been in touch with officials in New Delhi, although he declined to 
specify details.
 Faesal, 37, who hits the headlines in 2009, when he became the first person 
from Kashmir to top the Indian Administrative Services exam, acknowledged that 
he has been in touch with officials in New Delhi. (Hindustan Times/Ronjoy 
Gogoi) 
Bureaucrat-turned-politician Shah Faesal, who left the party he himself 
founded, quit only after making contact with top officials in the Union 
government. Faesal had a talk with National Security Adviser (NSA) Ajit Doval 
before informing his party colleagues in the Jammu & Kashmir People’s Movement 
(JKPM) that he was leaving, HT has learnt.

Faesal, 37, who hits the headlines in 2009, when he became the first person 
from Kashmir to top the Indian Administrative Services exam, acknowledged that 
he has been in touch with officials in New Delhi, although he declined to 
specify details.

“There has been a lot of speculation about the conversations I’m having with 
people in the government. I have been a member of IAS, and it’s nothing strange 
if I’m meeting people in the government,” he said. 

“I have to live and work here and this is perfectly normal,” he added. 

The NSA was not available for comment.

Faesal suggested that he is not opposed to rejoining the service, and there is 
talk that he could be reinstated.

Faesal, who once promised to be the voice of Kashmir’s young people has come a 
long way. His views, too, have changed. “I think we need to understand that in 
1949 national consensus was about incorporating Article 370 and the 2019 
national consensus is about scrapping it. We have to understand the mood of the 
nation and come to terms with the reality.”

Early in 2019, Faesal announced his resignation from the IAS and became a vocal 
critic of the government. Jammu & Kashmir was stripped of its special status in 
August last year, and at the time, he tweeted: “Kashmir will need a long, 
sustained non-violent political mass movement for the restoration of political 
rights. Abolition of Art 370 has finished the mainstream. Constitutionalists 
are gone. So you can either be a stooge or a separatist now. No shades of grey.”

He has now deleted all his tweets. Asked to explain the stooge-and-separatist 
comment , he said: “I was talking about the political grey zone in which 
electoral politics operated. I said that once the grey zone is over now people 
will call you stooge or separatist. [And] I said I’m neither of the two.”

He added: “I’m a proud citizen of this country who wants to make a difference 
in the lives of people. I don’t recognise these labels at all.”

In a signed article for this paper in January last year, Faesal enunciated the 
reasons he quit the IAS. He said then that Kashmir was in a crisis and that as 
an insider, he had decided to ring the alarm bell.

After being in touch with top officials in the government, Faesal now says he 
accepts the new reality. “We are face to face with a new political reality in 
Kashmir. Since August 5, the facts on the ground have changed. I want to 
articulate my understanding of the situation without the need to be politically 
correct. Kashmir has suffered a lot in the past. I don’t want to bank on the 
old illusions, take Kashmiris down a garden path, and build my career on that. 
I’m quitting with all humility and telling people that I can’t promise 
something that I can’t deliver.”

He now seems hopeful that the legislative route will provide answers. “In a 
democracy, this consensus is dynamic and we should not lose hope. The same 
Parliament has provided answers in the past and I’m sure the same Parliament 
will provide answers in the future also,” he said.

Faesal’s resignation from the IAS is still pending and he may be reinstated, 
though the timeline for that is not clear. “The rules can be tweaked to 
accommodate him,” an official said.

Faesal is not averse to returning to the bureaucratic fold. “I am not averse to 
working with the government. Public administration is my domain of expertise. 
That’s where I belong,” he said.

Officials in Delhi and Srinagar who asked not to be named said he could be 
rejoining soon, and could also be reinstated in an advisory role.

 



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