One reason why unauthorised maps of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) continue to get published is because the Survey of India has restricted access to the maps. While the Survey of India sells maps of all other states on nominal charges, its website restricts access to the maps of Jammu and Kashmir.
And, although RSS-affiliated Rashtriya Mukti Morcha had also invited controversy by putting up a ‘faulty’ map of the state in a hoarding at its Relief Road office in Ahmedabad, publication of an unauthorised map of Jammu and Kashmir in a booklet published by the Congress over the weekend made several BJP leaders see red.
“Is it for this that hundreds of our brave soldiers have given up their lives over the years defending our sovereignty and territorial integrity?” said Union Minister Venkaiah Naidu in Hyderabad and asked if the final solution that the Congress had in mind was to give Kashmir to Pakistan, referring to the map which showed the state as ‘Indian occupied Kashmir’.
A quick check reveals that besides the RSS and the Congress, media houses, text book publishers, NGOs, international publications as well as individuals have been guilty of the ‘offence’ which now invites imprisonment up to seven years and a fine of up to ₹100 crore.
Ironically , while Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad found himself caught on the wrong foot over the week-end, Azad himself had cornered the government in the Rajya Sabha on the wrong map of Jammu and Kashmir that was published by the RSS mouthpiece Organiser in March 2015.
But, while people continue to download maps of Jammu and Kashmir from the Internet, in the ‘map and data’ section of its website, Survey of India, the national survey and mapping organisation of the country under the Department of Science and Technology, has restricted access to the maps of Jammu and Kashmir.
While it has put up price of hard copies of many state maps besides giving free access to view and even download these maps, it has placed Jammu and Kashmir in the restricted category.
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RM Ghildiyal, section-in-charge of Map Archive and Dissemination Centre, Dehradun, said: “It’s restricted because the map is not final. It has LoC (Line of Control) and then Ladakh borders China.”
Even though Arunachal Pradesh too has a border dispute with China, he feigned ignorance as to why its state map was available for free download on Survey of India’s website. “We deal with hard copies only. Soft copies are looked after by Surveyor General of India. Usually, state maps are made available by the geo-spatial data centres of the state concerned,” he added.
Some of the major controversies involving disputed maps of Jammu and Kashmir in recent years are the following:
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