India, March 29 -- Ladakhi activist Sonam Wangchuk's recent release from detention may close an immediate confrontation but leaves a larger democratic question unresolved. Wangchuk's fast had sought constitutional protections for Ladakh's fragile ecology and political safeguards such as inclusion under the Sixth Schedule after the region's conversion into a Union Territory. The government's defence of this rested on the familiar language of national security that Ladakh is a sensitive borderland whose politics cannot be separate from the strategic pressures posed by China and Pakistan.

On paper, such caution appears logical. However, the episode reveals a deeper tension within the grammar of Indian democracy. Governments often engage dis...