Deccan Chronicle

BJP won’t find it easy to form new J&K govt

- The writer is a journalist based in New Delhi Bharat Bhushan

It is not going to be easy for the BJP to put together a dog’s dinner of a coalition government in Jammu and Kashmir. Keeping the Legislativ­e Assembly alive suits the BJP as it cannot face fresh elections. The party would be decimated in its stronghold of Jammu if the elections were to be held immediatel­y.

The fear of elections haunts the other parties as well. The MLAs of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP), for example, know only too well that that they cannot win an election after having cohabited with the BJP. Not even perhaps in December 2020, when the term of the Assembly would normally expire.

The BJP would like to cash in on the fear of fresh elections among the political class by forming a ragtag coalition that would include defectors from the PDP or even the National Conference (NC) and the Congress.

To avoid such a scenario, Omar Abdullah of the NC has demanded the immediate dissolutio­n of the Assembly. Perhaps it is to get him to back off that suddenly a six-year-old case has been revived against his father and party president Farooq Abdullah by the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion. A chargeshee­t has been filed in a J&K Cricket Associatio­n case alleging the misappropr­iation of `43.69 crores.

Why have the BJP’s manouvres not yet borne fruit? Is it waiting for the Amarnath Yatra to end peacefully in the last week of August? However, it may not be easy for the party to put together a coalition government even after that.

The ground situation in Kashmir has deteriorat­ed. The killing of civilians by the security forces has not come down in the wake of Governor’s Rule in the state. The “cordon and search” and “area domination” operations by the security forces are being implemente­d in full force.

There is no let-up in the recruitmen­t to militant ranks either. In the month of Ramzan, during the unilateral ceasefire, 27 youngsters from the Valley had joined the ranks of militants. More recently, on the second anniversar­y of Burhan Wani’s death at the hands of the security forces, the Hizbul Mujahideen released pictures of 35 new recruits from the Valley. The latest highprofil­e youngster to join militancy is the brother of an Indian Police Service officer.

Under these circumstan­ces, it would be difficult for a sizeable (twothirds, or 18 out of 27) of the PDP MLAs to quit and join an alliance government with the BJP. They would have to face the brunt of public anger. The hostility against them would be even stronger if the BJP appointed a Hindu from Jammu as chief minister. Jitendra Singh, minister of state in the Prime Minister’s Office, is a Jammu BJP man whose name is already being floated for the job.

A Dogra CM would suit the BJP eminently, whether it is Jitendra Singh or someone else. The party had wanted this in 2015 too, but neither the NC, which was approached first, nor the PDP, agreed to work under a BJP chief minister.

Once the BJP manages to achieve that goal, lowlevel propaganda can be used to claim that Hindu Dogra rule has been reestablis­hed by the party in J&K. Such communal propaganda will not only consolidat­e its vote in Jammu but also in its constituen­cy in the rest of India in the run-up to the next general election. As it is, the party was touting its success in forming a government in a “Muslimmajo­rity” state earlier.

Fewer benefits will accrue to the BJP should a coalition government be formed under the leadership of Sajjad Lone of the Peoples’ Conference, with two MLAs in the suspended Assembly. Should the BJP offer him the job, he would have to weigh his personal ambition against his long-term political career.

Another reason why the BJP may find it difficult to woo MLAs from other parties is because the new formation could be shortlived. They would have to consider whether such a government would last if a non-BJP government came to power at the Centre in May 2019.

The Centre would also have to appoint a new governor before the BJP initiates moves to form a new government. The current governor of the state, N.N. Vohra, is unlikely to stay on beyond his present extension that he had reluctantl­y accepted to oversee the completion of the Amarnath Yatra.

The governor would play a crucial role in deciding who to appoint as chief minister. He would have to assess how much support any claimant for the chief ministersh­ip enjoys in the suspended Assembly and how much time to give him to prove his majority. Mr Vohra, a veteran bureaucrat, is unlikely to sully his reputation at the fag end of his career by wading into such a potentiall­y messy political situation.

Mehbooba Mufti’s warning that more militants would be born if her party is broken is disingenuo­us. It only indicates that she is losing hold over her legislator­s. Those addicted to living off the fat of the land rarely pick up the gun. Militancy is the result of different processes of political disempower­ment — divorced from the current state of representa­tive politics in the state.

In a bid to improve her street credibilit­y, however, Mehbooba may move even closer to the Jamaat-e-Islami. In a recent TV interview she claimed that there was nothing wrong if the Jamaat supported her party. One of the allegation­s against her two years in power has been that she packed all state institutio­ns — from educationa­l institutio­ns to the police and banking services — with Jamaat supporters.

When the PDP was first formed it had gained support in Southern Kashmir with the help of the Jamaat. Now that Mehbooba finds herself in a political crisis, she could once again woo the same forces. Should she adopt a more radical posture, it could make it harder for her party’s legislator­s to defect.

A Dogra CM would suit the BJP eminently... The party had wanted this in 2015 too, but neither the NC, which was approached first, nor the PDP, agreed to work under a BJP CM.

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