The Asian Age

Article 35- A pleas on J& K status in SC on Monday

- J. VENKATESAN

The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear on Monday a batch of petitions challengin­g the legal validity of Article 35- A of the Constituti­on that provides special status to the state of Jammu and Kashmir and bars people other than the original inhabitant­s of the state from acquiring immovable property in the state, getting government jobs and availing educationa­l scholarshi­ps.

A bench of Chief Justice Dipak Misra and Justice A. M. Kanwilkar will hear the petitions filed by NGO We the Citizens, advocate Ashwini Kumar Upadhyaya and others seeking a declaratio­n that Article 35- A is unconstitu­tional and should be struck down as void.

Charu Wali Khanna, a Kashmiri Pandit woman who has also filed a petition against 35- A, has contended that since she had married outside her

caste and settled outside J& K, she was not entitled to own property in the state, and even her children cannot get property. It was argued that there is gender bias in this Article and that it violates the right to equality.

Attorney- general K. K. Venugopal, appearing for the Centre, is likely to press for hearing by a five- judge Constituti­on Bench as the issue involves interpreta­tion of constituti­onal provisions. Article 35- A was inserted by way of Constituti­on ( Applicatio­n to Jammu & Kashmir) Order 1954 by the President of India exercising power under Article 370( 1)( d) of the Constituti­on of India.

The matter was raised in a public interest litigation ( PIL) in 2014 by the Delhibased We the Citizens, against the continuanc­e of J& K’s special status which, it alleged, is discrimina­tory.

The petitioner­s contended that the President could not have amended the Constituti­on by the 1954 order and it was supposed to be a temporary provision.

They contended that the J& K government, under the guise of Article 35- A and Article 370, which grants special autonomous status to the state, has been discrimina­ting against residents from other states.

State CM Raman Singh said that education and BPO hubs have been set up in the naxal- hit region

The state government has justified the provision and said that Article 35- A has become a permanent feature of the Indian Constituti­on and that the 1954- Presidenia­l Order granting special rights to permanent residents of the state has been recognised, accepted and acted upon since its enactment and cannot be challenged now.

The state government said the petitions seek to upset settled law that is accepted and complied with by all. Further, as the challenge to the Presidenti­al Order has come after more than 60 years, such a plea cannot be entertaine­d.

The petition challengin­g Article 35- A also pointed to the plight of more than 4,000 people belonging to the second, third and fourth generation of Punjabis from Gurdaspur and Amritsar who settled in the Jammu area to work as sweepers.

It raises issues related to their fundamenta­l rights, alleging that they are suffering due to denial of right to seek admission in statefunde­d higher technical educationa­l institutio­ns, denial of right to get state scholarshi­p and aid to students, denial of opportunit­y of employment in state services, public sector undertakin­gs and local bodies.

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