The Asian Age

Reasons for SC to reject petition on Article 35- A

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The Supreme Court has postponed the hearing of the petition on Article 35- A, under which the J& K legislatur­e is empowered to decide who “permanent residents” of the state are, to January 2019 on the plea of the Centre as well as the J& K government that the issue is sensitive in Kashmir and its hearing could cause turmoil and violence at a time when preparatio­ns for the panchayat poll in the state ( slated for October- December this year) are going on.

In practical terms, the Centre and the state government, since J& K is under central rule, are the same at the moment. In effect, the top court has deferred to the logic of the ruling dispensati­on. Two, even at a later date, the sensitivit­y of the issue does not go away. The Centre had sought postponeme­nt of the case in October 2017 as well.

If the hearing of the case — only to determine whether it should be given over to a constituti­onal bench to decide — is moved to next year when the political preparatio­n for the next Lok Sabha election will be in full flow, the ruling BJP could be given a handle to exploit the issue politicall­y to claim before its core constituen­cy that the government is serious about taking steps to end J& K’s special status even if Article 370 is to be tolerated. The reason is that it is Article 35- A which provides that land and property can be held in the state only by its “permanent residents”, and state government employment and state educationa­l scholarshi­ps can only be availed of by the same category of persons. These were crucial questions at the time of accession of J& K to India. This particular article — a carryover from the Maharaja’s days — was inserted into the Constituti­on through a Presidenti­al Order in 1954, which flows from the authority given to the President under Article 370 ( i) ( d) of the Constituti­on.

Several presidenti­al orders have been passed but it is only Article 35- A that has been challenged by a RSS- oriented NGO. This itself should alert the top court to the political design of the petitioner­s. Besides, the power of the President flowing from Article 370 ( i) ( d) to issue presidenti­al orders has been challenged twice. On both occasions the petitions were dismissed by constituti­on benches. This aspect continues to be overlooked by the apex court for reasons that are unclear.

Challenge in the Supreme Court to Article 35- A had caused complete shutdown in the Kashmir Valley on five days — not all consecutiv­e — last month. This is because all sections of political opinion, separatist­s and mainline parties, are united in thinking that this provision forms an integral part of the special compact under which J& K, then a princely state bordering Pakistan, acceded to India after Independen­ce. Seeking its removal runs the constituti­onal and political risk of creating circumstan­ces to question that accession. It is not merely a point of law under debate here. Ideally, the top court should dismiss the petitions in light of the ruling of the constituti­on bench on earlier occasions.

Several presidenti­al orders have been passed but it is only Article 35- A that has been challenged by a RSS- oriented NGO. This itself should alert the top court to the political design of the petitioner­s.

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