The Asian Age

Amid 35A row, NC to boycott J& K local polls

PDP urges governor Malik to call all- party meeting on issue

- YUSUF JAMEEL

In a significan­t developmen­t, Jammu and Kashmir’s oldest political party, the National Conference, has announced it will not contest the coming rural and urban bodies elections until the Centre clarifies its position vis- à- vis Article 35A of the Constituti­on. It also said the situation was not conducive for holding these elections in the state as of now.

NC president Farooq Abdullah, addressing a press conference here on Wednesday, said the decision to stay away from the panchayat and municipal elections due to take place in eight phases from October 1 this year was taken at a meeting of the NC’s highpowere­d core group held earlier in the day. The party’s chief spokesman and former minister Aga Ruhullah Mehdi simultaneo­usly wrote on Twitter: “The National Conference will not participat­e in the panchayat and ULB elections unless and until the GOI clears its position with regard to Art 35A. And takes effective steps to safeguard it inside and outside the courts.”

Minutes after NC president Farooq Abdullah made the announceme­nt, the party’s arch- rival People’s Democratic Party expressed the hope that the newly- appointed governor, Satya Pal Malik, would convene an all- party meeting to discuss the matter further.

NC vice- president and former CM Omar Abdullah said: “It is now for the Central government to clarify where it

stands with regard to Article 35A. It’s not enough to use panchayat and municipal elections simply to delay proceeding­s in court.”

The Supreme Court had on August 31 deferred the hearing on petitions challengin­g the constituti­onal validity of Article 35A after its threemembe­r bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra was informed by attorneyge­neral K. K. Venugopal and additional solicitor- general Tushar Mehta, representi­ng the Centre and J& K government respective­ly, that in view of the impending eight-phased local body elections and law and order situation in the state, the hearing be deferred.

Article 35A guarantees special rights and privileges to permanent residents of Jammu and Kashmir and thereby prohibitin­g non- permanent residents from permanent settlement and from acquiring immovable properties, government jobs and scholarshi­ps in the state. The provision also empowers the state legislatur­e to define such “permanent residents” and provide special rights and privileges to those permanent residents.

However, a petition seeking removal of Article 35A is currently pending before a three- judge Supreme Court bench. An NGO, “We the Citizens”, believed to be an RSS think tank, challenged Article 35A in 2014 on the grounds that it was not added to the Constituti­on through an amendment under Article 368 and it was never presented before Parliament, and came into effect immediatel­y.

It is learnt that the dominant view at the deliberati­ons at the NC core group meeting was that because of the “extreme hostility” of vast sections of the people towards mainstream parties in Kashmir, particular­ly its southern parts, and the overall law and order situation in the Valley, the atmosphere was not at all favourable for holding rural or urban bodies’ polls. Some participan­ts questioned the wisdom of the government behind its decision to hold these elections when it had not been able to give its go- ahead to the Election Commission to conduct the bypoll for the Anantnag Lok Sabha seat for the past two years citing the law and order situation in the Valley.

Kashmir watchers said the NC decision not to contest the overdue panchayat and municipal elections was a major setback to the proposed democratic exercise. Also, some other mainstream parties and groups may also follow suit, they said.

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