The Asian Age

PDP to boycott J& K local polls, but govt is firm

Gov adviser & chief secy insist polls on schedule

- YUSUF JAMEEL

Shrugging off the decision of Jammu and Kashmir’s two major parties, the National Conference and the Peoples’ Democratic Party, to stay away from the coming rural and urban bodies’ elections, the state government said Monday that the democratic exercise will be held as per schedule.

“Panchayat polls are on... ( urban) local bodies elections are on. A decision was taken in July. The voter list drafts for both these have been printed. It is already final. The delimitati­on reservatio­n of the constituen­cies has been done,” state chief secretary B. V. R. Subrahmany­am told reporters during a visit to south Kashmir.

He added: “In few days’ time formal notificati­ons will be issued. It is done by the CEO ( chief electoral officer), not us. One month after that the panchayat

◗ The PDP urged the government to review its decision of holding local elections at this juncture

elections will be held... around November 5. The CEO will notify dates for that too. We are just waiting... Within one week you will see the entire process.”

Asked about the security scenario in which the state government plans to hold these elections, former IPS officer and adviser to governor K. Vijay Kumar, who was accompanyi­ng the chief secretary, said: “That’s also the part of the overall plan and on the basis of requiremen­ts being reviewed. It will be a feasible plan based on dynamics.”

Earlier on Monday, former chief minister and PDP president Mehbooba Mufti announced the party’s decision to boycott the panchayat as well

as municipal elections at a press conference, citing the situation on the ground created by the government’s linking these polls with the Article 35A case pending before the Supreme Court, and apprehensi­on among the people.

Reading from a statement, Ms Mufti said the PDP was “watching for some time the situation with concern and that after holding discussion­s at many levels it was noted with concern that the situation created by linking the local elections with the Article 35A case pending in the Supreme Court has created serious apprehensi­ons in the minds of the people who genuinely see it as an assault on the special constituti­onal position of the state”.

She said the party felt that while the special position of the state “is a matter of survival for its people and society, the democratic system is its sustenance”. She, however, also said that any attempt “to impose any electoral exercise in the current atmosphere of fear and apprehensi­on would seriously erode the credibilit­y of the process and the institutio­ns and defeat the purpose of it”.

The PDP urged the government to review its decision of holding these elections at this juncture “against the will of the people and instead focus on confidence- buildingme­asures, so that the state is assured of the inviolabil­ity of the constituti­onal guarantees that make it a special part of the Union of India”.

PDP chief spokesman Rafi Ahmad Mir said it was a unanimous decision of the party leadership and the rank and file. “The party under the leadership of its president has taken a conscious decision to boycott these elections. This decision is in line with the will of the people and the prevailing political situation”.

Last week the NC, the state’s oldest political party, too had announced it would stay away from these elections unless and until the Centre clears its position vis- à- vis Article 35A of the Constituti­on. It also said the situation is not conducive in the state for holding these elections.

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