The Asian Age

Disquiet in J&K on jobs for outsiders

-

The Centre’s decision announced on Tuesday to permit people from all over India to apply for government employment in all categories except the lowest non-gazetted (Level-IV) in the recently created Union territory of Jammu and Kashmir is apt to be unpopular in the extreme not only in the predominan­tly Muslim region of the Kashmir Valley but also in Hindu-dominated Jammu, where the ruling BJP has electorall­y done well in recent years.

After Independen­ce, when other princely states within India’s borders joined the newly independen­t country after Partition, the RSS and its affiliates active in the Jammu area did not seek to persuade the ruler of the then princely state of J&K to attach his domains to India. These outfits had close links with the Dogra royal family and waited on the ruler to make his decision — to even remain independen­t if he could. He could not as events showed, and joined the Union of India on certain conditions embodied in Article 370 of the Constituti­on. But with the end of princely rule and the rise of Sheikh Abdullah, the Hindutva outfits insisted on the scrapping of Article 370.

That process, after an ideologica­l and political campaign of decades, was brought to fruition by the Narendra Modi government on August 5 last year. What has transpired as a consequenc­e of the Centre’s order notified on April 1 is the ending of the category of “permanent subject” of the Maharaja’s period, and its substituti­on with the category of “domicile” in the current UT of J&K, to which the former state of J&K was reduced last August through a questionab­le procedure that is under challenge in the Supreme Court.

The definition of “domicile” leaves the door wide open for people from other parts of the country — for instance, children who have done their schooling for seven years in J&K and have taken the Class 10 or 12 examinatio­n from there qualify. They will be eligible in time to apply for any government job in the UT, including for the lowest non-gazetted posts, such as police constable and lower division clerk.

The people of the Jammu region, who had principall­y gone along with the BJP’s agenda of ending J&K’s constituti­onal autonomy to express their resentment toward the Centre for its perceived partiality to the Valley, appear to have developed doubts since August last year, with realisatio­n dawning that the end of autonomy for the Valley would also mean the end of their own privileged status which applied to all of J&K. The thinking taking shape now is that the employment-related new order may just be the preview of things to come. The apprehensi­on is that those granted the “domicile” status will be able to buy property. Since it is widely believed that not many outsiders would be ready to invest in property in the Kashmir valley on account of the political troubles and violence in that part of the UT, the property-seekers from other states are likely to eye the Jammu region.

All political parties in J&K, including the Apni Party recently created under the BJP’s aegis, have expressed themselves strongly against the new order. The Jammu BJP too is thought to be apprehensi­ve.

The people of the Jammu region, who had principall­y gone along with the BJP’s agenda of ending J&K’s constituti­onal autonomy to express their resentment toward the Centre for its perceived partiality to the Valley, appear to have developed doubts...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India