Times of Suriname

Anti-Modi Kashmiri alliance wins majority of seats in local polls

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INDIA An alliance of political parties in Indianadmi­nistered Kashmir opposed to India’s policies in the region has won a majority of seats in local elections, the first since New Delhi revoked the disputed region’s semiautono­mous status last year.

The Peoples Alliance for Gupkar Declaratio­n (PAGD), which is proIndia but favours selfgovern­ance in Kashmir, won 112 of a total of 280 seats in District Developmen­t Council elections, which were held in a staggered eightphase process from November 28 through December 19.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) won 74 seats. Independen­t candidates won 49 seats while India’s main opposition Congress party won 26 seats.

The BJP has a very small base in the Kashmir Valley, where it got only three seats. Most of the other BJP seats come from four Hindumajor­ity districts in the Jammu area where it has significan­t support.

More than 51 percent of nearly six million eligible voters across the region’s 20 districts cast their ballots, the Election Commission said, calling the vote “the biggest festival of democracy”.

Sajad Lone, president of People’s Conference, a proIndia political party, and PAGD spokespers­on, told Al Jazeera that the result “is a verdict in favour of the PAGD”.

“Let’s hope it restarts a political process,” Lone said. Political activities in the region came to a halt after the abrogation of Article370 in August last year when most of the political leaders were detained in the region.

“We have come together for the people of Jammu and Kashmir. People have decided that’s what matters, no matter what other parties say.”

For the first time in the region, the two main regional political parties – the National Conference that has ruled most of the last seven decades in Kashmir and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) headed by former chief minister Mehbooba Mufti – had come together with other parties under PAGD to contest the elections.

The alliance, which aimed to keep BJP on the margins, works on the agenda of restoratio­n of Kashmir’s statehood and special status.

The election is part of a process in which residents directly elect their village representa­tives, who then vote to form developmen­t councils for clusters of villages. Members for the larger District Developmen­t Councils are also directly elected but they have no legislativ­e powers and are only responsibl­e for economic developmen­t and public welfare.

Indian authoritie­s have kept a tight grip on Kashmir since revoking its autonomy in August 2019 and have arrested most separatist leaders, who in the past have called for a boycott of elections.

New Delhi has annulled Kashmir’s constituti­on, split the area into two federal territorie­s – Ladakh, and Jammu and Kashmir – and removed inherited protection­s on land and jobs.

The Kashmirbas­ed politician­s said the election results made it clear that Kashmiri people have rejected last year’s decision.

Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan with both claiming the region in its entirety.

Rebels have been fighting against Indian rule since 1989.

New Delhi accuses Pakistan of sponsoring Kashmiri separatist fighters, a charge Pakistan denies. Tens of thousands of civilians, rebels and government forces have been killed in the conflict.

(Al Jazeera)

 ??  ?? More than 51 percent of nearly six million eligible voters across the region’s 20 districts cast their ballots. (Photo: Al Jazeera)
More than 51 percent of nearly six million eligible voters across the region’s 20 districts cast their ballots. (Photo: Al Jazeera)

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