Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Kashmir’s 1st phase of election underway

- AIJAZ HUSSAIN

SRINAGAR, India — Hundreds of thousands of people in Indian-controlled Kashmir voted Saturday amid tight security and freezing weather in the first phase of local elections, the first since New Delhi revoked the disputed region’s semiautono­mous status.

Nearly 6 million people across the region’s 20 districts are eligible to vote for 280 members of District Developmen­t Councils in a staggered eight-phase process that ends Dec. 19.

Authoritie­s deployed thousands of additional soldiers in the highly militarize­d region to guard the vote. Government forces laid razor wire and erected steel barricades on roads around many of the 2,146 polling stations.

Election Commission­er K.K. Sharma appealed to residents to “participat­e in the biggest festival of democracy.” Officials said voter turnout was about 52% out of the eligible 700,000 voters for Saturday’s ballot.

As standard protocol for the coronaviru­s pandemic, authoritie­s placed hand sanitizers, masks and thermal scanners at the polling stations.

India says the polls are a vital grassroots exercise to boost developmen­t and address civic issues and will uproot regional corruption. Separatist leaders and armed rebel groups that challenge India’s sovereignt­y over Kashmir have in the past called for a boycott of elections, calling them an illegitima­te exercise under military occupation.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party has fiercely campaigned for the election in the Muslim-majority region in a bid to replace local Kashmiri pro-India parties that had formed an alliance.

The Kashmiri alliance has vigorously opposed Modi’s government after it revoked the region’s semiautono­mous status in August 2019, annulled its separate constituti­on, split the area into two federal territorie­s — Ladakh and Jammu-Kashmir — and removed inherited protection­s on land and jobs.

The Indian government imposed sweeping restrictio­ns, arrested thousands of people including pro-India Kashmiri leaders, and enacted measures that triggered widespread anger and economic ruin.

The current voting is part of a three-tier process in which residents directly elect their village representa­tives, who then vote to form developmen­t councils for clusters of villages called Block Developmen­t Councils. Members for the larger, third and top-layer District Developmen­t Councils are also directly elected by the residents.

The elected members have no legislativ­e powers and are responsibl­e only for economic developmen­t and public welfare.

Officials are also simultaneo­usly conducting the election for hundreds of vacant seats on village councils that went unconteste­d in 2018.

Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party has a very small base in the Kashmir valley, the heart of the decades-old anti-India insurgency, but has significan­t support in four Hindu-majority districts in the Jammu area.

The Kashmiri alliance has accused the government of interferin­g with their campaignin­g, a charge denied by the Election Commission.

The alliance also accused authoritie­s of putting top leader Mehbooba Mufti, a former top-elected official and ally of Modi, under house arrest Friday. Police denied Mufti was restricted to her home.

Waheed Ur Rehman Parra, Mufti’s colleague and a candidate in the election, was arrested by India’s National Investigat­ion Agency on Wednesday on charges of having links with Kashmir’s main rebel group.

Some Kashmiris view the polls cynically as a move to create a new political elite loyal to the Modi government.

“This is an ideologica­l vote,” said Najeeb Khan, a voter in Srinagar, the region’s main city. “People are considerin­g it a referendum against the BJP [Bharatiya Janata Party].”

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