Hindustan Times (Delhi)

370 regime helped militants, separatist­s, Centre tells SC

- Ashok Bagriya

Article 370 prevented the people of

Jammu & Kashmir from receiving benefits of evolving legal systems.

THE CENTRE’S AFFIDAVIT

NEW DELHI: Defending the nullificat­ion of Article 370 of the Constituti­on, which gave special status to the state of Jammu & Kashmir, and the subsequent creation of two Union Territorie­s (J&K and Ladakh) from the state, the Centre has told the Supreme Court that the special provisions needed to be removed because they gave rise to militancy and terrorism by creating “separatist mindset among the people”.

In an affidavit filed in the Supreme Court on November 9, the Centre submitted that the government’s move would act as a catalyst that enables the region to achieve its “developmen­t potential to the fullest”, and provide people the best possible standard of living in an “atmosphere of amity and tranquilli­ty”.

“Article 370 impeded full integratio­n of the state with the rest of the country and the 370 regime helped militant and separatist elements with the support of foreign forces in sowing secessioni­st feelings among the populace of the state,” the Centre stated.

“Article 370 prevented the people of Jammu & Kashmir from receiving benefits of evolving legal systems and even the amendments and other laws of the Parliament,” it added.

The affidavit was the first comprehens­ive response by the Centre on a bunch of petitions to the top court challengin­g the decisions by the government that were cleared by Parliament on August 5 and 6.

The petitions filed by MPS from the National Conference (NC) and others allege that the Modi government’s decision to changing the status of the state of J&K “irreversib­ly” without “the concurrenc­e of the people of the state acting through their elected representa­tives [J&K Assembly]”. They argue that this amounted to “an overnight abrogation of the democratic rights and freedoms guaranteed to the people of the state of Jammu and Kashmir upon its accession.”

The petitions in SC term the Centre’s move “unconstitu­tional”, violative of fundamenta­l rights under Articles 14 and 21, and demand the quashing of the presidenti­al orders approving the nullificat­ion of Article 370 and the declaratio­n of The Jammu and Kashmir (Reorganisa­tion) Act 2019 as void. They also attack the procedure adopted by the Centre in effecting changes in Article 370, saying the governor’s concurrenc­e to alter Article 370 amounts to a constituti­onal functionar­y taking his own consent to effect a fundamenta­l structural change, without consultati­on or concurrenc­e of the persons affected by that change, or their elected representa­tives.

The Centre’s affidavit, filed in response, asserted that powers were legally exercised by the Centre and the parliament to discontinu­e Article 370, which was a temporary provision.

The Centre’s response also attacked Article 35-A, a special provision which allowed the J&K state’s legislatur­e to define “permanent residents” of the state and provide special rights and privileges to permanent residents, on the grounds that it discrimina­ted against Kashmiri women by taking away their property rights if they married non-kashmiris.“the overall economic developmen­t of the state has been hindered on account of these factors. There are no private universiti­es in the state, the growth potential of the state remains largely untapped despite large monetary support from government of India.”

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