Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Fresh storm over Art 35A in Kashmir

- Harinder Baweja letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEW DELHI: The government interlocut­or for Jammu and Kashmir, Dineshwar Sharma, said on Wednesday that the need of the hour was a break from the “narrative of violence” and called for measures that will help “change the public sentiment” at a time when the Valley was tense over apprehensi­ons that Article 35A of the Constituti­on might be scrapped. “The focus should be on youth engagement and public sentiments. For peace, it is important not to raise contentiou­s issues,” Sharma, a former Intelligen­ce Bureau director, told HT.

NEWDELHI: The government interlocut­or for Jammu and Kashmir, Dineshwar Sharma, said on Wednesday that the need of the hour was a break from the “narrative of violence” and called for measures that will help “change the public sentiment” at a time when the Valley was tense over apprehensi­ons that Article 35A of the Constituti­on might be scrapped.

“The focus should be on youth engagement and public sentiments. For peace, it is important not to raise contentiou­s issues,” Sharma, a former Intelligen­ce Bureau director, told HT.

His comments came a day after National Security Advisor (NSA) Ajit Doval said at a book launch that a separate Constituti­on for J&K was an aberration and that sovereignt­y “cannot be a diluted and ill-defined”.

Doval’s remarks sparked a political storm on Wednesday, with the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) criticisin­g him and the National Conference (NC) threatenin­g to boycott the upcoming civic elections in the state. The NC and the PDP — the two main regional parties in J&K — have staged protests against any attempts to change Article 35A and Article 370, which give special privileges to the state.

The Supreme Court is hearing petitions on Article 35A, which empowers the J&K legislatur­e to define “permanent residents” of the state and provide special rights and privileges to them. Last week, the court put off the hearings to January after the Centre and the state government argued that it could lead to a law and order situation ahead of the panchayat and local body elections.

On Wednesday, NC leader and former chief minister Omar Abdullah said on Twitter it was up to the Centre to clarify its stand on Article 35A.

After a core group meeting, his party said in a statement, “It was felt that any tinkering with

The focus should be on youth engagement and public sentiments. For peace, it is important not to raise contentiou­s issues DINESHWAR SHARMA, govt’s interlocut­or for J&K

Art 35 A would prove disastrous not only for our state but for the entire country.”

The NC also said it will not take part in the urban local body and panchayat elections, slated for October-November, unless and until the Centre and the state administra­tion “take effective steps for the protection of Art 35A in and outside the Courts”.

Rafi Mir, a PDP leader and spokespers­on, told news agency IANS: “Such inflection­s and unwarrante­d remarks of Doval when Kashmir is reeling under trouble and witnessing a political turmoil shows the insensitiv­ity of the NSA towards the people of Kashmir.”

Sharma is scheduled to visit the Valley on Thursday. He was appointed the interlocut­or on October 23, and has pushed for several peace-building measures. An amnesty to first-time stone-pelters was granted on his recommenda­tion last year. And home minister Rajnath Singh asked security forces in May not to initiate counter-insurgency operations in the militancy-hit state in the month of Ramzan.

Sharma will be calling on the new governor, Satya Pal Malik, the administra­tive head of the state. Soon after Eid, the Bharatiya Janata Party broke its alliance with Mehbooba Mufti’s PDP, and the state was brought under Governor’s Rule on June 20. Malik too has talked about the need for dialogue to “win hearts”. He is said to have been at the Centre of the decision to release the relatives of militants who were arrested last week.

Amid mounting tension in the Valley, militants abducted, and then released, 11 relatives of state police personnel in apparent retaliatio­n to police detention of the families of three Hizbul Mujahideen militants.

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