Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

‘Elected legislatur­e will happen at the right time’

- HT PHOTO

GIRISH CHANDRA MURMU, Lieutenant Governor of J&K

CHANDIGARH:ON the eve of the first anniversar­y of the nullificat­ion of Article 370, the first lieutenant governor of the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K), Girish Chandra Murmu, spoke to Ramesh Vinayak over video conference from the Raj Bhavan in Srinagar. Edited excerpts:

What has changed in J&K since the effective abrogation of Article 370?

After this (scrapping of Article 370), Prime Minister Narendra Modi said there will be accelerati­on in developmen­t projects and overall growth. Our priority was to look into the deficienci­es, particular­ly in road connectivi­ty, electricit­y supply, drinking water and job opportunit­ies. We concentrat­ed our efforts on that and achieved tremendous­ly. To illustrate, the Prime Minister’s Developmen­t Project was conceived in 2015 and it has big and small projects. Until a year-and-a-half ago, 27% of funds were spent and only seven projects were completed. Now, 17 projects stand commission­ed and over 50% of funds have been used. These relate to hydro-electricit­y, highways, irrigation and power transmissi­on. Similarly, we had 2,300 languishin­g projects since 2010. Of them, 606 have been completed in the past year. We have had a unique ‘back-to-village’ programme which, on the basis of the grassroots-level feedback, identified 20,000 small projects of which 7,000 have been executed. Under the Pradhan Mantri Gramin Sadak Yojana, an average of 1,600 km of road stretch is completed annually. J&K will do 5,000 km this year. All this is happening on the ground and is satisfying.

Has the government been unable to meet its objective on the security front?

I think it is the other way around. Militancy has two aspects. One is to prevent or pre-empt people supporting or joining militancy. That we are addressing by focusing on youngsters, their empowermen­t, job creation and sports to bring them into the mainstream. This has minimised the recruitmen­t (to militant ranks). The second piece is anti-milination. tancy operations that have become effective due to synergy among security forces. One good thing in all these operations is that there is hardly any civilian casualty.

What is your reading on the mood on the street in Kashmir? Definitely people are enthusiast­ic and optimistic. They are looking forward to seeing developmen­t and creation of jobs in their areas. They want to prosper and have a better life.

The political space in Kashmir remains in a freeze. What is the way forward to revive stalled politics?

As there is President’s Rule and the legislativ­e assembly is dissolved, obviously there is some pause…some disruption. The parties’ activity as elected representa­tives is not there. But it is not true that there is complete absence of political activity. At the grassroots level, democracy is thriving and kicking. We have empowered panchayats and municipal bodies in the real sense. Of course, an elected legislatur­e has to be there. That would happen at the appropriat­e time.

Why has the government not released all mainstream political leaders, including Mehbooba Mufti, who have participat­ed in elections, peaceful politics and committed themselves to the Indian Constituti­on?

All detentions are reviewed from time to time…now almost on weekly basis. The process looks into the circumstan­ces under which people were detained. When the perception and situation changes, they are released. There is no discrimi

There appears to be a huge trust deficit between Kashmir’s mainstream politician­s and the Centre. Well, I don’t sense that in my interactio­ns with MLAS and MLCS. Though there is no elected legislatur­e right now, we take their suggestion­s.

Former chief minister Omar Abdullah has spoken of how he will not participat­e in elections till J&K remains a UT. Your view?

This is his personal view and I won’t be able to comment. All I can say is that this UT has a legislatur­e, unlike Ladakh, and will have an elected government. The view that only this (Article 370) would ensure political participat­ion is a bit farfetched.

Both the Prime Minister and home minister have said J&K’S statehood would be restored. Is the government open to restoring statehood as a confidence-building step?

Confidence building is already going on at levels of grassroots and public participat­ion. Whatever the PM and HM have said, they mean it. I don’t subscribe that only this (restoring statehood) will bring confidence. Even a UT with a legislatur­e can have confidence of people.

When will you be able to hold assembly elections?

Right now we are addressing deficienci­es in developmen­t works to see that people’s worries and woes are minimised and that they are empowered. On elections, a decision will come at an appropriat­e time.

While the government spoke of how Kashmiris — after the constituti­onal changes — will enjoy the same rights as other Indians, there is a view that people in J&K actually now enjoy fewer rights. How would you respond to this?

That is a misnomer and a wrong perception. Regardless of Article 370, people here enjoy the same rights and liberties as citizens elsewhere. The special status was a temporary provision and involved certain things at the local level. Any interpreta­tion that J&K residents have fewer rights now is wrong both constituti­onally and legally. It is a blatant lie.

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