Kashmir Observer

Delimitati­on Panel Gets OneYear Extension

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NEW DELHI: The Delimitati­on Commission, a panel for redrawing the parliament­ary and Assembly constituen­cies in Jammu and Kashmir, has got a one-year extension, a move indicating that the Assembly polls in the Union Territory would not be held anytime soon.

A gazette notificati­on issued by the government on Wednesday night said the panel, headed by retired Supreme Court judge Ranjana Prakash Desai, will get one more year for completing its task in the Union Territory, which came into existence on October, 2019 after the Centre abrogated the special status of the erstwhile state in August that year and announced its reorganisa­tion.

The panel was set up last year to redraw the electoral constituen­cies of Jammu and Kashmir and four northeaste­rn states -- Assam, Manipur, Arunachal Pradesh and Nagaland. However, the one-year extension is only for Jammu and Kashmir.

The proceeding­s of the commission, which has five MPs from the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir as ex-officio members, have been boycotted by the National Conference

(NC) that has three representa­tives in the panel.

Before Parliament passed the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisa­tion Act in August 2019, the effective strength of the Jammu and Kashmir Assembly was 87, including four seats from Ladakh, which is now a separate Union Territory without a legislatur­e. The strength of the realigned Jammu and Kashmir Assembly is 107 now with 24 seats to continue to remain vacant as those fall in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir (PcK).

The NC members, while disassocia­ting themselves with the Delimitati­on Commission, had said the party has challenged the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisa­tion Act in the Supreme Court and the matter is pending.

In a letter to the chairperso­n of the commission, the NC MPs, including former Jammu and Kashmir chief minister and veteran politician Farooq Abdullah, had said, “In our view, the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisa­tion Act, 2019 is palpably unconstitu­tional and has been enacted in disregard and violation of the mandate and the spirit of the Constituti­on of India and therefore, not to be acted upon.”

“We have thrown a challenge to the constituti­onal validity of the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisa­tion Act, 2019 exercise of powers whereunder the meeting in question is proposed to be held,” the letter, also signed by two other MPs -- Hasnain Masoodi and Muhammad Akbar Lone -- had said.

According to section 60 of the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisa­tion Act 2019, “...the number of seats in the Legislativ­e Assembly of the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir shall be increased from 107 to 114....”

With 24 seats in PcK, the effective strength will go up from 83 to 90.

The elections to the Assembly of the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir will be held only after the process of delimitati­on is completed.

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