The Asian Age

Centre refuses to commit on J&K special status issue

Larger Bench must decide issue: Govt

- J. VENKATESAN NEW DELHI, JULY 17

The Centre on Monday refused to commit itself in the Supreme Court on continuing the special status to Jammu and Kashmir as provided in the Constituti­on and said being purely a legal issue, it should be decided by a larger bench of the apex court.

Attorney-General K.K. Venugopal told a bench of Chief Justice J.S. Khehar and Justice D.Y. Chandrachu­d that the matter raised in a PIL in 2014 by a Delhi-based NGO We the Citizens, against the continuanc­e of the special status was a legal issue and therefore the Centre was not filing any reply to the notice issued in 2014.

Senior counsel K.N. Bhat, appearing for the petitioner said the Centre should take a stand one way or the other as one of the issues raised in the PIL was to extend the fundamenta­l rights chapter in the Indian Constituti­on to Jammu and Kashmir

The petitioner contended that the J&K government has been discrimina­ting against non-residents

also. The PIL said a combined reading of Article 3 & 4 would show that the state of Jammu & Kashmir is integral part of union of states and the laws made under Article 2, 3 & 4 shall be applicable on the state of Jammu & Kashmir also.

The attorney-general, however, said it was a “very sensitive” matter and this would require a “larger debate”. The twojudge bench of the CJI then referred the case to a three-judge bench, saying the matter could come up after six weeks.

The PIL has sought Article 35A in the Constituti­on to be declared unconstitu­tional, contending that the President could not have amended the Constituti­on by the 1954-order and it was supposed to be a temporary provision. Challengin­g the addition of new

Article 35 A by way of Constituti­on (Applicatio­n to Jammu & Kashmir) Order 1954 by the President of India exercising power under Article 370 (1) (d) of the Constituti­on of India. A reading of Article 370 of the Constituti­on of India would show that there IS no power conferred on the President of India to amend the (Laws made by the J&K government under Article 35A bars all the Indians— other than the original inhabitant­s of the state—from acquiring immovable property anywhere in J&K, obtaining jobs under the J&K Government, settling in the state and availing the state-sponsored scholarshi­p schemes.)

The petitioner contended that the J&K government, under the guise of Article 35A and Article 370, which grants special autonomous status to the state, has been discrimina­ting against non-residents.

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