Orders local polls by Sept 30; Modi hails verdict; Pakistan rejects ruling
World News Desk: India’s Supreme Court yesterday upheld a 2019 decision by the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to revoke special status for the state of Jammu and Kashmir and set a deadline of September 30 next year for local polls to be held.
India’s only Muslim-majority region, Jammu and Kashmir has been at the heart of more than 75 years of animosity with neighbouring Pakistan since the birth of the two nations in 1947 at independence from colonial rule by Britain.
The unanimous order by a panel of five judges followed more than a dozen petitions challenging the removal of Article 370 of the constitution and a subsequent decision to split the region into two federally administered territories – Jammu and Kashmir, and the Buddhist territory of Ladakh.
It sets the stage for elections in Jammu and Kashmir, which was more closely integrated with India after the government’s move, taken in line with a longstanding promise of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
Modi called the judgement “a beacon of hope, a promise of a brighter future”.
Pakistan’s caretaker government rejected the verdict. “International law doesn’t recognise India’s unilateral and illegal actions” of 2019, caretaker Foreign Minister Jalil Abbas Jilani posted on X.
Islamabad would write to the UN, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation and the European Union to apprise them of the Indian court decision and its “illegality”, Jilani added.
Political parties in Kashmir that opposed the revocation, and were among those that went to court, said they were disappointed by the verdict.
“Disappointed but not disheartened,” Omar Abdullah, a former chief minister and vice president of the Jammu & Kashmir National Conference party, posted on X. “The struggle will continue. It took the BJP decades to reach here. We are also prepared for the long haul.”
Mehbooba Mufti, another former chief minister and president of the Jammu and Kashmir People’s Democratic Party, echoed those views.
“The people of J&K are not going to lose hope or give up. Our fight for honour and dignity will continue regardless. This isn’t the end of the road for us,” she posted on X.
The Indian Supreme Court said special status was a temporary constitutional provision that could be revoked. It ordered that Jammu and Kashmir should return to being a state at the earliest opportunity.
“Article 370 was an interim arrangement due to war conditions in the state,” Chief Justice D Y Chandrachud said, referring to the provision of the Indian constitution which provided the special status after the first India-Pakistan war over the Himalayan region.
“Textual reading also indicates that it is a temporary provision,” Chandrachud said.
Security was stepped up before the verdict in Jammu and Kashmir region roiled by militant violence and protests since the start of an anti-India insurgency in 1989. Tens of thousands of people have been killed although violence has tapered off in recent years.