J&K delimitation: 6 more seats proposed for Jammu, one for Kashmir
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The Delimitation Commission on Jammu and Kashmir has proposed six additional assembly seats for Jammu region and one for Kashmir while reserving 16 constituencies for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, triggering strong protests from parties such as the National Conference which made it clear that it would not sign the report in its present form.
Participating for the first time in the commission’s deliberations, the NC’s three Lok Sabha members led by party president and former chief minister Farooq Abdullah expressed their reservations over the draft report, especially the biased process of seat sharing, a party spokesperson tweeted.
The party, within hours of the meeting, made it clear that it “will not be a signatory to this report.”
The PDP, JK Apni Party and the People’s Conference (PC), which is regarded as being friendly towards the BJP, also protested strongly against the commission’s draft recommendations which will alter the electoral map of Jammu and Kashmir.
Kashmir division currently has 46 seats and Jammu 37. The population of Jammu region is 53.72 lakh and Kashmir division 68.83 lakh, according to the census of 2011.
BJP MP and union minister Jitendra Singh, however, said after the meeting that there was no objection from any of the associate members and “in fact Dr Abdullah went on to say that there were some misgivings about the commission….”
“They have done a good job. There was no objection from any side. Now the Delimitation Commission has proposed to increase the seats to 90. They have followed objective parameters on the basis of population, accessibility, topography and terrain of individual districts. I don’t feel anyone would be dissatisfied with it. No political party can find fault with it,” Singh said.
However, the National Conference, in its tweet, said, “Misrepresenting and distorting the facts with malicious intention! Very misleading statement. We have clearly expressed our resentment over the draft of the Delimitation Commission, the biased process of seat sharing. The party will not be a signatory to this report.”
According to a statement issued by the Delimitation Commission, associate members appreciated the fact that the commission visited the Union Territory and met a large number of people and assured that all necessary assistance would be extended in the work of delimitation.
The commission headed by former Supreme Court judge Ranjana Desai held its second meeting here on Monday. It has five Lok Sabha members from Jammu and Kashmir as associate members and Chief Election Commissioner Sushil Chandra as ex-officio member.
Giving a presentation before the associate members, Deputy Election Commissioner Chandra Bhushan Kumar informed that since the last delimitation, the number of districts has increased from 12 to 20 and the number of tehsils from 52 to 207.
The population density in the districts varies from 29 persons per square km in Kishtwar to 3,436 persons per square km in Srinagar.
Taking all these into account, the Delimitation Commission has categorised all 20 districts in three broad categories A, B and C giving margin of 10 per cent (plus/minus) of average population per assembly constituency, while proposing allocation of the constituencies to the districts.
The commission has also, for some districts, proposed carving out of an additional constituency to balance the representation for geographical areas having inadequate communication and lack of public conveniences due to their inhospitable conditions on the international border.
For the first time, in Jammu and Kashmir, nine seats are proposed to be allocated for Scheduled Tribes out of 90 seats on the basis of population. Seven seats are proposed for Scheduled Castes. Twenty-four seats of the assembly continue to remain vacant as they fall under Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK).
The commission has asked all associate members to submit their views on the proposed increase of seats by December 31.
Abdullah, who is also the chairman of the five-party People’s Alliance for Gupkar Declaration (PAGD), said after the meeting that he would brief the grouping as well as his party colleagues of the deliberations of the commission.
“We attended the meeting for the first time because we wanted the voice of people of Jammu and Kashmir to be heard. The meeting took place in cordial manner and we all were explained the method adopted for coming to the conclusion,” Abdullah said.
NC vice president Omar Abdullah tweeted that it was deeply disappointing that the commission appears to have allowed the political agenda of the BJP to dictate its recommendations rather than data which should have been its only consideration.
“Contrary to the promised ‘scientific approach’, it’s a political approach,” he said.
The Jammu and Kashmir Apni Party, headed by former minister Altaf Bukahri, also rejected the proposal.
“This is outright unacceptable to us. Apni Party demands a fair delimitation exercise without any bias, taking population and districts as the base,” it said.
PDP president Mehbooba Mufti said the commission has been “created simply to serve BJP’s political interests by dividing people along religious and regional lines. The real game plan is to install a government in JK which will legitimise the illegal and unconstitutional decisions of August 2019”.
She was referring to the government’s decisions of abrogating J&K’s special status under Article 370 and bifurcating it into union territories.
People’s Conference chief Sajjad Lone said the recommendations were totally unacceptable. “They reek of bias. What a shock for those who believe in democracy,” he tweeted.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, during a meeting with J&K leaders in June, had said the ongoing delimitation exercise has to happen quickly so that polls can be held to install an elected government that gives strength to its development trajectory.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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