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Supreme Court agrees to early listing of pleas on Article 370

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New Delhi, December 14

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The Supreme Court on Wednesday said it would consider a plea for early listing of petitions challenging the Centre’s decision to nullify Article 370 which gave special status to Jammu and Kashmir.

“We will examine and give a date,” a Bench led by Chief Justice DY Chandrachud told the counsel for intervenor Radha Kumar.

The Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act, 2019, which divided the state into two UTs – J&K and Ladakh, has already been acted upon. The changes came into effect on October 31, 2019, after being notified in the official gazette.

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“The Supreme Court can always turn the clock back,” a five-judge Constitution Bench had said on October 1, 2020, when it took up the petitions challenging the constitutional validity of the J&K Reorganisation Act 2019 and the August 5 Presidential Orders nullifying Article 370.

Since then, a delimitation exercise has been completed in J&K and the number of seats increased from 83 to 90 (excluding 24 seats in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir).

There are about 24 petitions challenging the Presidential Order nullifying Article 370, including those by Delhi-based advocate ML Sharma, J&K-based lawyer Shakir Shabir, National Conference MPs Mohammad Akbar Lone and Justice Hasnain Masoodi (retd).

There is another PIL filed by former interlocutor for J&K Radha Kumar, Air Vice-Marshal Kapil Kak (retd), Major General Ashok Mehta (retd), former IAS officers Hindal Haidar Tyabji, Amitabha Pande and Gopal Pillai, who have urged the top court to declare the August 5 Presidential Orders “unconstitutional, void and inoperative”.

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