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J&K outreach: PM meets top ministers; Gupkar to take call on invite on June 22

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Strap: Delimitation panel expected to meet J&K DCs virtually soon

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Last delimitation exercise was in 1995

*Delimitation Commission was constituted on March 6, 2020, to delimit the constituencies of J&K

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*Govt says delimitation is essential to hold elections. The last exercise was held in 1995.

*Before bifurcation, J&K Assembly had 111 seats (including 24 reserved for PoK).

* Polls were held for 87 seats (Kashmir 46, Jammu 37 and Ladakh 4).

*After 2019, MHA increased number of seats to 114 (including reserved 24).

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Apprehension over allocation in Valley

J&K mainstream parties are apprehensive about reduction in the Valley’s constituencies through the delimitation exercise

Aditi Tandon

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, June 20

Ahead of the Prime Minister’s scheduled meeting with Jammu and Kashmir parties on June 24, activities around the event heated up on Sunday with Defence Minister Rajnath Singh and Home Minister Amit Shah meeting PM Narendra Modi and UT’s political outfits holding parleys in Srinagar to decide on the Centre’s invitation.

The National Conference and Peoples Democratic Party, largest constituents of the People’s Alliance for Gupkar Declaration (PAGD), conducted internal party deliberations today and decided to take a final call on the PM’s event after a PAGD conference on June 22.

The PDP’s Political Affairs Committee met at party president Mehbooba Mufti’s residence in Srinagar and authorised her to take a call on the June 24 meeting. Asked if she had decided, Mufti told The Tribune, “I will decide only after the PAGD meet.”

National Conference chief Farooq Abdullah also spoke with senior party leaders today but the talks were not “structured”, said NC provincial president Nasir Aslam Wani. He said a PAGD meeting would take the final call on participation.

The PAGD consists of the NC, PDP, Awami National Conference, CPM, J&K People’s Movement and the CPI. Sajjad Lone’s People’s Conference is no more with the alliance. Sources indicated that the PAGD might decide to nominate attendees for the PM’s meeting.

Meanwhile, government sources said the ongoing delimitation exercise was high on the agenda with discussions on June 24 expected to seek a broad consensus in the matter. Sources also said the Delimitation Commission was likely to meet with J&K’s deputy commissioners soon to seek inputs on making the UT’s constituencies “geographically more compact”. In an earlier letter to DCs, the commission had sought details of areas of the current constituencies and related aspects.

With the government repeatedly ruling out the restoration of J&K’s special status – a professed goal of the PAGD – political observers say the J&K mainstream parties would probably deliberate hard over the PM’s invitation.

The PAGD had at the time of its constitution even adopted the erstwhile flag of Jammu and Kashmir as its symbol. The move was a symbolic expression of PAGD’s commitment to the demand that special status of the area be restored to the pre-August 5, 2019, status.

Another issue the National Conference would have to consider while deliberating on the Centre’s invitation is the fact that it has challenged the J&K Reorganisation Act 2019 in the Supreme Court.

The Lok Sabha MPs of the National Conference had skipped the first meeting of the Delimitation Commission on February 18 this year, saying that the J&K Reorganisation Act 2019 was “unconstitutional” and under judicial scrutiny and they could not attend proceedings that flowed from the Act.

The PDP too has been publicly seeking restoration of J&K’s statehood — something the Centre has said will happen at an appropriate time. “It seems like an appropriate time in their dictionary will be when their agenda of changing the demography and reducing Kashmiris to second class citizens gets fulfilled,” Mufti had recently said in an interview to The Tribune.

The Congress also today demanded restoration of J&K’s statehood.

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