If voter turnouts are the midwives of a vibrant democracy, consider this: on April 7, 2017, only about seven percent voters in Srinagar turned up for voting in by-polls on a Lok Sabha seat. The elections were marred by violence: Indian media outlet NDTV reported nearly 200 instances of violence, including incidents of stone-throwing and petrol bomb attacks. One polling booth was torched by protestors and electronic voting machines were damaged to stop polling. As law enforcement responded in kind, eight people were killed while about 100 security personnel were injured. The seven percent turnout was the lowest in 30 years.
The Indian election commission subsequently ordered a re-poll, particularly in the 38 polling stations of Budgam district of Srinagar which were the worst-hit during the first round of by-polls. The voter turnout fell further: from seven percent, the re-polls returned a turnout of about two percent.
While the India-held valley of Kashmir is in a deep state of violence for the last several years, the current crisis in Kashmir signifies a democratic impasse. This has been brought on by the Narendra Modi regime attempting to end the special status given to India-held Jammu & Kashmir (IHK) as envisaged in Article 370 of the Indian constitution and fully absorb it into the Indian Union.
India-held Jammu and Kashmir enjoys special status in the Indian constitution but the BJP’s push to absorb it into the Indian Union has larger ramifications
The situation deteriorated after the killing of a Kashmiri youngster Burhan Wani, last July. Kashmiri assertions against Indian military control and atrocities are reflected in frequent protest marches particularly by the school and college female students in Srinagar. But the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) road to integrating Kashmir into the union is fraught with various stumbling blocks. The Srinagar seat had, in fact, fellen vacant after a leader from the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Tariq Hameed Karra, resigned in the aftermath of protests following the killing of Hizbul Mujahideen activist Burhan Wani.
Former IHK chief minister and National Conference (NC) leader Dr Farooq Abdullah accused the PDP of having betrayed the will of Kashmiris since the PDP had pledged to keep the BJP out of Kashmir. Abdullah eventually won the violence-marred polls.
Recently, in an interview given to India Today, Farooq Abdullah made it clear that India should wake up as it may lose Kashmir if it fails to control violence and mend fences with the youth and those who are in revolt against New Delhi. Meanwhile, the Indian government informed its Supreme Court that no talks will be held with separatists.
SIGNIFICANCE OF ARTICLE 370
Article 370 of the Indian constitution was formulated particularly for IHK. it provided special autonomous status to people living under the Indian-controlled region. Enforced on January 26, 1950, Article 370 was termed an attempt by New Delhi to achieve two objectives: first, to prevent the secession of Indian-controlled parts of IHK by providing special privileges in the form of autonomy. And second, to ensure the secular nature of the Indian state. J&K is the only Muslim-majority state in the Indian Union and is presented as a model of religious diversity and unity of the Indian state.
An article titled “What is Article 370: three key points” which was published in the Times of India on May 28, 2014, argues that as per Article 370, except for matters related to defence, foreign affairs, finance and communications, the Indian parliament needs the state government’s agreement to apply all other laws in IHK. This means, compared to other Indians, the state’s residents live under a separate set of laws, including those related to citizenship, ownership of property and fundamental rights. As a result of this provision, Indian citizens from other states cannot purchase land or property in IHK.