India's Kashmir region gets redrawn constituencies ahead of elections
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[May 05, 2022] By
Krishna N. Das and Fayaz Bukhari
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India published on
Thursday a new list of redrawn political constituencies for the former
state of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K), giving greater representation to the
Muslim-majority region's Hindu areas and paving the way for fresh
elections.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government broke up J&K into two federal
territories in 2019 as part of a move to tighten its grip over the
region, which is at the heart of more than 70 years of hostility between
India and Pakistan.
Anticipating protests in a region fighting Indian rule for decades, the
government put many political leaders under house arrest and cut off
internet connections when it announced the move to split the state.
J&K originally comprised the mainly Muslim Kashmir Valley - the bone of
contention between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan - the
Hindu-dominated Jammu region, and the remote Buddhist enclave of Ladakh.
The government said a delimitation commission had finalised 90 assembly
constituencies for J&K, excluding Ladakh, with 43 seats for Jammu and 47
for Kashmir. Earlier, Jammu had 37 seats and the Kashmir valley 46.
The commission, whose report has been rejected by J&K's Peoples
Democratic Party, said it had been difficult to accommodate competing
claims from various sides, citing in a statement the region's "peculiar
geo-cultural landscape".
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Tourists ride "Shikaras" or boats in the waters of Dal Lake during
sunset in Srinagar, April 5, 2022. REUTERS/Danish Ismail
Indian Home Minister Amit Shah said in January that
elections would be held in J&K soon after the delimitation process
was completed. He also promised to reinstate its statehood once its
"situation became normal".
The Jammu Kashmir National Conference, which has governed the
region, said it was studying the implications of the move that has
been championed by Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
"No amount of gerrymandering will change the ground reality, which
is that whenever elections are held the voter will punish the BJP
and its proxies for what they have done to J&K over the last 4
years," the National Conference said on Twitter.
The BJP said on Twitter it would change J&K's image and future for
the better if voted to power.
(Reporting by Krishna N. Das, Fayaz Bukhari and Nigam Prusty;
Editing by Gareth Jones)
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