National Conference leader Omar Abdullah will be CM of Kashmir
Gets support from India's main opposition Congress party
Thursday, 17 October 2024
SRINAGAR, Oct 16 (AP): Leaders of Kashmir's biggest political party were sworn into office Wednesday to run a largely powerless government after the first election since India stripped the disputed region of its special status five years ago.
National Conference leader Omar Abdullah will be the region's chief minister after his party won the most seats in the three-phased election. It has support from India's main opposition Congress party, although Congress decided not to be a part of the new government.
The vote was Kashmir's first in a decade and the first since Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist government scrapped the Muslim-majority region's long-held semi-autonomy in 2019. The NC staunchly opposed the move, and its victory is seen as a referendum against the Modi government's changes.
Kashmir's Lt. Gov. Manoj Sinha, New Delhi's top administrator in Kashmir, administered the oaths of office to Abdullah and the five members of his council of ministers in a ceremony under tight security at a lakeside venue in the region's main city of Srinagar. Some of India's top opposition leaders, including Rahul Gandhi of the Congress party, attended.
However, there will be a limited transfer of power from New Delhi to the local government as Kashmir will remain a "union territory" - directly controlled by the federal government - with India's Parliament as its main legislator. Kashmir's statehood would have to be restored for the new government to have powers similar to other states of India. But it will not have the special powers it enjoyed before the 2019 changes.
India and Pakistan each administer a part of Kashmir, but both claim the territory in its entirety. The nuclear-armed rivals have fought two of their three wars over the territory since they gained independence from British colonial rule in 1947.
Kashmir's last assembly election was held in 2014, after which the Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party, or BJP, for the first time ruled in a coalition with the local Peoples Democratic Party. But the government collapsed in 2018 after the BJP withdrew from the coalition and New Delhi took the region under its direct control.
A year later, in an unprecedented move, the federal government downgraded and divided the former state into two centrally governed union territories, Ladakh and Jammu-Kashmir. The move - which largely resonated in India and among Modi supporters - was mostly opposed in Kashmir as an assault on its identity and autonomy amid fears that it would pave the way for demographic changes in the region.
The region has since been on edge with civil liberties curbed and media gagged.
In the recently concluded election, NC won 42 seats, mainly from the Kashmir Valley, the heartland of the anti-India rebellion while the BJP secured 29 seats, all from the Hindu-dominated areas of Jammu. The Congress succeeded in six constituencies.
Militants in the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir have been fighting New Delhi's rule since 1989. Many Muslim Kashmiris support the rebels' goal of uniting the territory, either under Pakistani rule or as an independent country.
India insists the Kashmir militancy is Pakistan-sponsored terrorism. Pakistan denies the charge, and many Kashmiris consider it a legitimate freedom struggle. Tens of thousands of civilians, rebels and government forces have been killed in the conflict.