IQNA

Removal of Muslim-Majority Kashmir’s Special Status Upheld by India’s Top Court

12:57 - December 11, 2023
News ID: 3486374
IQNA – A 2019 decision by the New Delhi government to revoke special status for Indian-administered Kashmir, the country’s only Muslim-majority region, was upheld by India’s Supreme Court.

India's Supreme Court

 

India’s Supreme Court on Monday also directed the election commission to hold elections in the Jammu and Kashmir region by Sept. 30, 2024.

The court’s direction was part of the verdict on pleas challenging the revocation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir.

The government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi had decided to revoke special status for the region in 2019.

Indian-administered Kashmir, India’s only Muslim-majority region, has been at the heart of more than 75 years of animosity with neighboring Pakistan since the birth of the two nations in 1947 at independence from colonial rule by Britain.

The unanimous order by a panel of five judges came in response to more than a dozen petitions challenging the revocation and a subsequent decision to split the region into two federally administered territories.

It sets the stage for elections in the region, which was more closely integrated with India after the government’s contentious move, taken in line with a key longstanding promise of Modi’s nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

The decision is a shot in the arm for the government ahead of general elections due by May.

Read More:

The challengers maintained that only the constituent assembly of Indian-administered Kashmir could decide on the special status of the scenic mountain region, and contested whether parliament had the power to revoke it.

The court said special status was a temporary constitutional provision that could be revoked by parliament. It also ordered that the federal territory should return to being a state at the earliest opportunity.

The territory is divided among India, which rules the populous Kashmir Valley and the Hindu-dominated region of Jammu, Pakistan, which controls a wedge of territory in the west, and China, which holds a thinly populated high-altitude area in the north.

 

Source: Reuters  

 

   

captcha