Sat, 23 May 2026 · LIVE
Updated May 23, 2026 · 14:35
Jammu And Kashmir News Updated May 23, 2026

Sonam Wangchuk: Elected Leaders to Control Ladakh's Finances After Centre Deal

Climate activist Sonam Wangchuk confirmed that after a meeting with the Centre, financial decisions for Ladakh will now be made by elected representatives, not the Lieutenant Governor. The understanding gives Ladakh an elected chief minister with control over bureaucracy and a legislative body with protections under Article 371. Wangchuk noted that the Centre had previously argued Ladakh lacks revenues for operational expenses, but now 100% of the budget will be handled by elected leaders. He called the decision progress in the right direction, though details remain to be finalized and studies on full statehood feasibility are planned.

Financial decisions will rest with elected leaders: Sonam Wangchuk on Ladakh's agreement with Centre

New Delhi, May 23

Following a meeting with the Centre, renowned climate activist Sonam Wangchuk, on Saturday, emphasised that decisions over the finances of the Union Territory of Ladakh will now be taken by the elected representatives and no longer by the Lieutenant Governor.

His reaction comes after the Central government and the representatives of Ladakh Apex Body (LAB) and Kargil Democratic Alliance (KDA) reached an understanding in principle which will give the UT an elected chief minister with powers on bureaucracy, a legislative body and protections under Article 371. Wangchuk was also part of the discussions.

Speaking to IANS, Wangchuk said: "The Central government's argument was that Ladakh does not have the revenues to bear operational expenses like salaries or pensions at this stage. The Centre said that it cannot bear 100 per cent of the budget, and a state has to have its own resources."

Regarding the Centre's proposal, he said that it has been decided to have a UT-level Assembly or law-making body where elected representatives from Ladakh will make laws for the region, using Article 371 as a measure of safeguard for environment, land, culture and nature.

The climate activist highlighted: "Another very important feature, which was not true so far, was that the government accepted that this body, the chief of this body, which may be called the chief minister, will have supremacy or control over the entire bureaucracy, which means the chief secretary and all the bureaucrats, which was not the case earlier."

Wangchuk underlined that decision over the finances of the UT of Ladakh will be taken by these elected representatives.

He noted that earlier 90 per cent of the UT's budget was decided by the LG who is not an elected representative.

"Now in this set-up, 100 per cent of the budget will come to this body and its elected leaders, and they will take the financial decisions," he said.

He also mentioned: "Financial, executive and law-making powers will rest with this legislative body."

The climate activist called the decision "progress in the right direction".

"Details are yet to be worked out," Sonam Wangchuk said.

Further, the social activist said that studies will be conducted to understand if Ladakh truly does not have the resources to support full statehood.

"If it does, then these things may change, but if it does not then this is the mechanism that we have worked out," he asserted.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Sarah B

Good step but I worry about the financial sustainability. If Ladakh can't generate enough revenue, how will a CM manage salaries and pensions? The Centre should provide more support, not just push UT model.

Arjun K

Article 371 protections for environment, land and culture - that's crucial for Ladakh. Their unique Buddhist heritage and fragile ecosystem need special safeguards. But will this body have real power or just be a rubber stamp? Let's see the fine print.

Priya S

As someone from Leh, this is huge! 🏔️ No more LG deciding everything from Delhi. Elected CM controlling bureaucracy means local issues like tourism permissions, water management will finally get proper attention. But 100% budget control - can we actually manage that?

Michael C

Smart compromise. Ladakh gets democratic representation without full statehood burden. The study on resource capacity is wise - better to know if they can stand on their own feet before demanding full state. Sonam Wangchuk is a true grassroots leader.

Rohit P

Why not full statehood? Other small states like Sikkim manage fine. This feels like half-baked solution. But I'm glad at least elected leaders will control funds now. The LG system was undemocratic - appointing someone from outside to rule over locals.

K Kavya N < We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked