Key Points

Omar Abdullah has launched a strong critique against the BJP for the ongoing delay in restoring Jammu and Kashmir's statehood. He directly linked the delay to the BJP's failure to form a government after the recent elections, calling the situation unfair to the people. Abdullah pointed out that the central government's promised process of delimitation and elections has been completed, leaving statehood as the unfulfilled final step. He also expressed concern over the economic impact, particularly on tourism, and condemned recent arrests related to a religious slogan.

Key Points: Omar Abdullah Accuses BJP of Delaying J&K Statehood After Poll Defeat

  • Abdullah accuses BJP of opposing statehood after failing to win J&K elections
  • He highlights the unfulfilled three-step process promised to the Supreme Court
  • The CM links the delay to negative impacts on Kashmir's tourism and economy
  • Abdullah also criticizes recent arrests over the 'I Love Muhammad' slogan as irrational
3 min read

Statehood not being restored since BJP didn't form govt: Omar Abdullah

J&K Chief Minister Omar Abdullah slams BJP, linking statehood delay to their election loss. He calls it unfair and highlights broken promises to the Supreme Court.

"It seems like statehood is not being provided to the people since the BJP didn't form the government. - Omar Abdullah"

Srinagar, September 24

Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah on Wednesday launched a scathing attack on the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) over the delay in the restoration of statehood, saying that it was "unfair" to the people.

Speaking to reporters, Abdullah accused the BJP of delaying and opposing the restoration of statehood for Jammu and Kashmir since it lost the elections.

"People participated in the election process. It is the BJP's bad luck that they couldn't win. However, people here can't be punished for that. It seems like statehood is not being provided to the people since the BJP didn't form the government. It is unfair to people. It was not stated that statehood will be restored only when the results favour the BJP. The opposition to statehood is coming from the BJP," CM Abdullah said.

Flagging a delay in the restoration of statehood as the "biggest challenge", the Jammu and Kashmir CM informed that the statehood has not been restored despite the centre telling the Supreme Court about its three-step process of delimitation, elections and statehood.

"The biggest challenge is that we are not a state anymore. We were hoping for the promises made to the people of Jammu and Kashmir. The Supreme Court was informed that a three-step process would be implemented: delimitation, followed by elections and statehood. Delimitation and elections happened," Abdullah said.

"We were hoping that tourism in Kashmir would start again. We were hoping for a tourist influx during and after the Pooja season from states like West Bengal. But that is not happening," he added.

When asked about the arrests in connection with the 'I Love Muhammad' slogan row, the Chief Minister said that "someone" had to be "mentally ill" to make a case over this issue.

"Why would anyone object to it? I don't understand how writing these three words leads to people getting arrested? This means that someone is genuinely mentally ill for making a case on this. I would like the courts to fix it (intervene). How is it illegal to write 'I Love Muhammad'? Don't people from other religions write about their gods? They do. If that is not illegal, how is this labelled as being illegal?" Abdullah said.

The regional parties, along with people in Kashmir, have been constantly demanding the restoration of statehood ever since the abrogation of Article 370.

On 5 August 2019, the centre scrapped Jammu and Kashmir's special status and bifurcated the erstwhile state into two Union Territories: Jammu and Kashmir (with a legislature) and Ladakh (without a legislature).

The Supreme Court of India, on August 14 this year, heard a plea seeking directions to the Centre for the restoration of statehood to the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir.

The apex court noted that the ground situation in Jammu and Kashmir cannot be ignored while granting statehood and said that the events in Pahalgam cannot be overlooked.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As someone from Delhi who visited Kashmir last year, I can see how badly tourism has been affected. The uncertainty is keeping tourists away. Statehood restoration would bring much-needed stability.
M
Michael C
While I understand Abdullah's frustration, the Supreme Court has valid concerns about security. The Pahalgam incident shows that the situation is still delicate. Maybe gradual restoration is better than rushing.
A
Ananya R
The 'I Love Muhammad' arrests are ridiculous! If people can write 'Jai Shri Ram' everywhere, what's wrong with expressing love for Prophet Muhammad? This selective outrage needs to stop. 🙏
S
Sarah B
As an observer, it seems both sides are playing politics. Abdullah's party also needs to show more cooperation with the Centre. Development should be the priority, not political point-scoring.
V
Vikram M
The three-step process was clearly outlined: delimitation, elections, statehood. First two are done. Now government should fulfill its commitment. A promise is a promise, regardless of who wins elections.
K
Kavya N
My Kashmiri friends tell me how much they want normalcy. Tourism is their livelihood. If statehood can bring peace and economic growth, why delay it? Let Kashmir heal and prosper. ❤️

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