Voting rights to outsiders: Mehbooba appeals national parties to speak up against BJP’s Kashmir policy
The Hindu
Anyone who is living ordinarily in J&K can now also avail of the opportunity to get enlisted as a voter in the Union Territory, in accordance with the provisions of Representation of the Peoples Act
The former chief minister and Peoples Democratic Party president Mehbooba Mufti on Thursday appealed to political parties of the country to speak up against the measures and policy of the BJP in J&K while describing the latest decision of the election commission to allow outsiders to vote in the assembly polls as “pre-poll rigging”.
“I appeal to those parties that have fought for secular and democratic India, and not those that sided with Britishers should speak up. All measures and policy decisions taken in J&K are not for the national interest but only for BJP’s interest. The BJP has made Kashmir a laboratory. They experiment here first and apply such tricks outside later,” Ms. Mufti said.
She said the election commission is allowing 25 lakh outsiders to vote in J&K’s next assembly election. “This will make voters from Kashmir as well as Jammu irrelevant. This is a step to disenfranchise locals,” Ms. Mufti.
She said it was the policy of former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee to have free and fair elections in J&K that allowed people to repose faith in the electoral process in J&K.
“We witnessed rigging everywhere in the country, even before and after the elections, by using money and muscle. Voting rights to the non-locals are aimed at conducting fraud elections to allow the BJP fascist to rule here. They have understood that after three years of rule in J&K, they couldn’t break the resistance of silent people,” Ms. Mufti said.
Meanwhile, Ms. Mufti said she has approached Peoples Alliance for the Gupkar Declaration (PAGD) president Dr. Farooq Abdullah to call an all-party meeting on the issue. “It is the time when we should focus on the Kashmir resolution more than elections, as it has gone beyond elections now,” Ms. Mufti.
She said the current regime failed to make it easy for scattered migrant Pandits to participate in polls in J&K but is keen to allow outsiders to vote here.