Hand over power to sons of soil in J&K: Harsh Dev to Govt

Former Minister and NPP leader, Harsh Dev Singh addressing a public meeting at Ramgarh on Friday.
Former Minister and NPP leader, Harsh Dev Singh addressing a public meeting at Ramgarh on Friday.

Excelsior Correspondent
UDHAMPUR, Mar 10: Re-iterating the demand for early restoration of democracy in J&K and holding of early Assembly polls, Harsh Dev Singh, former Minister and senior NPP leader today said that the erstwhile State was being illogically and illegitimately deprived of popular Government in violation of Constitutional guarantees as well as the ‘obiter dicta’ laid down by the Apex Court over the subject.
Addressing a public meeting at Ramgarh near here, today he said a remote controlled system of governance could not be the solution for the woes and sufferings of the people of J&K. It is the local leaders and local Ministers and elected MLAs who could better address the concerns of their people and bail them out from their sufferings and pain. The proxy rule of BJP has only led to peoples’ alienation, said Singh. The outside bureaucrats and New Delhi leaders, despite their best of efforts, could not be the substitute for legitimate, elected Government asserted Singh.
Seeking the end of BJP’s proxy rule, he called upon the Union Government and Election Commission of India to take immediate measures to hand over power to the sons of soil in J&K who alone could address the peculiar problems of the new set up in J&K.
“While the unprecedented power cuts and drinking water scarcity had made the lives of people a living hell, the proxy Government imposed by the Centre was acting as a mute spectator. No concrete measures were being taken to address the chaotic situation which had created massive resentment all over the UT. The situation was the same with regard to other Departments including Health, Education, RDD where corruption was at its peak with no takers for the genuine concerns of the aggrieved masses.
He said elected representatives therefore alone could be the panacea for the ills afflicting the UT which had continued to remain deprived of popular rule for the last four years”, maintained Singh.
Lampooning the inordinate delay in holding Assembly elections in the new UT, Singh said that the Centre’s proxy rule in J&K was antithetical to democracy and amounted to subversion of the Constitution. “The Constitution categorically provided for a federal system of governance with timely elections for the Union as well as State legislatures. The people can’t be deprived of their legitimate rights to have an elected Government of their own.