Article 35A constitutionally vulnerable, hurts J&K's development: Jaitley

No investor is willing to set up an industry, hotel, private educational institutions or private hospitals in Jammu and Kashmir, says Arun Jaitley.

Arun Jaitley
Finance minister Arun Jaitley speaks at a BJP press conference in this file photo.
Press Trust of India New Delhi
3 min read Last Updated : Mar 28 2019 | 7:29 PM IST
Article 35A, which restricts non-permanent residents to buy property in Jammu and Kashmir, is "constitutionally vulnerable" and also hampering economic development of the state, said Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Thursday.

The statement comes amidst the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) pressing for early elections to the state assembly in the state.

The state is under President's rule and the Union Cabinet takes all policy decisions related to the militancy-hit state.

Jaitley said in a blog post the seven-decade history of the state of Jammu and Kashmir confronts changing India with several questions. "Was the Nehruvian course, which the state had embarked, a historical blunder or was it the correct course to follow? Most Indians today believe that it is the former.

"Does our policy today have to be guided by that erroneous vision or an out of box thinking which is in consonance with ground reality?" Jaitley questioned.

The senior BJP leader and in-charge of the party's campaign committee for general elections said Article 35A was "surreptitiously" included by a presidential notification in the Constitution in 1954.

Artcle 35A, he said, was neither a part of the original Constitution framed by the Constituent Assembly, nor did it come as a Constitutional Amendment under Article 368 of the Constitution which requires an approval by two-third majority of both Houses of Parliament.

"It came as a presidential notification and is a surreptitious executive insertion in the Constitution." Jaitley further said the Article gives the right to the state government to discriminate between two state citizens living in the state on the basis of declaring some as permanent residents while leaving out the others.

It also discriminates between permanent residents of the state and all other Indian citizens living elsewhere, he said.

"Lakhs of Indian citizens in J&K vote in Lok Sabha elections but not in Assembly, municipal or panchayat polls. Their children cannot get government jobs. They cannot own property and their children cannot get admitted to governmental institutions.

He said the state does not have adequate financial resources and its ability to raise more has been crippled by Article 35A.

Investors won't set up industries, hotels, private educational institutions or hospitals as they cannot buy land or property, he said.

"Article 35A, which is constitutionally vulnerable, is used as a political shield by many but it hurt the common citizen of the state the most. It denied them a booming economy, economic activity and jobs," Jaitley said.
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