"Instead of the elected chief minister, New Delhi invited the state's Governor for the high-level meeting to discuss various key issues pertaining to it.
"This is yet another sign of how Mehbooba Mufti has bartered the constitutional mandate and sanctity of the Chief Minister's Office to remain in her chair. This brazen disempowerment of the chief minister is an alarming development," NC chief spokesperson Aga Syed Ruhullah Mehdi alleged.
"The Union Home minister chaired the meeting to discuss various key issues pertaining to the state including the issues of rehabilitation of Kashmiri Pandit migrants, return of civilian land by the army, the security situation in the state post the Handwara and Kupwara tragedy and the situation along the Line of Control.
"While the meeting was attended among others by Defence Minister Manohar Parikar and National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, the state was represented by Governor N N Vohra and not the chief minister," he said.
"If the chief minister has no say in these issues that pertain to the state, one wonders why she has been placed in the chief minister's chair in the first place.
It is evident that the state is being "run from New Delhi" and the state government has been "divested of all its rights and roles", he alleged.
"This seems to have become a norm now and the most tragic
part is that Mehbooba sees no problem in her open, public marginalisation by Delhi and is hence endorsing how the Chief Minister's position is being undermined. She seems to have been reduced to be a non-essential formality in the scheme of things," Omar said.
Condemning PDP's alleged U-turns, Omar said the PDP-BJP government's "back-pedalling" on promises of revocation of AFSPA and the return of power projects to the state were examples of how the "sacrosanct" mandate of the people of J-K was "violated and sold".
Meanwhile, Omar took a dig at the Chief Minister on Twitter, saying after her yesterday's meeting for improving the traffic, the condition on the roads was "worse than before" today.
