Parliament nod to President\'s Rule in J&K\, Rajnath says open for polls with Lok Sabha elections (Roundup)

Parliament nod to President's Rule in J&K, Rajnath says open for polls with Lok Sabha elections (Roundup)

IANS  |  New Delhi 

Parliament on Thursday approved imposition of Presidents Rule in with Home stating that the government will have no objection if the (EC) decides to hold Assembly polls in the state along with the coming Lok Sabha elections.

Replying to a debate which saw both and members targeting each other, said that the government would meet all security needs sought by the

"If the wants, we won't have any objection to it," he said while responding to a query by of Opposition in Rajya Sabha

had sought to know whether the government is ready to conduct simultaneous elections to the Lok Sabha and the Assembly in Jammu &

"It is Election Commission's job to hold elections. But I would like to assure the House that we do not have any objection (to holding polls in Jammu & Kashmir). We are ready to provide whatever security support the Election Commission wants," added.

The also refuted allegations levelled by opposition parties that the (BJP) was earlier trying to form a government in the state.

"No one should doubt the government's intentions. There was no conspiracy," he said.

Participating in the debate, Finance said that mistakes made by the had led to alienation among people in Kashmir and rejected its charge that the process had started in the last four and half years.

He asserted that when history gives its verdict on the viewpoint of India's first and that of Syama Prasad Mookerjee, the ideologue of the Jana Sangh, the BJP's predecessor, the will feel the pain.

He also defended forming alliance with the in the state to run a coalition government.

Jaitley said there "is a history of alienation, there are policies" and noted that assembly elections in for successive years including in 1957, 1962 and 1967 were not fair and Congress had also indulged in destabilising governments.

"If elections are held in such manner, it will sow seeds of alienation. The people of the state felt they do not have right to contest polls. This is the you did to stay in power," he said.

He questioned Nehru government's decision to go for ceasefire during the invasion of Kashmir in 1947 when Indian troops were moving forward and claimed that the announcement was made without proper consultations with then

He also questioned the assurance given by on a plebiscite in Kashmir saying it had "hung around our neck like an albatross."

He said Congress cannot "whitewash its historical mistakes" in Kashmir as they are part of history now.

Jaitley said people of the Valley still recall that the first free and fair elections in the state were held after became in 1977.

"You had put all your eggs in one basket," he said, and added that the Congress government had to change its policy and arrest the

He said the Indira-agreement was reached in 1975 but disagreements soon cropped up.

The minister said that the then state refused to play the Centre's game to destabilise the government in 1984 and stepped down. He said a new was appointed and a new government was formed by splitting the National Conference.

Jaitley said Congress again joined hands with in 1986 and ran a government till 1989 which caused "so much alienation which the valley had never seen".

Jaitley targeted the Congress over the death of founder S P Mookerjee in custody, saying he gave away his life due to "barriers you erected".

The minister said it would be better not to indulge in blame-game. It was necesssary to learn from the mistakes made in the past and work for peace and progress.

Initiating the debate, said if people of the Valley who fought against the Pakistani intruders in 1947 had chosen to remain with were "unhappy with us today, then I think somewhere we 130 crore Indians have faulted".

"We have made mistakes. Should those mistakes not be corrected? The year 2014 should be the benchmark as to where we had le"t Kashmir and where it is now," he said.

Azad, a former chief minister, said Kashmir is incomplete without who left the Valley in fear. "They are our blood and a part of our blood has gone away from us."

He said the state has made as many as 55 amendments in various laws. "Is this right? you would not Is it not the elected government's right to amend laws?"

member said the government should give an assurance that elections in Kashmir would be held now or latest with the Lok Sabha polls.

He also raised questions over the role of the Governor. "The government that talks of Digital cannot even handle fax machines. Are becoming branch offices of the government at the Centre?" he asked.

"Nationalism is not the copyright of one party. Heal Kashmir. It's a heaven. My appeal to the government is please don't turn it into a hell," he said.

member Majeed Memon said other parties should have been allowed to form government in the state after the had withdrawn support to the

Governor's rule was imposed in Jammu and Kashmir in June after none of the political parties came forward to stake claim to form the government following BJP's withdrawal of support to the PDP-led government.

Then Governor weighed all the options available before the political parties, including the BJP and the Congress, but they did not express intention to form the government, he added.

President's Rule was imposed in the state last month.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, January 03 2019. 20:52 IST