The apex court was apprised by the Central government today that the forthcoming elections in the region of Jammu and Kashmir could be convened imminently. However, it was iterated that the ultimate decision rests within the purview of the Election Commission in conjunction with the state poll panel. This assertion transpired during the hearing of a cluster of petitions challenging the annulment of Article 370. The government had previously asserted that the bifurcation of the erstwhile state was indispensable, citing its uniqueness. In the antecedent session, the Supreme Court underscored the imperative to reinstate democratic governance in J&K, a province bereft of an elected administration since June 2018. In the current hearing, the government refrained from furnishing a specific timeline for the restoration of statehood for Jammu and Kashmir. The crux of the debate revolves around the procedural regularity observed during the abrogation of Article 370 and the subsequent partition into two union territories – J&K and Ladakh. Leaders and petitioners from Ladakh conveyed their discontentment over the Solicitor General’s affirmation that Ladakh would persist as a Union Territory. Over the past couple of years, substantial protests have reverberated in Ladakh, advocating for the region’s statehood. Following the abrogation of Article 370 in August 2019, the government pledged the eventual restoration of statehood, though no definitive deadline has been stipulated.
