A. G. Noorani, Article 370 - Introduction
A. G. Noorani, Article 370 - Introduction
Introduction
A.G. Noorani
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198074083.003.0001
Article 370 of the Constitution of India relating to the State of and Kashmir is
now sixty years old. The Constitution came into force on 26 January 1950 and
with it, this unique provision. All other provisions were debated in the
Constituent Assembly of India after deliberations in its Drafting Committee and,
sometimes, discussions in the Congress Parliamentary Party.
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Introduction
Article 370 was discussed for five months by the Prime Minister of India,
Jawaharlal Nehru and his colleagues with the Prime Minister of Jammu and
Kashmir, Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah, and his colleagues; from May to October
1949 ( ). The State of Jammu and Kashmir is theonly
State in the Union of India whichnegotiatedthe terms of its membership with
the Union. The Constituent Assembly merely put the imprimatur of its approval,
on 17 October 1949, to a draft agreed between the Union and the State. Article
370 records a solemn compact. Neither side can amend or abrogate it
unilaterally, except in accordance with the terms of that provision.
A little over a decade after the enactment of Article 370, its co-architect, Prime
Minister Nehru, declared in the Lok Sabha on 27 November 1963 that Article
370
has been eroded, if I may use the word, and many things have been done in
the last few years which have made the relationship of Kashmir with the
Union of India very close. There is no doubt that Kashmir is fully
! @ F ?* ! ? * ! ? !* QV !
going on. Some fresh steps are being taken and in the next month or two
they will be completed. We should allow it to go on. We do not want to take
the initiative in this matter and completely put an end to Article 370
(Chapter 9, Doc. No. 1).
There was no need for that, as the Union Home Minister Gulzari Lal Nanda
X*! ! YZ [' \ ' \] # *= += ? Z!
Constitution (of India) into Jammu & Kashmir is through the application of
!* QV@ " ! * " ! ! * * ? ??!
* = +!**% &Chapter 9, Doc. No. 2).
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Introduction
executive order made by the President under Article 370 would suffice. His
successors in office accepted this interpretation of Article 370.
*] #F ! *= ** ! !* QV
whether you keep it or not, has been completely emptied of its contents. Nothing
' *? ! !% &"'!`
(p.3) ! ! *!= ? # !* % ? [ ?
Kashmir. Nehru was conscious of the indelicacy of the metaphor. Article 370 was
# % '= ??*X ? ! < ? * " + ?
content by conscious executive acts on his advice through one Presidential
Order after another. Of no other constitutional provision can the metaphor
&# %` ' " ! ! '= +! ! *
was accomplished.
The Indian Independence Act, 1947 empowered the Governor General of India
(Section 8(2)) to adapt the Government of India Act, 1935 as the interim
constitution till the enactment of a Constitution by the Constituent Assembly of
India. The Act, as adapted, served as a Constitution from 15 August 1947 to 25
January 1950.
[! &` ? '* # "! [% ? *= !*=
accede to India by its ruler executing an Instrument of Accession. It is important
to note that no specific form was prescribed by the Act itself. All it required was
that the Instrument declare the act of accession and specify its terms. As a
matter of convenience the Government of India used the Draft Instrument which
was drawn up after the Act of 1935 became law. The federation it envisaged did
not come into being. In the case of Jammu and Kashmir, the Instrument of
Accession which the Ruler executed on 26 October 1947 was accompanied,
uniquely, by a letter of the same date signed simultaneously with the Instrument.
In law, such a document is a collateral document and the two form an integral
whole. The letter has the same legal effect as does, indeed, the Governor
*% * ? V ' \V &Chapter 1, Doc. Nos 5
and 6). Acceptance is a legal prerequisite under Section 6(1) of the Act. The
< *% * !* # *+ < '
restored in Kashmir and her soil cleared of the invader; the question of the
[% ! * ' * '= ? *% !*=
theWhite Paper on Jammu & Kashmirpublished by the Government of India
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made it clear that they would regard it as purely provisional until such time as
+!** ? * ? [ * ' !% &Chapter 1, Doc. No. 7).
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be deemed to commit me in any way to acceptance of(p.4) any future
Constitution of India or to fetter my discretion to enter into arrangements with
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Introduction
< ? "! = ? !!% &Chapter 1, Doc.
No. 5). Except Jammu and Kashmir, every state accepted Part B of the
Constitution of India which contained provisions uniformly for the governance of
the former princely states. Jammu and Kashmir was the only state to declare its
intention to have its own Constitution drafted by its own Constituent Assembly.
+ ? 'Z \ '= % ~ *! +! !
why it negotiated the terms of Article 370 to protect those rights (Chapter 1,
Doc. No. 9).
The State had acceded to India in 1947 in respect only of defence, foreign
affairs, and communications. Negotiations were held on 15 and 16 May 1949 at
= ~ ! !! **''! ~*% ! ! + *!
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Nehru recorded in a letter to the Abdullah (on 18 May) that both Patel and he
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(ii) the Jammu and Kashmir State now stands acceded to the Indian Union in
respect of three subjects; namely, foreign affairs, defence and communications.
It will be for the Constituent Assembly of the State when convened, to determine
! ? +! ' = % &!
throughout) (Chapter 2, Doc. No. 1(a)). Article 370 embodies this basic principle
which was reiterated throughout.
Article 370 embodies six special provisions for Jammu and Kashmir. First, it
exempted the State from the provisions of the Constitution providing for the
governance of all the states. Jammu and Kashmir was allowed to have its own
Constitution.
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Introduction
[ ~ *!% *!*!< + < [ + !
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extend to the State other provisions of the Constitution so as to provide a federal
constitutional framework if they related to the matters specified in the
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was required since the State had already accepted them by the Instrument. But,
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required.
The fourth feature is that this concurrence was strictly provisional. It had to be
!?! '= [% ! '*= !* QV& ` = * *=] #"?
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Assembly for the purpose of framing the Constitution of the State is convened, it
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dispersed. Moreover, the President cannot exercise his power to extend the
Indian Constitution to Jammu and Kashmir indefinitely. The power has to stop at
! [% ! '*= ? [% !!
decided finally what additional subjects to confer on the Union, and what other
provisions of the Constitution of India it should get extended to the State, rather
than having their counterparts embodied in the State Constitution itself. Once
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(p.6) The sixth special feature, the last step in the process, is that Article
370(3) empowers the President to make an order abrogating or amending it. But
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Jammu and Kashmir is mentioned among the states of the Union in the First
[* !* & ` $! !* QV&`&` =] # <!! ?
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Introduction
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applied to the State through Article 370.
We have also agreed that the will of the people, through the instrument of
a Constituent Assembly, will determine the Constitution of the State as well
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that several of these clauses provide for the concurrence of the
Government of Jammu and Kashmir State. Now, these relate particularly to
matters which are not mentioned in the Instrument of Accession, and it is
one of our commitments to the people and Government of Kashmir that no
such additions should be made except with the consent of the Constituent
Assembly which may be called in the State for the purpose of framing its
Constitution (Chapter 2, Doc. No. 3).
Ayyangar explained:
the provision is made that when the Constituent Assembly of the State has
met and taken its decision both on the Constitution for the State and on
the range of federal jurisdiction over the State, the President may, on the
recommendation of that Constituent Assembly, issue an Order that this
Article 306A (370 in the draft) shall either cease to be operative, or shall
be operative only subject(p.7) to such exceptions and modifications as
may be specified by him. But before he issued any order of that kind, the
recommendations of the Constituent Assembly will be a condition
precedent (Chapter 2, Doc. No. 2).
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Ayyangar therefore said:
The idea is that even before the Constituent Assembly meets, it may be
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Introduction
! +* ' !*= *! ! " @
and as this may happen before the Constituent Assembly meets, the only
authority from whom we can get consent for the addition is the
Government of State.
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Introduction
!*? + *= ] #" ! ?*= * ?
legal point of view how far the President can issue notifications under Article
QV < * !% &Chapter 4, Doc. No. 8). On 6 September 1952, President
Rajendra Prasad pointed out the illegality of such a course in a closely reasoned
_ $! # ? ~ ! <
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provision authorizing the executive government to make amendments in the
!!%(p.9) + ! != == % <!+
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intention is that the power is to be exercisedonly once, for then alone would it
be possible to determine with precision which particular provisions should be
X +! !?!% &Chapter 5, Doc. No. 6).
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(Chapter 5, Doc. No. 10). Seeds of distrust were sown on 17 November 1949. At
the time of the Delhi Agreement, distrust between Nehru and Abdullah was
*'* ! + ?* ! [!Z '**% + ! ! [%
Constituent Assembly on 11 August 1952 while explaining the terms of the Delhi
] #" +* *!Z Z ! * = ! ? * !
arbitrarily the basis of our relationship with India would not only constitute a
breach of the spirit and letter of the Constitution, but it may invite serious
$ ? ! !! ? [ +! "!% &Chapter 4,
Doc. No. 12; vide also Doc. No. 11).
Nehru and Abdullah viewed the Agreement differently. To Nehru it was a step
towards a closer integration of the State with India as well as a prelude to the
finalization of its accession. This alarmed Sheikh Abdullah. On 14 May 1948
"! ! + ? ? [ ! ] #= = *= [!Z
[' ! ?! ? +!! *'!! @% &[! ! &``Two Alone,
Two Together ~! + *! \ ` !< = * <
Sheikh Abdullah had abandoned hope as President Rajendra Prasad reported to
Prime Minister Nehru on 14 July 1953 after the Vice-President S.
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Introduction
Sheikh Abdullah sensed the popular mood and the popular desire for finality. He
set up a Committee of eight of his close colleagues in(p.10) the National
Conference to devise alternatives. They included men like Bakshi Ghulam
Mohammed and G.M. Sadiq who favoured plebiscite in various forms as late as
on 9 June 1953 (Chapter 6, Doc. No. 2). Abdullah kept Nehru as well as Maulana
Abul Kalam Azad fully informed. He could not have derived much comfort from a
confidential note which Nehru wrote to him from Sonemarg in Kashmir on 25
August 1952 (Chapter 5, Doc. No. 5).
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opposite to that which his friend favoured. The Sheikh sought finality by an
agreement on Kashmir between India and Pakistan. Nehru sought finality by a
!* * ?!*!>! ? ! '= [% ! '*=
exclusion of Pakistan, with which he had been negotiating since the accession.
The plan could not have been absent from his mind when he concluded the Delhi
Agreement with Abdullah only a month earlier. To Abdullah, the course Nehru
recommended spelt his political suicide. Nehru panicked at the course on which
his erstwhile interlocutor had set himself and decided to act ruthlessly. As
'** X*! * > *= Q #"? " ?!* ! !
confidence of the people here, I will not be able to render any service to my
? !% &! + *!` ! * + ! *= % ?? <=
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permanent. If such a declaration had been made at an appropriate time it would
< * < ! "! * ! !% &Chapter 6, Doc. No. 4).
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The Note which the Prime Minister dictated to his Private Secretary M.O.
Mathai on 31 July 1953 clinches the long debated question whether he knew and
< ? ! ? ? !% &Chapter 6, Doc. No. 5). It records to the
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assistance as may be considered necessary for the maintenance of law and order
* ' <!*'* & = ' * ` ??! #+ *=*=
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purge.
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Introduction
House. He was put in prison. His Deputy Bakshi Ghulam Mohammed, who had
agreed with him, on the record, till as late as on 9 June 1953, was made Prime
Minister. He presided over a regime of corruption till 1964 and was censured by
a Commission of Inquiry headed by a former Judge of the Supreme Court, Justice
N. Rajagoplala Ayyangar (Report of the Commission of Inquiry, J&K Government,
Srinagar 30 June 1967).
As for the Sheikh, he was released from prison on 6 January 1958, rearrested on
29 April 1958; belatedly implicated on 23 October 1958 in a case of conspiracy
filed on 17 May 1958 and released from prison only on 8 April 1964 when the
case was withdrawn (vide A.G. Noorani,The Kashmir Question, Manaktalas,
Bombay, 1964, pp. 79, 80, and 86). He was detained in May 1965 and released
on 2 January 1968; interned in New Delhi in December 1970 and freed only on 5
June 1972 (Sheikh Muhammed Abdullah,Aatish-e-Chinar, 1982, Srinagar, p.
836).
Documents inChapter 3+ +! +! ! !% !
Assembly undertook its task from 1951 to 1952.Chapter 7contains documents
which record the new turn its proceedings took with the Sheikh and his
colleagues, especially the principal colleague, Mirza Muhammad Afzal Beg,
'! ' + <! ?! ! '*=% ! !
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talks in 1974.
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June 1975, a large number of opposition leaders were put in prison. This raised a
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not pursued since the Government was defeated and lost the General Election of
March 1977. It is, however, of more than academic interest in the proceedings of
! % ! '*= ? < ? QIn re: K.
Anandan(p.12) (AIR 1952 Madras 117), the Madras High Court rejected the
! ' ? Y!*!< '*= &Y` '! % *
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to the arrest in Kashmir in 1953 and in the rest of India in 1975:
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Introduction
< +!* [% ! '*= + !** + Z ~ !
made an Order under Article 370 on 14 May 1954; presumably in
implementation of the Delhi Agreement. It is regarded to this day as the basic
order (Chapter 7, Doc. No. 5). The Constituent Assembly had given its
concurrence, three months earlier, in a quaint manner on 15 February 1954
while adopting the Report of the Drafting Committee.
The contrast with the end of the deliberations of the Constituent Assembly of
Jammu and Kashmir could not have been more glaring. It formally, solemnly
resolved to dissolve itself by considered, deliberate moves. On 17 November
! ! !% *! #! '*= *< !
should stand dissolved on the 26th day of January 1957, which is the date of the
? !!% &Chapter 7, Doc. No. 14). On 25 January
V ~ ! [!$ * ] #= ! ! ! !
with this the Constituent Assembly is dissolved according to the resolution
V <' % ? ! ! !
] # *Z Z ~ ! '*= + !*< '=
~ ! _%'* [!$ ! *! '=
! '*= V <' % &Chapter 7, Doc. No. 16).
These were deliberate and considered actions and their legal significance brooks
<!} * !?! = != X! ? %
powers over the State on the extension of additional provisions of the
!! ? "! + [ < % # % <*! only
till the Assembly first met on 31 October 1951, and then also subject to the
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Introduction
Chapter 11, Doc. No. 1! !*! ? X ? ~ !%
Article 370 made from 1954 to 1994. In all, ninety-four(p.14) of the ninety-
seven entries in the Union List were extended to Jammu and Kashmir as were
260 of the 395 Articles of the Constitution.
F [% !! !*? + < ! '= " '!
structure was altered. The head of state elected by the State legislature was
replaced by a Governor nominated by the Centre. Article 356 (imposition of
~ !% *` + *! ! <!! ! [% !! ?
< % * &[! ` ! + <' \ \
<' < * [ !!= ? [%
Constitution had been amended on 10 April 1965 by the Sixth Amendment in
violation of Section 147 of the Constitution. Section 147 makes itself immune to
amendment. It referred to the Sadar-i-Riyasat and required his assent to
constitutional amendments. He was elected by the Assembly (Section 27[2]). To
* ! '= % ! + !!**= * '!
structure of the Constitution (Chapter 10, Doc. No. 1(a) and (b)).
Article 370 was used freely not only to amend the Constitution of India but also
of the State. On 23 July 1975 an order was made debarring the State legislature
from amending the State Constitution on matters in respect of the Governor, the
Election Commission, and even the composition of the Upper House, the
Legislative Council.
It would be legitimate to ask how all this could pass muster when there existed a
Supreme Court of India. Three cases it decided tell a sorry tale. InPrem Nath
KaulvState of J&K, decided in 1959, a Constitution Bench consisting of five
!*= * !* QV& ` #+ !!Z
attached great importance to the final decision of the Constituent Assembly, and
the continuance of the exercise of powers conferred on the Parliament and the
President by the relevant temporary provisions of Article 370(1) is made
conditional on the final approval by the said Constituent Assembly in the said
matters% " ? * &Q` ! # <! * &Q` *
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Introduction
But, in 1968, inSampat Prakashvthe State of J&K, another Bench ruled to the
contrary without even referring to the 1959 case. Justice M. Hidayatullah sat on
both Benches. The Court held that Article 370 can still be used to make Orders
! ? [% ! '*=
exist.
Four basic flaws stand out in the judgement. First, the Attorney General cited
== % *= "!~Z! + ? \V *
with the United Nations, and the conditions in the State. On the basis, the court
! ! # !! X! + ! !* + !
! !! !**= * % += = * " !
**= == % X!! ? !* QV !*? ?**=
Constituent Assembly to Kashmir alone had the final say.
Secondly, it brushed aside Article 370(2) which lays down this condition, and
! ! Z ? # !< '= < ? [ '?
Constituent Assembly was convened and makes no mention at all of the
*!% ? ! + Z ! !*!
+ ? [% ! '*= !?= =
refuse to do so, was clearly indicated. Clause (3) on the cessation of Article 370
makes it clearer still. But the Court picked on this clause to hold that since the
Assembly had made no recommendation that Article 370 be abrogated, it should
continue. It, surely, does not follow that after that body dispersed the Union
acquired the power to amass powers by invoking Article 370 when the decisive
ratifying body was gone.
Thirdly, the Supreme Court totally overlooked the fact that on its interpretation,
Article 370 can be abused by collusive State and Central governments to reduce
Article 370 to a nought. Lastly, the Court misconstrued the State Constituent
'*=% ! ? V <' +! *= ?! !
X*! # < ? [% [ !
'*= #X ! ! ! ?
this Article by making a recommendation that it should be operative with this
!?!! *=% " !(p.16) The
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< ? [ @% " ! <
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Introduction
*!!! [ < % + ? ! '= *
(2); namely, ratification by the Constituent Assembly.
The Supreme Court laid down no limit whatever whether as regards the time or
#F !< +! ?? ! ? +
!?!! ! !* QV&`% * ? ! *! + !<
carte blancheto the Government of India to extend to Jammu and Kashmir such
of the provisions of the Constitution of India as it pleased.
Sheikh Abdullah had no cards to play when he concluded an accord with Indira
Gandhi and became Chief Minister on 24 February 1975 (Chapter 11, Doc. No.
3` Q V\ + ! ~ !] #"
that I have made it abundantly clear to you that I can assume office only on the
'! ? !! ! X! Q%
since will be deferred until the newly elected Assembly comes into(p.17)
'! Q <' V\ ~ ! ! #
*!%] !* QV ! ! ! = + ? *!*!
(except in regard to anti-national acts); constitutional provisions extended with
' #* *% [ * <!+ * *+
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#=! ! !% + ' [
Constitution regarding the Governor and the Election Commission. Differences
#nomenclature% ? < !? !! + # !
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other points. On 25 November, Abdullah sought a meeting with Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi. Her reply not only expressed doubt on the usefulness of talks but
* ! ! '! ? ? [% !!
the democratic functioning of the Government. Hurt, he wrote back ending the
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Introduction
This was a political accord between an individual, however eminent, and the
Government of India, like the Punjab Accord (24 July 1985); the Assam Accord
& ` !> &Q `} '+
Government and the opposition. It cannot override Article 370; still less sanctify
constitutional abuse. It bound the Sheikh alone and only until 1977.
! + X*!!*= #*!!* ! '+ % "!
Gandhi wrote (16 December 1974). On 12 February 1975, Abdullah recorded
! <! # '! ? = ! *!!* *<*% "
~ *! Q V ** ! #+ *!!* !% _
+ !? !! \ ' = 'Z '= % != !
the Assembly and on the understanding of a fresh election soon. Sheikh
'*% ! Aatish-e-Chinar(Urdu) record her backtracking on the
pledge in March 1977 when she lost the Lok Sabha elections. The Congress
+! + Z *! ? < < % * +
! [!Z% !* ? + *! +! !
!= * ! % = V
accord had collapsed.
(p.18) It was, I can reveal, based on gross error. The Agreed Conclusions said
&~ Q`] # <!! ? !! * = *! [ ?
+! ! !?!! * '*% ! !
was made in the teeth of theSampat Prakashcase. One Order can always be
rescinded by another. All the orders since 1954 can be revoked; they are a
nullity anyway. Beg was precariously ill and relied on advice which
~ !% #X % !< ! _ + [ *Z ! +
Z ? #!!* <! ! _ !! =% ! !
memoirs. It is no disrespect to point out that issues of such complexity and
$ ? *% !! ? *!! !** * bureaucrat
even if he had read the law. Even the Law Secretary would have insisted on the
= *% !! > + * ! = V "
pursued the matter and eventually met Balakrishnan in 1987. He confirmed that
he had, indeed, given such advice. It was palpably wrong. The 1975 accord,
based or a fundamental error of law, is worse than useless. It is harmful to
! % ! ! " ! ** ??!= * +
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"! ![!Z '** ? ' = V + ' <! !
Para 5:
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Introduction
The matters are: (a) the appointment, powers, functions, duties, privileges
and immunities of the Governor; (b) The following matters relating to
elections, namely, the superintendence direction and control of elections by
the Election Commission of India, eligibility for inclusion in the electoral
rolls without discrimination, adult suffrage, and composition of the
Legislative Council, being matters specified in Sections 138, 139, 140 and
50 of the Constitution of the State of Jammu and Kashmir (Chapter 11,
Doc. No. 3).
(4) No law made by the Legislature of the State of Jammu and Kashmir seeking
to make any change in or in the effect of any provision of the Constitution of
! *! ]}
Shall have any effect unless such law has, after having been reserved for the
consideration of the President, received his assent.
However, Article 147 of the Constitution of Jammu and Kashmir does not require
~ !% ? = !! *= ?
the Governor. It says:
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Introduction
The Order of 23 July 1975 is manifestly unconstitutional for two reasons. First
the State Government lacked the legal competence to accord any such
# % ? ! '*= + < Q '
Once that sole consenting body, the Assembly, was dissolved on 17 November
1956, the President can make no Order under Article 370. Secondly and
fundamentally, Article 370 envisages extension of the Constitution of India to the
[ " ' !<Z [% !! [ !
an abuse of Article 370 and, therefore, void.
Jammu and Kashmir has been put in a status inferior to that of other states. One
illustration suffices to demonstrate this. Parliament had(p.20) to amend the
Constitution four times, by means of the Fifty-ninth, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-seventh,
[!X=! !! X ~ !% * ! in
Punjab on 11 May 1987. For the State of Jammu and Kashmir, the same result
was accomplished, from 1990 to 1996, by mere executive orders under Article
370.
Another gross case illustrates the capacity for abuse. On 30 July 1986, the
President made an Order under Article 370, extending to Kashmir Article 249 of
the Constitution in order to empower Parliament to legislate even on a matter in
[ Y! ? = [' *! # % !
+ !< '= % + ! < Y
former Secretary, Law and Parliamentary Affairs to the State Government,
!' + #!*!% + #! !* =% ! Y+
[ =% <! ! ' ? !* ? !! &Chapter 11,
Doc. No. 3A).
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that the residuary powers of legislation (on matters not mentioned in the State
List or the Concurrent List), which Article 248 and Entry 97 (Union List) confer
on the Union, will not apply to Kashmir. The Order of 1986 purported to apply to
the State Article 249, which empowers Parliament to legislate even on a matter
in the State List if a Rajya Sabha resolution so authorizes it by a two-thirds vote.
But it so amended Article 249 in its application to Kashmir as in effect to apply
!* \ !}#= !?! ! *! '!
+! ! ! ! Y! ! Y!% &Chapter
11, Doc. No. 1).
The Union thus acquired the power to legislate not only on all matters in the
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Introduction
The Report of the fifth group, headed by Justice (retd) S. Saghir Ahmad, former
Chief Justice of the Jammu and Kashmir High Court and judge of the Supreme
[ *! + !!< "? +!*= + !
report could have served as a basis for an all-party dialogue and invested the
RTCs with success. The Working Group was formed to find a common ground on
self-rule, autonomy, and regional aspirations. More than any other report, this
was eagerly awaited. The Group held five meetings between 1 December 2006
and 3 September 2007. He submitted the Report suddenly on 18 December
2009.
(p.22) The issues under the purview of the Working Group V were as follows:
strengthening relations between the State and the Centre and to deliberate on
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Introduction
(i) matters relating to the special status of Jammu and Kashmir within the Indian
Union; (ii) methods of strengthening democracy, secularism, and the rule of law
in the State; (iii) effective devolution of powers among different regions to meet
regional, sub-regional, and ethnic aspirations. The central issue was erosion of
Article 370, a fact admitted by Jawaharlal Nehru in the Lok Sabha on 27
November 1963.
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National Conference, through Abdul Rahim Rather, Finance Minister, the
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Minister; and the Congress, through Prof. Saifuddin Soz, former Union Minister.
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' ? !* QV ! ? X * !! ~ ~%
? #[*? *% *! ! <!* } *!Z '+ + ?
Jammu and Kashmir (vide Jammu & Kashmir: The Self-Rule Framework for
Resolution; Srinagar, October 2008).
[! ** !% '!! !*! ?
!= ~ = ! ' + '= ! #"
order to find out an answer to these questions, it would be necessary to delve
into the archives of old records which would reveal the historical and political
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The published material, including the debates in the Constituent Assembly and
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material. In any case, two years were more than enough for archival research.
There are but two main judgements of the Supreme Court on Article 370:
Premnath v. State of J&K(AIR 1959 S.C. 749) and Sampat Prakash vs. State of
J&K AIR 1970 1118, which, he rightly notes, took a contrary view to the first
case. Justice M. Hidayatullah was on(p.23) both Benches but did not refer to
the earlier case. The first case ruled in favour of autonomy; the second, against
it. A former judge of the Supreme Court charged with the task that he was,
should have analysed both. Both were dismissed in a single laconic paragraph.
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Abdullah Accord of 1975 are also set out, so is a list of forty-three orders under
Article 370, after the major one of 14 May 1954; a list of the Chief Ministers
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provides that an addition to the matters in the Union List and the Concurrent
List as set out in Clause 1(b), the Right of Parliament to make laws will also
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Introduction
extend to such other matters in that list as with the concurrence of the
government of the State, the President may by Order specify. The list of Chief
Ministers given above indicates thatthere was always a popular government in
powerand, therefore, the Presidential orders were apparently issued with the
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[ < % + ! + '
ratification by the Constituent Assembly of Jammu and Kashmir as Clause (2) of
Article 370 makes clear and both Gopalaswamy Ayyangar and Sheikh Abdullah
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< % +
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authority ended on its dissolution in 1956.
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autonomy. The Explanation to Article 370(1) defining the government of the
State does not and cannot override the explicit bar in Clause (2) of Article 370.
But read this:
A case pending for over twenty years cannot debar a body like Group V or, for
that matter, anybody else from expressing an opinion on the law.
But where he does opine, it is in favour of the Union, not the State.
It is clear that legislative fields had already been indicated between the
Centre and the State in the Document of Accessories which was also
incorporated in the Indian Constitution in the form of Article 370 and,
therefore, the Parliament, to begin with, could make laws for the State of
Jammu and Kashmir only on the topics indicated in the Schedule attached
with the document of Accession but also on the topics subsequently
applied to the State of J&K.
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Introduction
The question of Autonomy and its demand can be examined in the light of
the Kashmir Accord or in some other manner or on the basis of some other
formula as the present Prime Minister may deem fit and appropriate so as
to restore the Autonomy to the extent possible. This is also a long pending
demand which requires to be settled once for all to usher in a brighter
relationship between the Centre and the State. The question of
appointment of the Governor and dismissal of popular Government by the
Governor may be considered and resolved.
What help does such a report render to a Government of India that seeks
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years is a long period and the Working Group recommends that the question of
Article 370 should be settled once for all and the state of uncertainty in respect
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how this should be done. What is plain is his acknowledgement that there is a
'* ' *< !< !* QV # ? * %
The intensity of the alienation surprised me. We believe that Article 370
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a historic commitment we made to Kashmiris. How can you nullify that? An
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}circumscribedthe provisions of Article 370. The starting point for
any discussion on Kashmir should be the pre-1953 status (Tehelka, 16
October 2010).
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long imprisonment thereafter.
As well as Article 370, certified by Nehru and Nanda to have been set at nought
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deed, is the Accord of 1975. A new Constitutional Settlement which enjoys
popular support and is negotiated freely with their leaders by representatives of
the Government of India is necessary.The mechanismfor investing the
Settlement with legal force and efficacy is ironically, Article 370 itself.
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Introduction
< ! !*! = ? % &Chapter 12, Doc. No.
1).
A final order can be made by the President of India under Article 370 to wipe out
all the patently unconstitutional orders made earlier, from 1954 to 1994, and
give the new Constitutional Settlement legal force under this Order. In the
unique historical circumstances genuine/popular support will make do for the
Constituent Assembly ratification. It must meet two tests, besides popular
acceptance. First it, must provide cast-iron guarantees against recurrence of the
abuse perpetrated in the teeth of Article 370. Its safeguards have proved of no
<!* ! ! ' '= !! ~ !% + Z = ?
orders(p.26) under Article 370. Its Clause (3) empowers the President to make
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put an end to the anachronism of constitutional amendment by executive fiat
which President Rajendra Prasad trenchantly criticized as far back as on 6
September 1952 (Chapter 5, Doc. No. 6).
" ' *! ! +! ! <!] #~ <! ?
the commencement of the Constitution (Application to Jammu and Kashmir)
Order 1954, no decisionaffecting the disposition of the State of Jammu and
Kashmirshall be made by the Government of India without the consent of the
< ? [%
Article 370, when revised as an agreed final provision, denuding the President,
and, therefore, the Central Government of the power to alter it, will fit the Four-
Points like a glove by guaranteeing self-rule.
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Introduction
Chapter 12, Doc. No. 5! + ! % !< !'! ?? " !
draft of Article 370 which guarantees an agreed quantum of self-rule.
It, however, omits the second and indispensable guarantee of autonomy, namely,
a Head of State elected by the State itself and not one(p.27) imposed upon it
by the Centre. The office of an elected Sardar-i-Riyasat, of Jammu and Kashmir,
established in 1952, was abolished in 1965 and replaced by that of the Governor
appointed by the Centre.
!* Q & ` ? "!% !! ?! # * %inter alia #+ ?
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outrageous to apply a rule governing hereditary princes to a head of state
elected by its Assembly. Nehru explained the Delhi Agreement in Lok Sabha on
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the veto (Chapter 4, Doc. No. 6). However, in a Note for Sheikh Abdullah dated
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Assembly or the Legislative Assembly will naturally he accepted by the
~ !% &Chapter 5, Doc. No. 1, Para 5).
(p.28) The integrity and independence of the office of head of State are crucial
to any scheme of autonomy. In 1937, the Congress insisted on assurances of
!<+* ? < % !* !'!*!! '? ! ??! ! the
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Introduction
Under the regional formula of Punjab in 1956, two regional committees of the
Assembly were set up, comprising MLAs of the Punjabi-and Hindi-speaking
regions. Each enjoyed a virtual veto on fourteen specified topics dealing with
social and economic development.
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<! < '= [!Z '** + ? #! *
!!* % <!! ? <*! ? + <!** *<*
Given the political will, sincerity of purpose, and a spirit of compromise, it is not
difficult to retrieve from the wreckage of Article 370 a Constitutional Settlement
which satisfies the aspirations of the people of Jammu and Kashmir.
***
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