• Top Story
  • Weekly
  • Latest
  • Editorial
  • Opinion
  • Interview
  • Feature
  • Sports
  • News
  • J&K
  • World
  • Education
  • Health
  • Economy
  • Culture
  • Literature
  • Lifestyle
  • Books
What's Hot

Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

January 8, 2025

Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

December 25, 2024

America’s Waning Global Position

November 4, 2024
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?
  • Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public
  • America’s Waning Global Position
  • Book Review—Shawls and Shawlbafs of Kashmir
  • Hundreds of Sheep Face Starvation as Forest Officials Bar Grazing
  • Photo Essay: Fire Fighting Service In Dal Lake
  • Pheran—How Kashmir’s Traditional Attire Evolved Through Centuries
  • Pheran—How Kashmir’s Traditional Attire Evolved Through Centuries
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
 Kashmir Newsline – Expression Unleashed Kashmir Newsline – Expression Unleashed
  • Weekly

    Weekly Dec 25 – Dec 31, 2022

    December 25, 2022

    Weekly Dec 05 – 11 Dec,2022

    December 7, 2022

    Weekly Nov 28 – Dec 04, 2022

    November 30, 2022

    Weekly November 21-27

    November 22, 2022

    Weekly November 14-20

    November 16, 2022
  • News
    1. India
    2. South Aisa
    3. World
    Featured
    Recent

    Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

    January 8, 2025

    Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

    December 25, 2024

    America’s Waning Global Position

    November 4, 2024
  • Feature
    1. Interview
    2. Literature
    3. Editorial
    4. Opinion
    5. Top Story
    6. Books
    7. View All

    Interview: ‘Travel, Observing and Tasting is the Best Way to Learn’

    October 2, 2023

    AS Dulat’s Kashmir Stories

    February 4, 2023

    Interview: ‘People are Deeply Pained by Mirwaiz’s Absence from Jamia Masjid’

    November 16, 2022

    ‘Abrogation of Article 370 has Made Kashmir More Dangerous than 1990s’

    October 18, 2022

    The Poet of Love—Daagh Dehlvi’s Poetry has Native Idiom and Sufi Undercurrent

    May 30, 2023

    The Breadth and Sweep of Sahir Ludhianvi’s Works

    March 8, 2023

    Memories of Gulmarg

    January 28, 2023

    ‘If This Language Lives On, Rahi Also Lives On’

    January 18, 2023

    Kashmir Needs Collective Fight against Glaring Drug Abuse

    December 27, 2022

    Healthcare Emergency

    December 7, 2022

    Traffic Mess: Who is to Blame? 

    November 30, 2022

    Give the Artists the Space They Need

    November 23, 2022

    Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

    January 8, 2025

    Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

    December 25, 2024

    America’s Waning Global Position

    November 4, 2024

    Writer’s Block What!

    October 8, 2023

    Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

    January 8, 2025

    Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

    December 25, 2024

    America’s Waning Global Position

    November 4, 2024

    Book Review—Shawls and Shawlbafs of Kashmir

    September 12, 2024

    Book Review—Shawls and Shawlbafs of Kashmir

    September 12, 2024

    Book Review: The Divine Dialect of Flowers

    October 5, 2023

    The Collision That Birthed Religion

    March 18, 2023

    Book Review: What is the Meter of the Dictionary?

    March 2, 2023

    Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

    January 8, 2025

    Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

    December 25, 2024

    America’s Waning Global Position

    November 4, 2024

    Book Review—Shawls and Shawlbafs of Kashmir

    September 12, 2024
  • J&K

    Hundreds of Sheep Face Starvation as Forest Officials Bar Grazing

    March 14, 2024

    Photo Essay: Fire Fighting Service In Dal Lake

    March 8, 2024

    Tatakooti—Challenges of Owning a Towering Peak

    October 5, 2023

    Interview: ‘Travel, Observing and Tasting is the Best Way to Learn’

    October 2, 2023

    What is Ailing the Apple Farming?

    September 16, 2023
  • Lifestyle

    Eating Together Binds Families

    November 22, 2022

    How Smartphones are Harming Children

    October 25, 2022

    Raising a Champion

    October 11, 2022

    The Reluctant ‘Urban Poor’

    August 28, 2022

    The Reluctant ‘Urban Poor’

    August 21, 2022
  • Economy

    Explained: What is a Credit Score and Why is it Important?

    December 27, 2022

    Rights of Special Bank Customers

    November 30, 2022

    How to be a Socially Responsible Investor

    November 23, 2022

    Stock Exchange Crimes

    November 16, 2022

    Avoid Debt Trap

    November 8, 2022
  • Culture
  • Entertainment
  • Sports

    Tatakooti—Challenges of Owning a Towering Peak

    October 5, 2023

    When Salim was in the Mood

    July 12, 2023

    Why Does Team India Fail Consistently?

    December 27, 2022

    Hail Ben Stokes and Co.

    December 7, 2022

    England Tour of Pakistan

    November 30, 2022
 Kashmir Newsline – Expression Unleashed Kashmir Newsline – Expression Unleashed
Home»Editorial»Jammu and Kashmir’s Electoral Freeze Must End
Editorial

Jammu and Kashmir’s Electoral Freeze Must End

Kashmir NewslineBy Kashmir NewslineOctober 5, 2022No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

It has now been more than four years since the last elected government in Jammu and Kashmir fell. The ruling alliance between PDP and BJP ended in June 2018 when Jammu and Kashmir was still a state with its own constitution and flag. The last four years have been as much politically tumultuous as they have been stagnant.

A deep political vacuum has existed since Articles 370 and 35-A were abrogated on August 5, 2019. In 2019, the region’s political parties remained dormant as their top leadership was either incarcerated or rendered incommunicado. This has led to a deepened political freeze in the union territory.

Jammu and Kashmir is being run by administration led by Lieutenant Governor. The first Lieutenant Governor, Girish Chandra Murmu, remained in the office from October 2019 till August 2020 and was succeeded by the incumbent LG Manoj Sinha who has made efforts to fill the political vacuum with his outreach programmes and public engagements.

For a single person, however, it is nearly impossible to fill this vacuum. The political parties in Jammu and Kashmir have a long history and deep system of public outreach. Even in the most turbulent years of Kashmir’s insurgency, the leaders of the political parties would meet their cadre and public which helped the wheels of democracy to move in the region. These meetings also served as a mechanism to garner feedback acting as an informal delivery mechanism of village-level issues, market concerns and economic problems of the people.

The system of political parties in Jammu and Kashmir was robust and effective. These political parties acted as an intermediary between the administration and the people. They listened to the people and conveyed it to the administration. Even though the element of corruption always existed, the truth is that this mechanism was working and people were feeling heard.

The political parties in Jammu and Kashmir had built these structures through years, decades in case of some, and through village and street-level structures, these parties had their ear to people’s concerns and problems. The lieutenant governor, being a single man, no matter the level of public outreach he attempts, cannot replace this robust system and cannot sift through the humongous noise to locate the real problems.

The political freeze in Jammu and Kashmir is creating an unhealthy atmosphere of too much power in the hands of the bureaucracy. The accumulation of immense power in the hands of the bureaucrats can never be of any interest to the people. The bureaucracy, because of the nature of its functioning, can never be an alternative to the elected representatives. The people eventually become files and statistics. The problems are solved by the book and copy-paste approach, not realizing that some solutions may not work with the people they are governing.

This is why there is an urgent need to empower the political parties in Jammu and Kashmir by holding an election as soon as possible. The rumoured October deadline that was rife in political circles has already passed for now and still there is no word on elections. The wait for an elected government, irrespective of its popularity or the lack of it, has caused huge disorder in public life. The problems are mounting and solutions are nowhere in sight. One example of this crisis is what is happening with the apple industry. For days, trucks laden with apples were stranded along the Srinagar-Jammu highway, causing the fruit to rot before it could reach the markets in Delhi and elsewhere. The economic loss caused thereof will take years to compensate.

There is another livid example of the bureaucratic sluggishness in the absence of an elected government, which exists less than a kilometer from the headquarters of the civil administration. The newly-constructed hawkers market, made exclusively for the vendors of Jehangir Chowk and its vicinity, has remained defunct since it was completed several years ago. The unwillingness of the street vendors is well-grounded in the logic that no customer would visit the isolated market. This reason was conveyed to the then administration when the construction of the market was still an idea, yet it was constructed.

The hawkers’ market was constructed at the only public parking space in a crucial neighbourhood which houses the High Court, the Civil Secretariat, the offices of Crime Branch and PDD, and several busy markets.

Long story short, the hawkers market has been defunct for several years and there is no public parking space available in Srinagar’s most important and busy neighbourhood.

Again, this is why there is an urgent need for an elected government and relieving the bureaucracy of the extra burden, which it is not able to carry. The bureaucracy in a government is trained and designed to deliver on the ideas of the elected government and the elected government is meant to find the ideas by listening to the people. It is a simple process which becomes complicated in the absence of an elected government. The bureaucracy should not be burdened by finding the ideas and then executing them. If that happens, the result would be disastrous, like the apples getting rotten in trucks stranded along the highway.

Elections are the need of the hour. An elected government is a missing link in Jammu and Kashmir that should be established. Without an elected government, the entire governing structure would falter and fall apart.

 

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Kashmir Newsline
  • Website

Related Posts

Kashmir Needs Collective Fight against Glaring Drug Abuse

December 27, 2022

Healthcare Emergency

December 7, 2022

Traffic Mess: Who is to Blame? 

November 30, 2022

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Team India’s Next Big Thing

July 6, 202227,463 Views

Why This Alpine Lake Trek Stands Out

July 6, 202225,423 Views

India’s Majoritarian Politics and the Role of Media

July 6, 202224,120 Views

Fragile Media Economies and Lack of Opportunities in Kashmir

July 6, 202223,225 Views
Don't Miss
Top Story

Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

By Kashmir NewslineJanuary 8, 20250

BRI’s transformative potential extends beyond economic development. It has the power to reshape global trade…

Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

December 25, 2024

America’s Waning Global Position

November 4, 2024

Book Review—Shawls and Shawlbafs of Kashmir

September 12, 2024
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

Based out of Srinagar (Jammu & Kashmir) and brought out in print as a weekly with online presence as well, Kashmir Newsline is solely committed to ethical, fearless journalism. We at Kashmir Newsline cover politics, geopolitics, international relations, social issues, health, sports and almost everything else as objectively as humanly possible. Kashmir Newsline carries detailed reports and in-depth analysis on multiple developments happening in Kashmir and around the world.

Facebook X (Twitter)
Our Picks

Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

January 8, 2025

Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

December 25, 2024

America’s Waning Global Position

November 4, 2024
Most Popular

Team India’s Next Big Thing

July 6, 202227,463 Views

Why This Alpine Lake Trek Stands Out

July 6, 202225,423 Views

India’s Majoritarian Politics and the Role of Media

July 6, 202224,120 Views
Facebook X (Twitter)
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Politics
  • J&K
  • E-Paper
  • Contact Us
© 2025 Kashmir Newsline. Designed by NexG IT Solutions.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version