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Friday November 22, 2024

IIOJK enters third and final round of elections

More than half a million Indian troops are stationed around IIOJK and today's vote saw heavy security presence

By AFP
October 01, 2024
People wait in a line to vote outside a polling station, during the third and final phase of the assembly election, in north Kashmirs Bandipora district October 1, 2024.
People wait in a line to vote outside a polling station, during the third and final phase of the assembly election, in north Kashmir's Bandipora district October 1, 2024. 

BARAMULLA, INDIA: The Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) on Tuesday entered the third and final round of voting which would elect the territory's first government since New Delhi took its control. 

In a sudden decision, Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government cancelled IIOJK's partial autonomy in 2019, which was followed by mass arrests and a months-long communication blackout. 

Since then the territory — which is divided between India and Pakistan and claimed by both in full — has not had an elected government, and has been ruled instead by a federally appointed governor.

More than half a million Indian troops are stationed around IIOJK and Tuesday's vote saw a heavy security presence, with rifle-toting soldiers seen guarding polling stations in Baramulla district.

A high unemployment rate and anger at the 2019 changes have animated campaigning, and local parties have promised to fight for the restoration of IIOJK's autonomy.

"I voted so that there is some relief for us. Modi doesn't agree with the views of Kashmiri people," Baramulla local Abdul Rahim Rah told AFP outside a polling station.

More than 55% of eligible voters cast ballots in the first two rounds of the poll.

Prior elections saw lower turnouts after boycotts called by separatist groups, who have waged a decades-long insurgency demanding IIOJK's independence or its merger with neighbouring Pakistan.

Tens of thousands of civilians, soldiers and rebels have been killed since the conflict began in 1989, including dozens this year.

Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) says the 2019 changes to the territory's governance have delivered a new era of peace to IIOJK and rapid economic growth.

That is disputed by homegrown political parties in IIOJK, who say the accompanying security clampdown brought a drastic curtailment of civil liberties.

The territory, officially titled "Jammu and Kashmir", is split.

One part is the overwhelmingly Muslim Kashmir Valley. Another is Hindu-majority Jammu district in the south, geographically divided from the rest of IIOJK by mountains.

While the BJP has fielded candidates in all the constituencies of Jammu, it is contesting only about a third of the seats elsewhere.

Regardless of the outcome, key decisions about IIOJK's governance will remain in the hands of Delhi, where Modi's government can use its parliamentary majority to override any legislation passed by the 90-seat assembly.

Results will be announced on October 8.