Srinagar: National Conference (NC) leader Omar Abdullah took oath as the Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir on Wednesday, marking his second term in the post, in a grand ceremony held at the lakeside Sher-i-Kashmir International Convention Centre (SKICC) here.
Sakeena Masood Itoo, Javed Ahmed Rana, Javed Ahmed Dar and Satish Sharma were also sworn in as the members of the Council of Ministers. While Ms. Itoo and Mr. Dar are from the Kashmir Valley, Mr. Choudhary and Mr. Sharma represent the Jammu region of the UT in the Abdullah-led government.
54-year-old Mr. Abdullah served as the chief minister of erstwhile state of J&K also between 2008 and 2014. His political career spans over two decades, with other notable roles including Union Minister of State for External Affairs and President of the NC.
After taking the oath of office, Mr. Abdullah visited Srinagar’s Civil Secretariat where he was offered the customary guard of honour by a special contingent of the J&K police. He will be holding a meeting with the administrative secretaries of various departments in the meeting hall of the Secretariat in the afternoon.
This is the formation of the first elected government in J&K after the abrogation of Article 370 of the Constitution in August 2019, ending the 6-year-old Central rule in the UT. The erstwhile state of J&K was stripped of its special status and split up into two Union territories on August 5, 2019.
Wednesday’s ceremony was attended besides others by NC president Farooq Abdullah, Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge, the Leader of Opposition (LoP) in Lok Sabha, Rahul Gandhi, and AICC General Secretary Priyanka Gandhi, former Uttar Pradesh chief minister and Samajwadi Party national president Akhilesh Yadav, CPIM leader Prakash Karat, CPI’s D Raja, DMK’s Kanimozhi and NCP’s Supriya Sule and several other leaders or representatives of various constituents of the INDIA bloc. Former chief minister and People’s Democratic Party (PDP) president Mehbooba Mufti and Mr. Abdullah mother Molly Abdullah, two sisters, and two sons were also present on the occasion.
Significantly, NC’s alliance partner Congress has, however, not joined the government. Sources in the party said that it was offered one ministerial berth in the Abdullah-led government which was declined by it though. AICC General Secretary Ghulam Ahmed Mir who was elected as the Congress’ Legislature Party leader earlier this week, however, denied that there was any discord between the alliance partners on the government formation. “We are fully aligned with our allies in the INDIA bloc. We are committed to working together to achieve our collective goals,” he told reporters here shortly before the swearing-in ceremony.
He said that the Congress firmly stands for the restoration of statehood to J&K and decided “not take the oath of office until statehood is fully restored.” He asserted, “Our position on the issue is non-negotiable and reflects the party’s commitment to the rights of the people of J&K. We did not contest this election for power but to restore the rights of the people.”
He added, “The question of ministerial posts is irrelevant at this point. Our priority remains the restoration of statehood. The Prime Minister must honour the mandate given by the people of J&K. They want the return of statehood, and the Prime Minister should respect their will.”
Earlier during the day on Wednesday, Mr. Abdullah paid obeisance at the mausoleum of his grandfather and legendary Kashmiri leader Sheikh Muhammad Abdullah at Naseem Bagh here. Ahead of the swearing-in ceremony, he said that he had “some strange distinctions” for he was the last chief minister of J&K to serve a full six-year term and will be the first chief minister of the Union territory of J&K. He, however, hoped J&K’s status of a Union territory was a temporary one and he looked forward to working in cooperation with the Government of India “to resolve the people’s problems and the best way to do that would be to start by restoring statehood to J&K.”
He reiterated that since the Prime Minister and Union Home Minister Amit Shah have committed that J&K’s statehood will be restored “I hope it will happen soon”. He told PTI, “In the meantime, we have a responsibility and a mandate from the people to get down to work… Governing Jammu and Kashmir comes with its own challenges, but it is also an incredible opportunity.”
Elections to the Assembly of J&K UT Assembly were held in three phases from September 18 after a gap of ten years. The NC won 42 seats and its pre-poll alliance partners Congress and CPIM six seats and one seat, respectively. Five of the seven Independent candidates and AAP’s lone MLA Mehraj Malik too have extended their support to Mr. Abdullah, taking the number of the MLAs endorsing his claim to form the government to 55 in the House of 90.
However, Mr. Abdullah himself has been elected on two seats-Ganderbal and Budgam- and will soon relinquish one of these. The BJP bagged 29 seats-all in the Jammu region- and the PDP three whereas J&K People’s Conference chairman Sajad Gani Lone was returned from home constituency Handwara. Mr. Abdullah was unanimously elected leader of the NC Legislature Party last week.