Chicago – August 17, 2024
Indian-administered Kashmir will hold local elections starting on September 18, according to the Election Commission, the first regional polls there in a decade and five years after New Delhi scrapped the region’s special autonomy.
“After a long gap, elections are due and will be held in Jammu and Kashmir,” Chief Election Commissioner Rajiv Kumar told reporters in New Delhi on Friday.
Voting for the region’s assembly will be held in three stages between September 18 and October 1, while the vote counting is set for October 4.
Nearly nine million people are registered to vote for the 90-member legislative assembly, the election panel said.
Some see the polls as a critical step in returning the vote to the people to choose their leaders.
India’s only Muslim-majority region, Kashmir has been at the heart of 77 years of animosity with neighbouring Pakistan since the two nations’ independence from colonial rule by Britain.
The larger Kashmir region is divided between India, Pakistan and China. The part ruled by India enjoyed a special status that was revoked by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government in 2019.
The decision to hold elections follows a December order by India’s Supreme Court that rejected petitions challenging the revocation of Kashmir’s special status and set a deadline of September 30 for holding provincial polls.