Voters have begun casting their ballots in regional elections in Indian-administered Kashmir.
India’s Kashmir holds
first regional election since losing autonomy
At stake are seats in the region’s 90-member legislature, which will make laws and approve local governing decisions.
Indian security personnel stand guard as voters queue to cast their ballots in Pulwama, Indian-administered Kashmir, on September 18 [Taussef Mustafa/AFP]
Published On 18 Sep 202418 Sep 2024
Voters have begun casting their ballots in
regional elections in Indian-administered Kashmir.
Kashmiris lined up outside polling stations on
Wednesday morning to vote in a local government election for the first time
since the disputed territory lost its semi-autonomous status in 2019.
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Nine million registered voters will choose
members of the Himalayan region’s 90-seat legislature. After Wednesday’s first
phase of voting, second and third rounds will be held on September 25 and
October 1. Votes will be counted on October 8, with results expected the same
day.
Kashmiri political analyst Sheikh Showkat
Hussain told Al Jazeera the election is significant because it has
“become a sort of referendum” on the region’s historic special status, which
was revoked by India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
That move, upheld by the Supreme Court
last year, sparked anger and fear in India’s only Muslim-majority
region, with many worried under Modi’s Hindu nationalism, New Delhi aimed to
change its demographics.
Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party-led (BJP)
government has said that getting rid of the region’s special status restored
normalcy in the area and helped its development.
Kashmir has been at the centre of a
dispute with neighbouring Pakistan since 1947. India and Pakistan both
claim the region in full but rule it in part, after having fought two of their
three wars over the region.