India Vote Resumes With Kashmir Poised To Oppose Modi
Faizan Hashmi Published May 13, 2024 | 06:31 PM
India's six-week election resumed Monday including in the Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu & Kashmir (IIOJK), where voters were expected to show their discontent with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's cancellation of their disputed territory's semi-autonomy and the security crackdown that followed
Srinagar, (APP - UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 13th May, 2024) India's six-week election resumed Monday including in the Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu & Kashmir (IIOJK), where voters were expected to show their discontent with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's cancellation of their disputed territory's semi-autonomy and the security crackdown that followed.
Modi remains popular across much of India and his Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is widely expected to win the poll when it concludes early next month.
But his government's decision in 2019 to bring Kashmir under its direct rule -- and the subsequent clampdown -- have been deeply resented among the region's residents, who will be voting for the first time since the move.
"What we're telling voters now is that you have to make your voice heard," said former chief minister Omar Abdullah, whose National Conference party is campaigning for the restoration of Kashmir's former semi-autonomy.
"The point of view that we want people to send out is that what happened... is not acceptable to them," he told AFP.
Violence has dwindled since the occupied valley was brought under direct rule five years ago, a move that saw the mass arrest of local political leaders and a months-long telecommunications blackout to forestall expected protests.
Modi's government says its cancelling of the held Kashmir's special status has brought "peace and development", and it has consistently claimed the move was supported by Kashmiris.
But his party has not fielded any candidates in the Kashmir valley for the first time since 1996, and experts say the BJP would have been roundly defeated if it had.
"They would lose, simple as that," political analyst and historian Sidiq Wahid told AFP last week, adding that Kashmiris saw the vote as a "referendum" on Modi's policies.
The BJP has appealed to voters to instead support smaller and newly created parties that have publicly aligned with Modi's policies.
But voters are expected to back one of two established Kashmiri political parties calling for the Modi government's changes to be reversed.
"I voted for changing the current government. It must happen for our children to have a good future," civil servant Habibullah Parray told AFP.
"Everywhere you go in Kashmir today you find people from outside in charge. Everyone wants that to change."
In rural districts outside Srinagar, the region's biggest city, army soldiers patrolled roads in convoys of bulletproof vehicles.
Several polling booths around the constituency had more than two dozen paramilitary troops guarding voter queues.
Boycotts called by freedom fighting groups left few Kashmiris willing to participate in past elections, with just over 14 percent of eligible voters in Srinagar casting a ballot during the last national poll in 2019.
By mid-afternoon on Monday nearly 30 percent of people in the constituency had voted, with booths still open for several more hours.
- Nearly one billion voters -
India's election is conducted in seven phases over six weeks to ease the immense logistical burden of staging the democratic exercise in the world's most populous country.
More than 968 million people are eligible to vote in India's election, with the final round of polling on June 1 and results expected three days later.
Voter turnout elsewhere in India has so far declined significantly from 2019, according to election commission figures.
Analysts have blamed widespread expectations that Modi will easily win a third term and hotter-than-average temperatures heading into the summer.
India's weather bureau has forecast more hot spells in May and the election commission formed a taskforce last month to review the impact of heat and humidity before each round of voting.
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