Understanding Article 370
Article 370 was and is about providing space, in matters of governance, to the people of a State who felt deeply vulnerable about their identity and insecure about the future.
At the Bharatiya Janata Party’s recent Lalkar
rally in Jammu, its prime ministerial candidate, Narendra Modi, called
for a debate on Article 370. This is encouraging and suggests that the
BJP may be willing to review its absolutist stance on the Article that
defines the provisions of the Constitution of India with respect to
Jammu and Kashmir. Any meaningful debate on Article 370 must, however,
separate myth from reality and fact from fiction. My purpose here is to
respond to the five main questions that have already been raised in the
incipient debate.
Why it was incorporated
First, why was Article 370 inserted in
the Constitution? Or as the great poet and thinker, Maulana Hasrat
Mohini, asked in the Constituent Assembly on October 17, 1949: “Why this
discrimination please?” The answer was given by Nehru’s confidant, the
wise but misunderstood Thanjavur Brahmin, Gopalaswami Ayyangar (Minister
without portfolio in the first Union Cabinet, a former Diwan to
Maharajah Hari Singh of Jammu and Kashmir, and the principal drafter of
Article 370). Ayyangar argued that for a variety of reasons Kashmir,
unlike other princely states, was not yet ripe for integration. India
had been at war with Pakistan over Jammu and Kashmir and while there was
a ceasefire, the conditions were still “unusual and abnormal.” Part of
the State’s territory was in the hands of “rebels and enemies.”
The involvement of the United Nations
brought an international dimension to this conflict, an “entanglement”
which would end only when the “Kashmir problem is satisfactorily
resolved.” Finally, Ayyangar argued that the “will of the people through
the instrument of the [J&K] Constituent Assembly will determine the
constitution of the State as well as the sphere of Union jurisdiction
over the State.” In sum, there was hope that J&K would one day
integrate like other States of the Union (hence the use of the term
“temporary provisions” in the title of the Article), but this could
happen only when there was real peace and only when the people of the
State acquiesced to such an arrangement.
Second, did Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel
oppose Article 370? To reduce the Nehru-Patel relationship to Manichean
terms is to caricature history, and this is equally true of their
attitude towards Jammu and Kashmir. Nehru was undoubtedly idealistic and
romantic about Kashmir. He wrote: “Like some supremely beautiful woman,
whose beauty is almost impersonal and above human desire, such was
Kashmir in all its feminine beauty of river and valley…” Patel had a
much more earthy and pragmatic view and — as his masterly integration of
princely states demonstrated — little time for capricious state leaders
or their separatist tendencies.
But while Ayyangar negotiated — with
Nehru’s backing — the substance and scope of Article 370 with Sheikh
Abdullah and other members from J&K in the Constituent Assembly
(including Mirza Afzal Beg and Maulana Masoodi), Patel was very much in
the loop. And while Patel was deeply sceptical of a “state becoming part
of India” and not “recognising … [India’s] fundamental rights and
directive principles of State policy,” he was aware of, and a party to,
the final outcome on Article 370.
Negotiations
Indeed, the synergy that Patel and Nehru
brought to governing India is evident in the negotiations over Article
370. Consider this. In October 1949, there was a tense standoff between
Sheikh Abdullah and Ayyangar over parts of Article 370 (or Article 306A
as it was known during the drafting stage). Nehru was in the United
States, where — addressing members of the U.S. Congress — he said:
“Where freedom is menaced or justice threatened or where aggression
takes place, we cannot be and shall not be neutral.” Meanwhile, Ayyangar
was struggling with the Sheikh, and later even threatened to resign
from the Constituent Assembly. “You have left me even more distressed
than I have been since I received your last letter … I feel weighted
with the responsibility of finding a solution for the difficulties that,
after Panditji left for America … have been created … without adequate
excuse,” he wrote to the Sheikh on October 15. And who did Ayyangar turn
to, in this crisis with the Sheikh, while Nehru was abroad? None other
than the Sardar himself. Patel, of course, was not enamoured by the
Sheikh, who he thought kept changing course. He wrote to Ayyangar:
“Whenever Sheikh Sahib wishes to back out, he always confronts us with
his duty to the people.” But it was Patel finally who managed the crisis
and navigated most of the amendments sought of the Sheikh through the
Congress party and the Constituent Assembly to ensure that Article 370
became part of the Indian Constitution.
Third, is Article 370 still intact in its
original form? One of the biggest myths is the belief that the
“autonomy” as envisaged in the Constituent Assembly is intact. A series
of Presidential Orders has eroded Article 370 substantially. While the
1950 Presidential Order and the Delhi Agreement of 1952 defined the
scope and substance of the relationship between the Centre and the State
with the support of the Sheikh, the subsequent series of Presidential
Orders have made most Union laws applicable to the State. In fact today
the autonomy enjoyed by the State is a shadow of its former self, and
there is virtually no institution of the Republic of India that does not
include J&K within its scope and jurisdiction. The only substantial
differences from many other States relate to permanent residents and
their rights; the non-applicability of Emergency provisions on the
grounds of “internal disturbance” without the concurrence of the State;
and the name and boundaries of the State, which cannot be altered
without the consent of its legislature. Remember J&K is not unique;
there are special provisions for several States which are listed in
Article 371 and Articles 371-A to 371-I.
Fourth, can Article 370 be revoked
unilaterally? Clause 3 of Article 370 is clear. The President may, by
public notification, declare that this Article shall cease to be
operative but only on the recommendation of the Constituent Assembly of
the State. In other words, Article 370 can be revoked only if a new
Constituent Assembly of Jammu and Kashmir is convened and is willing to
recommend its revocation. Of course, Parliament has the power to amend
the Constitution to change this provision. But this could be subject to a
judicial review which may find that this clause is a basic feature of
the relationship between the State and the Centre and cannot, therefore,
be amended.
Gender bias?
Fifth, is Article 370 a source of gender
bias in disqualifying women from the State of property rights? Article
370 itself is gender neutral, but the definition of Permanent Residents
in the State Constitution — based on the notifications issued in April
1927 and June 1932 during the Maharajah’s rule — was thought to be
discriminatory. The 1927 notification included an explanatory note which
said: “The wife or a widow of the State Subject … shall acquire the
status of her husband as State Subject of the same Class as her Husband,
so long as she resides in the State and does not leave the State for
permanent residence outside the State.” This was widely interpreted as
suggesting also that a woman from the State who marries outside the
State would lose her status as a State subject. However, in a landmark
judgement, in October 2002, the full bench of J&K High Court, with
one judge dissenting, held that the daughter of a permanent resident of
the State will not lose her permanent resident status on marrying a
person who is not a permanent resident, and will enjoy all rights,
including property rights.
Finally, has Article 370 strengthened
separatist tendencies in J&K? Article 370 was and is about providing
space, in matters of governance, to the people of a State who felt
deeply vulnerable about their identity and insecure about the future. It
was about empowering people, making people feel that they belong, and
about increasing the accountability of public institutions and services.
Article 370 is synonymous with decentralisation and devolution of
power, phrases that have been on the charter of virtually every
political party in India. There is no contradiction between wanting
J&K to be part of the national mainstream and the State’s desire for
self-governance as envisioned in the Article.
Separatism grows when people feel
disconnected from the structures of power and the process of policy
formulation; in contrast, devolution ensures popular participation in
the running of the polity. It can be reasonably argued that it is the
erosion of Article 370 and not its creation which has aggravated
separatist tendencies in the State. Not surprisingly, at the opposition
conclave in Srinagar in 1982, leaders of virtually all national parties,
including past and present allies of the BJP, declared that the
“special constitutional status of J&K under Article 370 should be
preserved and protected in letter and spirit.” A review of its policy on
Article 370, through an informed debate, would align today’s BJP with
the considered and reflective approach on J&K articulated by former
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. Only then would the slogans of Jhumuriyat, Kashmiriyat and Insaniyat make real sense.
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