National Conference, PDP ‘put to sleep’ as new political parties spring up in J&K
The New Indian Express
February 27, 2020
National
Conference, PDP ‘put to sleep’ as new political parties spring up in
J&K
SRINAGAR: The ground seems
to be shifting from under the feet of established grassroots political parties
in Kashmir with unending detentions of top leaders adding to their isolation.
In the political vacuum,
left behind by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the National Conference,
there is now a perceptible shift away to a nebulous group made up of deserters
from mainline parties.
The gravitational shift has
been visible post-August 5 following the scrapping of Article 370 and splitting
of the state into two Union territories, followed by detentions of the big
political guns, including three former chief ministers — Dr Farooq Abdullah,
Mehbooba Mufti and Omar Abdullah under the Public Safety Act.
The forced abstentions have
led to their parties — the PDP and NC —
being left ‘rudderless.’
Stepping into the gap are an
influential businessman and politician Altaf Bukhari and PDP patron and legal
expert Muzaffar Hussain Baig.
At the vanguard of the
shift, both are ambitious characters who have sensed an opportunity to strike
it big, with some tacit support from the BJP at the Centre.
The grapevine in the Valley
is that Bukhari and Baig could join hands despite their reservations towards
each other to form a new party.
Insiders said the PDP
deserters believe that Mehbooba Mufti having lost her moral clout and her early
release unlikely, Bukhari’s logic of “filling the vacuum and insisting on a
dialogue for political concessions with BJP, is the surer way to break the
logjam to achieve normalcy.”
The BJP-led UT
administration has been approving of the development, even as the first
families in the PDP and NC are likely to come under pressure via expected
investigations into financial commitments during their respective
administrations.
In the given political
scenario of frustration, Bukhari’s line has received huge traction. Bukhari and
Baig have had several meetings to iron out differences, which could lead to
spelling out the contours of a future party with insiders hinting that Baig’s
insistence on the top party post remains the glitch in a possible deal.
It is here, that BJP
strategist Ram Madhav’s intervention is likely since Bukhari and Baig are
believed to be close to him. Former minister Usman Majid sees the development
as a ‘logical one’, given that the discourse has changed and the “PDP and NC
are now irrelevant.”
He, however, discounted BJP
influence on the emerging formation.
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