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Arun Jaitley says Article 35A is curbing J&K’s progress

Updated - March 29, 2019 09:03 am IST

Published - March 29, 2019 01:07 am IST - NEW DELHI

Common citizen of State hurt by ‘erroneous vision’

New Delhi: Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley addresses a press conference at the BJP headquarters, in New Delhi, Wednesday, March 27, 2019. (PTI Photo/Shahbaz Khan) (PTI3_27_2019_000080B)

Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Thursday said Article 35A was a piece of legislation that was “constitutionally vulnerable” and coming in the way of economic development of Jammu and Kashmir.

Blames Nehru

In a blog entitled “The Rule of Law and the State of Jammu and Kashmir”, Mr. Jaitley said the seven-decade history of the State confronts changing India with several questions, adding that most Indians now believe that the “Nehruvian course” was a “historical blunder”. “Does our policy today have to be guided by that erroneous vision or an out of box thinking which is in consonance with ground reality?” he queried.

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Giving a background of Article 35A, a legislation that places restrictions on non-permanent residents buying property in Jammu and Kashmir, Mr Jaitley alleged said the act had been “surreptitiously” included by a presidential notification in the Constitution in 1954. Article 35A, he said, was neither a part of the original Constitution framed by the Constituent Assembly, nor did it come as a Constitutional Amendment under Article 368 of the Constitution which requires an approval by two-third majority of both Houses of Parliament.

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