Special Status of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh Notes
- Jammu & Kashmir (J&K) acceded to India through the Instrument of Accession signed on 26 October 1947 by Maharaja Hari Singh.
- Accession was accepted by Governor-General of India with certain special conditions.
Article 370 – Special Status (Before 2019)
- Article 370 provided special autonomous status to the state of J&K.
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Key provisions:
- Limited application of the Indian Constitution.
- Parliament had power to legislate only on matters in the Union List and Concurrent List with concurrence of the J&K State Government.
- Separate J&K Constitution (1956).
- Dual citizenship – J&K residents were Indian citizens but had special rights.
- No financial emergency could be imposed.
- Disrespecting the national symbols was not punishable under state laws.
- Prevented outsiders from owning land in J&K.
Article 35A – Special Rights to Residents of J&K
- Inserted through a Presidential Order in 1954 (not by Parliament).
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Empowered the J&K legislature to:
- Define “permanent residents.”
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Provide exclusive rights on:
- Property
- Government jobs
- Scholarships
- Other welfare benefits
- Not part of the Constitution’s main body; placed in Appendix I.
Abrogation of Article 370 – August 5, 2019
Steps Taken:
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Presidential Order C.O. 272 (2019):
- Extended all provisions of the Indian Constitution to J&K.
- Used Article 370(1)(d) with “concurrence of the Governor” (since state was under President’s Rule).
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Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act, 2019:
- Passed by Parliament.
- Came into effect on 31 October 2019.
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Bifurcated the state into:
- Union Territory of Jammu & Kashmir (with legislature)
- Union Territory of Ladakh (without legislature)
Consequences:
- Article 370 made inoperative.
- Article 35A annulled.
- J&K Constitution ceased to operate.
- All central laws extended to J&K and Ladakh.
J&K and Ladakh Post-2019
Union Territory of Jammu & Kashmir
- Has a Legislative Assembly.
- Similar structure to Delhi and Puducherry.
- Administered by Lieutenant Governor.
Union Territory of Ladakh
- No legislature.
- Administered directly by Lieutenant Governor.
Special Features of Reorganisation Act, 2019
Criticism and Support
Criticism
- Undermines federalism.
- Lack of state legislative consent.
- Lack of state legislative consent.
Support
- National integration.
- Equal laws and rights for all Indians.
- Equal laws and rights for all Indians.
Current Constitutional Position (Post-2019)
- J&K and Ladakh are UTs under Article 1 of the Constitution.
- All provisions of the Indian Constitution apply without exception.
- No special status remains.
Key Takeaways
- Article 370 granted autonomy to J&K.
- Article 35A provided special rights to permanent residents.
- Abrogated on 5 Aug 2019 by Presidential Order and J&K Reorganisation Act.
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State bifurcated into 2 UTs:
- J&K (with legislature)
- Ladakh (without legislature)
- All Indian laws and Constitution now apply in full to both UTs.