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The Ladakhi Sixth Sense

The BJP has managed to retain power in the Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council (LAHDC) but things may hot up if the Centre delays adding Ladakh to the Sixth Schedule

Congratulatory and thanksgiving messages spouted out following the BJP바카라™s 바카라śhistoric바카라ť victory in the first major election in Ladakh since the region was made a Union territory in August last year. The party was a pre-poll favourite and no political pundit would have predicted anything less than a land-sweeper considering the joy that ran through this dizzyingly beautiful land after it was hived off Jammu and Kashmir in a sweeping decision a year ago. But any hope of winning all 26 seats in the Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council (LAHDC) in Leh turned out to be thinner than the region바카라™s rarefied air when the results came on October 26. The BJP won 15 seats, Congress nine and two went to independents.

The BJP retained power in the council, but fell two seats short of its 2015 tally of 17. Party leaders hailed the victory as the people바카라™s mandate to the abrogation of Article 370. They also congratulated the BJP바카라™s Ladakh unit. But the contest wasn바카라™t between the local leaderships of the BJP and Congress, which had four seats in 2015, says former J&K minister Rigzin Jora. 바카라śWe were contesting against the government of India and its might. Four Union ministers camped here. We didn바카라™t end up badly,바카라ť the Congress leader sums up the elections. The National Conference and PDP did not contest, while the Aam Aadmi Party couldn바카라™t score on debut.

The BJP campaigned intensively with Union ministers, while the Congress depended solely on its local leadership. 바카라śThe ministers flew on helicopters바카라¦they were everywhere. I couldn바카라™t even campaign in Nobra Valley, where the BJP got all five seats,바카라ť says Jora and declares his party바카라™s next agenda바카라”ask Centre to extend constitutional safeguards under the Sixth Schedule to Ladakh. 바카라śWe will fight for it,바카라ť he asserts.

Independent candidate Konchok Stazin from Chushul was surprised by the verdict considering 바카라śthe anger바카라ť in Leh against the BJP. The people who were overjoyed with Ladakh becoming a separate Union territory were apprehensive of 바카라śoutsiders바카라ť overrunning their land, with the possibility of the Centre tweaking laws that prohibit non-Ladakhis from buying property in the region. In November last year, Ramon Magsaysay Award winner Sonam Wangchuk asked if Union territory was granted to exploit Ladakh바카라™s resources on the lines of China using Tibet. The election results didn바카라™t reflect the anger or fear, says Konchok, 바카라śbut the BJP will have a strong Opposition now바카라ť. Things might hot up if the Centre delays adding Ladakh to the Sixth Schedule, which will protect it from the Centre바카라™s notifications바카라”suchlike the one issued on October 27 that paves  the way for any Indian citizen to own land in J&K.

Konchok was with the BJP before and was sidelined because he told things about the recent Chinese incursions that many didn바카라™t like. He says, 바카라śThey have entered deep inside Chushul and no one is talking about it바카라ť.

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The LHDC in Leh was constituted in accordance with the Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council Act of 1995 during P.V. Narasimha Rao바카라™s rule, and the first election was held in 1995. The Congress swept the polls thrice, while Ladakh Union Territorial Front won in 2005. During Mufti Mohammad Sayeed바카라™s PDP rule in J&K in 2003, a similar council was formed for Kargil district.

By Naseer Ganai in Srinagar

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