7 new seats added to J&K assembly; 43 for Jammu, 47 for Kashmir

In a new layout of constituencies in Jammu and Kashmir, Jammu region will have 43 seats and Kashmir will have 47 seats, and each of the five parliamentary constituencies will have 18 assembly seats each, as per the plan drawn out by the Delimitation Commission on Thursday. 

Update: 2022-05-05 13:35 GMT

In a new layout of constituencies in Jammu and Kashmir, Jammu region will have 43 seats and Kashmir will have 47 seats, and each of the five parliamentary constituencies will have 18 assembly seats each, as per the plan drawn out by the Delimitation Commission on Thursday.

The three-member Commission submitted its final order just a day before its two-year tenure was to end.

A gazette notification was issued after the panel, headed by retired Supreme Court judge Ranjana Prakash Desai, signed the final order giving Jammu six additional seats and one more to Kashmir.

Before the restructuring, which has added 7 seats, taking the total to 90, Jammu had 37 assembly constituencies and Kashmir 46.

The Commission, also comprising Chief Election Commissioner Sushil Chandra and Jammu and Kashmir Election Commissioner KK Sharma as ex-officio members, has recommended that the legislative assembly of the Union territory have at least two members, one of them a woman, from the Kashmiri migrant community.

They should be at par with nominated members of the Puducherry Assembly who have the right to vote, the Commission said in a statement.

The Commission, which was set up in March 2020 and entrusted with the work of delimiting assembly and parliamentary constituencies in the Union territory on the basis of the 2011 Census, has also recommended to the government to consider giving displaced persons from Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir some representation in the assembly through nomination.

Besides, for the first time, nine seats have been proposed for Scheduled Tribes — six in Jammu and three in the Valley — following consultations with representatives of political parties, citizens, civil society groups.

The panel has redrawn the Anantnag parliamentary constituency in Kashmir by adding the Rajouri and Poonch assembly seats that fall in Jammu region. There are five parliamentary constituencies in the union territory with each having 18 assembly seats.

The names of some assembly seats have been changed keeping in view the demand of local representatives and public sentiment involved in the renaming, the statement said.
Tangmarg has been renamed Gulmarg, Zoonimar is Zaidibal, Sonwar is now Lal Chowk, Padder is Padder-Nagseni, Kathua North is Jasrota, Kathua South is Kathua, Khour is Chhamb, Mahore is Gulabhgarh and Darhal is Budhal.

“The Delimitation of Assembly and Parliamentary constituencies in the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir had been a challenging task and the Commission visited the Union territory twice during which it interacted with delegations as well as officials,” the statement added.

“The peculiar geo-cultural landscape of the Union Territory presented unique issues arising due to factors like competing political aspirations of the geographically and culturally distinctive regions,” the statement said.

During the public hearing, the Commission received several representations from Kashmiri migrants and displaced persons from Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir (PoJK). The Kashmiri migrants delegations said before the Commission that they were persecuted and forced to live in exile as refugees in their own country for the last three decades.

It was urged that in order to preserve their political rights, seats may be reserved for them in the Jammu and Kashmir assembly as well as in Parliament. Displaced persons from PoJK also requested the Commission to reserve few seats for them in J&K Legislative Assembly, the statement said.

(With inputs from agencies)

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