Avoiding ‘contentious issues’ Omar’s only way to develop J&K

Srinagar: As he settles down to decide what kind of dress would suit him on Wednesday’s swearing-in ceremony, the 54-year-old Omar Abdullah is upbeat about the mandate the people gave him to become the Chief Minister of J&K for the second time, but there are some pitfalls awaiting him.
The house that Omar Abdullah occupied as the Chief Minister, and was made to vacate after abrogation of Article 370 and revocation of the rule that provided every former Chief Minister an official accommodation till life, has been freshly painted and refurbished. He is expected to shift to this residence on the high-security Gupkar Road, a stone’s throw away from the residence of his father, National Conference chief and former Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah, on the same street.
People were seen lined up outside the residence of the Abdullahs in the morning to greet Omar Abdullah on his new assignment. As Chief Secretary, Atul Dulloo and DGP Nalin Prabhat had come to call on the incoming Chief Minister, the people outside were politely told to wait till the junior Abdullah was free to meet them.
Many old and new faces among the 42 MLAs of the NC are aspiring for a berth in the council of ministers, unmindful of Omar Abdullah’s worry to accommodate everybody in the same council of ministers that can have only 10 members including the Chief Minister.
Old faces in the race are former Finance Minister, Abdur Rahim Rather, former R&B Minister, Ali Mohammad Sagar, and former Social Welfare Minister, Sakina Itoo while new faces are also in the race for the ministerial posts.
Some of them have been trying to reach the incoming Chief Minister through the latter’s friends and prominent party men. Some among the new faces claim to have defeated ‘giants’ like Ghulam Hassan Mir of the Apni Party, Imran Raza Ansari of the Peoples Conference, Asiya Naqsh, Sartaj Madni, Abdul Rehman Veeri, and Mehboob Beg of the Peoples Democratic Party.
Omar Abdullah’s major worry is not who to choose or drop from among his MLAs in the Valley. His main worry is to ensure that he accommodates the MLAs from the Jammu division that has given 29 seats to his rivals in the BJP and just one to his allies in the Congress.
Given the splitting apart of the people’s mandate between the Valley and the Jammu division, the major concern for the elected government in J&K would be to bridge the chasm between the two regions. This will require bridging both political and emotional distances.

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