Srinagar/Jammu: Several political parties in Jammu and Kashmir on Saturday reacted sharply to the amendments in the domicile law for the Union Territory, saying they were cosmetic and token concessions which fell short of the expectations.
National Conference (NC) vice president Omar Abdullah said the people of Jammu and Kashmir should get to decide the laws to govern themselves rather than being subjected to the whims and fancies of the Centre.
It's high time the people of J&K get to decide the laws that will govern them rather than being subjected to the whims & fancies of the centre where orders are issued in the morning & changes to the same order issued in the evening. Restore statehood, conduct elections. #Democracy, the former chief minister of the erstwhile state wrote on Twitter.
Omar's part, the National Conference, in a statement said the amendments were cosmetic in nature and there was no doubt that the domicile law would change the demography of J-K and would essentially rob the rights of the locals to jobs.
The Central government has amended its two-day-old order and reserved all jobs in Jammu and Kashmir for the domiciles of the Union territory - people who have stayed there for at least 15 years.
On Wednesday, while laying down the rules for domiciles, the government had reserved jobs up to group 4 only.
However, following angry reactions from local political parties, an amended gazette notification - titled the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation (Adaptation of State Laws) Order-2020 - was put out on Friday night, reserving jobs for the domiciles of the UT, which was formed in October last year after the Centre withdrew the special status of the erstwhile state and announced its bifurcation.
Also read:Govt reserves jobs in J&K for domiciles; amends Apr 1 order after angry reax
The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) termed the amendments token concessions, saying the Centre should have addressed the apprehensions regarding assault on demography of J-K.
While securing the future of our youth is pivotal, GOI should've addressed the apprehension regarding assault on demography of J&K. Token concession with a backdoor left wide open in the form of new domiciles does nothing to mitigate the aspersions cast on GOI's urgent move during a life threatening pandemic, the PDP said on its official Twitter handle.
PDP spokesperson and former legislator Firdous Tak said a law which is to govern 12 million population of Jammu and Kashmir was so offhandedly drafted that the Union government had to change it within 72 hours.
He said the domicile law, even in amended form, was dangerous and only portrays the real intention of people sitting in the power corridors.
The basics of domicile law now remains unchanged whereby people from outside the union territory, who have been residing here for 15 years, the employees of central government and PSUs and others will get an equal opportunity to compete for the limited jobs in the government sector, Tak said in a statement.