Muzaffar Baig Formally Joins Peoples Conference In Srinagar
Ever since the withdrawal of Article 370 in August 2019, mainstream politics in Kashmir is going through some churning. The latest example of this is the return of Muzaffar Hussain Beigh to his parent party, the People’s Conference (PC), now led by Sajad Gani Lone. Beigh had started his political career with the PC in the early eighties, unsuccessfully contesting an assembly election as the party’s candidate in 1983 from Baramulla. He later moved on in his life, pursuing his legal career outside Jammu and Kashmir, returning only in the late nineties to co-found the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) along with late Mufti Mohammad Sayeed in 1998 and rising to become the then state’s Deputy Chief Minister in the subsequent PDP-led government.
‘I Have Risen From The Ground In These Elections, Nobody Can Term Me A Parachute’
Jammu and Kashmir Peoples Conference chairman Sajad Gani Lone along with his senior leaders Muzaffar Hussain Baig, at his residence in Srinagar on Wednesday, March 17, 2021. KL Image: Bilal Bahadur
Introducing his party before the media, Bukhari made it clear that his job was not to seek restoration of Kashmir’s autonomy but to work for the development of the region. As things stand, Bukhari’s politics has had a free run in Kashmir as Delhi initially ensured he faces no challenge from the main parties whose top leaders were in jail. In recent District Development Council elections too, Bukhari’s party won control of two councils. Also, considering he has a number of leaders in his party who command some support base back in their constituencies, the Apni Party could pull off a smattering of seats. And who knows, even more, considering the way the new politics is shaping up in Kashmir.
Riyaz Wani
At the same time, there is no denying the fact that steadily and imperceptibly a new generation of politicians is taking over in Kashmir. The basic structure of politics, however, remains the same. One, it pivots around a binary of the separatist and the mainstream discourse. And second, Kashmir’s political landscape so far continues to be dominated by Abdullahs and the Muftis. While Abdullahs’ have been in power for most of the post-1947 period, PDP, the Mufti party, which emerged on the scene only in 1999, rode spectacularly to power in 2002. It was in power for six years through a rotational arrangement with the Congress, with the parties sharing the chief ministership for three years each. However, the Muftis as a political family precede the PDP by decades. Before he founded the PDP, the party’s late patron, Mufti Sayeed, was a Congress leader for four decades. Now following the exit of a majority of its leaders, the PDP has been reduced to a rump.
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