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‘Mystery illness’ in J-K village claims ninth life in a fortnight Dec. 23, 2024, 2:56 PM ET (The Indian Express)

Constitutional framework

Until 2019, Jammu and Kashmir retained a special status within the union government of India as a semiautonomous state. Unlike the rest of the states, which are bound by the Indian constitution, Jammu and Kashmir followed a modified version of that constitution—as delineated in the Constitution (Application to Jammu and Kashmir) Order, 1954—which affirmed the integrity of the state within the Republic of India. A governor, who was appointed by the president of India, served as head of state with an elected chief minister as head of government and aided by a council of ministers. The legislature consisted of two houses: the Legislative Assembly (Vidhan Sabha), comprising several dozen members elected from single-member constituencies; and the smaller Legislative Council (Vidhan Parishad), with most members elected by various groups of politicians, local administrators, and educators and a few appointed by the governor. The union government had direct legislative powers in matters of defense, foreign policy, and communications within the state and had indirect influence in matters of citizenship, Supreme Court jurisdiction, and emergency powers.

In August 2019 the union government removed the constituional provision that gave Jammu and Kashmir autonomy. In October the state was formally bifurcated into the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir and the union territory of Ladakh. Under this reorganization, the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir came under the administration of a lieutenant governor appointed by the president of India, and an elected chief minister and a council of ministers. The reorganization also provided for a Legislative Assembly, with members elected to five-year terms, though it may be dissolved by the lieutenant governor before the term expires. Unlike with state legislatures, which have constitutional authority over matters of public order and policing, those matters fall under the domain of the union government (through the lieutenant governor as its representative). The territory directly sends five elected representatives to the Lok Sabha (lower chamber) and four members, elected by the combined Legislative Assembly and Council, to the Rajya Sabha (upper chamber) of the Indian national parliament. Jammu and Kashmir shares with Ladakh union territory a common High Court, which consists of a chief justice and 11 other judges, who are appointed by the president of India.

Health and welfare

Medical service is provided by hospitals and dispensaries scattered throughout the union territory. Influenza, respiratory ailments such as asthma, and dysentery remain common health problems. Cardiovascular disease, cancer, and tuberculosis have increased in the Vale of Kashmir since the late 20th century.

Education

Education is free at all levels. Literacy rates are comparable to the national average, but female literacy is considerably lower than that for males. The two major institutes of higher education are the University of Kashmir at Srinagar and the University of Jammu, both founded in 1969. In addition, agricultural schools have been established in Srinagar (1982) and Jammu (1999). A specialized institute of medical sciences was founded in Srinagar in 1982.

William Kirk Rais Akhtar The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica

History

The history of Jammu and Kashmir in its regional setting, both before and after Indian independence in 1947, is given in the article Kashmir.

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The decision by Hari Singh, the Dogra maharaja of Kashmir, to sign the Instrument of Accession in October 1947—thus joining Kashmir to the Indian union—precipitated warfare between India and Pakistan that culminated in the establishment of the line of control (cease-fire line) in the region in July 1949. The territory that India administered on its side of the line, which contained both Jammu (the seat of the Dogra dynasty) and the Vale of Kashmir, took on the name Jammu and Kashmir. However, both India and Pakistan have continued to claim the entire Kashmir region, and tensions generally have remained high along the line. Fighting has occasionally broken out between the two sides, notably in 1965. India has also contested China’s presence in areas that India claimed as part of Hari Singh’s accession. Meanwhile, the process of formalizing Jammu and Kashmir’s status as a state took several years and was completed only in 1957.

The pro-India Jammu and Kashmir National Conference (JKNC) governed the state for most of the time between accession in 1947 and the 2019 suspension of statehood. Interludes were mainly filled by the Indian National Congress (Congress Party)—notably from 1964 to 1975. The state was also administered directly by the central Indian government for brief periods, although one such occurrence lasted for six years (1990–96). Sheikh Muhammad Abdullah, founder of the JKNC, served as the first head of government (called prime minister until 1965 and then chief minister) until he was dismissed from office by the national government in 1953 and was imprisoned for 11 years on the grounds that he sought to separate Jammu and Kashmir from India. Abdullah later returned to government as chief minister, in office from 1975 to his death in 1982. His son, Farooq Abdullah, also served as chief minister (1982–84, 1986–90, and 1996–2002), as did Farooq’s son Omar Abdullah (2009–15 and 2024-).

In August 2019 the national government removed Jammu and Kashmir’s autonomy and applied India’s constitution fully to the territory. It also passed legislation to downgrade the state to a union territory in October—thereby allowing the union government full control over its governance—and to split the Ladakh region off into a separate union territory of its own. In December 2023 India’s Supreme Court upheld the government’s decision to revoke Jammu and Kashmir’s semiautonomous status. The court ruled that the decision was constitutional, on the grounds that the region’s status had been a “temporary provision.”

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica