1987 Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly election

Election held in Indian-administered Kashmir From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Election for the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir were held on 23 March 1987. Farooq Abdullah was reappointed as the Chief Minister.[1]

Quick facts all 76 seats in Legislative Assembly 39 seats needed for a majority, Turnout ...
1987 Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly election

 1983
23 March 1987
1996 

all 76 seats in Legislative Assembly
39 seats needed for a majority
Turnout74.9%(Increase1.70%)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Farooq Abdullah Collective leadership
Party JKNC INC MUF
Last election 46 26 0
Seats won 40 26 4
Seat change Decrease 6 Steady Increase 4
Percentage 32.98% 20.20% 18.9%
Swing Decrease 14.31% Decrease 10.12% Increase 18.9%

  Fourth party Fifth party
 
Party BJP Independents
Last election 0 4
Seats won 2 4
Seat change Increase 2 Steady
Percentage 5.10% 15.86%
Swing Increase 1.91% Steady

Chief Minister before election

Farooq Abdullah
JKNC

Elected Chief Minister

Farooq Abdullah
JKNC

Close

The election is widely perceived to have been rigged.[2][3][4] After the following elections to the Parliament in 1989, which saw low turn-out,[5] Governor's Rule was declared in Jammu and Kashmir in 1990, which lasted till 1996.[6]

The 1987 election was a watershed in the politics of the Jammu and Kashmir state.[7][8][9][10]

Background

The background of the 1987 election is fraught with multiple complexities.

During the long years of imprisonment of Sheikh Abdullah, his loyalists split off from the National Conference party and formed a Plebiscite Front. The remaining members of the National Conference merged their party with the Indian National Congress.

After Abdullah's release and his accord with Indira Gandhi, the Congress party accepted him as its own Head and elected him as the State's Chief Minister. However, during the 1977 election, Abdullah shunned the Congress party and revived a new National Conference party from the erstwhile Plebiscite Front. He won the election handsomely.

After Sheikh Abdullah's death, the Congress party again sought an alliance with the National Conference for the 1983 election. It was again shunned and the new leader Farooq Abdullah won the election independently. Congress however emerged as the de facto party of the Jammu region. Congress exploited the internal squabbles in the National Conference and teamed up with Farooq's brother-in-law G. M. Shah to topple Farooq's government. This led to a period of instability during which the Governor's Rule was imposed.

After Rajiv Gandhi became the leader of the Indian National Congress, another accord was reached with Farooq Abdullah. The Governor's Rule was lifted and Farooq returned to power in 1986, but with the understanding that Congress and the National Conference would ally for the 1987 election. In the view of scholar Sten Widmalm, the State's two largest parties had formed an 'election cartel', which had the result that popular discontent could not be channelled.[11]

Before the election, various anti-establishment groups including Jamaat-e-Islami joined hands to form a Muslim United Front (MUF) mainly pointing out that the NC had capitulated before the Centre for the sake of power and bartered away the special status of the State. Efforts were made to arouse Muslim sentiments along communal lines.[citation needed] MUF's election manifesto stressed the need for a solution to all outstanding issues according to Simla Agreement, work for Islamic unity and against political interference from the centre. Their slogan was wanting the law of the Quran in the Assembly.[12]

The NC-Congress(I) combine contested all the 76 seats and the MUF, 43 seats.[13][1]

Voting

The election was held on 23 March 1987. Nearly 75 percent of the voters participated, the highest recorded participation in the state. Nearly eighty percent of the people in the Valley voted.[14][15]

Elections for Bhadrawah, Leh and Kargil were held in June 1987.[6]

Results

More information Party, Votes ...
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Jammu & Kashmir National Conference857,83032.9840Decrease6
Indian National Congress525,26120.20260
Bharatiya Janata Party132,5285.102Increase2
Others181,1756.9700
Independents903,97134.768Increase6
Total2,600,765100.0076Increase1
Valid votes2,600,76597.69
Invalid/blank votes61,5902.31
Total votes2,662,355100.00
Registered voters/turnout3,555,54974.88
Source: ECI[16]
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The NC-Congress alliance won 66 seats in the Assembly: NC winning 40 seats of the 45 it contested, and Congress winning 26 out of 31 (5 out of 6 contested seats in the Valley).[17][14] The alliance received only 53% of the popular vote but garnered 87% of the seats.[18]

The BJP won 2 seats, in Jammu.[15][19] The MUF expected to win 10 seats out of the 44 seats it contested. But it won only 4 seats, even though it had polled 31% votes.[14][15][20] Syed Ali Shah Geelani of Jamaat-e-Islami (a constituent of MUF) won from Sopore.[21]

The disparity between the popular vote and the seat wins was very high. (In comparison, in 1983, the NC and Congress polled 78% of the vote to achieve 95% of the seats.) Scholar Sten Widmalm explains the increased disparity as an effect of forming an "election cartel" (between the NC and Congress), which had a dominant effect in the first-past-the-post election system used in India. The cartel's victory seemed unfair to many Jammu and Kashmir voters, which was magnified when allegations of fraud came to the surface.[22]

The MUF's garnering of 31% of the vote in its first electoral contest has been described as a 'huge' success.[23] Journalist Balraj Puri states that the MUF emerged as the main alternative to the NC-Congress alliance in all parts of the Valley, except the four constituencies of the Kupwara district where People's Conference came in the second place.[24]

The People's Conference did not win a seat despite having been expected to do well in the constituencies of Bandipora, Sangrama, Handwara, and Kupwara. They still managed to capture 93,949 votes.[25]

Results by constituency

More information Assembly Constituency, Turnout ...
  • Winner, runner-up, voter turnout, and victory margin in every constituency[26]
Assembly Constituency Turnout Winner Runner Up Margin
#k Names % Candidate Party Votes % Candidate Party Votes %
1Karnah77.02%Sharifuddin ShariqJKNC20,26950.88%Abdul Rashid MirchlJKNC14,84437.26%5,425
2Handwara82.19%Chowdary Mohammed RamzanJKNC20,42346.93%Abdul Ghani LoneJKNC19,09343.88%1,330
3Langate80.15%Abdul Ahad WaniJKNC10,67639.57%Ghulam Quadir LoneIndependent9,37134.73%1,305
4Kupwara69.44%Mushtaq Ahmad LoneJKNC12,58537.06%Abdul Haq KhanJKNC10,80631.83%1,779
5Bandipora76.66%Ghulam Rasool MirJKNC17,89446.25%Nizam-Ud-DinJKNC14,66837.91%3,226
6Sonawari76.98%Mohammed Ud-Din KocheyJKNC26,81967.53%Abdul Khaliq HaneefIndependent11,14628.06%15,673
7Pattan82.03%Aga Syed Mahmood AlmosviJKNC16,87144.02%Moulvi Mustafa HussainIndependent9,29124.24%7,580
8Gulmarg78.95%Sheikh Mustafa KamalJKNC19,26062.36%Ghulam Hassan MirIndependent10,52634.08%8,734
9Sangrama74.5%Ghulam Mohiuddin BhatJKNC10,50941.25%Vakil Abdul MajidIndependent6,81026.73%3,699
10Sopore84.75%Syed Ali Shah GeelaniIndependent24,39254.24%Abdul Ahmad VakilJKNC19,94244.35%4,450
11Rafiabad77.31%Ghulam Mohammed KhanJKNC12,37839.99%Abdul Majid BhatIndependent7,06622.83%5,312
12Baramulla77.35%Shiekh Mohammed MaqbolJKNC16,24748.06%Ghulam MohmadIndependent14,81143.81%1,436
13Uri83.42%Mohammad ShafiJKNC27,79389.61%Abdul RehmanIndependent2,5658.27%25,228
14Kangan80.48%Mian Altaf Ahmed LarviINC14,64446.04%Ghulam Mohammed WarIndependent9,95231.29%4,692
15Ganderbal83.37%Farooq AbdullahJKNC30,25578.75%Abdul Khaliq SofiIndependent7,44619.38%22,809
16Hazratbal76.98%Mohmad Yasin ShahJKNC19,16761.41%Syed Fayaz NaqashbandiIndependent7,93625.43%11,231
17Amira Kadal71.39%Ghulam Mohi-Ud-Din ShohJKNC19,56755.35%Mohammed Yussouf ShohIndependent15,27843.22%4,289
18Habba Kadal60.06%Piyare Lal HandooJKNC17,24048.51%Mushtaq AhmadIndependent15,95144.89%1,289
19Zaina Kadal75.56%Ali Mohammad CharlooJKNC22,82064.42%Firdous AttaIndependent12,24334.56%10,577
20Eidgah76.63%Mohammed Shafi KhanJKNC26,90470.41%Bashir AhmedIndependent11,12229.11%15,782
21Zadibal71.24%Peer Mohammed ShafiJKNC27,31654.42%Peer Abdul RoufIndependent22,12144.07%5,195
22Nagin99.89%Abdul Samad TeliJKNC14,09348.24%Hakim Mohammed JawadIndependent12,51042.82%1,583
23Beerwah74.12%Syed Ahmad SyedJKNC15,34147.28%Ghulam Mohammed MirIndependent10,01630.87%5,325
24Khan Sahib82.21%Ghulam Mohmad MirINC24,18070.03%Ghulam Qadir WarJKNC4,16612.07%20,014
25Budgam82.74%Syed Ghulam Hussain GeelaniJKNC18,91144.96%Mohammed Sultan BhatIndependent12,55629.85%6,355
26Chadoora72.97%Mir MustafaIndependent12,92040.59%Abdul Samad MirJKNC11,51436.17%1,406
27Charari Sharief85.54%Abdul Rahim RatherJKNC25,44782.94%Abdul RashidIndependent3,0629.98%22,385
28Pulwama80.99%Bashir Ahmed NengrooJKNC23,29759.57%Mushtaq AhmedIndependent14,91038.12%8,387
29Pampore81.8%Ghulam Mohi Ud DinJKNC22,18657.33%Ali Mohammed LoneIndependent15,38339.75%6,803
30Tral87.45%Ghulam Nabi NaikINC13,62935.17%Mohmad SultanIndependent12,27431.67%1,355
31Wachi83.42%Nazir Ahmad WaniJKNC17,90049.66%Mohmad AbdullahIndependent17,77849.33%122
32Shopian81.68%Sheikh Mohammed MansoorJKNC18,08348.%Abdul Ahad ThokerIndependent17,74747.11%336
33Noorabad82.33%Abdul Aziz ZargarINC27,13276.51%Bashir Ahmad MalikIndependent7,43020.95%19,702
34Devsar77.85%Peerzada Ghulam AhmadJKNC17,16950.49%Hamid Ulla RangrezIndependent14,55042.79%2,619
35Kulgam79.97%Haji Abdul Pazak MirIndependent15,60749.95%Ghulam Nabi DarJKNC12,03138.5%3,576
36Hom Shali Bugh84.91%Ghulam NabiIndependent20,88658.22%Abdul Salam DevaJKNC14,18039.52%6,706
37Pahalgam77.7%Rafi Ahmad MirJKNC16,25752.89%Ghulam Nabi HagrooIndependent13,47643.84%2,781
38Srigufwara–Bijbehara83.06%Abdul Gani ShahJKNC16,81847.72%Mohammed SultanIndependent16,71847.44%100
39Anantnag83.8%Mohammed Syeed ShahIndependent24,80073.92%Mirza Masood BegINC8,09524.13%16,705
40Shangus–Anantnag East81.38%Abdul Rashid DarJKNC14,28343.97%Jamseed Ghulam MohammedIndependent8,23725.36%6,046
41Kokernag87.95%Peerzada Mohammad SyedINC28,46380.92%Mohammed Abdulla SheikhIndependent4,77813.58%23,685
42Dooru74.94%Mohammed Akbar GanieJKNC13,82649.6%Noor Ud Din ShahIndependent12,59445.18%1,232
43Leh68.25%Tsering SamphelINC16,14256.39%Tokdan RinpocheyIndependent7,13824.94%9,004
44Kargil78.64%Qamar Ali AkhoonJKNC35,55988.93%Kachoo Mohammed Ali KhanIndependent4,42711.07%31,132
45Kishtwar69.85%Bashir Ahmed KichlooJKNC18,04467.95%Man MohanBJP3,30912.46%14,735
46Inderwal65.5%Shareef NaizINC27,06990.78%Sheikh Ghulam MohammedIndependent1,0453.5%26,024
47Bhaderwah (SC)51.4%Hari LalINC11,77254.17%Gian ChandLKD8,33338.34%3,439
48Doda78.05%Attaullah SohrawardiJKNC29,23292.46%Chuni LalLKD1,3954.41%27,837
49Ramban66.9%Bharat GandhiINC14,33958.32%Tirth SinghIndependent8,59734.97%5,742
50Banihal64.32%Molvi Abdul RashidJKNC13,94957.92%Mohammed Akhter NizamIndependent6,05625.15%7,893
51Gulabgarh72.36%Haji Buland KhanJKNC15,54548.37%Abdul GaniIndependent11,14334.67%4,402
52Reasi66.58%Mohammed Ayub KhanINC15,54546.99%Jagjiwan LalIndependent5,76217.42%9,783
53Udhampur64.93%Balak RamINC18,84753.72%Shiv Charan GuptaBJP13,55238.63%5,295
54Chenani62.86%Yash Paul KhajuriaINC15,84256.01%Thakur Dass ChanotraJKNPP10,46236.99%5,380
55Ramnagar (SC)51.01%Chandhu LalINC14,31158.77%Girdhari LalJKNPP6,80727.95%7,504
56Samba70.2%Parkash SharmaINC10,31827.34%Hoshiar SinghIndependent7,40719.63%2,911
57Bari Brahmana (SC)76.69%Swaran LataINC14,53945.51%Gurnbachan KumariIndependent8,46626.5%6,073
58Bishnah (SC)66.2%Parma NandJKNC16,31953.65%Gian ChandIndependent6,49521.35%9,824
59Ranbir Singh Pora–Jammu South77.47%Ranjit SinghINC14,04337.51%Thakur DassIndependent9,52325.44%4,520
60Jammu Cantonment68.24%H. S. BaliIndependent10,97026.62%Trilochan DuttaINC10,11024.54%860
61Jammu West (SC)61.52%Mangat Ram SharmaINC16,20448.99%Chander Mohan SharmaBJP10,13030.63%6,074
62Jammu East63.74%Chaman Lal GuptaBJP13,93049.52%Ved ParkashINC10,69738.02%3,233
63Jandrah Gharota72.59%Shiv Dev SinghINC13,12134.56%Rattan Chand GandhiIndependent8,88723.41%4,234
64Marh (SC)78.5%Mula RamINC17,16252.24%Sat PalJKNPP11,81835.97%5,344
65Akhnoor79.78%Govind Ram SharmaIndependent19,64259.52%Dharam PalINC9,20227.88%10,440
66Chhamb81.06%Madan LalINC15,52752.5%Ram NathBJP10,79536.5%4,732
67Basohli (SC)61.64%Jagdish Raj SapoliaINC11,32240.69%Lal ChandIndependent10,05436.14%1,268
68Billawar (SC)60.71%Swram SinghINC17,73158.99%Loknath SangraBJP7,14323.76%10,588
69Kathua (SC)70.08%Om ParkashINC16,80549.61%Kulbhushan KumarBJP10,17530.04%6,630
70Hiranagar71.97%Baldev SinghBJP17,08845.17%Ram Das DograINC14,58038.54%2,508
71Nowshera68.54%Beli RamINC24,05360.51%Balwant SinghIndependent5,80814.61%18,245
72Darhal75.78%Chowdhary Mohmmad HussainJKNC28,70764.34%Mohammed Sadiq MalikIndependent13,49630.25%15,211
73Rajouri82.74%Mirsa Abdul RashidINC33,44372.02%Chowdhary Talib HussainIndependent10,64822.93%22,795
74Surankote80.35%Aslam Chowdhary MohammadINC26,39468.81%Mohammed Ayub ShabnamIndependent11,67730.44%14,717
75Mendhar (SC)80.64%Nisar Ahamed KhanJKNC19,82052.46%Lal Mohammed SabirIndependent16,04942.48%3,771
76Haveli67.84%Chaudhry Bashir AhmedIndependent19,10356.22%Ghulam Ahmed GanaiJKNC14,38442.33%4,719
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Electoral malpractice

India Today reported that "starting about two weeks before the election, 600 opposition workers were arrested in areas where the MUF, independents, and PC [People's Conference] candidates were showing strength".[27]

In the Amira Kadal constituency of Srinagar, MUF's Syed Mohammed Yusuf Shah was a candidate. As the vote-counting began, it was becoming clear that Yusuf Shah was winning by a landslide. His opponent, Ghulam Mohiuddin Shah, went home dejected. But he was summoned back by the electoral officials and declared the winner. When the crowds protested, the police arrived and arrested Yusuf Shah and his supporters. They were held in custody till the end of 1987.[28]

Leader of the People's Conference party, Abdul Ghani Lone, complained that vote counting in the constituency of Handwara was tampered with by the deputy inspector-general of police, A.M. Watali. There were several cases like this with other candidates but the petitions to the courts did not lead to any action. There was no response from the central government, courts, or the election commission to the demands that the allegations of rigging be investigated. Kashmir's High Court chose not to probe the allegations and the Election Commission was inactive at the time.[27]

Balraj Puri has noted three constituencies where the MUF lost narrowly: Bijbehara, Wachi, and Shopian. The number of rejected votes in these constituencies was far higher than the margin of victory for the alliance, indicating that the vote-counting could have been easily manipulated.[24]

Whereas it took only three hours to count the votes in Farooq Abdullah's seat, the vote-counting in seats where the MUF had influence took considerably longer. In Anantnag, it was reported that the results were delayed for two and a half days while the polling station was surrounded by hundreds of policemen. In Bijbehara the polling officers refused to count when they found that a MUF candidate had taken an early lead. In Doru, an NC candidate with a lead of 300 votes was declared the winner even though more than a thousand votes remained to be counted. Counting in the Pulwama constituency took no account of the strategic Tahab belt. Counting in Shopian and Sopore went on for three days.[25]

BBC cited a Kashmiri politician Khem Lata Wakhloo,[a] as stating that there was widespread rigging in Kashmir. She stated: "I remember that there was massive rigging in 1987 elections. The losing candidates were declared winners. It shook the ordinary people's faith in the elections and the democratic process."[31][undue weight? discuss]

Governor Jagmohan is reported to have been appalled at what was being done, but he said that he was ordered by the central government in Delhi not to interfere.[25]

Many see this rigged election as a cause of militancy in Kashmir.[32] Abdul Ghani Lone became a separatist leader after the 1987 election and stated that many young people, out of frustration with the democratic process, decided to go for an armed struggle.[27]

Extent of electoral malpractice

The extent of election malpractice has been debated by scholars and analysts.[33][34]

Scholar Victoria Schofield has stated that the MUF might have won four more seats if there was no electoral fraud.[35] On the other hand, an anonymous source in the Intelligence Bureau has advanced the estimate that the MUF may have lost approximately 13 seats due to electoral malpractice.[36] Other journalists and commentators have estimated a loss of fifteen to twenty seats.[4] Farooq Abdullah conceded that the opposition parties might have been able to win 20 seats instead of 10 in the absence of rigging. He denied his own involvement in the rigging.[37]

Former Kashmir civil servant Wajahat Habibullah states that clear indications of malpractice were found in ten constituencies. These constituencies were mainly in Srinagar and all of them were counted as wins of the National Conference.[38] He believes that Farooq Abdullah allowed them to be rigged to gain a majority for the National Conference in the Assembly so that it would not be dependent on support from the Indian National Congress.[39] He also notes that the methods of rigging appeared "blatant" and lacked the finesse of the pre-1977 elections.[40]

Aftermath

Farooq Abdullah was elected Chief Minister and formed a coalition government. However, the Government lacked legitimacy in the eyes of the people in the Valley. Rebels branded the election as a "thoroughly made one".[41] The Valley sank into a "morass of frustration and radicalisation", states scholar Sumantra Bose. In June 1988, there were protests against a hike in the electricity tariffs, resulting in police firings. In July, the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front launched its first bomb attack in Srinagar.[42] A cycle of violence and protests took hold, steadily rising in tempo. In January 1990, the Union Government appointed Jagmohan as the governor of the state. Farooq Abdullah resigned in protest, and Governor's Rule was declared.

See also

Notes

  1. Khem Lata Wakhloo was one of the 12 legislators of the National Conference that defected to the G. M. Shah's faction in 1984.[29] Her political affiliation in 1987 is uncertain but Sumantra Bose believes she was still part of the National Conference at that time.[30]

References

Bibliography

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