By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
The Web StoryThe Web StoryThe Web Story
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Top Stories
  • Politics
  • Stories
  • Security
Search
  • Advertise
©2022 The Web Story. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: Did Kashmir’s ‘Islamist’ Voters Turn Secular Nationalists In Three Months?
Share
Sign In
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
The Web StoryThe Web Story
Font ResizerAa
  • Politics
Search
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Top Stories
  • Politics
  • Stories
  • Security
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Advertise
©2022 The Web Story - All Rights Reserved. | Hosted by LineageHost

Home - Politics - Did Kashmir’s ‘Islamist’ Voters Turn Secular Nationalists In Three Months?

Politics

Did Kashmir’s ‘Islamist’ Voters Turn Secular Nationalists In Three Months?

The Web Story
Last updated: October 14, 2024 9:45 pm
By The Web Story
Share
7 Min Read
IMG 20240929 230038
SHARE

When the results of the parliamentary elections were announced, Engineer Rashid’s victory in the north Kashmir constituency of Baramulla came as a surprise to political leaders like National Conference leader Omar Abdullah. Rashid, who was then in Tihar jail on Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act charges, entered the contest very late. But he managed to beat Abdullah and Peoples Conference leader Sajad Lone by a huge margin. Rashid got nearly 470,000 votes, while Abdullah trailed at around 268,000 votes and Lone got about 173,000 votes. The margin of victory seemed to have shocked Omar and Lone so much that three months after the defeat, during campaigning for the Assembly elections, Omar refused to call him Engineer saying he is only diploma holder, and Lone went further saying articles appearing in Rashid’s name were by ghost writers reported Outlook.

Soon after the defeat in the parliamentary polls, Omar Abdullah shared an article characterising Rashid’s win as an Islamist triumph. Omar on June 6 tweeted a paragraph from an article which read: “Rashid’s victory, without doubt, will empower secessionists, and give Kashmir’s defeated Islamist movement a renewed sense of hope. Efforts to draw secessionism back into electoral politics led New Delhi to support the rise of the People’s Democratic Party, and its alliance with the BJP. That, however, ended up empowering violent secessionists, not mainstreaming them—a warning of the unpredictable outcomes of trying to manipulate politics.”

PDP leader Mehbooba Mufti’s argument, however, was that people had replied to New Delhi’s policy in Kashmir by making Rashid win in north Kashmir.

Three months later, perspectives are different.

On October 8, when the Assembly results were announced, Rashid could retain only one seat out of 16 Assembly segments of north Kashmir.

In the 35 seats contested by his party across the state, he was decisively defeated in 34. The only winner was Rashid’s brother in the Langate constituency, which had previously been Rashid’s own constituency. Rashid had been winning there since he began contesting elections in 2008.

During the campaigning, Rashid had referred to the death of Altaf Fantoosh, the late separatist leader Syed Ali Geelani’s son-in-law, who had been imprisoned alongside him. He also spoke about other separatist figures like Assiya Andrabi, the leader of banned Dukhtarani Milat, and shared his own experiences of suffering during his five years in Tihar Jail.

Despite his lofty rhetoric, Rashid’s Awami Ithad Party underperformed.

In contrast, we saw the National Conference emerging as the largest party, winning 42 seats in the 90-member Assembly. The party won 35 seats in Kashmir and seven seats in Jammu’s Ramban, Poonch, Rajouri and Reasi districts. This indicates that Rashid’s victory, without doubt, didn’t empower secessionists, and didn’t give “Kashmir’s defeated Islamist movement a renewed sense of hope.” It only empowered the National Conference, giving the party a decisive mandate like that of 1977 when Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah was leading the party. The party has got a mandate from all parts of the Valley and some parts of Jammu. If the party had campaigned on its own in Jammu, without the Congress, it would have performed better than Congress.

If Rashid’s win in June was indeed an Islamist triumph, then Omar Abdullah should be a great influential secular preacher who has been able convert people en masse towards his party’s secular agenda in three months. Sometimes we are quick to come to judgments on Kashmir and make ourselves believe that we solved a great riddle. But Kashmir is quick and silent in its surprises.

In Kulgam, people have been electing a CPI-M candidate for years. This time, the contest in Kulgam was on ideological lines with Jamaat-e-Islami-backed candidate Sayar Ahmad Reshi saying that godless communists have been ruling Kulgam constituency for too long and that it was time to replace them. Reshi lost by 7,000 votes.

One of the main arguments of Omar Abdullah was that if people give a fragmented mandate, BJP along with its like-minded parties would ratify what happened on August 5, 2019. Maybe voting happened on these lines. When Jammu voting for the BJP is not seen as being on religious lines, Kashmiris voting for National Conference is also not a religious vote. Remember the National Conference has representation in all regions and it draws leaders and cadres from all religions and is a known secular party.

When people in north Kashmir voted for Rashid in the parliamentary elections, his son had generated a wave of sympathy for his incarcerated father, who had served as MLA. It was a symbolic and sympathetic vote. Out of jail, Rashid was like any other leader. It did not help that Rashid was projected as a BJP mole during the latest campaign.


Rashid himself might be surprised that while a large number of people came to his rallies where he was narrating his stories from Tihar, it didn’t translate into votes. In these elections, Kashmiris turned up in large numbers for all rallies; from Apni Party chief Altaf Bukhari to independent candidate Usmaan Majid, all drew substantial crowds. However, voters ultimately favoured the National Conference.


The people of Kashmir have carried a heavy burden for many years now. In their silence, they hoped to lighten this load by transferring responsibility to someone.

It seems they found Rashid’s shoulders too weak to carry the burden of addressing critical issues like Article 370, the restoration of statehood, unemployment, fears of demographic change, and concerns about land and identity. Now, after the elections, Kashmiris are seen watching international cricket matches at the Bakshi Stadium, cheering for Chris Gayle. They feel a sense of relief, believing it is now Omar Abdullah’s responsibility to tackle all other issues. The burden on Omar Abdullah is no small one reported Outlook.

You Might Also Like

Youth responsible for writing their own destiny, shaping J&K’s future: LG Sinha

Assembly Polls Result: Sajad Lone Expresses Concern Over Leaders Visiting Delhi

Cabinet passes resolution for restoration of Statehood for J&K

Baramulla Battleground: Senior Baig to Contest as an Independent

No scope: Omar Abdullah’s U-turn on dialogue with Pakistan over Kashmir

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
[mc4wp_form]
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Print
Share
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
Previous Article IMG 20241014 210638 Kashmiri Journalist Rifat Abdullah Now Covers the Lebanon War
Next Article India Bloc Growing rift among key constituents threatens unity of INDIA bloc
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest News

high
Western Disturbances to Bring Rain, Snow to J&K, Ladakh
Stories January 19, 2026
IMG 20260117 WA0087
He Skipped the Govt. Job Queue. Now, He’s Creating It.
Stories January 18, 2026
IMG 20260118 103748
96% rainfall deficit hits J&K in Jan so far
Top Stories January 18, 2026
IMG 20260115 080908
Against All Odds, Handwara Boy Aces Exams from Tin-Shed ‘Classroom
Latest News January 15, 2026
//

We influence 20 million users and is the number one business and technology news network on the planet

Top Categories

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

[mc4wp_form id=”847″]

The Web StoryThe Web Story
Follow US
©2022 The Web Story. All Rights Reserved. | Hosted by LineageHost
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account