Article 370 row: Karan Singh calls for restraint as issue ‘extremely sensitive’
New Delhi: Amid a raging row over Article 370 that guarantees special status for Jammu and Kashmir, senior Congress leader Karan Singh on Thursday appealed to all concerned to exercise restraint, saying the "extremely sensitive" issue needs to be handled in a mature fashion.
Singh, whose father Maharaja Hari Singh had agreed to accede to India by signing the Instrument of Accession in October 1947, expressed distress over the controversy and said any "steam-roller approach" to deal with the issue was not appropriate.
"I have been distressed by the fierce controversy that has broken out in the press and electronic media with regard to Article 370, flowing from an avoidable statement by the MoS in PM's office. The whole question is extremely sensitive and must be handled coolly and in a mature fashion," he said in a statement.
Jitendra Singh, the MoS in the Prime Minister's Office, on Tuesday triggered a controversy when he said the new government has started the process for repealing the provision. J and K Chief Minister Omar Abdullah and opposition PDP slammed Singh for his comments while the minister said he has been "misquoted".
Read: Remark on Article 370 ‘misunderstood’: Jitendra Singh embarrasses Modi
Singh said the kind of statements being issued from both sides will only create "further turmoil and tension" in J and K. "My appeal to all concerned is to kindly tone down the rhetoric and not let the Minister's statement plunge the new government almost immediately into a complex and difficult situation."
"The whole question of Jammu and Kashmir has to be looked at an integral fashion, including the international dimension, the constitutional position, the legal aspects as well as the political aspects. Such an integral review is overdue, but it has to be done in a cooperative rather than a confrontational manner," he said.
Read: Either Article 370 will exist, or J & K won't be a part of India
In the statement, Singh mentioned that Maharaja Hari Singh had signed the Instrument of Accession under "unusual circumstances when a full scale war was raging due to the Pakistani-based tribal invasion."
He said the Instrument was identical to the document signed by all the other former provincial States.
Elaborating further, he said though other States later signed merger agreements, the relationship of J and K with the rest of the country was governed by a special set of circumstances, and hence was given a special position.
"The Constitution of Jammu and Kashmir, which I signed into law in 1957, is still in force," he said. "Certainly J&K is an 'integral part' of India, but that does not necessarily mean that it has to be treated exactly on par with other States," he said.