The state government had recently announced that the panchayat polls would be conducted from February 15 and preparations for elections have been set in motion.
However, aspiring contestants and political parties including National Conference (NC), Jammu and Kashmir Pradesh Congress Committee (JKPCC) are wary of the announcement, citing the law and order situation in the state, especially in Kashmir valley.
The apprehensions about a smooth conduct of the elections have been accentuated by the separatists' call for boycott of the polls and the threats issued by militant organisation Hizbul Mujahideen (HM).
Hizbul commander Riyaz Naikoo in the audio clip told another militant of the outfit, Sameer Tiger, that they should not threaten or kill anyone standing for elections but instead pour "strong acid -- Sulphuric acid or Hydrochloric acid" into the eyes of these candidates.
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Shafiq Mir, a former panchayat member and chairman of All Jammu and Kashmir Panchayat Conference (AJKPC), told PTI that though he wants the elections to be conducted, "the reports of security situation are worrisome".
Asked about the Hizbul threats and poll boycott call by the separatists, the AJKPC chairman said panchayats have nothing to do with any kind of politics of Jammu and Kashmir and should not be linked to the Kashmir issue.
"Our institution is not a political one but a community institution. We want to tell those who are issuing threats that we have nothing to do with any kind of politics of Jammu and Kashmir," he said.
He said 16 panchayat members were killed and 20 others injured in recent years since elections were held last in 2011.
The state's main opposition party NC said the law and order situation in the state was "very worrisome" and "disconcerting", and conducting the polls "should not be one more blunder" which in turn could affect tourism, industry and the state's economy this year.
"Our point is simple, that the obtaining law and order situation in the state is very worrisome, it is disconcerting and unless they (the government) address that first, unless they address the threats issued to the probable panchayat candidates first, till then no other statement or rhetoric will make sense," NC state spokesperson, Junaid Azim Mattu, told PTI.
A senior police official said the security agencies were fully aware of the threat issued by the militants and a strategy will be formulated to counter that.
"We will discuss it and formulate a strategy to counter the threat," the official said.
He said that a high-level meeting, to be chaired by the chief minister, would discuss the issue after January 26 in the state's winter capital Jammu.