Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah today said if a majority of Kashmiri Pandits wants a bill for safeguarding temples and shrines in the Valley, an attempt would be made to present it during the budget session of the assembly.
Claiming that a consensus over the bill is unlikely, the Chief Minister said they would table it in the House and see who is in favour and who is not.
"We always take the majority's point of view. If a majority of Kashmiri Pandits thinks that the bill should be passed, we will try to bring it during the budget session of the House and see who is on which side of the fence. It is my commitment that I will talk to my members," Omar told Kashmiri Pandits at a function here.
More From This Section
Omar said, "We presented the bill in the assembly when we were in opposition. We had been assured that a consensus would be arrived at, but unfortunately those who don't have to do anything with your community opposed it. Even the Centre was misguided on it."
"In the last few functions, I came across the word 'consensus' three to four times. I feel that it is a dangerous word. My experience is when we do not want to do anything, we bring in the word 'consensus'. When there is talk of Jammu & Kashmir, we talk of consensus, though we know there can be no consensus on these issues," he said.
"We do not run politics on consensus. We run politics with majority... I have not become the Chief Minister of this state with consensus. If there was politics of consensus, there would have never been a Chief Minister in any of the state of the country or a Prime Minister," he said.
Omar appealed to the Kashmiri Pandits to vote. "More and more of you should vote, and in democracy the electorate can root out anyone. Who had thought two months ago that Arvind Kejriwal would be the Delhi Chief Minister... I had myself seen the face of defeat in elections. Who can say what is in store for me tomorrow," he said.