New Delhi: In a new initiative, the Central Ministers will visit Jammu & Kashmir, which is seen as a significant outreach by the government close to the heels of many parliamentary panels and dozens of parliamentarians traveling around the United States along with Ladakh two years after the nullification of article 370 Some ministers have been assigned different districts, others are asked to review the ongoing project.
They also said some ministers would interact with local beneficiaries of the central scheme.
There is also a possible few ministers who distribute the right to beneficiaries identified as long as they live in UT.
This will send a strong message about how the center has a special focus on developing in J & K, the source said.
Most ministers will complete their tour this month.
More than 200 parliamentarians from at least 14 parliamentary committees have visited UTS J & K and Ladakh in recent months, interacting with mass and receiving feedback on the problems they face.
During their visit, many parliamentarian members told toi that they recorded a lower level of tension and longing for normal and peace situations.
The latest is a visit by the Shashi Tharoor parliament panel, which was led on information technology, which spent three days in J & K immediately after the death of the Hurriyat leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani on September 1.
“The lack of response to Geelani’s death shows that it is relatively safe now to move towards the expansion of political space, and focus on integrating the hearts and minds of people,” Tharoor told Toi.
The Tharoor-LED panel also discussed the status of Bharatnet in J & K, in addition to visiting the Doordarshan office and the Institute of Industrial Training in Srinagar.
A discussion about the internet shutdown in J & K, where MP members said there was a “universal disgust”, however, was not held.
Pointing to the expenditure of high per capita development funds, and projects resolved on war footing, MP BJP Zafar Islam said the committee had “special interactions with several people from various regions in the valley and we could see a sense of satisfaction and satisfaction most of them about development work sustainable in the region “.
“Unlike general perceptions that there is unhappiness in the valley, we find most people do not have complaints about changes such as removing special status to the country,” Islam added.
Visits by several parliamentary panels were seen as a measure of development of trust among the valley people, also seen as the beginning of the recovery of assembly and state selection.