He also slammed the move to give powers to the Lieutenant Governor for nominating members to the five reserved seats in the Jammu and Kashmir Assembly, and said his party would approach the Supreme Court if the BJP-led Centre went ahead with it.
Abdullah, while ruling himself out of the race for chief minister’s post, said statehood should be restored to Jammu and Kashmir so that the new government has powers to address the people’s problems.
“The statehood should be restored, full statehood, where the government has the power to do things. I will not be the CM. Let this one thing be clear. I have done my chief minister’s job. My problem will be how we make a strong government and how we fulfil the agenda that we have put before the people,” he added.
Asked if the National Conference-Congress alliance will take support from the PDP if need be, Abdullah said “why not?”
“How does it matter? If we all work for the same thing, for improvement in the conditions of the people of the state, removing unemployment, removing all the distresses that have occurred in the last 10 years. First thing we should do is restore the freedom of the press. We should have the right to say what is true and what is not true. We can be rivals in elections but I have no objections and I am sure Congress will have no objections,” he said.
The NC president said he was not averse to taking support of the independents as well but he would not go begging for it.
“I will not go begging before them. If they feel they can strengthen the state, most welcome. It should be their initiative. They should want to do good for the people,” he added.
The former chief minister also slammed the power given to the L-G to nominate members.
“The L-G should first of all stay away from this process as a government is being formed. It is for the government to nominate people and send it (nominations) to the L-G. That is the normal procedure. What they want to do, I do not know. However, if they do it (give powers to L-G), we will go to the Supreme Court,” Abdullah told reporters here.
The five reserved seats are for two women, two Kashmiri migrants and one for refugees from Pakistan occupied Jammu and Kashmir.