Omar Abdullah vs Raj Bhawan: Inside the Bulldozer Showdown Reshaping Governance in Jammu & Kashmir
By: Javid Amin | 28 November 2025
A New Flashpoint in Kashmir’s Power Corridors
A fresh political storm is sweeping across Jammu & Kashmir. At the center of this upheaval stands an explosive allegation made by Chief Minister Omar Abdullah: that Raj Bhawan has been orchestrating demolition drives across J&K without the consent or knowledge of the elected government.
In a region already sensitive to questions of authority, representation, and federal balance, Omar Abdullah’s charge is not a routine political complaint—it strikes at the heart of how governance is structured in a Union Territory with a newly restored political framework.
The alleged practice of deploying bulldozers through the Lieutenant Governor’s office, bypassing ministers, revenue officials, and district administrations loyal to the elected government, has triggered a confrontation that is unprecedented in post-Article 370 J&K.
This article examines the issue from every angle:
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✔ The political significance
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✔ Constitutional boundaries
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✔ Historical background
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✔ Governance practices
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✔ Selective demolition allegations
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✔ Power struggle between LG and CM
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✔ Public perception
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✔ Implications for democracy in J&K
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✔ Possible outcomes
Let us begin with what exactly Omar Abdullah alleged—and why it matters.
What Omar Abdullah Accused — “Bulldozers Without Government Approval”
In a hard-hitting statement, Omar Abdullah claimed:
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Demolition drives were launched unilaterally under Raj Bhawan’s directives.
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Ministers had no knowledge of the operations.
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Revenue officers reported confusion because “instructions were coming from two power centers.”
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The drives were selective, disproportionately targeting particular communities and individuals.
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The intent, he said, was to defame the elected government and portray it as ineffective.
His words were sharp and unambiguous:
“How can bulldozers move without the orders of the elected government? Who is running J&K—the people’s representatives or the Raj Bhawan?”
This statement instantly ignited a political firestorm.
Why the Timing Matters — Post-Article 370 Governance Dynamics
Since the revocation of Article 370 in 2019, J&K has gone through:
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2.5 years of President’s Rule
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Direct administration by the LG
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Bureaucrat-driven governance
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Delayed elections
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Reduced autonomy and heightened central oversight
In late 2024, after assembly elections, the Omar Abdullah-led coalition restored democratic governance. But the administrative machinery—police, revenue officers, district collectors—had been operating under LG authority for years.
The demolition controversy exposes this structural imbalance:
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The bureaucracy still feels answerable to the LG.
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The LG’s office continues to act with executive confidence.
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The elected government is struggling to assert authority.
This makes Omar’s allegation more than a political complaint—it’s a governance crisis.
What Exactly Happened During the Demolitions?
Multiple demolition incidents occurred in:
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Jammu district
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Samba
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Kathua
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Udhampur
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Srinagar’s outskirts
Targets included:
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Houses alleged to be “encroachments”
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Commercial shops
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Sheds and small structures
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The home of a journalist, raising media freedom concerns
Common features reported:
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Bulldozers arrived early morning.
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Police cordoned off the area.
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No minister was informed.
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District officers privately said “orders came from above.”
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Some notices were issued, many were not.
The lack of procedural transparency triggered widespread suspicion.
The Constitutional Question — Who Controls What in J&K?
Jammu & Kashmir is in a unique constitutional position:
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It has a Lieutenant Governor (LG) like any Union Territory.
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But it also has a full-fledged elected government like a state.
This hybrid structure creates ambiguity in:
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Executive authority
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Police control
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Land and revenue matters
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Demolition/eviction powers
According to constitutional experts, demolition drives fall under:
✔ State subject — land & revenue
✔ Controlled by district magistrates
✔ Who report to the elected government, not the LG
Thus, if demolitions happened without ministerial approval, it raises questions of:
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Overreach
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Misuse of UT laws
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Violating democratic oversight
Omar Abdullah framed it sharply:
“If the LG wants to run J&K alone, why hold elections at all?”
The Political Chessboard — Why Omar Is Calling It a Conspiracy
Omar Abdullah argues the demolitions were designed to:
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Make his government look anti-public
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Create an impression of inefficiency
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Suggest that “only the LG can deliver tough decisions”
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Undermine the credibility of the new government
For the National Conference, the narrative is strategic:
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BJP and Raj Bhawan want to retain control
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Bureaucracy remains loyal to LG
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The CM’s authority is weakened by parallel decision-making
Political analysts agree this conflict was inevitable, given:
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Deep distrust between NC and BJP
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Competing power centers
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Long history of federal friction in J&K
Selective Demolitions — The Accusation That Ignited Public Anger
Several demolitions reportedly targeted:
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Minority-community clusters
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Critics of the administration
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A journalist’s home
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Families involved in past protests
This raised two questions:
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Were demolitions neutral?
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Or were they politically directed?
Civil society groups argue:
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Notice procedures were bypassed
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Legal remedies were blocked
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No uniform policy existed
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Rich encroachers were ignored, poor were targeted
Human rights groups have demanded:
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Judicial oversight
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Suspension of officers responsible
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Inquiry into selective targeting
Raj Bhawan’s Possible Response — What the LG’s Office May Argue
Though Raj Bhawan hasn’t formally responded, its likely defense would be:
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Drives were part of anti-encroachment policy
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Demolitions targeted illegal structures
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Bureaucracy acted under existing UT laws
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No political motive involved
However, the silence from Raj Bhawan has only intensified suspicion.
Bureaucracy in Crossfire — A State Caught Between Two Power Centers
Since 2019, civil servants in J&K have functioned under:
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Lieutenant Governor
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Ministry of Home Affairs
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Central agencies
After elections, the elected government expects loyalty.
But in reality:
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DCs still look to LG for career security
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Police receive mixed signals
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Revenue officials fear contradicting LG’s authority
This dual power structure is unsustainable.
Omar Abdullah’s accusations highlight this administrative confusion.
Civil Liberties & Media Freedom — Why the Demolition of a Journalist’s House Matters
One of the biggest triggers of public debate was:
The demolition of a journalist’s residence in Jammu.
Concerns include:
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Retaliation for reporting
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Precedent for suppressing dissent
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Shrinking media space in the region
International human rights organizations have expressed concern that:
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Bulldozer politics is becoming normalised
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J&K’s democratic institutions are being weakened
Historical Parallels — Has This Happened Before in J&K?
J&K has seen repeated power tussles between:
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CM vs Governor
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State govt vs Centre
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Elected institutions vs bureaucracy
Examples include:
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1984 dismissal of Farooq Abdullah
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1990 Governor’s Rule
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2008 Amarnath land row
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2016 Governor-driven decisions during political transitions
But bulldozer governance without elected oversight is unprecedented.
Public Perception — Who Does the People Blame?
In Kashmir Valley:
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Many distrust any Raj Bhawan-driven action
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Omar’s stance seen as defending democratic rights
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Bulldozers evoke memories of heavy-handed governance
In Jammu:
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Mixed reaction
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Some support clearing “illegal structures”
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Others see demolitions as politically targeted
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Journalistic community strongly opposed
The overall sentiment:
People want transparent, lawful governance, not power games.
The Larger Political Stakes — 2026 & Beyond
The demolition controversy is part of a larger battle:
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NC wants full administrative control restored
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BJP wants to retain influence through Raj Bhawan
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Bureaucracy is stuck between both
This issue will influence:
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Voter sentiment
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Valley–Jammu political divides
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Centre–state relations
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Future legislative autonomy debates
Legal Ramifications — Could This Go to Court?
It is possible.
The elected government may:
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Seek judicial clarification
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Demand an inquiry
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Move a resolution in Assembly
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File petitions challenging unilateral demolitions
Legal experts say:
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LG cannot override elected government in land matters
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Demolitions must follow due process
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Parallel governance is unconstitutional
What Happens Next — Three Possible Scenarios
1. Constitutional Showdown
The standoff escalates into a legal and political battle between:
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CM’s office
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Raj Bhawan
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Centre
2. Negotiated Settlement
Centre intervenes to:
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Define clear boundaries
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Restore ministerial authority
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Prevent bureaucratic confusion
3. Continued Dual Governance (Most Dangerous)
If unresolved, J&K may experience:
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Policy paralysis
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Conflicting orders
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Erosion of public trust
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Political instability
Bottom-Line: Why This Bulldozer Controversy Matters More Than Any Other
This controversy is not merely about demolitions.
It is about:
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Who governs Jammu & Kashmir
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The role of the Lieutenant Governor
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The authority of the elected government
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The balance of federal power
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The rights of citizens against administrative excess
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The fragility of democracy in a post-370 era
Omar Abdullah’s charge that Raj Bhawan is bypassing democratic authority has opened a new chapter in J&K’s political evolution—one that will determine the shape of governance for years ahead.
The bulldozers may have targeted buildings, but the deeper conflict they unearthed strikes at the foundations of constitutional governance.