FM: When it was brought, it was temporary because by that time the constituent assembly of Kashmir had not been constituted, and it had not met. Because the constituent assembly of Kashmir may have taken a decision that they want to go to Pakistan, or they want to hold a plebiscite, they decided they want this kind of a special status, they endorsed Article 370 and said they wanted to be governed by it. So, how this Article 370 can now be amended—even though it says the President of India can modify it, and modify may mean even repeal—is a question that the court will determine. If the court says constituent assembly means constituent assembly, as the Justice Rohinton Nariman-led bench said in 2016 in the SBI case, then the amendment will be bad in law. And if it says that the constituent assembly is not there and its substitute is the legislative assembly, then it will be upheld. In addition, Article 370 does not use any time frame. If you look at Article 369, it specifically says ‘for five years’. For instance, the provision that English shall be the official language is for the first 15 years. If you look at the provision of reservation for SCs/STs in Parliament and assemblies, it was done for 10 years. These provisions are temporary. Article 370 was not temporary; even the SC has said so.