Kashmir 'Martyrs Day': Mehbooba, other politicians under 'house arrest'
Political leaders said they have put them under house arrest to prevent them from visiting the 'martyrs' graveyard' to pay homage to the 22 Kashmiri people killed by the army of a Dogra ruler on this day in 1931
PTI
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PDP chief Mehbooba Mufti alleged that she was put under "house arrest" at her residence in Khimber on the outskirts of Srinagar city
Srinagar, 13 July
Several political leaders in Jammu
and Kashmir, including PDP chief Mehbooba Mufti, on Saturday claimed
authorities have put them under house arrest to prevent them from visiting the
'martyrs' graveyard' to pay homage to the 22 Kashmiri people killed by the army
of a Dogra ruler on this day in 1931. However, there was no official word on
the claims made by the politicians.
Mehbooba, a former chief minister
of Jammu and Kashmir, alleged that she was put under "house arrest"
at her residence in Khimber on the outskirts of the city. "The gates of my
house have been locked up yet again to prevent me from visiting Mazar e Shuhada
- an enduring symbol of Kashmir's resistance and resilience against
authoritarianism, oppression and injustice," she said in a post on X.
The PDP chief said the
"sacrifices of our martyrs is a testament that the spirit of Kashmiri's
cannot be crushed" and added that "today even observing it in
remembrance of the protesters martyred on this day has been criminalised".
"On 5th August, 2019 J&K
was dismembered, disempowered and stripped of everything that was sacrosanct
for us. They intend to erase each one of our collective memories," she
said referring to the abrogation of Article 370 and bifurcation of the
erstwhile state of J-K into Union Territories of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh. "But
such assaults will only strengthen our determination to continue the fight for
our rights and dignity," she added.
Separatist-turned-mainstream
politicians and People's Conference chairman Sajad Lone also claimed that he
has been put under house arrest. "For no reason informed of being under
house arrest. I really fail to understand what the administration gets in
stopping people from going to the martyrs graveyard," Lone said on X.
He said people have a right to
choose their heroes and "the martyrs are heroes for the people of
Kashmir". "Why be in a denial and why on earth would a non-resident
government need to meddle in it. Actually believing that a government will
decide on what has been historically heroic and who are the historical heroes
is an unambiguous sign of despotism," Lone said.
The gate of the residence of
National Conference (NC)'s provincial president, Kashmir, Nasir Aslam Wani, was
also locked by police. "The gate has been locked and police personnel
deployed to stop us from going to pay our respects at martyrs' graves. I don't
understand why. We will always remember their sacrifices," Wani said.
The party's youth wing president
Salman Sagar said the administration was also putting restrictions on their
political activities. Sagar posted pictures and videos of the locked gates of
his residence and claimed he was put under house arrest.
Earlier in the day, police stopped
leaders of the Apni Party from visiting the "martyrs' graveyard". Members
of the Apni Party, led by their president Altaf Bukhari, tried to march from
the party's Sheikh Bagh office here to the graveyard, around 5 km in Naqshband,
but were stopped by police.
Later, the leaders held
"fateh" prayers on the road and paid tributes to the 22 Kashmiris. NC
vice president Omar Abdullah said from next year, Jammu and Kashmir would mark
July 13 to pay homage to the 22 Kashmiri people.
Reacting to the developments and
referring to the impending assembly polls in J&K, he said this year is the
last one the Jammu and Kashmir administration would be able to do so. "Another
13th July, Martyr's Day, another round of locked gates and police excesses to
stop people from paying homage to those who sacrificed their lives to establish
a just, fair and democratic regime in J-K," Abdullah said in a post on X.
"Everywhere else in the
country these people would have been celebrated but in J-K the administration
wants to ignore these sacrifices. This is the last year they will be able to do
this. InshaAllah, next year we will mark 13th July with the solemnity and
respect this day deserves," he said.
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