After a gap of five years,
Jammu and Kashmir Government allowed hardline separatist leader
Syed Ali Shah Geelani to hold a public rally in the outskirts of
Srinagar city where his supporters including
Masarat Alam, released from jail last month, raised pro-Pakistan slogans and others waved
Pakistani flags.
Geelani, who returned here after spending winter months in
Delhi, was taken to his residence from the airport in a procession led by Alam against whom state
Police registered a case under
Unlawful Activities Prevention Act. He is likely to be arrested, official sources said.
BJP, alliance partner of
PDP in Jammu and Kashmir, reacted sharply to this with
Minister of State for
Home Kiran Rijiju saying that the state government had been asked to act against those who had broken the law.
Taking a swipe at BJP,
Congress if it was so concerned with the development, it should walk out of the alliance. Alam, who was released last month soon after PDP-BJP government came to power in the state, led the march from the
Srinagar Airport to Geelani's residence at Hyderpora.
Geelani, who broke away from
Hurriyat Conference to form his own conglomerate with all pro-Pakistan separatist parties as a part of it, spoke about right of self-determination and his speech was broadcast live in Muzzafarabad in Pakistan- occupied-Kashmir (PoK). "This (broadcast of Geelani's speech) has been done with arrangement with a semi-government organisation in PoK," Hurriyat Conference spokesman Ayaz
Akbar said. There were some anxious moments when slogans were raised in support of 45-year-old Alam besides pro-Pakistan and Geelani slogans. He is being talked about being successor to Geelani.
Talking to reporters, Alam rejected the suggestions that he was indulging in unlawful activities. "
We are only promoting the aspirations of the people of
Kashmir.
Look at their enthusiasm," he said apparently referring to the group of youth waving Pakistani flags. This was Geelani's first public rally after the
2010 summer agitation in Srinagar in which over
100 youths were killed. Alam was a key player in the entire agitation and used to issue a weekly schedule for strikes.
Besides the
Hurriyat flags, some supporters were also seen carrying Pakistani flags as they chanted pro-Pakistan and pro-freedom slogans.
In a debate moderated by
TIMES NOW's Editor-in-Chief
Arnab Goswami, panelists -- Sheshadri Chari,
Member, Nat'l
Executive & Convenor,
Foreign Affairs Cell, BJP; Firdous Tak,
MLC, PDP; Waheed ur
Rehman,
President, PDP
Youth Wing; Devender
Rana,
Senior Leader, NC;
Shobha Oza, Spokesperson, Congress; Gaurav
Bhatia, Spokesperson &
National Head,
Legal Cell, SP and
Maroof Raza, Strategic Affairs Analyst -- discuss the issue -- can Mufti continue to watch this?
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- published: 17 Apr 2015
- views: 13459