NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi must act quickly to
douse the fires of unrest in Kashmir, where over 50 civilians have died
and many have been seriously injured when security forces opened fire on
protesters last month, the Indian leader’s political foes and allies
said on Monday.
Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister
Mehbooba Mufti, an ally of Mr Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, met Home
Minister Rajnath Singh on Monday.
“I am hopeful that PM
Modi will take this as an opportunity to initiate dialogue with people
in J&K to address their problems. There is a need to take the same
initiative of winning hearts of J&K people, which was taken during
Vajpayee ji’s tenure,” she was quoted by The Indian Express as saying.
She
also said that the process of dialogue with the people of Kashmir could
improve the situation in the Valley. “I believe there is a need to heal
wounds of people, to initiate dialogue with the people of J&K.
These are our own people. If process of dialogue with J&K people can
improve situation in Valley, we should do it.”
Ms Mufti
said that Jammu and Kashmir could become a bridge between India and
Pakistan, if a proper dialogue process is initiated.
Leader
of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha, Congress party’s Ghulam Nabi Azad
said that independent India had never seen the imposition of a curfew
for such a long period in any area. He wanted the prime minister to make
a statement on the situation in Jammu and Kashmir, saying the entire
country was eager to know what his government was doing.
“We
want to awaken this government...we feel that the government and the
prime minister are like silent spectators as the situation keeps
deteriorating,” Mr Azad told the house.
The Congress
party on Monday gave a notice in Rajya Sabha over the ongoing situation
in held Kashmir. The notice comes a couple of days after Mr Azad wrote
an open letter to Prime Minister Modi urging him to ‘break his silence’
over the issue.
On Sunday, Mr Azad had justified his
letter and said that it was hard to believe there was a government at
the centre because of the ‘indifference’ they have shown towards the
Kashmir issue.
“We had raised the Kashmir issue in the
Rajya Sabha, and thereafter, there was a whole-day discussion in the Lok
Sabha as well, but the prime minister did not speak even a word in
either houses and neither expressed his solidarity with the people of
Kashmir. It has created widespread disappointment across the nation, and
especially in Jammu and Kashmir,” Mr Azad told ANI.
Kashmir
has witnessed curfews and pitched battles between civilians and Indian
forces since the killing of Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani in
an encounter with Indian forces last month.
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