Deccan Chronicle

Centre: No talks with separatist­s

No dialogue in current violent situation: A-G

- J. VENKATESAN | DC NEW DELHI, APRIL 28

The Centre informed the Supreme Court on Friday that it cannot hold talks with Kashmiri separatist­s or with Pakistan in the current situation in the Valley where tension between civilians and security forces has spiked after a fresh wave of fatal clashes.

Attorney-General Mukul Rohatgi, the government’s top law officer, rejected the J&K High Court Bar Associatio­n’s plea for a unilateral ceasefire and resumption of talks with separatist leaders such as Syed Shah Geelani.

Mr Rohatgi told the bench that there can be no talks with Pakistan or the separatist­s, and even the court cannot direct the government for holding talks with them.

The A-G said, “The Counsel is saying that we should hold talks with Syed Geelani and other leaders. What is going on? What kind of dialogue with these separatist leaders is he talking about? I can’t have a dialogue. If he has to talk, he has to talk under the rules (Constituti­on),” he said.

The court immediatel­y asked the A-G, “Did we say we will direct you? Did we agree? It was a suggestion within certain parameters.” The A-G made his submission­s before a three-judge bench when Chief Justice J.S. Khehar suggested suspension of the use of pellet guns in the Valley, provided there was a reciprocal assurance that there would be no violence and stone throwing from the other side.

The bench — also comprising justices D.Y. Chandrachu­d and Sanjay Kishan Kaul — was hearing a petition from the bar associatio­n against pellet guns’ use that “results in innocents being killed and several persons losing eyesight.”

The Attorney-General also drew the court’s attention to the Associatio­n’s reply describing Kashmir’s accession to India as a “controvers­ial instrument of accession.

The CJI suggested suspension of the use of pellet guns in the Valley, provided there was a reciprocal assurance that there will be no violence and stone-throwing from the other side.

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