Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Trucker killed in Anantnag; 19 wounded in Sopore blast

27 members from European Parliament meet PM, NSA over the central govt’s decision to nullify J&K special status

- Mir Ehsan letters@hindustant­imes.com ■ ■

SRINAGAR: A truck driver was killed by suspected militants in Jammu and Kashmir’s Anantnag district on Monday, the police said, a day before a delegation of European Union MPS visits the Valley.

Narayan Dutt, a resident of Katra in Udhampur district, was fired upon by the militants in the evening in the Kanilwan area of Bijbehara in the south Kashmir district, a police official said. Dutt died on the spot, he added.

The police said gunmen targeted the driver who was waiting for goods to be loaded.

A senior police official, who was nearby, rushed to the scene of the incident and managed to save two other truck drivers who were in the vicinity, the police said. Security forces rushed to the spot after the attack and cordoned off the area.

In the past few days, militants killed three truck drivers, a trader from Punjab and a migrant labourer in Kashmir.

In a separate attack, at least 19 people were wounded in a grenade attack in north Kashmir’s Sopore town on Monday evening.

Sopore superinten­dent of police, Javid Iqbal, said, “The target of the blast was civilians who were doing their routine business in the bus stand, especially selling merchandis­e on handcarts.”

Iqbal said the nearest police post from the spot of the attack is more than 300 metres away. “At the time of the attack, no security personnel were deployed at the bus stand. It was a deliberate attack on the civilians as we have also assessed the footage of the attack.’’ “Six injured people were referred to Srinagar hospitals for treatment,” he said.

Doctors said the condition of all the injured referred to Srinagar

is stable. “Only one woman has received serious injuries in the blast,’’ said a health official.

The locals, however, said the grenade was hurled on security forces near the general bus stand and missed the intended target, and exploded on the roadside causing injuries to 19 civilians. The police and army reached the area and started a search operation near the bus stand, locals said. This was the fifth grenade attack in Kashmir in the last one month.

NEW DELHI: The Narendra Modi government has agreed to host 23 members of the European Parliament, currently on a visit to India, in the Kashmir Valley on Tuesday so they can see first-hand the ground situation in the region after the nullificat­ion of Article 370, which gave Jammu & Kashmir special status.

This will be the first visit by any internatio­nal delegation to the Valley after August 5, when Indian Parliament passed resolution­s and laws to split Jammu & Kashmir into two Union territorie­s, and scrap special status to the state and special privileges to its residents. This was followed by communicat­ion curbs and other restrictio­ns in the Valley, some of which have since been lifted. Many local political leaders were also detained following the move. On Monday, 27 MPS from the European Parliament met Prime Minister Narendra Modi at his Lok Kalyan Marg residence. They were also briefed by National Security Adviser Ajit Doval, who pointed out that Article 370 was always of a temporary nature and that Pakistan did not object to J&K’S inclusion as a state of the Indian Union.

Modi explained to the MPS that India’s main objective in making legislativ­e changes concerning Jammu & Kashmir was to achieve peace and ensure developmen­t in the region. He also stressed the importance of zerotolera­nce towards terrorism, and asked for urgent action for all supporters of terrorism. The Prime Minister did not name Pakistan, which has served as a base for several terrorist groups operating in Jammu & Kashmir. Pakistan has also sought to internatio­nalise the Kashmir issue, which, Indian maintains, is an internal matter.

The 27 MPS were then briefed by Doval for around 40 minutes on the situation in Jammu & Kashmir. He told them that the restrictio­ns put in place after August 5 were necessary to ensure there were no attacks by the Pakistan-based terror groups. Doval’s detailed briefing also countered Pakistan’s contention of a genocide-like situation in the Valley.

While most foreign nations have not bought into Prime Minister Imran Khan’s narrative, they have expressed concern over continued restrictio­ns in Jammu & Kashmir. Last Thursday, for instance, the US said while it has seen “progress” in Kashmir, it remained “deeply concerned” about the situation and would like India to release detainees and produce a “road map” on the restoratio­n of economic and political normalcy.

It also said Pakistan-based terrorist groups such as Lashkar-etaiba and Jaish-e-mohammad are a “problem” as regards the situation in Kashmir, and the Khan government needs to follow it promises with action.

BN Dunn, one of the parliament­arians who met the PM told news agency ANI that Modi briefed the delegation on the nullificat­ion of Article 370, but that he wanted “to see on the ground, how it actually is and talk to some local people”. “What we want is normalcy and peace for everyone,” he added.

In his briefing, Doval said there were now no restrictio­ns on movement; that all land lines and mobile phones were operationa­l; and that all hospitals were functionin­g. Of the 27 members, 23 will leave for Srinagar on Tuesday and spend two days in the region, meeting civilians, local journalist­s, and officials of the state administra­tion. They will also be given a tour of Srinagar. Jammu & Kashmir will be broken up into two Union Territorie­s on October 31.

Iltija Mufti, the daughter of former chief minister Mehbooba Mufti, and who now handles her mother Twitter account, posted: “Hope they get a chance to speak to the people, local media, doctors and civil society members. The iron curtain between Kashmir & the world needs to be lifted and GOI must be held accountabl­e for pushing J&K into turmoil.”

Mehbooba Mufti, the head of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), and several other leaders of political parties in the region (including former chief ministers Omar Abdullah and his father Farooq Abdullah) have been in detention since August 6. The senior Abdullah has been arrested under the Public Safety Act. On Monday, over lunch, the visiting European Parliament members met around 40 Kashmiri politician­s, political activists, and intellectu­als, including PDP leaders Muzaffar Beig and Altaf Bukhari, and the chairman of the All J &K Panchayat Conference, Shafiz Mir.

Even as the Modi government is sending the European parliament­arians to the Valley, it has adopted a focused approach on countering Pakistani diplomatic bombardmen­t on the nullificat­ion of Article 370 on global platforms. India is convinced that Pakistan will keep on piling pressure diplomatic pressure on India globally, while its Army will do its utmost to orchestrat­e violence in the Valley. Last weekend, in response to increased shelling by Pakistani troops – it was aimed at helping terrorists infiltrate into India, Indian security officials said – Indian artillery fire targeted launch pads for terrorists across the Line of Control, killing several terrorists.

During his brief interactio­n with the MEPS, PM Modi also told them that early conclusion of a fair and balanced Bilateral Trade and Investment Agreement (BTIA) with European Union was a priority of his government.

 ?? WASEEM ANDRABI / HT ?? An injured woman being carried for treatment at a hospital in Srinagar on Monday.
WASEEM ANDRABI / HT An injured woman being carried for treatment at a hospital in Srinagar on Monday.
 ?? VIA REUTERS ?? PM Narendra Modi with members of the European Parliament in New Delhi on Monday.
VIA REUTERS PM Narendra Modi with members of the European Parliament in New Delhi on Monday.

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