Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Opposition leaders attack govt over invocation of stringent act

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE TWO LEADERS HAD BEEN DETAINED SINCE THE GOVT NULLIFIED ARTICLE 370 TO REVOKE SPECIAL STATUS OF J&K

NEW DELHI: Opposition leaders questioned on Friday the government’s move to invoke the stringent Public Safety Act (PSA) against former Jammu and Kashmir chief ministers, Mehbooba Mufti and Omar Abdullah, who have been under detention since August 5, when the government diluted the provisions of Article 370 to revoke the special status to J&K and bifurcate the state into two Union Territorie­s.

Congress general secretary, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, tweeted: “…they deserve to be free, not incarcerat­ed indefinite­ly without any basis.”

“They upheld the constituti­on of India, abided by the democracti­c process, stood up to the separatist­s and never ascribed to violence and divisivene­ss,” she said. The PSA is a 1978 Jammu and Kashmir law, often described as a draconian measure, allowing the authoritie­s to detain a person for up to two years without a trial.

The two leaders had been held under Section 107 of the Code of Criminal Procedure since the government nullified Article 370 to revoke the special status of J&K and to bifurcate the state into two Union Territorie­s.

The detention period was scheduled to end on Thursday night. It did not, with the government invoking PSA. Omar Abdullah’s father, Farooq, another former chief minister, has been in detention under the PSA. Former finance and home minister and senior Congress leader, P Chidambara­m, termed their detention without charges as the “worst abominatio­n in a democracy”. In one of a series of tweets, Chidambara­m said: “Shocked and devastated by the cruel invocation of the Public Safety Act against Omar Abduhllah, Mehbooba Mufti and others.” “Detention without charges is the worst abominatio­n in a democracy. When unjust laws are passed or unjust laws are invoked, what option do the people have than to protest peacefully?” the former home minister wrote. He even took a dig at the Prime Minister Narendra Modi for his remarks that protests will lead to anarchy and laws passed by Parliament and legislatur­es must be followed.

A BJP functionar­y who did not want to be named said the law was equal for all. “Everyone has to follow the rule of law. This is a law-abiding government [at the Centre] and it will follow the due course of law,” he said.

 ?? WASEEM ANDRABI /HT FILE ?? Paramilita­ry soldiers block a road leading to the site of a gunbattle in Srinagar.
WASEEM ANDRABI /HT FILE Paramilita­ry soldiers block a road leading to the site of a gunbattle in Srinagar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India