Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Several govt employees leave Valley after killings

Around 65 employees with their families have left, says Kashmiri Pandit Sangarsh Samiti chief

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

SRINAGAR: The killing of Vijay Kumar, a bank employee, by terrorists on Thursday, the 12th of a civilian since March, triggered another round of exits of migrant Hindu and Kashmiri Pandit workers and their families from the Valley. The exodus has revived memories of the mass exodus of Kashmiri Pandits from the Valley between 1989 and 1995.

“We are around more than 350 families in the transit camp of Baramulla and half have already left. We fear for our lives and feel very insecure here after the spate of targetted killings in the Valley,” said a Kashmiri Pandit who asked not to be named. “We want relocation or will leave this place. For us, it is again an exodus.”

On Thursday, as families started leaving the Valley after Kumar’s killing in Kulgam, the Kashmiri Pandit Sangarsh Samiti (KPSS) demanded security for families leaving Kashmir till Banihal tunnel. “Kashmiri Pandit Package employees in Mattan have requested DC Anantnag to provide them security till Banihal tunnel as they will be mass migration tomorrow to Jammu. DC and SSP Anantnag are present in Mattan Transit camp Anantnag,” tweeted the Kashmiri Pandit Sangarsh Samiti.

KPSS president Sanjay Tickoo confirmed that many Kashmiri Pandits left the Valley on Thursday. “As per my informatio­n around 65 employees with their families have left.”

Ranjan Zutshi, a migrant employee who lives at a transit camp in Mattan , said more than 100 people have left for Jammu.

“Nobody feels safe here. Tomorrow more people will be leaving Kashmir. We will only return when safe accommodat­ion can be created for us,” Zutshi said. He added that since the killing of Rahul Bhat, around 2,500 employees have already left Kashmir.

On Thursday, there was a brief altercatio­n between employees and the police at the gates of the transit camp at Mattan in Anantnag. Employees also held a brief protest outside the gate of the camp. However, senior officials arrived at the spot and defused the situation.

Meanwhile, as viral videos of crowds at Srinagar airport started doing the rounds, director of the airport Kuldeep Singh Rishi took to Twitter to clarify that the crowd was nothing out of the ordinary.

“We handle between 16 thousand to 18 thousand passengers everyday,” he said.

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