Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘Is this the azadi we are fighting for?’

- Ashiq Hussain letters@hindustant­imes.com

J&K LYNCHING Near and dear ones of police officer killed by mob seethe in anger, wonder what is the use of such freedom

and disbelief was high among the near and dear ones of Mohammed Ayub Pandith, the Jammu and Kashmir police officer who was lynched by a mob in Srinagar on Thursday, as they tried to make sense of his killing.

“What state we have reached that we kill a person outside a mosque on an auspicious night without any reason? Is this what the religion has taught us?” asked a close relative of Pandith at their home in old city Nowpora.

Pandith was lynched outside the Jamia mosque in Srinagar on Thursday, which was Shab-eQadr, an auspicious night for Muslims when, according to belief, Quran was first revealed to Prophet Mohammed. People across the Valley were praying in mosques and shrines throughout the night.

“Is this the azadi (freedom) we are fighting for that we have started lynching people? What shall we do with such Azadi?” she asked. People were perplexed at the manner he was killed.

“He was not killed by a militant or some military men. He was killed by a mob. They killed an innocent, a Tahjud Guzar (one who prays during the nights),” said one of the sisters-in-law of the slain officer.

She sought to know from the Hurriyat leaders what kind of society Kashmir has become.

“Our children are getting orphaned. They (the mob) did not just kill one person, but three more with him,” she said, referring to Pandith’s wife and two kids. The slain officer, described as honest and down-to-earth by friends and neighbours, is survived by his wife and two teenage children.

His daughter is studying MBBS in Bangladesh while his son has been ill after completing higher secondary examinatio­ns. A cousin of his is a prominent member of the high court bar associatio­n in Kashmir.

The sister-in-law said that Pandith was an honest person who had “no craze of being a police officer”. “He would even polish his own shoes,” she said.

Pandiths are a prominent family in Nowpora, with many having their own businesses, including the slain officer’s two brothers. He also has three sisters.

Pandith started his career as a sub-inspector in the 1990s. He was working as a DSP in the security wing of Jammu and Kashmir police and had been at the mosque post for quite some time. Many locals who frequent the area knew him. Policemen posted in the security wing do not wear

PANDITH WAS LYNCHED OUTSIDE THE JAMIA MOSQUE IN SRINAGAR ON THURSDAY, WHICH WAS SHABEQADR, AN AUSPICIOUS NIGHT FOR MUSLIMS

Isro's PSLV C-38 lifts off from Sriharikot­a on Friday. The 712 kg Cartosat-2 series satellite has been termed as India's eye in the sky as it is dedicated for defence forces The previous satellite in the series had a resolution of 0.8 metres

The latest remote sensing satellite has a resolution of 0.6 metres, which means it can spot smaller objects

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