The Asian Age

I was asked to quit politics to walk free: PDP leader

Akhtar evicted from official residence while under house arrest

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

People’s Democratic Party (PDP) leader and former minister state Naeem Akhtar said on Friday that he was asked to choose between luxury and agony after being detained by the authoritie­s in August last year.

“I was asked to quit politics to walk free, evade harrying and live a comfortabl­e life with my family,” Mr Akhtar told this newspaper a day after he was evicted from a government bungalow along Srinagar’s high-security Gupkar Road. The house was allotted to him few years ago for being a “protected person” in view of the threat perception.

Last week, J&K authoritie­s revoked Mr Akhtar’s detention under the stringent Public Safety Act (PSA) but on reaching his home he was placed under house arrest. He said that at 11 am on Thursday, he was visited by two officials of the J&K estates department who asked him to vacate his government accommodat­ion in five hours or face forcible eviction.

“I sought a day’s time but they said that we (Mr Akhtar, his spouse and daughter) would be forcibly evicted if we don’t vacate the premises by 4 pm. They said this even after knowing that

■ Continued from Page 1 I’m under house arrest and do not have any place of my own to shift to,” he said.

Mr Akhtar had sold his own house in City’s Barzulla area some time ago after it was damaged in a series of attacks allegedly carried out by militants and anti-government protesters. “It was damaged, making it unusable. Also, being located in a congested area and I being a vulnerable person, I decided to dispose it off,” he said.

Mr Akhtar, who after seeking premature retirement from government service in 2008 when he was holding the lucrative post of commission­er/secretary tourism to join the PDP, said that during his detention at “subsidiary jails” here he was repeatedly visited by government representa­tives and intelligen­ce officials who persuaded him to quit politics or, at least, sign a bond saying that he would not indulge in any political activity after being released.

“I was asked to sign the bond many times. I was, in fact, the first person among the detainees who was approached for it in September last year itself. They told me that since I’m facing several health issues it would be better for me to come out of the jail and go home,” he said.

The 69-year-old added, “They also told me that ‘you are an elderly person’, to which I said that there are many people who are older than me and yet incarcerat­ed and that they should take a view of everybody if they are really concerned about our age and health issues”. He said that the bond the authoritie­s wanted him to sign was “horribly worded”.

“I don’t think that people even in an autocracy would be asked to sign such a bond,” he said and added that after he was shifted from a city hotel to Srinagar’s MLAs hostel, also declared a subsidiary jail, he was again visited by some officials who told him that considerin­g his age and failing health, the government was willing to set him free on the condition that he agreed to retire from politics.

“I told them that more than 100,000 people have already lost their lives in the three-decade-old turmoil in J&K, many of them just 14-15 years old. If an old man dies in your prison it won’t be a big deal and I won’t consider it as a sacrifice.”

He said that it was after this meeting with that he was detained under the PSA. “After some time, I was again approached by some people who were not locals. I told them that the solution of Kashmir issue can’t be evaded even if the government of India reduces J&K to a municipali­ty. I was unexpected­ly released from the makeshift jail after my detention under the PSA was revoked last week. However, after being taken to my home I was placed under house arrest and (was) not allowed to meet anybody, including media representa­tives,” he said.

He said that after he was asked to vacate the government accommodat­ion on Thursday, the policemen deployed at the premises told him that they won’t permit him to leave. “They said you are under house arrest… how can you leave. The issue between the police and the estates department could be sorted out only late Thursday evening. I was shifted at 9 pm. I’m at my sister’s place right now and we will be shifting to a rented accommodat­ion soon. But I have been instructed not to venture out without permission,” he said.

I told them that more than 100,000 people have already lost their lives in the turmoil in J&K, many of them just 14-15 yrs old. If an old man dies in your prison it won’t be a big deal and I won’t consider it as a sacrifice. — Naeem Akhtar, PDP leader

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