The Free Press Journal

Amarnath Yatra resumes after day-long suspension

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JAMMU: The Amarnath yatra resumed from Jammu on Sunday after a day-long suspension due to apprehensi­ons of a law-and-order situation in Kashmir Valley. Over 1.34 lakh pilgrims have so far paid their obeisance Lord Shiva at the cave shrine at an altitude of 3,888 metres. “Today, on the 11th day of the yatra, 8,167 pilgrims paid obeisance at the holy cave. As of now, a total of 1,34,771yatris have had a darshan at the shrine,” an official said.

The Amarnath yatra was resumed from Jammu on Sunday after a day-long suspension due to apprehensi­ons of a law-and-order situation in the Kashmir Valley.

Over 1.34 lakh pilgrims have so far paid their obeisance to the ice-lingam of Lord Shiva at the cave shrine at an altitude of 3,888 metres in the south Kashmir Himalayas.

“Today, on the 11th day of the yatra, 8,167 pilgrims paid obeisance at the holy cave. As of now, a total of 1,34,771 yatris have had a darshan at the cave shrine,” said an official spokesman.

A batch of 4,411 pilgrims left the Bhagwati Nagar Yatri Niwas here this morning in a convoy of 140 vehicles, said officials. The authoritie­s had Saturday clamped a curfew in three towns of the Kashmir Valley, including Tral, and imposed restrictio­ns on the movement of people in the rest of the Valley to foil the separatist­s' plan to take out a rally to mark the first death anniversar­y of Hizbul Mujahideen “commander” Burhan Wani.

Police and paramilita­ry personnel have been deployed in strength across the Valley. A total of 29,705 pilgrims and sadhus have left the Jammu base camp for the cave shrine since the 40day yatra began on June 28.

Fourteen persons, including a security officer, have died during the pilgrimage this year.

The yatra began in the backdrop of an intelligen­ce warning of a terror attack, which prompted the authoritie­s to mobilise the “highest level” of security measures, including satellite-tracking.

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