The Sunday Guardian

Mehbooba bats for stern action against stone pelters

PSAs are being slapped against miscreants.

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The police has finally swung into action as Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti has decided to crack the whip against all those who are behind creating the current unrest. A senior police officer told this newspaper that over 600 protesters have been arrested in midnight raids across the valley in the last two days and the Public Safety Act (PSA) has been slapped against some of them. Mehbooba’s decision came after the administra­tion failed to quell protests despite a continued curfew and curbs on the internet and pre-paid mobile service.

Recently, some youths who were responsibl­e for orches- trating an attack on a police post in Bijbehara township of South Kashmir were slapped with PSA and were sent to Kathua Central Jail in Jammu. But the spate of arrests has resulted in a fresh wave of violence and protests. Even women in came out on the streets hundreds to press for the release of the youths.

CM Mufti came under attack from her own party leaders in South Kashmir for having given the go-ahead to the police to arrest stonepelte­rs.

The lawmakers in South Kashmir who belong to the opposition National Conference and Congress have appealed to the government to stop the police from arresting people. They alleged that the police was framing innocent youths in false cases. J&K Pradesh Congress Committee chief Ghulam Ahmad Mir urged the Centre to take immediate political measures for the restoratio­n of normalcy in the valley. “The arrests and the use of force are only making the situation more murky and dangerous in Kashmir,” Mir told the media. CM Mehbooba Mufti, who is also the state’s home minister, has told the police to launch a massive crackdown against the miscreants who are responsibl­e for protests and violence on the streets of Kashmir. A police spokesman in Srinagar told the media that they have arrested 349 miscreants. But a senior police officer told this newspaper that they have arrested more than 600 youths so far and the numbers may jump further. Exiled Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen, who is accused by the Erdogan regime in Ankara of mastermind­ing the 15 July failed coup attempt, has a following in India too. Not only his books are published and distribute­d here, seminars and events are organised that draw inspiratio­n from his ideas of peace, multicultu­ralism, inter-faith dialogue and coexistenc­e in multi-religious societies.

After the coup attempt, the Turkish government urged the Indian government “to stop the spread of Gulen’s ideology”.

New Delhi-based Indialogue foundation, an organisati­on run jointly by Turkish and Indian citizens, claims on its website that it seeks inspiratio­n from personalit­ies like Emperor Ashok, Mahatma Gandhi and Fethullah Gulen. Its president Bilal Acikgoz said that his organisati­on is devoted to promote cultural exchanges, cause of peace and harmony among people of all religious orientatio­ns. “We keep organising events like seminars, conference­s, cultural festivals etc., to promote such ideas. One such programme will be held on Gandhi Jayanti on 2 October.

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