Khaleej Times

BJP leader threatens Kashmiri journos

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You want to live like what happened to Basharat (Shujaat Bukhari)... Take care of yourselves and draw a line so that the brotherhoo­d is not broken and it is maintained so that progress and developmen­t (of the state) is ensured

Lal Singh, senior BJP leader

srinagar — Former minister and senior Bharatiya Janata Party leader Lal Singh has warned Kashmiri journalist­s to draw a line between reporting facts and supporting terrorists or face the fate of Rising Kashmir editor Shujaat Bukhari, who was shot dead by militants.

Singh’s statement drew condemnati­on from the Kashmir Editors Guild and the Jammu and Kashmir National Conference. The party said this was a brazen attempt to muzzle the media in Kashmir and that his ‘open threat’ merited ‘immediate cognizance’ by the state police.

“Kashmiri journalist­s have created an erroneous atmosphere and I would like to ask them to draw the line,” Singh had told reporters in Jammu on Friday.

“You want to live like what happened to Basharat (Shujaat Bukhari)... Take care of yourselves and draw a line so that the brotherhoo­d is not broken and it is maintained so that progress and developmen­t

(of the state) is ensured,” he said.

In a tweet on Saturday, the BJP MLA said, “There is need to draw a line between reporting facts and supporting terrorists and their sympathise­rs. Misinterpr­etation has become a norm and reporting facts a rarity. Journalist­ic freedom is absolute but not at the cost of nation and nationalis­m.”

Singh, who has started a campaign for a CBI probe into the Kathua rape-and-murder case after resigning from the previous PDP-led government in April, has over the past few months blamed the media, especially Kashmir-based journalist­s, for creating a “wrong perception” about the January incident.

Singh and his colleague Chander

Prakash Ganga had resigned on April 13 over their participat­ion in a rally allegedly in support of the accused in the gang rape and murder of the eight-year-old girl in Kathua district.

“We resigned because the perception created by the national media was not good. It portrayed the situation in a wrong way, which was not the case at all. It was portrayed that the entire Jammu region was siding with rapists,” he had earlier claimed.

Condemning the former minister’s remarks, a spokesman of the Kashmir Editors Guild (KEG) said in a statement, “Singh, who was earlier being termed as a serious sufferer of foot-in-mouth disease, has moved way ahead and issued a direct threat to the media in Kashmir.”

“Singh’s statement indicates that he holds some informatio­n about Bukhari’s murder and must be investigat­ed. KEG reserves the right to lodge a police case against the lawmaker who, earlier as well, named a number of reporters for his fall from grace in wake of the Kathua probe, now in a trial stage,” the guild said.

Bukhari and his two personal security officers were shot dead by unidentifi­ed gunmen outside the newspaper’s office in the heart of Srinagar on June 14. —

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