Deccan Chronicle

BULLETS, ABUSES WON’T RESOLVE KASHMIR: MODI

On I-Day, PM talks of embracing people of Kashmir

-

Toeing Vajpayee’s Kashmir doctrine of “Kashmiriya­t, Jamhooriya­t aur Insaniyat”, Prime Minister Narendra Modi from the ramparts of Red Fort held out some hope for the strife-ridden Kashmir valley as he called for compassion and not coercion.

Addressing the nation on 71st Independen­ce Day, the Prime Minister said:

“Na gaali se, na goli se, parivartan hoga gale lagaane se... samasya suljhegi har Kashmiri ko gale lagane se” (Kashmir problem cannot be resolved by either bullets or by abuses. It can be resolved by embracing Kashmiris).

Making it clear that his government would not be soft on terrorism, Mr Modi also slammed violence in the name of faith, saying it was “not acceptable” and that communalis­m and casteism were a “poison” that would do no good to the country.

Wearing his trademark half-sleeve kurta and a Rajasthani turban, in his 56-minute speech, the shortest of all the four speeches since 2014, he assured that the government was committed to making Kashmir a paradise once again.

Toeing Vajpayee’s Kashmir doctrine of “Kashmiriya­t, Jamhooriya­t aur Insaniyat”, Prime Minister Narendra Modi from the ramparts of Red Fort held out some hope for the strife-ridden Kashmir valley as he called for compassion and not coercion.

He said that “a handful of separatist­s” were resorting to “various tactics” to create problems in the state. Mr Modi also asked the countrymen to shed the “chalta hai” attitude and instead adopt an approach of “badal sakta hai” (can change) for positive change.

Invoking Bal Gangadhar Tilak’s slogan of swaraj (self-rule), he said now their motto should be “suraj” (good governance) as he underlined his vision for a ‘new India’ by 2022.

In “New India”, he said, “Tantra se lok nahin, lok se tantra chalega (people would be the driving force behind the establishm­ent rather than the other way around).” He lamented that democracy has been confined to ballots.

The nation had shown its collective strength between 1942 and 1947 culminatin­g in India's Independen­ce, he said, asking people to show the same resolve to create a “new India” by 2022.

Most of his speech, however, focussed on the economy, as he pointed out the various reforms carried out by his government, including demonetisa­tion, the implementa­tion of GST and the crackdown on black money.

“Those who have looted the nation and looted the poor are not able to sleep peacefully today,” the PM said, vowing to continue the crackdown. He said over `1.75 lakh crore has been deposited in banks since the note-ban, and more than 18 lakh people with disproport­ionate income are under scrutiny.

He said demonetisa­tion of old `500 and `1,000 notes last year had helped bring over `3 lakh crore of unaccounte­d wealth into the banking system.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India