Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Fear grips Valley as locals stock up on essential items

TENSION MOUNTS Consumer affairs dept asks staff to distribute foodgrain stocks

- Mir Ehsan

SRINAGAR: On Friday night, fighter jets and helicopter­s hovered over the city as the police, backed by the army, raided the premises of separatist groups in the Kashmir valley and arrested their leaders and activists. Then, news spread on social media that 100 companies of paramilita­ry troops were being airlifted to Kashmir for immediate deployment.

By Saturday, fear and uncertaint­y gripped many residents of the troubled region who speculated about what may be afoot.

Some thought it was the backdrop for a war with Pakistan following the February 14 Pulwama suicide car bombing that killed 40 paramilita­ry troopers, and some that it was a prelude to upcoming Lok Sabha elections. And still more conjecture­d that it was related to petitions challengin­g Article 35A of the constituti­on due to begin in the Supreme Court. The article grants special privileges to permanent residents of J&K.

By afternoon, their nerves had frayed enough for long queues to start forming outside petrol pumps. “There is panic among people that something is going to happen so people are stocking petrol and diesel; the sale is different from routine days,’’ said Arshid Khan, a salesman at a petrol pump in Dalgate.

Top officials were tight-lipped about what was happening and ignored the speculatio­n doing the rounds. “I don’t know anything what is happening here, but, meetings of top officials have been going in the city from the past few days,’’ said a senior police officer, adding that he too was getting frantic calls from friends and relatives inquiring about what was going on.

Two government orders, one by the principal of Government Medical College, Srinagar, cancelling the second half of the staff’s winter vacation and another order by the consumer affairs department directing staff to distribute foodgrain stocks among people over the next two days added to the uncertaint­y.

A third order issued by the director, health ordered all chief medical officers ‘’to collect the available supply of drugs, medicines, surgical disposable items and other allied items’’ from the J&K Medical Supply Corporatio­n ‘’in view of prevailing situation”.

Samia Rashid, principal of the medical college , termed it a routine order. “It has nothing to do with the situation.’’

Director of consumer affairs Mohammad Qasim said the order was withdrawn. “It is a normal procedure, but timing was wrong and the order has been withdrawn now,’’ Qasim said.

The Joint Resistance Leadership of separatist organisati­ons, meanwhile, called for a strike in Kashmir on Sunday.

 ?? WASEEM ANDRABI/ HT PHOTO ?? People queue up outside a petrol pump in Srinagar on Saturday.
WASEEM ANDRABI/ HT PHOTO People queue up outside a petrol pump in Srinagar on Saturday.

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