The Asian Age

Locals join Hindu family for last rites

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Even as Srinagar and other cities and towns in the Valley lay curfewboun­d, residents came out to join a Hindu family in performing the last rites of an elderly member at Sheikh Mohalla ( Maharaj Gunj in the heart of otherwise volatile central Srinagar.

The family of Deepak Malhotra, a businessma­n, is one of a few thousand Hindu families which chose to stay put when militancy broke out in the Valley in 1989- 90.

On Saturday morning, Mr Malhotra’s aged mother passed away. When a neighbour got an announceme­nt about it broadcast through a mosque loudspeake­r, a large number of residents came to the bereaved family’s house defying the curfew, using alleyways where no security forces are

J& K deputy CM said the situation has been brought under control to some extent

usually deployed. They participat­ed in the last rites of Mr Malhotra’s mother.

Meanwhile Jammu and Kashmir’s deputy chief minister and senior BJP leader, Dr Nirmal Singh, has denied claims made by some people that Kashmiri Pandits in the Valley and their properties, places of worship and also Amarnath pilgrims came under mob attack during the ongoing turbulence. He said no such incident took place in the Valley.

He told reporters in Jammu on Saturday, “We have, to some extent, controlled the situation ( in the Valley). Fortunatel­y, no attacks on the members of minority community or Yatra have taken place.”

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