Saturday, June 20, 2026
ADVT 
India

Modi Flags Terrorism, Balochistan Atrocities At Kashmir Meet

IANS, 12 Aug, 2016 11:50 AM
    Atrocities committed by Pakistani security forces in Balochistan and the Kashmir it holds need to be exposed to the world, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Friday at a meeting to discuss ways to defuse a deadly unrest in the Kashmir Valley.
     
    Modi told the all-party meeting that the roots of tension in the Kashmir Valley lay in cross-border terrorism sponsored by Pakistan.
     
    "Terrorism is the basis of tension in Kashmir and it is being supported by a neighbour," Modi said, according to Home Minister Rajnath Singh. Rajnath Singh and Finance Minister Arun Jaitley addressed the media.
     
    Friday's meeting followed the death of 56 people and injuries to thousands in clashes between security forces and protesters in the Kashmir Valley after the July 8 killing of rebel commander Burhan Wani.
     
    "Pakistan forgets that it is bombing its own people. The time has come for Pakistan to tell the world why it has been committing atrocities on people in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir and Balochistan," the Prime Minister said in the meeting that lasted for about four hours.
     
    The valley has been in a lockdown amid continuous curfew and separatist-called shutdown for the past five weeks amid daily pro-freedom rallies despite strict restrictions. The normal life has been on a standstill with educational institutes, shops, businesses, banks and offices closed in the weeks of unrest.
     
    The Home Minister said all the participants at the meeting felt that normalcy had to be restored in the valley. But Modi stressed that "there cannot be any compromise on national security".
     
     
    "We have to win the confidence of the people in Jammu and Kashmir. The central and state governments are committed to address all the genuine grievances of the people and restore peace there. But we will not lower the guard against terrorism and anti-India activities," Modi said.
     
    Informed sources, however, told IANS that there was no consensus in the meeting on how to resolve the tension in the valley. Most opposition parties urged the government to start a dialogue with all stakeholders, including separatist leaders, in Jammu and Kashmir.
     
    But the government appeared to have shot down the proposal to talk to separatists.
     
    "All parties were of the same approach and there will no compromise on terrorism or separatism," Jaitley said. "As far as the dialogue is concerned, it is already on with mainstream parties, traders and civil society (in Jammu and Kashmir)."
     
    Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad said former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who also attended the meet, assured the government "full cooperation" on "any positive step in the endeavour of solving the Kashmir issue".
     
    Azad, who headed the state government at the start of a similar Kashmir unrest in 2008, said there was a need to find where the problems in the valley started.
     
    "If there is a mistake we must correct it," Azad told reporters, adding his party "will be satisfied when peace is restored" in the valley.
     
    Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) leader Sitaram Yechury said he urged the government to talk to all stakeholders in Kashmir. "We have done it in the past. We have to do it again."
     
     
    CPI's D. Raja also stressed on the need to have "talks with all stakeholder".
     
    Earlier, the Lok Sabha adopted a resolution appealing for peace in Kashmir and expressing "serious concern over the prolonged turbulence, violence and curfew".

    MORE India ARTICLES

    53 Years On, Indian Soldiers In Icy Himalayas Short Of Boots, Ski Masks

    53 Years On, Indian Soldiers In Icy Himalayas Short Of Boots, Ski Masks
    It's yesterday once more as 53 years on, Indian Army soldiers in the icy Himalayas, to go by a parliamentary panel's report, suffer a crippling shortage of snow boots, ski masks and ammunition, among others - precisely the cause of the crushing defeat inflicted by the marauding Chinese forces in 1962.

    53 Years On, Indian Soldiers In Icy Himalayas Short Of Boots, Ski Masks

    Hijack Threat: Security Tightened At Delhi Airport After Terror Alert

    Hijack Threat: Security Tightened At Delhi Airport After Terror Alert
    Security was Sunday tightened at the Indira Gandhi International (IGI) airport here following an intelligence alert that terrorists may target Air India flights going to Afghanistan, officials said.

    Hijack Threat: Security Tightened At Delhi Airport After Terror Alert

    Congress, BJP Spar Over Pakistani 'Terror Boat'

    Congress, BJP Spar Over Pakistani 'Terror Boat'
    The ruling BJP Sunday hit out at the Congress for seeking a probe into the alleged Pakistani "terror boat" incident and said its questioning the matter showed the opposition party had touched a "new low" in politics.

    Congress, BJP Spar Over Pakistani 'Terror Boat'

    Highs Hit A New Low As Day Chill Returns In Punjab, Haryana

    Highs Hit A New Low As Day Chill Returns In Punjab, Haryana
    While the minimum temperature at most places across Haryana and Punjab showed an upward trend Sunday, it was the turn of the maximum temperatures to hit a new low.

    Highs Hit A New Low As Day Chill Returns In Punjab, Haryana

    Jihadi Uses Social Media To Recruit Fighters

    Jihadi Uses Social Media To Recruit Fighters
    The social media is increasingly turning out to be a platform for terrorists to peddle their interests and a top militant commander has been using the business networking site LinkedIn to recruit fighters, media reported Sunday.

    Jihadi Uses Social Media To Recruit Fighters

    Over 3.65 Lakh Treated For Drugs In Punjab

    Over 3.65 Lakh Treated For Drugs In Punjab
    Over 3.65 lakh patients were treated last year or are undergoing treatment at various medical facilities in Punjab for drugs de-addiction, a senior health official said here Sunday.

    Over 3.65 Lakh Treated For Drugs In Punjab