Thursday, June 11, 2026
ADVT 
India

PM Modi Reviews Kashmir Situation, Appeals For Peace

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Jul, 2016 11:28 AM
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday held a high-level meeting over the violence in Jammu and Kashmir that has claimed over 30 lives, and appealed for calm even as curfew continued for the fourth consecutive day in the Valley.
     
    Modi, who returned to the capital early in the morning after his four-nation tour of Africa, held the review meeting that was attended by Home Minister Rajnath Singh, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar, National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, and Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar besides senior security officers.
     
    The meeting took stock of the situation in the Kashmir valley that has seen repeated clashes between thousands of protesters and security forces following the killing of Hizbul Mujahiddin commander Burhan Wani last Friday.
     
     
    Besides 33 people killed in the violence so far, nearly 1,400 people have been wounded, many seriously.
     
    The Prime Minister also voiced concern over the violence in the Valley where curfew continued for the fourth consecutive day on Tuesday.
     
    "Prime Minister has appealed to the people of Jammu and Kashmir to maintain calm and peace so that normalcy returns in the valley and no innocent lives are lost," Minister of State in Prime Minister's Office Jitendra Singh told reporters soon after the meeting concluded.
     
    Jitendra Singh also said that the Prime Minister offered every assistance to the state government and assured it of providing every help.
     
    He said the Prime Minister is keeping a close watch on the sequence of events in the valley.
     
     
    The Prime Minister also expressed hope that innocent people should not face inconvenience and expressed satisfaction over the ongoing Amarnath Yatra.
     
    In Kashmir, amid curfew in most parts of the valley, the authorities grappled to control continuing violence.
     
    Police said "strict curfew shall continue" almost all across the valley to prevent the spillover of street violence and counter-violence.
     
    Separatist groups have extended the ongoing protest shutdown in the valley until Wednesday.
     
    National Conference leader and former Chief Minister Omar Abdullah raised questions on Jammu and Kashmir being "unrepresented" at the high-level meeting.
     
     
    In a tweet, Abdullah said that Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti's presence at the meeting could have been ensured via video-conferencing.
     
    "I understand if Mehbooba Mufti didn't leave the state to attend (the meeting) but why not by video conference? State unrepresented," Abdullah tweeted.
     
    Reacting to the prevailing situation in the valley, Congress Vice president Rahul Gandhi said that the gains made during the UPA regime in Jammu and Kashmir have been nullified by the "fatalistic policies" of the Modi government.
     
    Speaking at an Eid Milan reception hosted by Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind chief Maulana Asad Madni here on Monday night Gandhi said that mishandling the situation in the Kashmir Valley had led to political turmoil.
     
    MIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi urged the Centre to call an all-party meeting on the violence in the Kashmir Valley.
     
     
    The Hyderabad MP said the meeting should be called to discuss how to end the cycle of violence and to show empathy following street protests that have claimed 32 lives.
     
    A group of Muslim clerics met with Home Minister Rajnath Singh to discuss ways and means to restore normalcy in the Kashmir Valley.
     
    The clerics said the Minister assured them of all possible help in restoring peace in the disturbed valley.
     
    Umer Ahmed Ilyasi of All India Organisation of Imams of Mosques told media later that they will visit Kashmir and urge people, specially religious leaders, there to help the valley to return to normalcy.
     
    Ilyasi said he along with other Muslim religious leaders will also meet Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti. 
     
     
    Meanwhile, the annual Amaranth Hindu pilgrimage that resumed on Monday after remaining suspended for two days continued as some 300 vehicles carrying pilgrims from different states of India entered the Kashmir Valley on Monday night.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Narendra Modi Wants Private Success Story With Pakistan: Salman Khurshid

    Narendra Modi Wants Private Success Story With Pakistan: Salman Khurshid
    Congress leader and former union minister Salman Khursid has said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi wanted his own private success story with Pakistan and was pursuing a "policeman's foreign policy" which was a disaster.

    Narendra Modi Wants Private Success Story With Pakistan: Salman Khurshid

    Two Women Killed In Puri Rath Yatra Stampede

    Two Women Killed In Puri Rath Yatra Stampede
    Two women were killed and 10 other people were injured in a stampede during the Rath Yatra in Odisha's temple city of Puri on Saturday, police said.

    Two Women Killed In Puri Rath Yatra Stampede

    Three Injured In Kashmir Clashes After Eid Prayers

    Three Injured In Kashmir Clashes After Eid Prayers
    Youths pelted stones at police and Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) personnel in Sekidafar and Safa Kadal areas of Srinagar's old city area immediately after the Eid-ul-Fitr prayers ended here in the morning.

    Three Injured In Kashmir Clashes After Eid Prayers

    Eid Celebrated In India But No Exchange Of Sweets At Pakistan Border

    Eid Celebrated In India But No Exchange Of Sweets At Pakistan Border
    Muslims offered prayers at mosques, greeted each other and relished the 'seviyan' sweet dish. From Gujarat to Jammu and Kashmir to Kerala, Eid festivity gripped areas with sizeable Muslim populations.

    Eid Celebrated In India But No Exchange Of Sweets At Pakistan Border

    India's first anti-colonialist uprising predates Mangal Pandey's by 274 years?

    India's first anti-colonialist uprising predates Mangal Pandey's by 274 years?
    A sustained campaign is on to haul back the date of India's first rebellion against Western colonialism by a good 274 years - from Barrackpore in eastern India to what is now Goa.

    India's first anti-colonialist uprising predates Mangal Pandey's by 274 years?

    NDA's Pakistan policy an international joke: Congress

    NDA's Pakistan policy an international joke: Congress
    The Congress on Saturday condemned the incidents of waving of Pakistani and Islamic State (IS) flags in Srinagar as it termed the Narendra Modi-led NDA government's Pakistan policy is not only "directionless", but an "international joke".

    NDA's Pakistan policy an international joke: Congress