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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, May 24, 2001 |
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Aziz returns from Pak. amid drama
By Shujaat Bukhari
SRINAGAR, MAY 23. Police fired in the air and burst teargas
shells at Lal Chowk here to disperse a procession protesting the
``arrest'' of senior All-Party Hurriyat Conference leader, Sheikh
Abdul Aziz, who returned from Pakistan today. A few hundred Aziz
supporters had arrived in a number of vehicles at the Airport
Road to receive him, but were denied entry by police and asked to
``go back''.
Mr. Aziz was reportedly taken into custody soon after he landed
at the Srinagar airport and was not allowed to meet his
supporters. As news of the arrest spread, the procession moved
towards Lal Chowk, heart of the city, waving Pakistani flags and
raising pro-Pakistan and pro-Lashkar-e-Taiba slogans - `Jeeway
jeeway Pakistan' `Lashkar ke mujahidou ham tumharay saath hain'
(Long live Pakistan; We are with you, mujahideen of Lahshkar).
Police stopped the processionists and asked them to disperse.
They, however, resisted and police resorted to lathicharge, used
teargas and fired in the air.
Shopkeepers downed shutters and ran helter-skelter. Pitched
battles continued for some time and a few activists were
arrested.
However, police denied that Mr. Aziz was arrested and said he had
reached his Pampore residence to which he was escorted. Mr. Aziz,
who spent over two months in Pakistan, has been very critical of
India and the security forces.
With a red carpet welcome there, he also rejected the `third
option' for Kashmir, to which JKLF reacted strongly. Both Mr.
Aziz's People's League and the JKLF are constituents of All-Party
Hurriyat Conference.
Hurriyat in a fix
NEW DELHI, MAY 23. Sharp differences have surfaced again in the
All-Party Hurriyat Conference over backing the demand for
accession of Kashmir to Pakistan.
After its executive member, Sheikh Abdul Aziz, on a personal
visit to Pakistan, went public propagating accession to Pakistan,
former Hurriyat chairman, Mirwaiz Umer Farooq, said, ``These can
be his personal remarks and the Hurriyat's agenda is not confined
to this.''
He said all the three options - accession to India or Pakistan,
or Independence - were open for the people of Jammu and Kashmir.
However, Mr. Aziz, who returned from Pakistan after meeting Gen.
Pervez Musharraf, and other top-ranking officials, defended his
stand that Kashmir's accession to Pakistan was inevitable.
``I have not said anything wrong. Kashmir's fate would be
completed only after it is annexed to Pakistan,'' Mr. Aziz told
PTI on his return.
This statement further fuelled the infighting among the Hurriyat
constituents.
The JKLF leader, Mr. Javed Ahmed Mir, said Mr. Aziz had been sent
to Pakistan to attend a family function and not to indulge in
making statements on the future of Kashmir.
There was a feeling in the Hurriyat that his statement might
cause further setback to the possibility of its delegation
visiting Pakistan for talks with the Government there and the
militant leadership to facilitate a dialogue on Kashmir.
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