Farooq barred from leaving house, claims Gupkar alliance

The NC had tweeted the administration had blocked Farooq Abdullah's residence

PTI15-10-2020_000188B Jammu and Kashmir National Conference president Farooq Abdullah addresses a press conference along with his son Omar Abdullah, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) president Mehbooba Mufti and others after meeting of signatories to the Gupkar declaration, at his residence in Srinagar | PTI

 The Peoples' Alliance for Gupkar Declaration (PAGD) on Friday said National Conference president Farooq Abdullah not being allowed to leave his house to visit Hazratbal shrine is a "new low in curtailment of fundamental rights" of the people of Jammu and Kashmir.

In a statement, PAGD spokesperson Sajad Lone condemned the state administration for putting a blockade outside the resident of Farooq Abdullah and demanded that it be removed.

No official from the administration was available for comment on the issue.

Farooq Abdullah is also the president of the recently floated PAGD, an alliance of seven mainstream political parties in Jammu and Kashmir seeking restoration of the erstwhile state's special status as it existed on August 4 last year.

Earlier in the day, the National Conference (NC) claimed in a tweet that the administration had blocked Farooq Abdullah's residence and stopped him from offering prayers at Dargah Hazratbal on the occasion of Milad-un-Nabi.

Lone said, "Abdullah was slated to go to Hazratbal in order to participate in the religious congregation on account of Eid-Milad-Un-Nabi, however (he) was barred from leaving his house."

"We strongly condemn the actions of the state administration which are tantamount to interference in the religious rights of Dr Farooq Abdullah. This marks a new low in the curtailment of fundamental rights of the people of J-K. We demand that the blockade be removed so that Dr Farooq Sahib is able to perform his religious duties," he said.

The PAGD also "unequivocally and unambiguously" condemned the killings of three BJP workers by militants in Kulgam district of south Kashmir on Thursday.

"Political differences cannot justify use of violence. Violence has always and will crowd out sanity. We will always fight aggression in all its forms irrespective of the source of aggression," Lone said.

The three BJP workers—Fida Hussain, Umer Hajam and Umer Rashid Beigh—were shot dead by militants in Kulgam's Y K Pora area.

The Resistance Front (TRF), believed to be a shadow group of the Lashkar-e-Taiba, has claimed responsibility for the killings.

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