Central intelligence agencies again blamed Pakistan for the escalating violence in the Kashmir valley while briefing Union Home Minister Amit Shah during a series of meetings on Friday at the Delhi’s North Block.
Violence levels might have increased in Kashmir but it is not jihad. It is being done by some desperate elements, a senior functionary in the government informed the reporters. The govt officials also said that the perpetrators of the violence are sitting across the border in Pakistan.
There is no evidence to suggest the presence of the Taliban in the Kashmir valley. This is significant as the Narendra Modi government started its engagement with the Taliban just earlier this week, the officials also said.
Earlier in the day, three rounds of meetings were held in the North Block in which the intelligence heads of both internal and external agencies briefed the Home Minister about the steps being taken to break the cycle of violence.
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It was unanimously decided that Kashmiri Pandits would be moved to safer locations but not out of Kashmir. Centre can’t be part of any ethnic cleansing, another senior level officer said.
On issue of targeted killings in the Kashmir valley, the AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi told the ANI that the central government is repeating the mistakes from 1989. The Modi government is not learning lessons from history and is making a mistake similar to what was done in 1989. In 1989 too, political outlets were shut down and politicians of the Kashmir valley were not allowed to speak, Owaisi said.
Blaming the BJP for the current situation in Kashmir, Owaisi said the Centre does not see Kashmiri Pandits as humans and only sees them as electoral issues. The 1987 assembly elections were rigged and its result was seen in 1989, he said.
Owaisi also said that BJP doesn’t allow the local politicians to speak and such things are giving way to terrorism. Its onus lies on the Modi government.
Targeted killings was started in September 1989 in the Kashmir valley following tension and dissatisfaction over the Jammu and Kashmir assembly election in 1987.
The spate of targeted killings in the Kashmir Valley has sent an alarming sign in the valley. The situation in Jammu and Kashmir has taken a sudden and violent turn for the worse this time.
Last month, Union Minister Jitendra Singh had said Jammu and Kashmir was fast returning to normal as the decades-long terrorism was on its last legs and even Srinagar was declared terror-free by police in August 2020.
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