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  • Jaipur: Woman accuses husband’s friend of rape, accused claim it was Nikah Halala

    Jaipur woman was allegedly drugged by her husband who took her to a property and then called his friend over.

    Jaipur: A 42-year-old Muslim woman has filed a complaint, accusing her husband’s friend of rape. The accused, however, has claimed that the woman’s husband had divorced her and he was participating in the Shariah-sanctioned Nikah Halala so that she could return to him. Police have filed an FIR based on the woman’s complaint, accusing her husband of drugging her after which his friend allegedly raped her. Her husband, a property dealer, was a gambler and had “lost her” to his friend, says the complaint. The woman is a garland maker and the couple have two sons.

    According to police, the accused has claimed that the woman signed the decrees of marriage and divorce. She, however, claimed that the accused colluded with her husband to get fake Nikahnama and Talaqnama made. “On August 5, my husband took me to a property he owned, drugged me and called his friend over,” she said.

    When she woke up next to the accused and cried for help, her husband emerged from another room and said it was part of Halala, she said. “She went to file a complaint next day, but police called her husband and asked them to resolve the matter. Her husband reached the police station and took her out to talk. He showed her a video in which she is with his friend and threatened to show it to her sons. Traumatised, she returned home,” said Nishat Hussain of Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan.

    However, the woman could not get over the humiliation and filed a complaint on August 16, Hussain added. “Ever since the FIR has been filed, she is being threatened and offered money to withdraw the case. She is scared, but won’t back out,” said Hussain.

  • No Friday prayers at Jamia again; Mirwaiz detained outside Nigeen residence

    Mirwaiz had on Wednesday threatened to defy curfew to offer congregational prayers at the Jamia Masjid.

    Srinagar: Hurriyat (M) chairman Mirwaiz Umar Farooq was detained today after he tried to march towards the historic Jamia Masjid where prayers were disallowed for the consecutive 16th Friday.

    Hurriyat (M) spokesman Advocate Shahid-ul-Islam said that the Mirwaiz was detained outside his Nigeen residence after he tried to march towards Jamia Masjid in Nowhatta.

    “He was arrested and lodged in Nigeen police station,” Islam said.

    Mirwaiz had on Wednesday threatened to defy curfew to offer congregational prayers at the Jamia Masjid.

    “We are telling the government that there should be no restrictions this Friday. If they impose curfew, we will break it to offer prayers,” he had told journalists during a press conference at his residence, a day after he was released from jail and put under house arrest.

  • Barkha Dutt joins Global Opinions

    Announcement from Deputy Editorial Page Editor Jackson Diehl and Global Opinions Editor Karen Attiah

    The Washington Post is pleased to announce the addition of award-winning journalist Barkha Dutt to the Global Opinions section as a contributing columnist.

    Ms. Dutt is a New Delhi-based author, columnist, reporter  and presenter with India’s NDTV. She is the host of the popular television talk shows “We the People,” and the Emmy-nominated “The Buck Stops Here.” The Association for International Broadcasting recognized her as the International TV Personality of the Year in 2012, calling her “a reporter of considerable stretch and depth, still passionate and fearless in bringing the issues closer to her viewers.”  She has twice appeared on the World Economic Forum’s list of 100 Global Leaders of Tomorrow, and serves on the Global Council of the Asia Society. She completed her Master’s degree from the Columbia School of Journalism in New York.

    The Global Opinions section is part of The Post’s wider effort to increase its international presence by expanding its offerings of quality journalism, commentary, and video projects from and about other parts of the world. Since its launch in the spring, more than a dozen columnists from around the world have joined Global Opinions as contributors, and we look forward to adding more.

  • Pakistan trade body hints at suspending ties with India

    Islamabad: A Pakistan trade body has announced that it would consider suspending trade with India if the current hostile situation did not improve soon, a media report said on Friday.

    The Federa­tion of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FPCCI) President Abdul Rauf Alam on Thursday said that Pakistan had no compulsions of any sort to continue business and trade relations with India under the current hostile conditions, Dawn online reported.

    The entire Pakistani business community, he said, was united to take any decision and given the tense situation in the region, it was not possible to continue trade relations with India.
    He pointed out the role of the Saarc Chamber of Com­m­erce and Industry and said that it left them with no choice but to promote trade relations with ECO and D-8 countries.
  • Farooq Abdullah meets PM Modi, presses for dialogue in Kashmir

    New Delhi: The former Chief Minister, who has been touring the entire state, said that the Prime Minister listened patiently to him and was receptive to the suggestions he made. “I am sure that the Prime Minister will urgently address all the issues that have been flagged by me and others from the state,” Abdullah said after the meeting.

    The former Chief Minister said that National Conference has played the role of a constructive opposition party and would continue to do so.

    “We are willing to do anything for the people of the state who have been victims of unrest for over three months now. “The education sector has suffered. Tourism industry, which is the mainstay of the economy, has been hit badly. The people living along the Line of Control and International border.

    Border are suffering. I have requested to take into consideration all these factors and make attempts to bring some relief to the people in the state,” he said. Abdullah, however, refused to share other details about the meeting.

    “The meeting took place in the most cordial atmosphere and the Prime Minister was equally concerned about the situation in the state,” the NC leader said. (PTI)

  • Four militants, police constable arrested from Bemina Srinagar

    Srinagar: Five suspected militants including a Jammu Kashmir Police Constable were arrested during a nocturnal raid in Bemina locality of Srinagar city, sources said on Friday.

    Reliable sources told news agency CNS that raid was conducted after inputs about the presence of a group of militants in Bemina locality.

    Sources added that during the raid all the five militants belonging to Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) were apprehended.

    “One of them is police constable Khurshid Ahmed Chuhan who hails from Karnah,” a police official on condition of anonymity said.

    He added that 8 grenades and an AK-47 were recovered from the possession of the militants.

    Sources added that two more non-local militants were arrested in a separate nocturnal raid from Srinagar city. (CNS)

  • Kashmir Unrest: Hurriyat chairman Geelani has bandh calendar for every school except that of his grandchild

    The Indian Express
    Over the last three weeks, a number of government school buildings were set on fire by unidentified people in Kashmir with the latest such incident occurring in Baramulla.

    Srinagar: AMID A shutdown spearheaded by the Hurriyat across Kashmir, following the killing of militant Burhan Wani in July, 573 students of Delhi Public School in Srinagar appeared for their internal exams this month at an indoor stadium inside a high-security zone in the city with assistance from the J&K government. Among those who attended the exams for DPS students of classes 9 and 10 in the Civil Lines area from October 1-5 was the granddaughter of separatist leader and Hurriyat chairman Syed Ali Shah Geelani. The daughter of Geelani’s eldest son Dr Nayeem Zafar Geelani, she is a class 10 student in the school.

    Since the killing of Wani on July 8, government and private schools across the Valley have remained shut for 111 consecutive days, with the Hurriyat refusing to exempt them from its protest calendar. A government curfew was also in place for nearly two months. Recently, in an effort to break the shutdown and bring students back to school, the state government had announced that it would conduct the final exams of all classes on time. Parents and students, however, protested against the decision and demanded a postponement given the situation in the Valley.

    Over the last three weeks, a number of government school buildings were set on fire by unidentified people in Kashmir with the latest such incident occurring in Baramulla Thursday — the Hurriyat had condemned the incidents.

    The DPS in Srinagar, which is one of the biggest private schools in the Valley, was unable to conduct its term exams in July because of the protests.A practising medical professional, Nayeem is not a member of Geelani’s Tehreek-e-Hurriyat Kashmir or Hurriyat Conference, and lives with his family separately in Srinagar.

    When contacted, he confirmed that his daughter had appeared for the internal exams conducted by DPS. “Who says we are against students appearing in examinations or attending schools? We have never been against the holding of examinations or the education of students,’’ Nayeem told The Indian Express.

    ”Once the school decided to hold the internal exams, it was mandatory for my daughter, like other students, to appear as they carried a weightage of 70 per cent marks. If my daughter had skipped the exams, she wouldn’t have been able to sit for the final exams scheduled for next March,’’ he said.

    Nayeem said that the school management had initially decided to conduct the exams at other locations during the “relaxation time” allowed by the separatists. “Finally, the venue was shifted to the indoor stadium,” he said.

    Nayeem said that the exams were originally scheduled to be held before the protests began in Kashmir. “Due to some internal problems at the school, this examination couldn’t be held then. It was basically a term exam that was due in the first week of June,” he said. Pro vice chairman, Delhi Public School, Vijay Dhar told The Indian Express that exams were conducted for Formative Assessment (FA) 1 and 2.

    ”Geelani’s grand-daughter is enrolled in our school. I don’t know whether she appeared for the exams or not. Of the 580 students enrolled in classes 9 and 10, seven didn’t appear for the exams,’’ said Dhar, who is the son of D P Dhar, a diplomat and well-known politician known to have been close to the Nehru-Gandhi family.

    He said that the school had sent question papers to the parents of students in junior classes and asked them to conduct assessments at home. “This was the best available solution. The parent’s assessment will be further checked by our teachers,’’ said Dhar. He said that the school chose the indoor stadium for the two senior classes as it was centrally located and allowed students and parents to reach on time even in absence of any transport.

    DPS is not the only educational institution in the Valley that has conducted such exams. Recently, the Central University conducted internal tests for students in their final terms. “We even ferried some students in ambulances to save their precious year,’’ said a teacher of the university.

    The Islamic University of Science and Technology in south Kashmir also conducted exams for its outgoing batch of management students. A University official said the tests were conducted following requests from the students.

  • JKLF Chief Yasin Malik shifted back to jail from hospital

    Srinagar: Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) chief Yasin Malik was on Friday morning shifted back to jail after remaining admitted at SKIMS Soura for six days.

    A JKLF spokesman said that Malik, who was admitted at SKIMS after developing an arm infection on weekend, was shifted back to Central Jail today morning.

    Malik, who remains jailed since July 9, was shifted to SKIMS from Khyber hospital on the evening of Oct 22 after doctors advised an immediate treatment.

    “A team of doctors immediately admitted him to ICU (at SKIMS) and started treating his arm that was in severe pain due to swelling and infection,” added the spokesman.

    Rights bodies, activists and family members of Malik have also been calling for his release, fearing that his health might deteriorate again in the jail.

  • Day 112: Curfew in Srinagar parts to foil ‘Jamia chalo’; shutdown across Kashmir

    Srinagar: Authorities on Friday imposed curfew in some parts of Srinagar city to prevent post-prayer protests.

    The police said curfew has been imposed in old city Nowhatta area while restrictions would remain in force in other parts to maintain law and order.
    Mirwaiz Umer Farooq, chairman of moderate Hurriyat group has announced that he would defy restrictions to offer Friday prayers at the Jamia Masjid in Nowhatta.
    Mirwaiz has been placed under house arrest in his uptown Nigeen residence in the outskirts of Srinagar.
    For the 112th consecutive day, life across the valley remained paralysed due to the separatist called protest shutdown which is now extended till November 3.
    All educational institutions including schools, colleges and universities have remained closed.
    After the authorities announced holding of exams on schedule, over a dozen schools across the were gutted.
    Main markets, public transport and other businesses have also remained close during this period.
    Ninety-five people have been killed and over 12,000 injured since the present unrest began here on July 9, a day after Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani was killed.
  • Day 110: Shutdown continues in Kashmir

    Srinagar: Life remained affected in Kashmir Valley for the 110th consecutive day today due to the strike called by separatists, even as the summer capital continued to witness movement of private transport in some parts.

    Many street vendors set up stalls at many places around the commercial hub of Lal Chowk.
    While there were no curbs on the movement of people anywhere in Kashmir, the officials said restrictions on assembly of four or more people were in place throughout the Valley for maintaining law and order.
    They said forces have been deployed in strength at vulnerable spots and along the main roads as a precautionary measure.
    Shops, business establishments and fuel stations remained shut and are not expected to open this evening as separatists have not given any relaxation.
    Apart from business and tourism, the ongoing unrest has also affected the education as schools, colleges and other educational institutions continue to remain shut in the Valley.
    As many as 95 people have been killed and several thousand others injured in the ongoing unrest in the Valley.
    Around 5,000 forces personnel have also been injured in the clashes.
    Over 300 persons have been booked under Public Safety Act (PSA)