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  • On arrival, ChillaiKalaantouches 6-yr old record

    Srinagar freezes at minus 6.5 degree Celsius

    Srinagar: On its arrival, ChillaiKalaan, the harshest 40-day period of winter in Kashmir, brought the coldest night of the season with temperature dipping below minus 6.5 degree Celsius.

    “Mercury in Srinagar plunged further to settle at minus 6.5 degrees Celsius – a degree below the previous night’s minimum of minus 5.5 degrees Celsius,” an official of local Meteorological Department told Greater Kashmir.

    The official informed that it was the coldest night of the season so far in Srinagar, adding, “In recent past, Srinagar had recorded minus 6.6 degrees Celsius on December 27, 2010. The all-time low recorded in December in Srinagar is minus 12.8 degrees Celsius on December 13, 1934.”

    The cold wave forced most of the commuters who use two wheelers to travel to use alternative mode of transportation on Wednesday. Some water bodies, including the fringes of the Dal Lake and water supply pipes were frozen.

    Leh recorded the coldest night of the season as the mercury settled at a low of minus 14.9 degrees Celsius.

    “The weather is likely to remain mainly dry across the state during next 24 hours,” said an official.
  • Scrap Art 370 to save Kashmir from jihadi terror: Pandits

    Jammu: Welcoming the recent historic judgment of the Supreme Court upholding the applicability of the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002, (also known as the Sarfaesi Act) in Jammu and Kashmir, the Panun Kashmir, an organisation of displaced Pandits, today demanded scrapping of Article 370 to save the Valley from becoming a sanctuary of “jihadi terror organisations”.The Panun Kashmir has said the December 16 order of the SC, which upheld the applicability of the Sarfaesi Act allowing national banks to seize and auction assets of loan defaulters, has put to rest controversies arising out of the claims of separatist elements with regard to the constitutional relationship between J&K and the Union of India.“It is an appropriate time to repeal Article 370 to completely integrate J&K into India politically, constitutionally and economically. It will also stop the state, especially the Valley, from turning into a sanctuary and hub of Islamic jihadi terror groups,” said Ajay Chrangoo, chairman, Panun Kashmir.“The Supreme Court judgment has reiterated the most fundamental and cardinal fact that Jammu and Kashmir is an integral part of India and that the provisions of Article 370 embodied in the Constitution of India do not in any respect recognise it as a separate entity,” said Chrangoo.He said, “The order makes it clear that the constitution of J&K is subordinate to the Constitution of India and it is the only one expression of the authority of the Indian state.”The Panun Kashmir has also condemned attempts that describe the reiteration of constitutional reality of the state by the Supreme Court as a judicial route to undermine Article 370 and Article 35-A. “Such political forces have all through sought to wreck the state from within by undermining and violating the constitution,” Chrangoo claimed.

  • No truth in Karra’s claims about being offered CM’s post: Nirmal Singh

    Jammu: Jammu and Kashmir Deputy Chief Minister Nirmal Singh today said there is “no truth” in former PDP MP Tariq Hamid Karra’s claims that he was offered the Chief Minister’s post by the BJP and the statement was made to create “confusion” in the coalition government.

    “There is no truth in it (his remarks claiming that BJP had offered him Chief Minister’s post thrice),” he told reporters here.

    Singh was replying to a volley of questions about the remarks of Karra, who had resigned from PDP and the Lok Sabha over the government’s handling of the recent unrest in Kashmir  that he was offered the CM’s chair by BJP for ensuring that PDP-BJP government in J&K continued uninterrupted.

    “He is resorting to such statements after leaving the party. There is nothing of such nature,” the Deputy Chief Minister said, adding this is being done to create “confusion” in the coalition government.

    Replying to another question about advancing the Budget Session to January 2, he said this has been done to facilitate better spending of expenditure and increasing the working season in this northern state.

    Asked whether the Budget Session would be stormy in view of Winter Session of Parliament getting washed away due to Opposition’s protest, he said, “We are ready to face Opposition in the House with our report card and the issues that were raised during the previous sessions have been addressed”.

    “The Opposition had also made an attempt to make issues out of non-issues during the previous sessions and to polarise the situation and create regional rifts. We hope that Opposition will not create such situation this time,” he said.

    “We hope that the session passes off peacefully and people’s issues are raised as there is short working season here. We are opened to criticism and suggestions. “Mainstream should not talk like separatists and if they do it on the floor of the House it would be unfortunate. There should be no such issues in the Assembly,” he said.

    “We will accept if we have faulted but criticism should be positive and aimed to help the people,” Singh said.

    On the Supreme Court’s judgement on Securitization and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 (SARFAESI Act), he said the judgment is within the constitution of India and Jammu and Kashmir and the state government has already given its point of view on it through its spokesman earlier.

  • Burhan Wani Was India’s Creation: Yasin Malik

    In an exclusive interview with The Quint, Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) chief Yasin Malik said the Hurriyat ‘protest calendar’ is based on the people’s will. He added that stakeholders from different professions are consulted every week while preparing the calendar.

    The JKLF leader also said Burhan Wani was “forced to pick up guns” after he was “tortured” by police and security forces.

    Have you joined hands with the Hurriyat because the people are following their calendar?

    The calendar is there on the demand of the people (sic). We consult all stakeholders, including businessmen, transporters and teachers. As long as people want this calendar, it will go on.

    Malik spoke to The Quint at his residence in Srinagar after he was released from the city’s Central Jail in the last week of October. He was arrested as a preventive measure on 8 July after Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani was killed.

    During the interview, he blamed the state government for the burning of schools in the Valley.

    Many schools were burnt in Kashmir. Is burning schools a solution?

    Every freedom organisation condemned the burning of schools. Who are making confrontations with the students? Who are forcing exams on them? It is the state government.

    Are you saying the state government is burning schools?

    If they can burn temples in 1986 to change the government, why can’t they burn schools?

    He said the weekly calendar released by the Hurriyat can be relaxed if the people want it.

    “Burhan Wani and other youths were part of a non-violent movement during the 2008-10 agitation. However, Kashmir police and the security forces tortured them. This forced them to pick up guns.”

    Though he calls himself a Gandhian, Malik justified Wani’s act of picking up the gun. He predicted that the unrest in the Valley will continue in some form or the other, until the Kashmir dispute is resolved.

    “The present government does not believe in negotiations. It wants to break the will of the people, crush and kill them. Ours is a freedom movement, which has been going on since 1947. The speed at which it goes forward may vary, but it will go on until the Kashmir issue is resolved.”

    Although incidents of stone-pelting have come down recently in Kashmir, militant attacks have been on the rise. It has also been observed that the number of ‘relaxation days’ has been increased in the Hurriyat’s protest calendar.                                      

  • 10th, 12th Class results to be declared next month

    Srinagar: Jammu and Kashmir State Board of School Education (JKBOSE) is going to declare the results of the 10th and 12th class annual examinations for Kashmir valley next month.

    “We have asked the Board authorities to fast-track the evaluation process so that the results are declared at the earliest,” Minister for Education, Mr Naeem Akhtar said.  He said hopefully the result of 12th class will be out by 20 January 2017 while the result of the 10th class will be declared by 22 January 2017.

    The Minister said that the practical examination of 12th class is still going on and the process would be completed by 28 December 2016.

    He said to help students make up for the precious academic time lost because of the disturbances during the summers, the Education Department has already started the process of organizing free tuitions and coaching under CM’s Super-50 programme.

    “Around 6000 students appeared in the screening test for CM’s Super-50 Coaching at various centres in the Valley yesterday and the results of the test would be declared on December 24,” he said and added that the coaching would begin on December 26.

    The Minister said that on the basis of their performance in the screening test, 1200 students will be short-listed for regular tuitions and free coaching for JKCET, NEET, JEE, AIIMS, AMU and other competitive examinations at the Srinagar centre while 50 students each will be shortlisted for coaching at district centres.

    He said the guest lectures are also being arranged by the faculty from higher education department, medicos, professionals and IITians with regular counseling sessions and test series to check the progress of the students.

    Pertinently, several students from the CM’s Super-50 Coaching programme had last year cracked the prestigious competitive examinations including JEE for admission to IITs and NITs.

    The initiative is a comprehensive free tuition program for 10th and 12th class students of Jammu and Kashmir who are tutored by top faculty drawn from the Education Department. 

  • Faheem Aslam appointed PRO to VC KU Andrabi

    Srinagar: Kashmir University (KU) today appointed Faheem Aslam as public relations officer (PRO) to its Vice-Chancellor Khurshid Iqbal Andrabi.Aslam is holding the charge of the PRO of the varsity and has been assigned the additional charge as the PRO to the VC. In 2011, Aslam was appointed as the PRO in Convocation Complex of the varsity. In 2015, he was appointed as the full-fledged PRO of the university.

  • Don’t restrict Yasin Malik’s movement: High Court tells Govt

    Srinagar: The Jammu and Kashmir High Court on Tuesday directed the government not to restrict movement of JKLF Chairman Yaseen Malik, in keeping with the law.

    Hearing a petition by Malik, a bench of Justice MuzaffarHussain Attar directed the government to follow the provisions of law with regard to movement of the petitioner.

    “Follow the mandate contained in Article 19 (1) (d) and Article 21 of the Constitution of India,” the court said 

    “The respondents (authorities) however, will not be prevented from proceeding in accordance with law if they feel that any action in terms of law is required to be taken,” the court said, asking the authorities to inform the court if Malik was put under surveillance, if so for what reason.

    The directions followed after Malik’s counsel Mian Abdul Qayoom submitted that the government breaches without any right or reason right of personal liberty of the petitioner guaranteed under Article 19 (1) (d) and Article 21 of the Constitution to move freely throughout the territory of India.

    “Wherever he (Malik) goes, he is followed by police personnel. As and when the petitioner goes to hospital for getting himself treated, police personnel follow him,” Qayoom pleaded. 

    He submitted that without any legal justification Malik is being kept under surveillance by the police. The respondents, he argued, have no authority to impede the liberty of the petitioner.

    Malik has approached the court seeking directions not to cause any kind of interference with the right of movement of the petitioner and not to keep any police personnel for the surveillance of the petitioner outside his residence.

    He also sought directions that no police personnel should follow him, on motorcycle or on any other conveyance, while he is travelling from one place to another.

    Additional Advocate General B A Dar, who was present, accepted notice on behalf of government after the court asked for it. The government has been directed to file objections to the petition by the next week.

     
  • Frozen Kashmir Greets Chillai-Kalan

    Srinagar: Cold wave tightened its grip on Kashmir Valley ahead of the onset of ‘Chillai-Kalan’ the 40-day harshest winter period – with the summer capital Srinagar and Leh town recording the coldest night of the season.

    Chillai-Kalan, considered the harshest period of winter when the chances of snowfall are most frequent and maximum, has begun from today.

    As per Srinagar based MeT department, minimum temperature was minus 6.2 degrees Celsius in Pahalgam and minus 3.0 degrees Celsius in Gulmarg. Qazigund – the gateway town to Kashmir valley – is another place which experienced the coldest night of the season with minus 7 degree temperature. Leh, in Ladakh region of Jammu and Kashmir, also recorded the coldest night of the season as the mercury there settled at a low of minus 14 degrees Celsius- down from the previous night`s minus 13.8 degrees Celsius. The MeT department has suggested that it is going to continue like this for the next few days as the weather is likely to be dry and cold. The Dal lake has already frozen partially, halting shikara activities at places.

    The MeT department has suggested that it is going to continue like this for the next few days as the weather is likely to be dry and cold. The Dal lake has already frozen partially, halting shikara activities at places. As per Srinagar based MeT department, minimum temperature was minus 6.2 degrees Celsius in Pahalgam and minus 3.0 degrees Celsius in Gulmarg. Leh, in Ladakh region of Jammu and Kashmir, also recorded the coldest night of the season as the mercury there settled at a low of minus 14 degrees Celsius- down from the previous night`s minus 13.8 degrees Celsius. Qazigund – the gateway town to Kashmir valley – is another place which experienced the coldest night of the season with minus 7 degree temperature.

    The weather usually remains cold during this period with the mercury remaining several degrees below freezing point, which often leads to freezing of water supply lines as well as water bodies, including the famous Dal Lake.

    Leh, in Ladakh region of Jammu and Kashmir, also recorded the coldest night of the season as the mercury there settled at a low of minus 14 degrees Celsius- down from the previous night’s minus 13.8 degrees Celsius.

    He said Leh was the coldest recorded place in the state.

    Qazigund the gateway town to Kashmir Valley was another place which experienced the coldest night of the season, the official said.

    He said the mercury in the town settled at a low of minus 4.4 degrees Celsius compared to minus 3.8 degrees Celsius on Monday.

    He said the north Kashmir town of Kupwara recorded a low minus 4.8 degrees Celsius, against minus 4.2 degrees Celsius the previous night.

    The official said Pahalgam health resort in south Kashmir which serves as a base camp for the annual Amarnath Yatra recorded a low of minus 6.2 degrees Celsius nearly a degree down from minus 5.3 degrees Celsius 24 hours earlier.

    He said the resort was the coldest place in the Valley.

    The mercury at the famous ski-resort of Gulmarg, in north Kashmir, settled at a low of minus 3 degrees Celsius half a degree up from yesterday s low of minus 3.5 degrees Celsius.

    The minimum temperature in Kokernag town of south Kashmir settled at a low of minus 3.4 degrees Celsius, the official said.

  • I was offered JK CM’s post thrice by BJP: Tariq Karra

    Srinaagar: Tariq Hameed Karra, who had quit PDP and the Lok Sabha over the government’s handling of the recent unrest in Kashmir today claimed he had been offered the Jammu and Kashmir chief minister’s post thrice by BJP before and after Mufti Muhammad Sayeed’s death.

    “I was offered the chief minister’s chair twice after Mufti Muhammad Sayeed’s death, and once even when he was alive, by the BJP. Their agenda was to keep the (PDP-BJP) government in place,” Karra told reporters.

    Karra said the offer was made by the “top brass of the BJP”, but did not name any leader of the party.

    Karra said the BJP had asked him to take over as the chief minister when Sayeed was not keeping well. Sayeed passed away in January this year. 

    “They told me that Mufti Sahib is not able to run (the government) effectively and asked me to become the chief minister but I rejected it,” he said.

    He said there was no truth in allegations that he had quit the PDP and the Lok Sabha in September as he did not find any place in the council of ministers in the dispensation led by Mehbooba Mufti who succeeded her father Sayeed.

    “When I rejected the chief ministership offer three times, why should I hanker after ministerial berth?” he said. On his political future, he said he had three options, including floating a new political party, and he would opt for the one which will lead to resolution of Kashmir issue and oppose the BJP and RSS policies in the state.

    He said a decision in this regard will be taken in consultation with his workers.

  • ‘MANY PEOPLE OUTSIDE HAVE LIMITED KNOWLEDGE ABOUT THE GROUND REALITIES IN KASHMIR’

    Shama Naqushbandi was born in London in 1983 to parents of Kashmiri heritage. After graduating from Clare College, Cambridge University, she joined one of the world’s premier international law firms and has since been working in the city. In the summer of 2011, Shama took a sabbatical to write The White House, her first book which won the ‘Best Novel’ in the Brit Writers’ Awards, 2012. 

    Shama was recently in Srinagar and spoke about her book that reflects on the idea of home and juggling between multiple identities and cultures.

    You were recently in Kashmir and also did a small book reading in a cafe in Srinagar. Tell us about your novel and how you came to write it?

    Yes, it was a real pleasure to have such an opportunity. I’d describe The White House as a coming of age story about trying to find home in the 21st century. It is told through the lens of the narrator, Liyana, a character born in England but of Kashmiri heritage, who juggles multiple identities, and it is about her journey through different cultures, places, times and ultimately even people to try to find her place in the world. I wrote The White House because I felt it was a story that needed to be told and one that is very important and relevant for our time. With all the advances in technology, communication, travel and globalisation, I believe the subject of identity has become increasingly complex. Whether we like it or not, we are exposed to so much more in today’s world and this presents challenges when it comes to concepts of home. This is why Liyana’s odyssey is universal and her story resonates with everyone because it is a tale about wanting to belong and find love in a fundamentally broken world, a world that constantly divides, reduces and demands us to choose allegiances even when the very modes of categorisation fall short of the realities they try to contain. I also think the female perspective shines a different spotlight on the diaspora experience, because it is a voice that is often not heard.

    Your book explores the idea of home in the 21st century, and your frequent visits to Kashmir over the years, of growing up in London while also being emotionally attached to the valley reflect in the narration of the protagonist.  Did writing this novel from the distance in London help you make peace with the memories of home?

    Where is home? This is the ultimate question or challenge of the book. I penned The White House across many different geographical locations, including London and Kashmir. The very style of the book is influenced by writers across a rich and diverse literary tradition, from the ancient epic poets Homer and Virgil to the classical English writers who I studied during my time at Cambridge like Hardy and Shakespeare, to impressionist French poets, post-colonial writers and Kashmiri poets such as Agha Shahid Ali. Even the creative process reinforces the rootlessness of the narrative. I think it was perhaps travelling that ultimately helped me make peace with the meaning of ‘home’. Simply being a traveler, a wanderer, endows you with new perspectives that can be incredibly empowering. The White House is itself an odyssey replete with metaphors of travel, and Liyana is the quintessential go-between. The reader travels intimately with her, experiencing her growth alongside her. One of my favourite parts of the book relates to Liyana’s revelation of being a passenger in a taxi – the ultimate ferrier home of human traffic.




    You have grown up in London and traveled across the world to many countries. How do you see the response of the outside world to the political and human rights situation in Kashmir? What is the role of international community in calling for a peaceful resolution to the Kashmir dispute that can somewhat ease the suffering of Kashmiri people who bear the brunt of this decades-old unresolved issue?

    I think it would be wrong for me as an outsider and someone who does not live in the Valley to pontificate about the political solution for Kashmir – I think that is best left to the Kashmiri people. The situation in Kashmir is of course desperately tragic because of the human cost involved, and I think it is incumbent on us at a human level to advocate truth, justice and reconciliation to bring about peace. As for the outside world, my personal experience has been that many people have limited knowledge about the realities on the ground in Kashmir. Sadly, I think this also extends to people within the rest of India. I often find it difficult to talk about Kashmir without individuals already having their own emotions and prejudices attached to it. It is as if everyone’s map of Kashmir is different and I draw on this idea in my book. I always encourage people to visit the Valley with an open mind and judge Kashmir for themselves.

    How do you look at the emergence of young writers in Kashmir who are also writing in English, finding their own voice and telling their own stories to the outside world?

    I think it is incredibly exciting. I’ve always supported art coming from Kashmiris themselves, particularly because I think Kashmir has a long history of being over-represented and often misrepresented, misappropriated and sensationalised by outsiders. It is fantastic that there is so much talent coming through the pipeline, particularly amongst the younger generation, and Kashmiris are now finding their own voices and writing back. I’ve always said Kashmir is the perfect palette for an artist – there is so much inspiration and emotion to draw from. If you speak to people in the Valley, almost every other person is a poet, painter or philosopher. Everyone has a story to tell, and it is just a question of time before people have to start listening.

    Kashmir Ink

    Also read: This Lady from Mumbai visited Kashmir alone and what she experienced was something absolutely beautiful