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Farooq Abdullah speaking language of separatists for electoral gains: Jitendra Singh

Abdullah, who is contesting the bypoll to Srinagar Lok Sabha seat, earlier on Wednesday said that the stone-pelting youth from the valley were giving their lives for resolution of Kashmir dispute and not for tourism.

JKCA scam: Court directs Farooq Abdullah to appear before it on August 29"In view of what has been stated hereinabove, and having regards to the judgment supra the applicant/accused be produced by learned counsel for the application for admitting the accused to bail and thereafter the application for exemption will be taken up for consideration," the court ordered.. (Former Jammu and Kashmir CM Farooq Abdullah)
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Union Minister Jitendra Singh on Wednesday dubbed as “worrisome” NC chief Farooq Abdullah’s defence of stone-pelters in Kashmir and accused him of getting tempted to speak the “language of separatists” for electoral gains. Abdullah, who is contesting the bypoll to Srinagar Lok Sabha seat, earlier on Wednesday said that the stone-pelting youth from the valley were giving their lives for resolution of Kashmir dispute and not for tourism.

The former J&K chief minister’s comments came in response to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s April 2 appeal that the state’s “misguided” youth should choose tourism over terrorism. “It is quite worrisome…a politician of the stature of Abdullah has also come under pressure of upcoming polls and therefore has felt tempted to speak the language of the separatists,” Singh told reporters outside Parliament.

Referring to the 1994 Parliament resolution that Pakistan -occupied Kashmir (PoK) be liberated from the neighbouring country and be merged with India, Singh said Abdullah’s party had supported the position. The minister also said that Abdullah had stated on record several times that India should “bombard” terror training camps operating from Pakistani soil.

“It seems that just in a bid to woo a certain constituency, some of the Kashmir-centric campaigners have felt tempted to use the jargon of separatists,” Singh added. The minister further said Abdullah’s remarks raise a “larger question” if one should succumb to expediency of electioneering “at the cost of consistency when it comes to nationalist views and beliefs”.

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