Farooq Abdullah urges people of J-K to take stand against perpetrators of Pahalgam-like attacks
Speaking on the Pahalgam massacre, the National Conference chief urged people not to be afraid of such attacks and said those behind it would rot in hell.
PTI
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Farooq Abdullah meets family of Pahalgam attack victim (PHOTO: PTI)
Anantnag, 3 May
National Conference supremo Farooq Abdullah on Saturday urged the people
of Jammu and Kashmir to stand against the perpetrators of Pahalgam-like attacks
for progress and prosperity, asserting that those behind the 22 April massacre
would "rot in hell".
The
former chief minister of the erstwhile state visited the residence of Adil Hussain Shah, a pony ride operator who was among the 26 victims, at Hapatnaar
in this south Kashmir district.
"He
(Shah) is a martyr. He sacrificed his life, he was not afraid of the guns of
the beasts. This is 'insaniyat (humanity)', this is Kashmiriyat. One who is
afraid is dead," Abdullah said.
"We
have to fight them (terrorists) and fight them with courage. We will never be
happy and prosperous and we can never move forward until we fight them. So, we
must have courage," he added.
Abdullah,
however, refused to comment on India's actions against Pakistan in the
aftermath of the attack. "Our prime minister will take such a
decision."
On
Pakistan Peoples Party leader Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari's threatening remarks,
Abdullah said, "He (Bhutto) will continue to issue statements ... If we
care about his statements, we cannot move forward."
After
India suspended the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) with Pakistan after the Pahalgam Attack, Bhutto-Zardari was quoted as saying by The News, "The Indus is
ours and will remain ours -- either our water will flow through it or their
blood."
Abdullah
also called for revisiting the treaty.
"We
have been saying for a long time that we need to revisit the IWT. We are
suffering losses because of it. The rivers are ours but we are suffering. I am
not saying that water be stopped but we also have a right over it," he
said.
Jammu
faces water shortages and water from the Chenab cannot be diverted for
residents of the region because of the treaty, Abdullah said.
"We
had tried to divert water from the Chenab to them but the World Bank did not
help us, saying it came under the IWT. Today, we have an opportunity to get
water to Jammu from there (Chenab). We have a right over the rivers as well,
not just them (Pakistan)," he added.
Brokered
by the World Bank, the IWT governed the distribution and use of the Indus river
and its tributaries between India and Pakistan from 1960.
Abdullah
said India could not build any projects on its rivers without Pakistan's
permission because of the treaty.
"Are
you not deprived of electricity? We have rivers from where we can generate
thousands of megawatts of electricity and can never be deprived of electricity.
But we cannot build any projects as they (Pakistan) do not permit us. So, we
have to revisit it and, God willing, we will," he said.
Asked
about a war-like situation prevailing between the two nuclear powers in wake of
the attack, Abdullah said, "I have no answer to such questions."
Speaking
on the Pahalgam massacre, the National Conference chief urged people not to be
afraid of such attacks and said those behind it would rot in hell.
"Those
who did that and those behind it murdered humanity. The doors of hell are open
for them. They cannot enter heaven," he said.
Abdullah
later travelled to Pahalgam and interacted with several tourists. He also
clicked selfies with the tourists.
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