Home Minister Rajnath Singh on Thursday said that Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act can be withdrawn from the Kashmir Valley once normalcy is restored.
Singh who was addressing a public meeting in support of Cabinet colleague Mahesh Sharma, accused the Congress of wanting to dilute AFSPA in an attempt to weaken the armed forces.
“We have strengthened the hands of our soldiers with AFSPA in disturbed areas where extremists and terrorists run their activities. But Congress wants to weaken our soldiers and security forces. We will not let this happen,” he said.
Singh added that the government has already withdrawn ASFPA in Tripura, parts of Arunachal Pradesh and Meghalaya.
The Union Home Minister’s remarks on Kashmir come a day after he told The Indian Express in an interview: “This turmoil will end. We are on track to end this for all time. How long can a handful of leaders keep betraying the people there and play with their future?” The minister further declared that the government is going to develop Kashmir and that “Kashmiris have a distinct identity in the country. They have talent.”
Commenting on the recent outcry over the possibility of scrapping Articles 370 and 35A, which vests special powers to J&K, and how such a move may trigger widespread resentment in the Valley, Singh said that the government has not said anything on the matter yet. “Are they dreaming that we are abolishing it? We haven’t said anything on it as yet. Why are they hallucinating? Separatists there will have to cooperate in the development of Kashmir. Whatever we will do will be in the best interests of Kashmir,” he was quoted as saying by The Indian Express.