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Polling ends peacefully in Srinagar, Udhampur: DGP

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Srinagar, April 18 : Director General Police (DGP) Dilbagh Singh Thursday said that polling in Srinagar and Udhampur Lok Sabha seats concluded peacefully.

Talking to news agency he said barring some incidents of violence polling in Kashmir valley remained peaceful. “In Jammu province also, situation remained peaceful so-far,” he said.

“People in large number exercised their right to vote defying boycott call by some outfits in Srinagar constituency and in Udhampur the people had to wait for their turn to wait as they came in big numbers to vote in all the districts going to polls today, the DGP added.

The DGP said the forces were advised to exercise caution at the time of de-induction as some violence is experienced during this process.

“In Kashmir, I monitored election arrangements along with other senior officers including ADG CID, ADG armed police, ADG CRPF, IGP Kashmir, IG BSF and IG CRPF. Adequate security arrangements were made and supervised by DIGs, District SPs, commandants of police and Central Armed Police forces,” he added. 

‘Just Married’ couple reaches polling booth to vote in Udhampur in Jammu and Kashmir

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A newly-married couple, not yet off their bridal wear, reached a polling booth of Udhampur parliamentary constituency here Thursday to cast their vote, underlining the importance of exercising one’s franchise.

The couple reached the polling booth in a flower-decked sedan with groom Sourav Sharma sporting a headgear and a cream ‘achkan’ over red churidars with his bride Manisha, attired in a red ‘salwar-kameez’ and donning gold jewellery.

Accompanied by friends and family members, the couple stepped into the booth hand-in-hand, surprising many standing in the queue and exercised their franchise.

They instantly became a hit at the polling booth with dozens of people and visiting journalists clicking their pictures.

“It was my moral duty. So we made it a point to cast our votes before starting a new phase of life,” Manisha told reporters here.

She said even though she just got married, she did not want to waste her vote.

Groom Sourav too requested people to vote.

“I request all electorate in the country to vote. This is our mandatory duty as citizens of India,” he said.

People waiting at the polling booth in serpentine queues appreciated the example set up by the newly-married couple.

Awaiting his turn to vote, Suram Singh said, “It is an example for the rest of the voters who prefer to enjoy a holiday instead of going to vote”.

Udhampur Lok Sabha constituency having 16.85 lakh eligible electors recorded 26.28 till 11 am, said officials.

Prominent among the contestants include Union minister Jitendra Singh seeking re-election on a BJP ticket, Dogra dynasty scion Vikramaditya Singh fighting as a Congress candidate, Dogra Swabhiman Sangathan founder Choudhary Lal Singh and National Panthers party chairman Harsh Dev Singh.

Courtesy Press Trust of India 

Used as ‘human shield’ last time Srinagar voted to elect MP, Dar now on poll duty

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Nearly two years ago, when Srinagar voted in a Lok Sabha bypoll, Farooq Ahmed Dar was used as a ‘human shield’ to ensure safe passage for army jawans as they came under intense stone-pelting, but now he finds himself posted on election duty.

“Farooq Ahmad Dar is working on consolidated terms as sweeper in the Health Department. He has been posted on election duty,” said Budgam Chief Medical Officer Nazir Ahmad.\

In 2017, a picture of Dar tied to the bonnet of an army jeep splashed across the front pages of newspaper, invoking sharp but divided reactions.

Investigations later found he was on his way to his sister’s place for a condolence meet after casting his vote in the bypoll on April 9 2017 when the army picked him up and tied him with ropes, parading him through nearly 28 villages.

“What was my mistake? Going to the polling booth and casting my ballot?” Dar had told PTI in a video interview last year.

At this village, nearly 40 kms from the Srinagar city, where Dar was tied to the army jeep, the incident is still fresh in the minds of the locals.

After the polls opened at the Utligam polling station, only two of the registered 1,016 voters had cast the ballots in the first 100 minutes.

The residents allege the stone-pelting was in response to the “unprovoked harassment” of the locals by the army officer and the “vandalism” by the troops.

“It was the army personnel who went berserk and started beating up people and broke window panes of many houses that day. The youngsters were infuriated and retaliated by pelting them with stones,” Nazir Ahmad, a local resident, told PTI.

Ahmad admits the stone-pelting was very intense, which probably forced Major Leetul Gogoi to catch hold of Dar and use him as a human shield.

“He is not even from our village. He is from Cheill-Brass village, 15 kilometres from here. That incident has brought only unwanted attention from all sides to our village. If we vote, it is a problem and if we do not vote, it is a problem,” he said.

Mohammad Aslam, another villager, said the police picked up 22 youths from the village over the past couple of days without any charge.

“Most of them are labourers and students. We are least bothered about if any one comes to vote or not. We have formed a committee to ensure there is law and order problem in our village this time because we are concerned about our boys,” he said.

There is a sense of deja vu among some residents here.

A young woman died Thursday morning due to brain hemorrhage. Preparations were underway for her final rites at the graveyard right next to the polling station.

“You would not have been able to come here had it not been for the death of the woman this morning. The scenes here would have been different,” said a youth, who wished not to be named, indicating that disturbance in the area was planned.

As this PTI reporter travelled to Cheill-Brass, a remote village just at the foot of the mighty mountain, Dar was not at his home.

“He has gone for election duty,” his mother Fazi Begum told PTI.

She said Dar was appointed as a daily wage employee in the state Health Department and has been on election duty since Wednesday.

Asked if the eligible members of her family had cast their votes, Fazi Begum said, “I almost lost my son due to voting two years ago. Do you think we will go to vote again?”

The 65-year-old woman said her son had to seek daily wage employment in the government department as he could not work on shawls anymore.

“His thumb has been damaged after he was tied to the jeep by army people. Now he cannot work on shawls,” she said.

The State Human Rights Commission had awarded Rs 10 lakh compensation to Dar but the state government refused to pay up.

“We have not got any help from the Government. (Then chief minister) Mehbooba Mufti did not honour the ruling of the SHRC,” Fazi Begum said.

She has now pinned hopes on the court where the case is under consideration.

Courtesy PTI

Three labours, civilian injured by shooting stones in Uri

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Suhail Khan

Uri, April 18 : Three Beacon labourers and a civilian on Thursday were injured when a shooting stone hit a beacon vehicle in which they were travelling in at Nambla Uri in north Kashmir’s Baramulla district.

Reports reaching GNS said that the three beacon labourers and a civilian suffered injuries after they were hit by shooting stones at Nambla area of Uri, however all the injured were rushed to Sub District hospital where from one among them reffered to Srinagar hospital and another reffered to District Hospital Baramulla for advanced treatment.

A senior police officer also confirmed the incident to GNS and identified all the injured as Syed Gralam Mohammad Shah Syedpora , Nasser Ahmed Lone ,Syed Mohammad Saffer and Aijaz Ahmed Khan. Officer said that the incident occured at Chowkidar mode at Nabla when shooting stones had hit with beacon vehicle when it was on way to Nabla.(GNS)

Girl burned to death for reporting sexual harassment in Bangladesh

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A 19 year girl was burnt to death at her school in Bangladesh after she had filed a sexual harassment complain against her headmaster.

Nusrat Jahan Rafi was doused with kerosene and set on fire at her school in Bangladesh. 

Nusrat, who was 19, was from Feni, a small town 100 miles (160km) south of Dhaka.

According to BBC she was studying at a madrassa. On 27 March, she said the headmaster called her into his office and repeatedly touched her in an inappropriate manner. Before things could go any further she ran out.

Many girls and young women in Bangladesh choose to keep their experiences of sexual harassment or abuse secret for fear of being shamed by society or their families. What made Nusrat Jahan different is that she didn’t just speak out – she went to the police with the help of her family on the day the alleged abuse happened.

At the local police station she gave a statement. She should have been provided with a safe environment to recall her traumatic experiences. Instead she was filmed by the officer in charge on his phone as she described the ordeal.

In the video Nusrat is visibly distressed and tries to hide her face with her hands. The policeman is heard calling the complaint “no big deal” and telling her to move her hands from her face. The video was later leaked to local media.

According to a statement given by Nusrat, a fellow female student took her to the roof of the school, saying one of her friends was being beaten up. When Nusrat reached the rooftop four or five people, wearing burqas, surrounded her and allegedly pressured her to withdraw the case against the headmaster. When she refused, they set her on fire.

Police Bureau of Investigation chief Banaj Kumar Majumder said the killers wanted “to make it look like a suicide”. Their plan failed when Nusrat was rescued after they fled the scene. She was able to give a statement before she died.

“One of the killers was holding her head down with his hands, so kerosene wasn’t poured there and that’s why her head wasn’t burned,” Mr Majumder told BBC Bengali.

“The teacher touched me, I will fight this crime till my last breath,” you can hear her say.

She also identified some of her attackers as students at the madrassa.

Courtesy BBC

As Srinagar polls: Omar, Mehbooba get into a nasty spat on Twitter

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Srinagar

Former Jammu and Kashmir chief ministers Omar Abdullah and Mehbooba Mufti got into a Twitter spat on Thursday after the Mehbooba taking to Twitter to criticise BJP after they announced the candidature of Malegaon blast accused Sadhvi Pragya Thakur Singh from Bhopal.

Soon after the BJP’s announcement Peoples Democratic Party President Mehbooba took to Twitter and wrote: “Imagine the anger if I’d field a terror accused. Channels would’ve gone berserk by now trending a mehbooba terrorist hashtag! According to these guys terror has no religion when it comes to saffron fanatics but otherwise, all Muslims are terrorists. Guilty until proven innocent.”

Former Chief Minister and NC Vice president Omar Abdullah responded to Mehbooba’s tweet reminded her that these guys were her allies till June 2018.

““These guys” were your allies until they unceremoniously unseated you. “These guys” have been this way before they came to power in 2014 but you only noticed their sins after June 2018. The desire to remain in power blinded you to their crimes until “these guys” forced you to see!” Omar tweeted.

Mehbooba reacted quickly and reminded Omar that his party was the BJP’s first regional ally in the state.

“Someone’s had a belated reaction to my tweet! As their first ally from J&K you’d know their true colours since you served as an MoE under NDA. Oddly enough Ram Vilas Paswan resigned post Gujarat carnage on moral grounds but you chose not to. Consume almonds Omar. Improves memory,” Mehbooba wrote on Twitter.

However, Omar responded by saying he was happy giving a comparison of his relations with Vajpayee government and Mehbooba’s alliance with Modi.

“When you are done tweeting for your mother you can tell her I’m more than happy to debate my 3 years with Vajpayee Sahib v/s her 4 years with Modi ji but I’d rather do that directly with her & not with her understudy,” Omar wrote on Twitter.

Mehbooba reacted to Omar’s tweet and wrote: “That’s no answer to my questions! Did I hit a raw nerve? Deflecting it with juveline comebacks wont help Omar. If I were you Id pop an antacid for the stomach burn.”

India drops down on World Press Freedom Index

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India has dropped two places on a global press freedom index to be ranked 140th out of 180 countries in the annual Reporters Without Borders analysis released on Thursday, with the lead up to the ongoing Indian general elections flagged as a particularly dangerous time for journalists.

The World Press Freedom Index 2019′, topped by Norway, finds an increased sense of hostility towards journalists across the world, with violent attacks in India leading to at least six Indian journalists being killed in the line of their work last year.

“Violence against journalists including police violence, attacks by Maoist fighters and reprisals by criminal groups or corrupt politicians is one of the most striking characteristics of the current state of press freedom in India. At least six Indian journalists were killed in connection with their work in 2018. A number of doubts surround a seventh case, the index noted.

These murders highlighted the many dangers that Indian journalists face, especially those working for non-English-language media outlets in rural areas, it said.

Attacks against journalists by supporters of ruling BJP increased in the run-up to general elections in the spring of 2019, the analysis alleged.

Paris-based Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF), or Reporters Without Borders, is a non-profit organisation that works to document and combat attacks on journalists around the world. In its 2019 index, RSF finds that hatred of journalists has degenerated into violence, contributing to an increase in fear around the world.

In reference to India, it found an alarming rate of coordinated hate campaigns waged on social networks against journalists who dare to speak or write about subjects that annoy Hindutva.

“The campaigns are particularly virulent when the targets are women. The emergence of a #MeToo movement in the media in 2018 has lifted the veil on many cases of harassment and sexual assault to which women reporters have been subjected, it noted.

“Finally, coverage of regions that the authorities regard as sensitive, such as Kashmir, continues to be very difficult. Foreign reporters are barred from Kashmir and the Internet is often disconnected there,” it added.

South Asia in general features poorly on the index, with Pakistan dropping three places to 142, and Bangladesh dropping four places to 150.

The number of countries regarded as safe, where journalists can work in complete security, continues to decline, while authoritarian regimes continue to tighten their grip on the media, RSF concludes.

Norway is ranked first in the 2019 Index for the third year running while Finland (up two places) has taken second place from the Netherlands (down one at 4th). An increase in cyber-harassment caused Sweden (third) to lose one place. In Africa, the rankings of Ethiopia (up 40 at 110th) and Gambia (up 30 at 92nd) have significantly improved from last year’s Index.

At the bottom of the Index, both Vietnam (176th) and China (177th) have fallen one place and Turkmenistan (down two at 180th) is now last, replacing North Korea (up one at 179th).

Press Trust of India

Modi disrespected law by giving ticket to Pragya Thakur, alleges Soz

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Reacting to Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) fielding Sadhvi Pragya Thakur, a 2008 Malegaon blasts accused from Bhopal parliamentary constituency, senior Congress leader and former union minister Saifuddin Soz alleged that ‘no less person than Prime Minister Narendra Modi has disrespected the law’.

“Modi fielding terror accused Pragya candidate from Bhopal is shameful. NIA floated facts about her involvement in Malegaon blast case in which she was decisively involved. She is on bail. No less person than the PM showed disrespect to Law. Country will remember Modi for long!” Prof Soz wrote on micro-blogging site twitter.

Sadhvi Pragya, who is out on bail on health ground, formally joined the BJP on Wednesday. She will contest against senior Congress leader Digvijay Singh from Bhopal parliamentary constituency on a BJP ticket.

Imran Khan, Jacinda Ardern named Time magazine’s most influential people of 2019

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Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan has been named among the 100 most influential people of 2019 along with New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern by Time magazine.

The list, unveiled on Wednesday, has chosen the “influential people” under four categories: leaders, pioneers, artists, icons and titans.

Ardern, who recieved global acclaim for her handling of the aftermath of a terrorist attack on two mosques in Christchurch, also made it to the annual list.

Among the other leaders on the list are US President Donald Trump, Pope Francis, American Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Chinese President Xi Jinping, Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Bin Mohamad, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Farooq Abdullah A Strong Voice To Be Sent To Parliament: Altaf Bukhari

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Former finance minister Altaf Bukharo today said it was time to rise above the party system and vote for a strong candidate who can talk about Kashmir issue in the parliament of India.

Hinting that he has voted for National Conference candidate Farooq Abdullah, Bukhari said Farooq Abdullah is a strong candidate among all the people who were in election fray for the Srinagar parliamentary seat.

Bukhari while talking to reporters said the attacks on the special identity of Jammu and Kashmir need to be defended and only a person like Farooq Abdullah can do that in the parliament.

“I feel we need to send a strong leader to the parliament. We need to send those leaders to the parliament who can make a strong stand for Kashmir cause,” Bukhari said.

Admitting that the previous government in which he was a strong minister holding the portfolio of education and later on finance, failed to respect the aspirations of the people, Bukhari said youth who are on the streets pelting stones, it is always a responsibility of the government to make atmosphere conducive and restore normalcy which the previous government completely failed.