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| ‘No compromise on HR situation’ | | | EARLY TIMES REPORT Srinagar, July 11 Peoples Democratic Party has said its role as a responsible and responsive political party is governed by the historical necessities of Jammu and Kashmir and not any momentary considerations. Responding to the current debate on the deteriorating human rights and law and order situation, a spokesman of the party said here today that the human and economic cost of the unresolved problem will only keep mounting unless it is resolved, the spokesman added. ‘National Conference, he said, had lost its appeal by confining itself to power politics which often came to it through compromises on the interests of state and PDP provided a credible alternative to it. Although the PDP in its first outing in the electoral arena had got only a limited mandate but, the spokesman recalled, through its policies during the brief tenure of three years it had been able to set new standards of governance and political action which helped it emerge as a major political force with a clear cut ideology on state’s political problems and economic issues. “The party can neither be wished away from the political scene nor browbeaten into silence, collusion, or compromise through arm twisting, blackmail, insinuation or character assassination”, the spokesman said. The spokesman said the PDP has from day one of its formation constantly advocated that the problem needs to be resolved through genuine and bold action on diplomatic, political, constitutional and economic fronts. The party in fact was formed by Mufti Mohammad Sayeed in preference of his much wider role on national level as the only regional force National Conference through its wrong policies had become ineffective in its carrying forward the mandate it had been constantly receiving he said and added it was inescapable to try and fill that political vacuum. The spokesman said the people of the state and their interest was the only consideration for the party and it would continue to pursue its agenda with their help. ‘Power, he said, was not the objective of the party and realizing its role on a much larger canvass of resolution it had accepted the results of the elections in spite of the reservations now being voiced all over the country which incidentally echoed the sentiment on the streets of Kashmir.
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