news details |
|
|
| Bhim hails PM’s Aug 15 declaration | | | Early Times Report Jammu, Aug 18- Jammu and Kashmir National Panthers Party Chief Prof Bhim Singh has hailed the August 15 declaration of Prime Minister that there was no relevance to the separatists and there was no place for them. In a statement issued here today Prof. Singh said Dr. Manmohan Singh deserves commendation on such a statement should be understood by every citizen of the country including those who have been browbeating and blackmailing Delhi for the past 60 years in the name of ‘Azadi’ and 'self determination’. He said the Prime Minister was fully justified in his assertion because there could be no separatist within the country, who could enjoy all fruits of democracy and fundamental rights. There are some political activists who have been going angry out of their frustration and over ambitious in Jammu and Kashmir and elsewhere also. A separatist is one who betrays his conscience and faith in the mandate of the Constitution. A person who defies the Constitution or infringes the domain of law shall be taken care by the law itself. None can be decorated for being a separatist and his place is determined and identified by the law of the land, he added. Prof Singh said that every one, an individual or a group of individuals, have a right to interact with the Prime Minister or anybody else in government to present his point of view on any issue subject to the restrain provided in the Chapter of Fundamental Rights itself. Secession and separation are the acts covered by the criminal law and nobody can take advantage, he pointed out. Prof. Singh urged Prime Minister to visit Kashmir for couple of days and open his doors to meet any angry leader so that genuine grievances of the people may be addressed genuinely and respectfully. He also called on angry leaders to not to allow the ‘busy bodies’ to fix undesirable suffixes with their names. They should fight for their genuine rights like any other Indian citizen, the Panthers Chief counseled. ‘Neither nationality nor boundaries are negotiable’, he maintained.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| |
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|