[Reader-list] Secessionist leaders exchange blows (The Curse of Lakshmi)

rashneek kher rashneek at gmail.com
Thu Aug 21 09:27:31 IST 2008


SRINGAR: A meeting of secessionist groups, called to discuss the future of
what has been characterised as the largest Islamist mobilisation since 1990,
dissolved into chaos after members of rival factions exchanged insults and
blows.

Leaders of the Ali Shah Geelani-led Tehreek-i-Hurriyat and Srinagar cleric
Mirwaiz Umar Farooq's All Parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC) charged each
other with engaging in actions damaging the course of the ongoing movement,
provoking their supporters to engage in scuffles.

Sources present at the meeting said APHC leader G.M. Hubbi was physically
attacked by his Tehreek-i-Hurriyat counterpart Masrat Alam, and several
important leaders, including Mr. Geelani and the APHC-affiliated Shabbir
Shah, left the meeting in disgust.

Both groups had said earlier that they would organise a joint protest at
Srinagar's Idgah on Friday, where the future course of the agitation was to
be made public.

It is now unclear if the two groups will be able to announce a shared
programme of agitation, and, indeed, if their fragile alliance will survive
Wednesday's clashes.

Kashmir's Mufti-e-Azam (chief cleric), had earlier denounced Mr. Geelani's
call for all Srinagar residents to offer Friday prayers only at the Idgah,
saying it was repugnant to Islamic practice.
Simmering tensions

 Tensions between the secessionist leaders have been building up since
Monday when Mr. Geelani asked tens of thousands of people who assembled at a
protest rally to endorse him as the leader of the secessionist movement.

Mr. Geelani also made clear his belief that the movement was for the cause
of Islam, and Jammu and Kashmir's incorporation in to Pakistan—assertions
that incensed rival secessionist leaders such as the Jammu and Kashmir
Liberation Front's Yasin Malik.

Mr. Geelani later apologised for any offence his remarks—but did not
withdraw his claim to be the principal leader of the movement.

Within the APHC, too, tensions have been high ever since Mirwaiz Umar Farooq
agreed to unite with the Tehreek-i-Hurriyat in June.

The Mirwaiz and Mr. Geelani agreed to join hands just as protests against
the grant of land-use rights to the Shri Amarnathji Shrine Board was picking
up. Both leaders agreed to a three-point formula for joint action, in a
declaration that appeared to meet Mr. Geelani's long-standing demand that
the APHC not engage in direct talks with the Government of India.

Senior APHC leaders like Bilal Gani Lone and Abdul Gani Bhat were highly
critical of the unification plan, complaining that they were not consulted.

>From the outset, Mr. Geelani defined the agenda of the alliance, relegating
the APHC to the role of junior partner. Even the alliance's first joint
rally, a June 20 gathering held to protest against the sale of liquor,
gambling and drug abuse, was led by Mr. Geelani.

Mr. Geelani also alarmed centrists in the APHC by characterising their joint
movement as a struggle for the defence of Islam, rather than a political
movement.
"Religious aggression"

 For example, at the June 20 rally, Mr. Geelani decried the grant of
land-use rights to the Shri Amarnathji Shrine Board as part of India's
"cultural and religious aggression." He said India wished to force Kashmiris
to "backtrack from the gift of Islam given to us by Mir Syed Ali Hamdani 650
years ago."

Mr. Geelani also claimed that "universities and educational institutions are
being used as platforms for spreading Shaivism, Kashmiriyat and degraded
Sufism. Vice Chancellors of these universities are trained by intelligence
agencies to percolate imperial and lethal occupational designs."
http://www.hindu.com/2008/08/21/stories/2008082160491200.htm
Best Regards
-- 
Rashneek Kher
Wandhama Massacre-The Forgotten Human Tragedy
http://www.nietzschereborn.blogspot.com


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