Life in Kashmir remained severely affected for the second consecutive day today due to a complete shut-down called by separatists against the legal challenge in the Supreme Court on the validity of Article 35A.
The two-day strike called by the Joint Resistance Leadership (JRL) -- comprising Syed Ali Shah Geelani, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq and Mohammad Yasin Malik -- comes as the Supreme Court is scheduled to hear a PIL challenging the validity of Article 35A later in the day.
Article 35A, incorporated in the Constitution by a 1954 Presidential Order, confers special status to the permanent residents of Jammu and Kashmir, and bars people from outside the state from acquiring any immovable property in the state.
Educational institutions, shops and business establishments remained closed across the Valley, while all kinds of transport remained off the roads due to the strike.
The state government has filed an application before the registrar of the Supreme Court, informing that it was going to seek adjournment of the hearing in view of the “ongoing preparations” for the upcoming panchayat and urban local body and municipal elections in the state.
Officials said security forces had been deployed at vulnerable places in the city and elsewhere in Kashmir to maintain law and order. The situation across the valley is peaceful, with no untoward incident reported from anywhere so far today, the officials said.
Stone-pelting incidents were reported from some places yesterday, with six people getting injured in Kulgam district in a clash between protesters and security forces. Various organisations, including the state bar association, transporters and traders’ bodies have extended support to the shut-down call.
Protests have been held across the length and breadth of Kashmir over the past few days, with mainstream parties such as the National Conference and the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) also holding rallies in support of continuing Article 35A.
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