Jammu and Kashmir MP meets Nrendra Modi, demands release of former CM Mehbooba Mufti

Jammu and Kashmir MP meets Nrendra Modi, demands release of former CM Mehbooba Mufti
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Former Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Mehboba Mufti
Highlights

After the meeting speaking to IANS, Laway said, "There are two Chief Ministers and many youths who are under detention and I have demanded that all of them should be released."

New Delhi: After the release of former Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah, Member of Parliament Nazeer Ahmed Laway, who was expelled from the PDP, met Prime Minister Narendra Modi here on Monday and demanded that party chief and former Chief Minister Mehboba Mufti be released along with Omar Abdullah.

After the meeting speaking to IANS, Laway said, "There are two Chief Ministers and many youths who are under detention and I have demanded that all of them should be released."

He said that the Prime Minister has assured him of more affirmative action and the detainees will be released soon.

The MP has also said that he hopes "the political process in Jammu and Kashmir starts soon". Laway hailed the Prime Minister for taking the initiative on the issue of COVID-19 and said that he has done good work.

On the question of Pakistan raising Kashmir issue during the video conferencing with Prime Minister Modi over coronavirus, Laway said, "We should not take Pakistan seriously."

Nazir Ahmed Laway was expelled from the party on November 1, 2019, after he attended the swearing-in ceremony of Lt Governor G.C. Murmu.

Former Chief Minister and Lok Sabha member, Farooq Abdullah were set free on Friday after authorities said his detention under the Public Safety Act (PSA) had been revoked.

Abdullah on Friday promised to be in the Parliament in the next two weeks as he said he is recovering from eye surgery.

Senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad met Abdullah on Saturday and sought early restoration of the political process in Jammu and Kashmir. Azad had said, "the political process has to start. Only with the political process, elections are held and the government is chosen by the people."

Talking to the media along with Abdullah at the latter's residence, Azad said India was not famous for its size but democracy. But it was no democracy when three former chief ministers were under detention for over seven months, and the fourth had to seek the Supreme Court's permission for a visit, he added.

The Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Sunday had announced that the government will formulate a domicile policy for Jammu & Kashmir, a demand many have made since the revocation of its special status last year after meeting with the 24-member delegation of the newly formed Apni Party led by Altaf Bukhari in New Delhi.

The Home Minister assured the delegation that Jammu and Kashmir will have a better domicile policy than other states in the country and a reasonable economic development policy will be drafted soon after widespread consultations, official sources told IANS.

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