Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
India

Kashmir will not remain part of a communal India: Farooq Abdullah

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 27 Apr, 2014 02:49 PM
    National Conference (NC) patron and Srinagar Lok Sabha candidate Farooq Abdullah said Sunday that Jammu and Kashmir would not remain a part of India if the country becomes communal, while asking those who vote for Narendra Modi to "drown themselves".
     
    Lashing out at Modi, the Bharatiya Janata Party's prime ministerial candidate, Abdullah told a party election rally in old city's Khanyar area that: "Those who say that people opposing Modi should go to Pakistan must remember that if India becomes a communal country, Kashmir would not remain its part.
     
    "Those who vote for Modi should drown themselves in a river".
     
    Criticizing his opponents of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Abdullah alleged that PDP's open support to BJP was a historic betrayal of the people of Jammu and Kashmir and its patron Mufti Mohammad Sayeed should know that there is a limit to a nation's tolerance to gimmickry, political intrigues and lies.
     
    "Every single vote that you will cast for National Conference will be a vote against the Modi-Mufti alliance and will be a vote that will stop the march of communal forces from entering Jammu and Kashmir.
     
    "National Conference has defended Article 370 (of the constitution) and Kashmiriyat from hundreds of intrigues and thousands of enemies and National Conference will continue to be a protection shield for Jammu and Kashmir and its people long after I am gone," he said.
     
    "Mufti Sayeed nurtures a grudge against Kashmiris that they have handed him embarrassing electoral defeats from his native constituency four times, a loud and clear rejection that forced his rehabilitation in Muzaffarnagar (in Uttar Pradesh) as a member of parliament from a safe seat at a time when he couldn't garner more than 300 votes in his own state," Abdullah said.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Modi's poems translated in English

    Modi's poems translated in English
    A collection of poems penned by Narendra Modi is being published with the BJP's prime ministerial candidate terming them "screams of thoughts" of things he had faced or imagined.

    Modi's poems translated in English

    Voting made easier for government officials on poll duty

    Voting made easier for government officials on poll duty
    A total of 45,383 Election Duty Certificates (EDCs) have been issued to government officials, deployed for the April 10 Lok Sabha election in Delhi, an Election Commission official said Tuesday.

    Voting made easier for government officials on poll duty

    Slaped Again! Arvind Kejriwal Fears Threat To Life Now

    Slaped Again! Arvind Kejriwal Fears Threat To Life Now
    AAP leader and former Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal Tuesday said he faced a threat to life after being slapped by a man while campaigning for his party here.

    Slaped Again! Arvind Kejriwal Fears Threat To Life Now

    1984 Riots Case: Sonia Gandhi declines to show US court her passport

    1984 Riots Case: Sonia Gandhi declines to show US court her passport
    India's Congress Party president Sonia Gandhi has declined to provide a copy of her passport to a US court, saying that government of India had denied her permission to do so

    1984 Riots Case: Sonia Gandhi declines to show US court her passport

    Election Special: Assam, Tripura kick off balloting with high turnout

    Election Special: Assam, Tripura kick off balloting with high turnout
    India went to the polls Monday, with nearly six million people casting their vote in five constituencies in Assam and one of two seats in Tripura. The chief ministers of both the northeastern states dismissed any "Modi wave" and expressed happiness at the high voter turnout of at least 74 percent in Assam and as high as 84 percent in Tripura.

    Election Special: Assam, Tripura kick off balloting with high turnout

    From economic reform to protecting cow, BJP promises it all

    From economic reform to protecting cow, BJP promises it all
    Taking up issues ranging from economic revival to protecting cows and Ram temple, the much delayed manifesto of the BJP Monday promised "immediate and decisive action" to revive the country from the "decade of decay" of the UPA.

    From economic reform to protecting cow, BJP promises it all