Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
India

Sikhs End Protests In Jammu, Army Withdrawn

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Jun, 2015 02:37 PM
    Life began limping to normalcy here on Saturday as authorities withdrew the army from areas that saw street protests over the removal of posters of Sikh militant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale.
     
    Members of the Sikh community ended their dragging demonstrations after reaching a deal with the Jammu administration late Friday.
     
    "The army has been withdrawn from the affected areas," a senior official told IANS here. Curfew imposed in the troubled places was lifted. 
     
    The removal of the Bhindranwale posters triggered protests here this week, leading to the death of a young man in firing by security forces.
     
    This fuelled more protests in larger areas, prompting authorities to call in the army. An indefinite curfew was imposed in parts of Jammu.
     
     
    On Saturday, markets, public transport and other businesses in the areas of Satwari, Digiana, Nanak Nagar and Talab Tillo began functioning normally.
     
    However, fewer private vehicles were on the roads. Internet connectivity, suspended by the district magistrate, has been restored.
     
    But as a precaution, all educational institutions will remain closed in Jammu, Poonch, Samba, Kathua and Rajouri districts on Saturday, the official said.
     
    Following the agreement with the Sikh community, authorities transferred Jammu's Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Uttam Chand and placed under suspension the head of the Satwari police station, Kulbir Singh, pending an inquiry into the firing that left a Sikh youth dead.
     
     
    An FIR was also registered in Satwari police station against the Jammu SSP's security guards who allegedly opened fire at the Sikh youth.
     
    Authorities have announced an ex-gratia of Rs.5 lakh and a government job to the next of kin of the slain youth.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Pakistan's High Commissioner Abdul Basit Invites Mamata To Pakistan

    Pakistan's High Commissioner Abdul Basit Invites Mamata To Pakistan
    Pakistan's High Commissioner Abdul Basit on Wednesday invited West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee to Pakistan and said she "readily agreed" to student exchange programmes between her state and Pakistan.

    Pakistan's High Commissioner Abdul Basit Invites Mamata To Pakistan

    Indian Supreme Court Quashes Jat Reservation, Shocked Community To Seek Review

    Indian Supreme Court Quashes Jat Reservation, Shocked Community To Seek Review
    Mahasabha president Kushaldeep Dhillon said legal options would be explored to defend the case, and blasted the Modi government for "deliberately weakening the case" in the court by not presenting the "true facts".

    Indian Supreme Court Quashes Jat Reservation, Shocked Community To Seek Review

    After Delhi Success, AAP To Go National

    After Delhi Success, AAP To Go National
    A month after it took power in Delhi after crushing the BJP and the Congress, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) announced on Tuesday that it has decided to go national.

    After Delhi Success, AAP To Go National

    Modi's Religious Beliefs Helped Shape His Political Views

    Modi's Religious Beliefs Helped Shape His Political Views
    Narendra Modi's religious beliefs helped shape his political views and he has no desire to jettison Hindu nationalist ideology, says a new book and notes that Modi risks alienating a section of his supporters if he allows the more extreme elements of Hindutva to influence governance.

    Modi's Religious Beliefs Helped Shape His Political Views

    Mamata Faces Protests Over Nun's Gang Rape, Condemns BJP For Politicising

    Angry over police's failure to arrest any of the culprits who gang-raped a nun in West Bengal's Nadia district, scores of people on Monday held up visiting Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee's convoy at Ranaghat and staged a demonstration seeking a CBI probe.

    Mamata Faces Protests Over Nun's Gang Rape, Condemns BJP For Politicising

    Congress, Government Clash Over 'Snooping' On Rahul Gandhi

    Congress, Government Clash Over 'Snooping' On Rahul Gandhi
    The alleged snooping on Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi blew into a political confrontation on Monday, as the Congress charged the BJP with a "police state mentality" while the government dismissed the episode as a "non-issue".

    Congress, Government Clash Over 'Snooping' On Rahul Gandhi