PM’s visit will be turning point in J&K’s history, says Mufti
BY Agencies2 Nov 2015 5:51 AM IST
Agencies2 Nov 2015 5:51 AM IST
Chief Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed on Sunday said Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s upcoming visit here will be a “turning point” in the history of Jammu and Kashmir and the people of the state have great expectations from it.
“People have great expectations from the visit of the Prime Minister who is a visionary and has his eyes fixed on overall development of Jammu and Kashmir. I see this as a turning point in the history of the state,” Sayeed said while recalling former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s address to the people at Sher-e-Kashmir Stadium at Sonwar in 2003.
Modi is scheduled to address a rally at the same venue on November 7.
The Chief Minister, while addressing a public meeting here, cited several instances where the Centre extended wholehearted support in core sectors linked to connectivity, healthcare, education and rural development.
He said the Prime Minister had personally intervened in speeding up work of four-lanning of Srinagar-Jammu National Highway and broadening the scope of railway network in the state. “I met Modi a couple of times and realized that he genuinely wants to win the hearts and minds of people of the state,” Sayeed said.
He also praised Modi for inviting his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif in his swearing-in ceremony last year.
Urging India and Pakistan to shun confrontation and engage in a meaningful dialogue, Sayeed said the state is the first casualty of tension between the two countries.
He stressed that if India has to emerge as a world power, it will have to foster and maintain friendly ties with all its neighbours, including Pakistan. Sayeed described as “disturbing” the attempts being made made to “vitiate the peaceful atmosphere” in the state ahead of the Prime Minister’s visit.
“There are different shades of opinion...the ‘Agenda of the Alliance’ (the Common Minimum Programme of the PDP-BJP coalition) favours a dialogue with those having different political ideologies as well,” he said.
Assuring the people that the government would not allow anyone to take the law into his own hands, the Chief Minister made a reference to the State Cabinet’s resolution which unanimously condemned the killing of Zahid Rasool Bhat, a trucker who succumbed to burn injuries after a mob set his truck on fire in Udhampur last month.
“The investigation into the killing of Zahid will be fast-tracked so that those responsible for the heinous crime are brought to justice,” he said.
On economic front, Sayeed said he expected the Centre’s support in restoration of infrastructure damaged in the floods last year, relief to flood-affected people and long-term measures to prevent recurrence of floods by constructing Dogripora-Wullar alternate flood channel.
Describing politics as “the art of the possible”, Sayeed thanked both Congress and National Conference for extending unconditional support when the 2014 Assembly election results threw a fractured mandate.
“People have great expectations from the visit of the Prime Minister who is a visionary and has his eyes fixed on overall development of Jammu and Kashmir. I see this as a turning point in the history of the state,” Sayeed said while recalling former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s address to the people at Sher-e-Kashmir Stadium at Sonwar in 2003.
Modi is scheduled to address a rally at the same venue on November 7.
The Chief Minister, while addressing a public meeting here, cited several instances where the Centre extended wholehearted support in core sectors linked to connectivity, healthcare, education and rural development.
He said the Prime Minister had personally intervened in speeding up work of four-lanning of Srinagar-Jammu National Highway and broadening the scope of railway network in the state. “I met Modi a couple of times and realized that he genuinely wants to win the hearts and minds of people of the state,” Sayeed said.
He also praised Modi for inviting his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif in his swearing-in ceremony last year.
Urging India and Pakistan to shun confrontation and engage in a meaningful dialogue, Sayeed said the state is the first casualty of tension between the two countries.
He stressed that if India has to emerge as a world power, it will have to foster and maintain friendly ties with all its neighbours, including Pakistan. Sayeed described as “disturbing” the attempts being made made to “vitiate the peaceful atmosphere” in the state ahead of the Prime Minister’s visit.
“There are different shades of opinion...the ‘Agenda of the Alliance’ (the Common Minimum Programme of the PDP-BJP coalition) favours a dialogue with those having different political ideologies as well,” he said.
Assuring the people that the government would not allow anyone to take the law into his own hands, the Chief Minister made a reference to the State Cabinet’s resolution which unanimously condemned the killing of Zahid Rasool Bhat, a trucker who succumbed to burn injuries after a mob set his truck on fire in Udhampur last month.
“The investigation into the killing of Zahid will be fast-tracked so that those responsible for the heinous crime are brought to justice,” he said.
On economic front, Sayeed said he expected the Centre’s support in restoration of infrastructure damaged in the floods last year, relief to flood-affected people and long-term measures to prevent recurrence of floods by constructing Dogripora-Wullar alternate flood channel.
Describing politics as “the art of the possible”, Sayeed thanked both Congress and National Conference for extending unconditional support when the 2014 Assembly election results threw a fractured mandate.
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