In his first ever interview after his arrest in August last year and his release in March this year granted to The Indian Express, Omar Abdullah has laid down three parameters for his party’s future course of action:
National Conference vice-president Omar Abdullah seems inclined to play ball with New Delhi in its plan to form a ‘democratic’ government in the almost-one-year-old Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir.
In his first ever interview after his arrest in August last year and his release in March this year granted to The Indian Express, Omar Abdullah has laid down three parameters for his party’s future course of action:
Omar Abdullah, speaking to The Indian Express, categorically ruled out any possibility of his party National Conference indulging in any kind of ‘’street politics”. “I am sorry that is not me. I will not engineer a protest to score a point…I have said this before, if I am not willing to put a gun or a stone in my own hands, I have no business to doing this to a young Kashmiri. I am very clear on that…”
Abdullah junior, who spent over 7 months under house arrest since the abrogation of Article 370 on August 5 last year, expressed his bitterness against opposition parties which supported the Modi government’s move inside Parliament to scrap Article 370 and didn’t protest against dismemberment of J&K as a state. “I am deeply resentful about their support to the UT and dismemeberment…And then the way detention were handled.” Omar said the they just paid “lip service” protesting Kashmir leaders’ detention.
Omar made it clear in his interview that he would have no truck with them. “I have no cause with them (opposition leaders). I will speak for the people of J&K. I can’t speak for any body else,” he said. It makes it very clear that his party National Conference will not join hands with any opposition group if it is formed.
Omar Abdullah didn’t sound keen to raise the autonomy issue in J&K politics. When The Indian Express categorically questioned him if National Conference would change its stand on the issue of autonomy, Omar said: “I can’t speak for the party. But I am very clear I will not raise a slogan that is for mere lip service or for hood winking.”
Former RAW chief during the AB Vajpayee government A.S. Dulat had indicated, in an article published on a Delhi-based website, that the Abdullahs’ release in March this year was part of a deal with the Centre. Who knows? May be Omar Abdullah was making the deal public through The Indian Express interview.