07-30-2008, 01:07 AM
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Suicide bid by youth gives new turn to stir </b>
Pioneer.com
IANS | Jammu
A youth in a border town here attempted suicide to press the State Government to restore allotment of land near the Amarnath shrine to the temple trust. This is the second suicide bid over the issue that has rocked the Jammu & Kashmir since last month.
<b>Kuljeet Singh Choudhary, in his 20s, consumed poison while on a sit-in to protest the revocation of the land allocation order. Choudhary was rushed to a hospital, where his condition was stated to be critical, according to reports. Officials, however, were tight-lipped over the issue.</b>
The Government on May 26 allotted 40 hectares of forest land in north Kashmir to the Shri Amarnath Shrine Board (SASB) for creating "temporary and pre-fabricated" shelters for Hindu pilgrims of Amarnath cave temple in south Kashmir. But the order was revoked July 1 after people in the Muslim-dominated Kashmir Valley took to streets with violent protests, in which six people were killed. They were alleging that the land would be used to settle outsiders and change the Muslim-majority character of the Valley. The revocation orders silenced the Kashmir protests but ignited demonstrations in Jammu region, which has been reeling under curfews, shutdowns and violent protests for the past one month now.
The news of the attempted suicide brought the people onto the Jammu-Pathankote Highway. They threw stones at the police and fought pitched battles with them, sources here said. Earlier July 23, Kuldeep Kumar Dogra allegedly consumed some poisonous substance for, what he wrote in a purported suicide note, "the cause of the land restoration to the (Amarnath) shrine board." He died in hospital later.
<b>Dogra's suicide re-ignited the agitation, which was then ebbing from violent protests and shutdowns to black flag demonstrations, banging of utensils and signature campaigns. Normal life in the winter capital of Jammu & Kashmir remained crippled on Tuesday due to a shutdown for the sixth consecutive day in protest against the land transfer row.</b>
The shutdown is being observed in response to a call by the Amarnath Yatra Sangharsh Samiti (AYSS), a conglomerate of some 30 Hindu groups spearheading the campaign for re-allocation of the land to the SASB.
All shops, business establishments and educational institutions remained closed and traffic was off the roads in response to the shutdown call, which has been extended till Thursday by the AYSS.
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Pioneer.com
IANS | Jammu
A youth in a border town here attempted suicide to press the State Government to restore allotment of land near the Amarnath shrine to the temple trust. This is the second suicide bid over the issue that has rocked the Jammu & Kashmir since last month.
<b>Kuljeet Singh Choudhary, in his 20s, consumed poison while on a sit-in to protest the revocation of the land allocation order. Choudhary was rushed to a hospital, where his condition was stated to be critical, according to reports. Officials, however, were tight-lipped over the issue.</b>
The Government on May 26 allotted 40 hectares of forest land in north Kashmir to the Shri Amarnath Shrine Board (SASB) for creating "temporary and pre-fabricated" shelters for Hindu pilgrims of Amarnath cave temple in south Kashmir. But the order was revoked July 1 after people in the Muslim-dominated Kashmir Valley took to streets with violent protests, in which six people were killed. They were alleging that the land would be used to settle outsiders and change the Muslim-majority character of the Valley. The revocation orders silenced the Kashmir protests but ignited demonstrations in Jammu region, which has been reeling under curfews, shutdowns and violent protests for the past one month now.
The news of the attempted suicide brought the people onto the Jammu-Pathankote Highway. They threw stones at the police and fought pitched battles with them, sources here said. Earlier July 23, Kuldeep Kumar Dogra allegedly consumed some poisonous substance for, what he wrote in a purported suicide note, "the cause of the land restoration to the (Amarnath) shrine board." He died in hospital later.
<b>Dogra's suicide re-ignited the agitation, which was then ebbing from violent protests and shutdowns to black flag demonstrations, banging of utensils and signature campaigns. Normal life in the winter capital of Jammu & Kashmir remained crippled on Tuesday due to a shutdown for the sixth consecutive day in protest against the land transfer row.</b>
The shutdown is being observed in response to a call by the Amarnath Yatra Sangharsh Samiti (AYSS), a conglomerate of some 30 Hindu groups spearheading the campaign for re-allocation of the land to the SASB.
All shops, business establishments and educational institutions remained closed and traffic was off the roads in response to the shutdown call, which has been extended till Thursday by the AYSS.
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->