
Political parties seek permission to observe Martyrs' Day on July 13
In the erstwhile J&K state, July 13 was not only the state holiday but official functions used to be held at martyrs cemetery in the old city. After J&K became UT, the administration not only cancelled the state holiday but also discontinued any function.
With the first July 13 in the public government, different political parties have sought permission to hold programmes especially floral tributes in memory of 1931 martyrs who were killed by the forces of erstwhile maharaja of J&K.
National Conference, in a statement, on Thursday said that for decades, the party has solemnly observed Martyrs' Day on July 13, honouring the valiant sacrifices made in 1931. 'After 2019, we have repeatedly been denied the right to commemorate this historic day - a day deeply rooted in the collective memory and political conscience of our people. This year, in keeping with our tradition, we have formally written to the Srinagar district magistrate seeking permission to peacefully assemble and pay floral tributes at Mazar-e-Shuhada,' NC spokesperson said.
'We sincerely hope that this time, our democratic and peaceful request will be respected, and that the National Conference will be allowed to mark this day in accordance with tradition and sentiment,' the spokesperson said.
Ex J&K chief minister Mehbooba Mufti termed the NC exercise a lip service
'Omar Abdullah government's proposal sent to LG about declaring July 13 and December 5 as public holidays would have carried weight if the Speaker had supported PDP's resolution for the same in the assembly. The Speaker's outright rejection of the resolution was unexpected and disappointing. Today's exercise looks more like lip service than any serious effort,' Mehbooba Mufti wrote on X while sharing the old resolution that was moved by PDP MLA Waheed Para in the assembly.
PDP leadership to also pay homage
Meanwhile, Apni Party president Altaf Bukhari said that they have moved an application to seek permission to hold a rally at the martyrs cemetery in the old city. 'If you don't want to hold a function. Allow us we have already sought permission to hold a rally and pay floral tributes to martyrs of 1931 who laid their lives for the future of J&K,' Bukhari said in Srinagar.
Four months after the abrogation of Article 370 in August 2019, the centre controlled administration of J&K union territory had changed the list of official holidays, doing away with July 13 and December 5 as official holidays and added October 26 - the day the region had acceded to union of India in 1947- to the list.
July 13 was observed as Martyr's Day in the erstwhile state of J&K in memory of 21 Kashmiris who were killed by the army of Dogra ruler Maharaja Hari Singh during an uprising in 1931 when the region was a princely state. Before 2019, Kashmir would observe a shutdown every year on the day in memory of the martyrs venerated by both mainstream politicians as well as separatists.
December 5 is the birthday of National Conference founder Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah who is considered J&K's tallest leader among mainstream politicians. The NC after coming to power in J&K last year had written to lieutenant governor Manoj Sinha urging him to include both days in the list of state holidays.
Meanwhile, J&K chief minister Omar Abdullah, sources said, will visit the martyrs cemetery in the old city to pay tributes to those killed in 1931.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Indian Express
17 hours ago
- New Indian Express
TN's Mango farmers left in lurch as pulp units shut doors, exports falter
The summer is past, but the sweat of uneasiness is still dripping from the eyebrows of mango farmers in Tamil Nadu, as the season was different this time around. While the 'king of fruits' entered households in abundance, as it generally does, the mango cultivators, who otherwise remain off the media glare, also entered the drawing rooms, virtually. They caught the attention of the media and thereby those in power, at least briefly, during the peak season in June. For about two weeks, the media, with its appetite for drama, covered episodes of farmers dumping mangoes in large quantities on the roads in protest and out of desperation, as the pulp-making units, whom they primarily rely on for selling their produce, either did not buy the fruit citing poor demand from up the value chain or offered an abysmal price of Rs 1 to Rs 5 per kg. While speaking to TNIE in June, NT Bharat from Paradarami in Vellore pointed to a couple of thousand tonnes of mangoes harvested in the region with no buyer coming forward, saying, 'Officials said they will find a proper solution. They do not understand the urgency. Our fruits are already rotting.' K Murugan from Marandahalli in Dharmapuri district said dumping the produce on roadside was a better way to prevent further losses. 'We would otherwise have to spend Rs 1 per kg for cleaning and transport, besides labour charges for collecting the fruits, at a time when the companies are not even offering us Rs 5 per kg,' he said. R Venkatesan of Katpadi in Vellore, meanwhile, had a tractor full of mangoes waiting outside a pulp factory in Chittoor in Andhra Pradesh for a few days, expecting that they would be procured. 'The fruits are rotting as we speak. It's heartbreaking,' he told TNIE in the third week of June. As voices from TN's mango-growing districts intensified and pressure mounted from the opposition parties, the state government met owners of pulp-making companies on June 16, 'urging' them to procure the mangoes, but to no avail. A week later, Chief Minister MK Stalin wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Agriculture Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan seeking the implementation of the Market Intervention Scheme for mangoes in the state to compensate the farmers through Price Deficiency Payment (PDP), with the Union and state sharing the cost equally.


Hindustan Times
21 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Omar Abdullah's signature campaign draws flak
The launch of a signature campaign for statehood restoration by J&K chief minister Omar Abdullah has drawn sharp criticism from leaders of various political parties terming it as shameful. The launch of a signature campaign for statehood restoration by J&K chief minister Omar Abdullah has drawn sharp criticism from leaders of various political parties terming it as shameful. (ANI File) In his Independence Day speech at Bakshi Stadium on Friday, Omar said that he is going to launch a signature campaign across J&K for statehood restoration and will reach every house and village of UT. 'In the next 8 weeks, we will reach out to all 90 assembly constituencies of Jammu and Kashmir, gathering signatures from the people in support of the restoration of statehood to Jammu and Kashmir. We will not rest until our rights are restored. We cannot be denied equality,' Omar Abdullah said while two former CMs Farooq Abdullah and Mehbooba Mufti were in audience along with over a dozen legislators. The PDP criticised Omar Abdullah's signature campaign. 'Omar Abdullah owes an apology not a signature campaign for normalising 5th August. With 50 MLAs behind him, he has reduced the fight for J&K's statehood to token gestures, after seeking votes door-to-door on the promise of restoring pre–5th August status. This is not just retreat, it is betrayal. The people gave him a historic mandate to fight for Article 370 and statehood, not to stage political theatre. If he has already surrendered, he must admit it and apologise to every citizen of J&K for selling promises he never intended to keep,' PDP legislative party leader Waheed ur Rehman Para wrote on X. People's Conference chairman Sajjad Lone said he supports statehood but the said signature campaign has no legal value. 'I beg you. Please stop this childish and immature attitude. We will support any campaign unconditionally. But please ensure that a resolution from the state assembly is also passed and sent to the Supreme Court,' he said. Awami Itihaad Party (AIP) chief spokesperson Inam Un Nabi called the move 'a shameful confession of political irrelevance and utter failure'. 'Omar had a golden opportunity to fight for the rights of the people when the NC got a full mandate to represent the aspirations of Kashmiris, especially on Article 370 and statehood. Instead of pursuing these goals with conviction, NC has chosen the path of surrender and soft obedience towards the BJP. This signature campaign is nothing but a diversion from their betrayal,' he said. He termed Omar's statement a classic case of 'political theatre', noting that the NC's past performance in power and their silence during the critical years post-August 5, 2019, speaks volumes about their priorities. 'If Omar truly had the will, he would have mobilised legislators including that of oppositions , taken legal and constitutional routes and built a national-level consensus for the restoration of rights. Instead, he's now going door-to-door collecting signatures, as if Kashmir's dignity can be traded with a petition paper,' he said.


Scroll.in
2 days ago
- Scroll.in
‘Theatrics': Opposition criticises Omar Abdullah for signature campaign seeking J&K statehood
Opposition parties in Jammu and Kashmir on Friday described Chief Minister Omar Abdullah's announcement of launching a signature campaign to seek statehood for the Union Territory as ' theatrics ' and a ' token gesture '. Abdullah said during his speech on the occasion of Independence Day that his hope for statehood being restored to Jammu and Kashmir was fading. The chief minister announced that over the coming eight weeks, he and his team would go door to door across all 90 Assembly constituencies to collect signatures in support of restoring statehood. These signatures will be presented before the Supreme Court, he said. Peoples Democratic Party leader Waheed Para said Abdullah 'owes an apology, not a signature campaign', accusing the chief minister of reducing the fight for statehood to tokenism. 'The people gave him a historic mandate to fight for Article 370 and statehood, not to stage political theatre,' Para said in a social media post. He also accused Abdullah of betraying the commitment he made in the run-up to the Assembly elections. 'If he has already surrendered, he must admit it and apologise to every citizen of J&K for selling promises he never intended to keep,' Para added. Omar Abdullah owes an apology not a signature campaign for normalising 5th August. With 50 MLAs behind him, he has reduced the fight for J&K's statehood to token gestures, after seeking votes door-to-door on the promise of restoring pre–5th August status. This is not just… — Waheed Para (@parawahid) August 15, 2025 Peoples Conference president Sajad Lone also criticised Abdullah, questioning why the chief minister was avoiding bringing a resolution in the Assembly, which would carry 'constitutional dignity'. 'Signature campaigns have no legal or constitutional sanctity,' Lone said. 'Name one event empirically in India or in the rest of the world where signature campaigns have altered legal interpretations. They are not even admissible. Assembly resolutions reflect the will of the people unambiguously.' We will support any movement towards statehood. But please don't make a mockery of statehood. We are already reeling under the impact of a 'Tom Dick and Harry' approaching the Supreme court. Let us approach the Supreme Court as a constitutional entity not as another 'Tom Dick… — Sajad Lone (@sajadlone) August 15, 2025 Abdullah claimed on Friday that he was told 'something big for Jammu and Kashmir will be announced from Delhi on Independence Day'. 'I was even told that papers were being prepared [for statehood],' said the chief minister. 'We waited, but nothing happened.' Statehood for Jammu and Kashmir The Bharatiya Janata Party-led Centre had abrogated Article 370, which gave special status to the erstwhile state, in August 2019. It also bifurcated the state into two Union Territories: Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh. In December 2023, the Supreme Court upheld the validity of the 2019 order abrogating Article 370 and ordered the Centre to restore statehood to Jammu and Kashmir. In January, Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah said that he wanted to give the Centre the 'first opportunity' to restore the Union Territory's statehood before seeking legal recourse. The National Conference leader told reporters that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had himself committed to restoring the statehood of Jammu and Kashmir. 'Every government or every individual has recourse to courts,' Omar Abdullah said. 'But that was never going to be our first option.'