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"Multifaceted Terror Attack, Hit Economic Lifeline": J&K MLA Sajjad Lone
"Multifaceted Terror Attack, Hit Economic Lifeline": J&K MLA Sajjad Lone

NDTV

time23-04-2025

  • Politics
  • NDTV

"Multifaceted Terror Attack, Hit Economic Lifeline": J&K MLA Sajjad Lone

New Delhi: Jammu and Kashmir People's Conference (JKPC) MLA Sajad Lone told NDTV the terrorists who killed 26 tourists at Pahalgam launched a "multifaceted attack" to drag the region back to the dark days before special status was scrapped. Mr Lone said the people of Kashmir came out on the streets to reject terror in huge numbers, and they have crossed their threshold. "They are going to be resilient enough not to get threatened or cowed down by these cowards," Mr Lone told NDTV. He said a lot of common people spoke to him, but there was "a deafening silence". "You can see that as if this place is mourning. There is mourning in the air and it's from the core of the heart. They're mourning the loss of their friends, their tourists, their guests... Very rarely I've seen such a show of unanimity and unconditionally, unambiguously. There are no conditions attached. Everybody is condemning it," Mr Lone told NDTV. He pointed out that apart from the painful loss of civilians, the local people will also get hurt in many ways as the terror attack was meant to finish their economic lifeline. "I feel very odd talking about other things when people have died, somebody has lost a father, somebody has lost a husband, somebody has lost a son. But you have to understand that in this killing, this is a multifaceted terror attack. Of course, the most vicious part of it is to kill these innocent people who were tourists who had come here to have a good time," Mr Lone said. "And equally vicious, and a facet of this terror attack is to destroy and hit at, assault the economic lifeline of Kashmir, which is tourism. [They] smear our identity of hospitality, culture of hospitality with an indelible dark mark, a dark milestone. We have a culture of hospitality, which dates to more than 100 years," the MLA said. "These villains have come and uprooted everything for us, societally, socially, we don't know. We can't explain to the whole world it's not us. It was a soil that was used by outsiders. And tourism is an economic lifeline. They've hit at it and they know it hurts. They basically want Kashmiris to be out on the roads, be beggars and be tools for exploitation. So, as I said, it's multifaceted. In the short term, we see that they kill these innocent people. And in the longer term, it is the economic lifeline that they are struck at," Mr Lone said. The Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS), chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, is meeting today to discuss a response to the Pahalgam terror attack, sources said. The CCS on Security is the highest decision-making body for appointing heads of national security agencies as well. The meeting included top leaders, including Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, Union Home Minister Amit Shah, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, and External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, who were part of the committee. Earlier today, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh chaired a meeting with National Security Adviser Ajit Doval, Indian Air Force Chief Marshal AP Singh, and other officials to discuss the security situation in the region. "The meeting discussed all issues related to the security situation in Jammu and Kashmir. The issue is expected to be discussed in further detail in the Cabinet Committee on Security meeting, likely to be held today," a source told news agency ANI.

Kashmir killings shatter Modi's tourism success in troubled region
Kashmir killings shatter Modi's tourism success in troubled region

Straits Times

time23-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Straits Times

Kashmir killings shatter Modi's tourism success in troubled region

A tourist sits on the banks of Dal Lake with her belongings as she waits for transport to leave for Srinagar airport, following a suspected militant attack near south Kashmir's scenic Pahalgam, April 23, 2025. REUTERS/Sanna Irshad Mattoo SRINAGAR - Images and videos of gunshots ringing out in a meadow, bloodied bodies lying on the ground, and people fleeing across a dry river bed have shattered Kashmir's emergence as India's new tourism hotspot. The region's strikingly beautiful mountains, valleys and grand Mughal-era gardens had drawn record tourist arrivals stemming from five years of relative safety. Supporters of Prime Minister Narendra Modi had touted the tourism boom as among his signature achievements. But Tuesday's attack by suspected militants who killed at least 26 tourists and wounded many more in Kashmir's scenic Pahalgam area, known for its glowing Himalayan peaks and fast-flowing streams, has left panicked tourists seeking an early exit at the start of the busy summer season. Modi, whose decision to strip Muslim-majority Kashmir's partial autonomy in 2019 after decades of anti-India violence led to widespread protests, and his finance minister both cut short separate overseas trips after vowing justice. He took a meeting of his top lieutenants at the airport itself upon return. Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan, which both claim fully, and had been plagued by years of insurgent violence. Locals have called for a one-day protest against the deadliest such attack in Kashmir in decades, tourist operators are reporting massive cancellations, and airlines are running additional return flights from Kashmir's main city of Srinagar. Tourism is the backbone of the Kashmir valley's economy, and has been promoted heavily by the government and Indian airlines. Arrivals hit a record high of more than 3 million last year, from fewer than 831,000 in 2018, as India's widening middle class splurged on travel post-COVID, government data showed. But some Kashmir hardliners have derided the influx as a cultural invasion by visitors from the rest of mostly Hindu India. "We have a history of hospitality, but some cowardly terrorists want to destroy it all," Sajjad Lone, a local lawmaker and chief of the Jammu and Kashmir People's Conference party, told reporters. "People involved in tourism have, after a long time, begun to restart their lives. They had begun to dream. Make no mistake, these terror attacks are aimed at yet again disempowering us economically." A little-known militant group, the "Kashmir Resistance," claimed responsibility for the attack in a social media message. It said more than 85,000 "outsiders" had been settled in the region after arriving as tourists, vowing violence against such settlers. Civilian casualties, however, have fallen significantly in the past two decades, data shows. Tourist operators, taxi drivers, and other people involved in the industry condemned the attack and rued lost business at the start of the summer rush. The attack is also a big blow to Modi's attempts to draw foreign investments into the area. As desperate tourists tried to flee Kashmir, flight tickets briefly rose sharply before the government met with airline operators and "issued a strong advisory against surge pricing". "In the aftermath of the incident in Pahalgam, there is an unexpected demand from tourists seeking to return to their homes," the Ministry of Civil Aviation said in an advisory to all airlines. "Airlines are advised to take swift action to increase the number of flights." A top travel agent in Kashmir said on the condition of anonymity that they had to cancel about 90% of bookings for the next three months. Shakir Ahmed, manager at a tourist taxi union in Pahalgam, said all their 30 vehicles were sitting idle as people fled in the morning. "The streets are suddenly empty," he said. "Summers are like wedding celebrations for us, but this year, we will have nothing. We are nothing without the tourists." Inaugurating a tunnel in January connecting a key snow hotspot in Kashmir with some other tourist sites, Modi said the federal territory of Jammu and Kashmir was benefiting from infrastructure and other work in recent years. "Leaving behind the earlier difficult days, our Kashmir is now regaining its identity as a paradise on earth," he said. On Tuesday while on a visit to Saudi Arabia, he wrote on X: "Those behind this heinous act will be brought to justice ... they will not be spared!" REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

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