Traffic jams mark day of normalcy in Srinagar
October 20th, 2010 - 3:23 pm ICT by IANSSrinagar, Oct 20 (IANS) Heavy traffic jams marked yet another day of normalcy in the Jammu and Kashmir summer capital Wednesday as no curfew was imposed and separatists froze their protests for a day as their top leader Masarat Alam is under arrest.
“No curfew or restrictions have been imposed anywhere in Srinagar today. The situation is normal throughout the city,” a senior police officer said here.
The hardline Hurriyat group headed by Syed Ali Geelani has asked people to resume normal activities of life for a day today. The separatists have been issuing protest calendars on a weekly basis since early June as part of their Quit Kashmir campaign.
Life has remained crippled throughout the valley for over four months now as shutdowns, protests, marches and the violence that invariably follows separatist protests has been prompting the authorities to impose curfews and restrictions.
At least 110 people have died so far in the ongoing unrest that started here June 11.
Senior police officials here believe the separatist protests and inciting of violence were orchestrated since June 11 by Masarat Alam, who was arrested here Monday and is the general secretary of the Geelani-led Hurriyat.
Alam had gone underground immediately after he jumped bail granted to him in June. “He has been chiefly responsible for inciting youth to violence and issuing protest calendars for shutdowns, sit-ins and marches,” a senior police officer told IANS here.
“His arrest has come as a setback to the separatist agenda of pushing the youth to violence and we hope things would soon return to complete normalcy here,” the officer said.
Alam’s arrest is also believed to be significant as most locals believe he had the capacity to organise protests and enforce shutdowns.
“He is generally believed to have started the Quit Kashmir campaign and coined the slogan ‘Go, India, Go’. But, still I believe the whole campaign could not have been spearheaded and visualised by Masarat Alam alone,” said a local journalist here.
“He had a cadre which enforced his programmes and the coming days would prove whether the entire agitation was a one-man show or not.”
Shops, public transport, educational institutions, banks, post offices and other businesses Wednesday opened up normally throughout Srinagar city and other towns of the valley except north Kashmir’s Baramulla town where clashes between stone pelting youths and security forces started early in the morning.
- Srinagar under curfew after Masarat Alam's arrest - Oct 19, 2010
- Kashmir separatists, authorities now in 'calender war' - Sep 25, 2010
- Money was behind Kashmir protests: Militant leader - Dec 15, 2010
- Kashmir gets two-day breather from shutdowns - Oct 28, 2010
- 25 including 11 cops wounded in fresh Kashmir violence (Lead) - Oct 19, 2010
- No curfew in Srinagar despite protest shutdown - Oct 07, 2010
- Free of shutdowns and curfew, Valley returns to normal - Nov 09, 2010
- Curfew imposed to foil separatist march in Kashmir - Oct 22, 2010
- Life normal for another day in Srinagar - Oct 11, 2010
- No curfew in Srinagar despite separatist shutdown - Oct 10, 2010
- No curfew, separatist shutdown in Srinagar - Oct 16, 2010
- No curfew in Srinagar but Geelani urges 'civil curfew' - Nov 07, 2010
- Hardline Hurriyat group's general secretary arrested - Oct 18, 2010
- Geelani to intensify stir ahead of Obama's India visit - Oct 30, 2010
- Curfew in parts of Srinagar - Oct 08, 2010
Tags: alam, campaign life, curfew, curfews, geelani, general secretary, heavy traffic, hurriyat, jammu and kashmir, kashmir, marches, normalcy, police officer, police officials, protests, setback, shutdowns, srinagar, syed ali, traffic jams