Srinagar: A day ahead of polls in the Srinagar parliamentary seat, the main contesting parties — the National Conference and the PDP — on Sunday accused the Jammu and Kashmir administration of enforcing an election boycott and targeting and harassing their workers.
The NC candidate for the Srinagar Lok Sabha constituency, Aga Ruhullah Mehdi, took to Twitter to demand the immediate release of workers of his party and rival PDP, whom he claimed had been arrested ahead of the polling.
“Our workers are being picked up by the police since yesterday. I got a call from a senior colleague like A R Rather sb informing me about the arrests of our workers from Chrarsharif. Similar calls from the colleagues from Khansahab and Chadoora. Would the @ECISVEEP please care to explain these arrests,” Mehdi, an influential Shia leader, posted on X.
People’s Democratic Party (PDP) candidate, Waheed-ur-Rehman Parra directly accused senior IPS officer and Additional Director General of Police (ADGP) Law and Order, Vijay Kumar of enforcing a poll boycott.
In a post on X, he wrote: “In the past, Kashmir has experienced boycotts at the behest of separatists. Today, we're witnessing a similar scenario, with an IPS officer of ADGP rank, Mr. Vijay Kumar, allegedly directing officials to minimize voter turnout by detaining, harassing our workers. Such actions serve the interests of anti-national elements, not India. @PMOIndia @HMOIndia (sic).”
In another post without naming anyone, Parra said the events are akin to the “rigging” of assembly elections in 1987. The 1987 Jammu and Kashmir Assembly elections are widely perceived to have been rigged, with the Farooq Abdullah-led National Conference sweeping the polls.
Earlier on Saturday, PDP president Mehbooba Mufti Mufti accused the BJP-led Centre of creating a “political Ikhwan” (a counter-insurgent group accused of mass human rights violations) in the Valley, saying, “Preparations are being made to do fraud in the elections. The election is being fixed.”
NC president Farooq Abdullah, during a poll campaign for Aga Ruhullah, alleged harassment by the police. “I want to tell the Lieutenant-Governor… stop harassing us. The way you are using the police to harass our workers, you think you will win the election this way. You will, god willing, lose the election.”
Meanwhile, the Election Commission said it had taken cognizance of “grievances of alleged intimidation of political workers of certain parties and the use of the Section 144 order”.