The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Senior Jamaat leader tells Govt to lift ban: ‘Will fight J&K polls’

Release by Jamaat-e-islami ‘spokesman’ distances outfit from Ghulam Qadir Wani’s remarks, admits contact with Centre

- BASHAARAT MASOOD

A SENIOR LEADER of the Jamaate-islami (JEI), Ghulam Qadir Wani, has said that the outfit is ready to join electoral politics if the Centre lifts its ban on them, and has called upon its supporters to cast their ballot in the ongoing Lok Sabha polls.

The JEI, which last participat­ed in elections in Kashmir before the start of militancy, has been banned since the Pulwama terror attack in 2019, with most of its leadership behind bars.

A press release on social media purportedl­y from “the spokesman of Jamaat-e-islami”, said the statements of Wani, a leader from Pulwama, are his personal opinion.

About Wani’s claims of the JEI holding talks with the Centre, the “spokesman” said they had formed a panel “to run organisati­onal affairs”, and that its members had met the Centre through another political outfit.

Wani, who voted on May 13 for the Srinagar Lok Sabha seat election, held a brief interactio­n with select mediaperso­ns on Wednesday after the press release came out, where he repeated that the JEI had never believed in boycott politics, and stayed away from polling earlier because others did.

“If the ban on us is lifted, we can participat­e (in the elections) and we will participat­e,” Wani said.

“We are in talks with the Centre. Our appeal to our members is that they should cast their vote and cast it without any fear.”

Calling the press release a work of “some miscreant”, Wani added: "Elections are in progress, we have participat­ed in them. We told our members and those associated with us that casting of vote means to strengthen democracy... Democracy is important, it will solve issues. Voting will make a change, decent people will come forward and society will improve".

Reacting to Wani's remarks, National Conference (NC) leader Omar Abdullah said the Centre should follow through and revoke the ban on the JEI to enable it to participat­e in the Assembly elections when they happen in J&K, PTI reported. "It is a good thing... We want them to participat­e in the elections and their symbol on the voting machine," Omar told reporters after an election rally in Tangmarg area of Baramulla.

A socio-religious party, the Jamaat-e-islami Jammu Kashmir, the only cadre-based party in the Valley after the NC, was formed before Partition and is distinct from the Jamaat-eislami Hind.

Before 1990, it participat­ed in several elections, with its leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani elected to the Assembly thrice. After the inception of militancy, the JEI became a part of the Hurriyat Conference, and dissociate­d from electoral politics, calling Kashmir a disputed territory between India and Pakistan.

In the following years, the Valley's largest militant organisati­on, Hizbul Mujahideen, claimed to be the military wing of the JEI, with several leaders common to the two.

However, in 1997, after Ghulam Mohammad Bhat was elected as the JEI chief, he publicly dissociate­d the outfit from militancy. This led to a split in the organisati­on, with Geelani forming his own party, the Tehreeke-hurriyat, drawing most of its cadres from the JEI.

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