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Maharaja Hari Singh’s birthday to be holiday in J&K

Published - July 19, 2019 10:38 pm IST - Srinagar

Resolution passed without opposition

Maharaja Hari Singh.

In a rare move, the Jammu Municipal Corporation (JMC) has passed a resolution to declare the birth anniversary of Dogra monarch Maharaja Hari Singh on September 23 as State holiday, days after the State paid tributes to people killed during his rule in 1931 in the Valley.

Jammu-based BJP corporator Narotam Sharma moved the resolution on Thursday. It was passed without any opposition from the Congress or independent candidates in the general house meeting, where out of 75 corporators BJP has 43 members.

“The sentiments of people of Jammu are associated with Maharaja Hari Singh and the Governor must declare (a State) holiday on his birth anniversary,” said Mr. Sharma.

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The resolution has been sent to Governor Satya Pal Malik for his consent.

Several right-wing parties in the past made similar demands but was rejected by the previous regimes in the State.

The JMC’s move comes days after the State observed a holiday and paid tributes to J&K’s 22 “martrys” who fell to the bullets in Srinagar on July 13, 1931 to the Maharaja’s forces.

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Congress leader Vikramaditya Singh was first to stoke a controversy. He tweeted that “plunder, loot and rape by criminals and jail breakers in Srinagar city was put to an end in 1931”. “It is a blot on J&K that this is glorified as State Martyrs Day,” he added.

These remarks attracted strong reactions from the Congress as well as the regional parties, including National Conference (NC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

Congress leader Saifuddin Soz termed it “obnoxious” and, in a letter Rahul Gandhi, demanded Mr. Singh’s explusion.

NC spokesperson Imran Nabi Dar said the day marked “an open revolt against a despotic, pitiless and tyrant autocratic government”.

“Such brutish assertions against the martyrs who laid their lives for the dignity and self-respect shows the disdain the scions of erstwhile autocrats hold for the cherished values of democracy,” he said.

He said the worst feature of the Dogra rule was its communal outlook. “It discriminated Muslims on the basis of their religion and also interfered in their religious affairs. The coming generations will continue to draw inspiration from the martyrs of 1931,” said Mr. Imran

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