Jammu: A group of six devotees from Ranchi in Jharkhand has reached here with a hope to pay obeisance at the 3,880-metre-high holy cave shrine of Amarnath in south Kashmir Himalayas.
The initially proposed 42-day yatra was scheduled to commence from the twin tracks of Pahalgam and Ganderbal in Kashmir on June 23 but was delayed due to the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic.
Though the Jammu and Kashmir administration announced its plan to undertake the yatra in a restricted manner this time and only 500 devotees will be allowed by road per day from Jammu to the cave shrine, the high court on July 15 had directed the Shri Amarnath Shrine Board (SASB) to take an urgent decision on holding the pilgrimage while ensuring that the right to health of every person is at the highest pedestal.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh on Saturday visited the holy cave shrine and offered prayers there.
Singh, who was accompanied by Chief of Defence Staff Gen Bipin Rawat and Army Chief Gen MM Naravane, spent about an hour at the temple complex.
There has been a spike in coronavirus cases over the past couple of weeks, especially in Kashmir, forcing the local administration to reimpose the lockdown in different parts of the Valley, including summer capital Srinagar.
Despite coronavirus casting its shadow on the annual yatra, we are hopeful of offering our prayers at the shrine in the coming days, Deepak Choudhary, who along with his five friends has reached here, said.
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