Srinagar: Former Jammu and Kashmir chief minister Farooq Abdullah on Thursday urged India and Pakistan to initiate dialogue in an effort to weed out terrorism from the region.
Talking to reporters after offering condolences to the family of slain deputy superintendent of police Himayun Muzammil Bhat at Humhama in the outskirts of Srinagar, Abdullah took a jibe at the ruling government over claims of militancy being eradicated from the region.
"After this encounter where a Colonel, Major, and DSP died while several soldiers are battling for their lives in the hospital, do you think that militancy has ended? These incidents certainly occur. It would be foolish on our part to think that the militancy has ended. India and Pakistan should give up belligerence and return to the negotiating table," he said.
Abdullah also said that encounters are taking place every day though the government is saying that militancy has ended. "Militancy will not end unless a solution is found. Fighting cannot bring peace. Only dialogue can bring peace," he said.
Referring to the Russian invasion on Ukraine, he said that war had only resulted in miseries and plunder. "There too Russia and Ukraine must come to the table," he said. India and Pakistan have to talk, he said adding: "When India gained independence, this conflict was annexed to it".