Jammu:Senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad on Wednesday said there is no democracy in Jammu and Kashmir and people are living in fear after the Centre scrapped the state's special status on August 5.
Azad was talking to the media as he concluded his six-day tour of the state.
"There is a disappointment in Kashmir and the despair is also prevalent among the people in Jammu province. Except for 100 or 200 people of the ruling party (BJP), nobody is happy (over the abrogation of Article 370 and bifurcation of the state into two Union Territories)," the former chief minister told reporters before leaving for Delhi.
Azad, who had on Tuesday arrived in Jammu on the second-leg of his tour, had said the situation in Kashmir is "very bad".
The Congress leader had reached Srinagar on Friday on his maiden visit to the Valley after the revocation of Jammu and Kashmir's special status on August 5.
His three earlier bids to reach Srinagar had failed as he had been turned back from the airport by the authorities.
"I have not seen such a terror of the administration anywhere in the world. Democracy is nowhere in the state after the change in its status. It has vanished from the state," Azad said.
He claimed that the people are afraid of talking, feeling that someone was going to tip-off the government about it.
"With the change in the status, the voices have also been suppressed and there is no place for freedom of speech, freedom of expression or freedom of agitation," he said.