Jammu (JK ): Former minister Mohammad Dilawar Mir on Thursday said nobody has the power to expel him from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) except the president and former Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti who is under detention in Srinagar.
Mir, former General Secretary of PDP, was among eight party leaders expelled from the PDP for going "against the will of the people" by engaging in parleys with the government on January 9.
Besides Mir, the others expelled PDP leaders include Rafi Ahmad Mir, Zaffar Iqbal, Abdul Majeed Padroo, Raja Manzoor Khan, Javaid Hussain Baig, Qamar Hussain and Abdul Rahim Rather -- all former MLAs.
"I am still in PDP and nobody has the power to expel me except the party president who is under detention. Nobody can take such a decision in her absence," Mir, who was flanked by president of Jammu and Kashmir Democratic Party Nationalist and former minister Ghulam Hassan Mir, told reporters here.
However, Mir said he is addressing a press conference in his individual capacity and not as a PDP leader.
"Who has the power to expel us from the party when our president and vice president Abdul Rehman Veeri is under detention. What was the justification for our expulsion because we met the Lt Governor to raise the public issues," Mir said.
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In a statement on January 9, the PDP had said, "in view of the development post-August 5 and the unilateral move of the government of India which has violated the will and hurt the sentiments of people, it has come to the attention of the party that certain party leaders have been part of the parleys which go against the interests of the state, official position and core beliefs of the party.
"The party disciplinary committee has recommended the expulsion of all these leaders from the basic membership of the party," the PDP statement said.
Asked about the reports suggesting the emergence of a third front under the leadership of former PDP minister Altaf Bukhari who led the delegation to meet the Lt Governor, he said "We met Murmu on individual capacity...whenever some people come together, people start talking about the third front which is not a reality. Everything will come to the fore.
On abrogation of Article 370, he said the matter is sub-judice and the Supreme Court is the final authority to make a decision on it.
"The people in Kashmir have neither expected such a move nor desired it. The credit goes to the Government of India as well as the people for no violence post abrogation of the special status. If the people stayed back, it does not mean they have liked the government move," Hassan said.
He said if the Supreme court restored the special status, nothing like that but there is one more option that is a consensus among national political parties which is least possible at the moment in the given situation in the country.
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"We have to live and move forward. Domicile laws are prevalent in different parts of the country and if the demand is being raised from Jammu and Kashmir, what is wrong in it," Hassan said.
He said there can be different voices and these voices need to be addressed in a democratic way.
"The way the entire political leadership, youth, trade union leaders, lawyers were detained in not good. You cannot gag the voices of the people but violence should not be of course," he said.
Hassan said Kashmiri pandits left the valley under threat and duress and the government of India need to take cognizance of their plight and address their problems.
"Kashmiri pandits are our brothers and whatever happened was a bad phase," he said.
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