Six Detained Under PSA in Kashmir for Alleged Incitement During Student Protest
Quick Look
- Jammu and Kashmir authorities detained six individuals under the stringent Public Safety Act for allegedly inciting law and order disturbances during a student protest in Sopore.
- The protest was against a schoolteacher accused of molestation, who was already in police custody.
- The detentions were authorized by the district magistrate and the individuals have been jailed in Doda, Jammu.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
The Public Safety Act allows preventive detention without trial in Jammu and Kashmir. A 2011 amendment by then-CM Omar Abdullah reduced the maximum detention period from two years to six months for threats to state security, and from one year to three months for threats to public order.
SRINAGAR: J&K authorities announced Friday detentions of six people under the stringent Public Safety Act (PSA) for allegedly inciting "law and order disturbances" and "acts of vandalism" during a recent students' protest in Kashmir's Sopore. The students were protesting against a schoolteacher accused of molestation and later taken into custody. Police said Umar Akbar Hajam, Salman Ahmed Shala, Altaf Ahmed Sheikh, Mubashir Ahmed Gilkar, Muzammil Mushtaq Changa, and Majid Firdous Dar were detained after authorisation from the district magistrate, as required under PSA. They have been jailed in Jammu's Doda. All hail from Sopore, the police said, adding none is a student. "These miscreants were involved in attempting to disturb peace during a recent protest by students. Their activities posed a serious threat to public order and safety," a police statement said, adding more individuals involved in the April 13 trouble are being identified for prosecution, including under PSA. In a warning to the public, the police asked them to "stay away from unlawful activities and not to fall prey to instigation by anti-social elements". The police have not mentioned the specific PSA clause under which the six have been booked. The law allows detentions for six months without trial if an accused is a threat to the security of the State, with extensions of six months. Under a PSA clause on threat to public order, preventive detentions are allowed up to three months, with extensions of three months. Earlier, PSA allowed detentions without trials up to two years. But an amendment during a previous stint of J&K CM Omar Abdullah in 2011 reduced the detention period to six months from two years for threat to security of the State and from one year to three months for threat to public order.
Open Questions
- What specific PSA clause were the six individuals booked under?
- What evidence links these specific individuals to incitement?
- Were any students among those detained?
- What was the exact nature of the vandalism alleged?