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In her first public appearance after resigning as Jammu and Kashmir chief minister, PDP President Mehbooba Mufti on Friday, 13 July, said any attempt by the Centre to "engineer" a split in her party will have "extremely dangerous" consequences.
Mufti resigned as chief minister on 19 June after the BJP pulled out of the coalition with the PDP in the state and withdrew support to her government.
“My party is strong; there are differences that can be resolved. However, if there are any attempts to engineer a split in the PDP, like it was done in 1987 to commit robbery on people's vote and to crush the MUF (Muslim United Front), the results will be extremely dangerous," she told reporters.
Mufti also recalled that the events post the 1987 Assembly elections had "created" Syed Salahuddin, the supremo of the banned Hizbul Mujahideen, and Mohammad Yasin Malik, the chief of pro-Independence JKLF. Salahuddin is now based in Pakistan.
"There are differences in every party like there are differences in every family and these can be addressed,” she said.
Mufti was talking to reporters at the Martyrs' Graveyard at Naqshband Sahib after paying tribute to those killed in firing by soldiers of Dogra Maharaja Hari Singh on this day in 1931 during protests against his autocratic rule.
This was her first public appearance in the state after she resigned as chief minister.
After the government fell, several PDP legislators raised a banner of revolt against Mufti’s leadership and accused her of nepotism and favouritism during her tenure as chief minister.
Reacting to Mufti’s statement, National Conference leader Omar Abdullah said it would not matter to Kashmiris if the PDP breaks up.
"Let me put this out here for all to remember NOT ONE NEW MILITANT WILL BE CREATED WITH THE BREAK-UP OF THE PDP. People will not mourn the demise of a party created in Delhi only to divide the votes of Kashmiris," he tweeted.
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