Monday, May 11, 2026
32.1 C
New Delhi

Not getting ‘good response’, says judicial panel probing Ladakh violence; urges people to share info

Not getting ‘good response', says judicial panel probing Ladakh violence; urges people to share info

Vehicles parked on a road closed with barbed wire, a day after violence erupted over statehood and other demands, in Leh, Ladakh. (PTI)

SRINAGAR: A judicial commission set up by Union home ministry to probe the September 24 violence in Leh Thursday said it was not getting a “good response” from the public, and appealed to the people to come forward and depose before it.Addressing a press conference in Leh, IAS officer Tushar Anand, administrative secretary of the inquiry commission, said, “The greater the number of people submitting evidence, the more impartial the investigation will be and that will help ensure justice.”Ananad, who was accompanied by Rigzin Spalgon, joint secretary for the panel, said it would not be possible to conduct a fair inquiry if people did not come forward. “We won’t get information on our own. People must step up and share whatever they know so that we can examine the evidence and make a proper decision,” he said.He said officials and ground-level staff posted at the site during the incident were being identified and once their list was prepared, they would have to depose before the commission. “But, many people may have seen what happened. If they come forward, it will help the inquiry,” he added. The ministry of home affairs announced the commission on Oct 17 after Leh Apex Body (LAB) and Kargil Democratic Alliance (KDA), the two major political organisations in the Union Territory of Ladakh, demanded a judicial probe headed by a retired Supreme Court judge as a precondition for resuming dialogue with the Centre.The inquiry commission, chaired by retired SC judge Justice B S Chauhan, began its work on Oct 27 and a day later, issued a public notice inviting people to share information related to the Sept 24 incident. The evidence can be submitted till Nov 28, after which the commission will start its hearing.When asked about reports that some people were allegedly forced by security forces to delete their videos and were now afraid to share evidence, the official said: “Even if the videos have been deleted, people can still submit written statements explaining that they were forced to delete them.” “Anyone having information, whether in video, written, or oral form, can submit it through an affidavit,” he added.On Sept 24, police and paramilitary forces allegedly opened fire on protesters demanding statehood and Sixth Schedule status for Ladakh, after demonstrations turned violent, killing four people and injuring more than 90. Subsequently, more than 70 people, including climate activist Sonam Wangchuk, were arrested.After the announcement of the judicial probe, the Centre held talks with representatives of LAB and KDA on Oct 22 in New Delhi. The two organisations had pulled out from the scheduled talks after the violence.

Go to Source

Hot this week

Who is Q Manivannan, Indian-origin candidate elected to Scotland’s Parliament on a student visa?

Manivannan, who identifies as non-binary and uses they/them pronouns, won a Scottish Greens seat in Edinburgh and Lothians East under 2025 legislation introduced by the SNP government. Read More

The universe hidden in ink: A 2,000-year-old lost map of the night sky is coming back into recognition hidden in ancient manuscripts

Scientists have found what may very well be the oldest surviving map of the universe ever made, and it has been sitting under our noses all these years, locked away in the pages of an ancient medieval book. Read More

Thailand’s ex-PM Thaksin released from prison amid uncertainty over political future

Thailand’s former Prime Minister and telecom billionaire Thaksin Shinawatra walked out of prison on Monday after serving eight months of a one-year prison sentence linked to corruption. Read More

Quarantine, testing and more… What awaits passengers after evacuating hantavirus-linked cruise ship

The MV Hondius, which is at the centre of the hantavirus outbreak, docked at Spain’s Tenerife on Sunday following which 94 passengers and crew members were evacuated. Read More

Topics

Who is Q Manivannan, Indian-origin candidate elected to Scotland’s Parliament on a student visa?

Manivannan, who identifies as non-binary and uses they/them pronouns, won a Scottish Greens seat in Edinburgh and Lothians East under 2025 legislation introduced by the SNP government. Read More

The universe hidden in ink: A 2,000-year-old lost map of the night sky is coming back into recognition hidden in ancient manuscripts

Scientists have found what may very well be the oldest surviving map of the universe ever made, and it has been sitting under our noses all these years, locked away in the pages of an ancient medieval book. Read More

Thailand’s ex-PM Thaksin released from prison amid uncertainty over political future

Thailand’s former Prime Minister and telecom billionaire Thaksin Shinawatra walked out of prison on Monday after serving eight months of a one-year prison sentence linked to corruption. Read More

Quarantine, testing and more… What awaits passengers after evacuating hantavirus-linked cruise ship

The MV Hondius, which is at the centre of the hantavirus outbreak, docked at Spain’s Tenerife on Sunday following which 94 passengers and crew members were evacuated. Read More

Who Is Khabir Moraes, Goan Chef Caught In The Hantavirus Cruise Ship Scare?

Goan chef Khabir Moraes, who was aboard the hantavirus-hit cruise ship MV Hondius, has addressed growing fears around the outbreak after WHO confirmed multiple infections, 3 deaths Go to Source Author: News18 Read More

IT, Media, Banking: Which Jobs Can Shift To WFH Immediately In India? Full Sector-Wise List

Can your office switch to work-from-home immediately. The answer lies in how digitally dependent, customer-facing, and infrastructure-heavy your sector is. Read More

AIADMK Split Imminent? Rift Widens As MLAs Arrive In Separate Camps In Tamil Nadu Assembly

One group of 11 MLAs arrived with former Chief Minister Edappadi K Palaniswami, while another larger group of 36 legislators came separately. Read More

Related Articles