Sanjha Morcha

BJP’s Army barb reprehensible: CM

BJP’s Army barb reprehensible: CM

Punjab CM Capt Amarinder Singh. Tribune file

Chandigarh, January 30

CM Capt Amarinder Singh today hit out at BJP national general secretary Tarun Chugh over his “Army background” remark and called it reprehensible.

“What does the BJP know of Army honour or the grace of the national flag, in which the bodies of our Punjabi brothers come wrapped from the borders every second day?” he said.

Chugh had claimed the CM was insulting his Army background and the grace of Republic Day by supporting farmers over the Red Fort incident. “We in Punjab know the pain of seeing bodies of our sons and brothers, wrapped in the national flag, come home every second day,” he said, adding the BJP had no empathy towards soldiers losing their lives to protect India’s integrity.

What does it know of Tricolour grace?

What does the BJP know of Army honour or the grace of the national flag, in which the bodies of our Punjabi brothers come wrapped from the borders every second day? —Capt Amarinder Singh, CM

Neither Chugh nor his party could relate to the anguish of those soldiers on seeing their farmer-fathers and brothers being beaten up and teargassed while fighting for their rights, said the CM, while accusing Chugh of spreading lies. He said the BJP, which had ripped the constitutional fabric apart over the past six years had lost all moral and ethical right to talk of the honour of the R-Day. — TNS


Family worried as no info on youth held for Singhu violence

Family worried as no info on youth held for Singhu violence

Ranjeet Singh

Aparna Banerji

Tribune News Service

Jalandhar, January 30

“Mere putt nu ghar bhej den, meri ehi hath jor ke benti hai,” Sarabjit Kaur weeps uncontrollably as she remembers the last glimpses she caught of her 22-year-old son.

With his mother eager to hold an akhand path at the village gurdwara, Ranjit Singh had asked her to wait until he returned from the Singhu morcha. However, the images on the social media of police assault on the 22-year-old left the family in shock.

Ranjit is among the youths accused of attacking the police during the Singhu border violence. His family vehemently denies the charge. “He is a very good natured boy. He can’t beat anyone. I just request the government to send my son back,” says Sarabjit Kaur.

Cops not responding

Ranjit didn’t beat up anyone. We called the police last night but no one responded. Today some youths went to the local police station but they said he would be produced in court. We haven’t seen him yet. —Jasbir Singh Piddi, KMSC vice-president

Hailing from Kajampur village in Nawanshahr, Ranjit’s video grabs of being beaten with lathis and picked up — seemingly unconscious — went viral on internet. Ranjit’s family still hasn’t heard from the Delhi police. Since yesterday, frantic calls have been made to the police and some members of the Kisan Mazdoor Sangharsh Committee, who also checked with the local police – but there is no information about Ranjit’s whereabouts.

Satnam Singh, a resident of Jalwaha village in Nawanshahr and neighbour of Ranjit’s family, says, “Hooligans have beaten up Ranjit because he stood in the way of the ladies’ tents they were going to uproot. These people weren’t locals. He is a very religious, Amritdhari Gursikh who does path twice a day in the local gurdwara. False charges have been slapped on him for no fault of his. He wielded his sword which is part of his Gursikh attire but he did not injure or attack anyone.”

Jasbir Singh Piddi, vice-president, Kisan Mazdoor Sangharsh Committee, said: “Ranjit didn’t beat up anyone. We called police last night but no one picked. Today some youths went to the local police station but they said he would be produced in court. We haven’t seen him yet.”


Farmers returning to Singhu, Ghazipur borders in droves 50 tractor-trailers leave for Singhu

Farmers returning to Singhu, Ghazipur borders in droves

Farmers from Lohian, Shahkot and Nakodar blocks leave for the Singhu border. Photo: Malkiat Singh

Tribune News Service

Jalandhar, January 30

Scores of farmers from Punjab are heading back to the Ghazipur and Singhu borders after having returned home from the tractor parade.

Amarjot Singh, youth wing president (Jalandhar), BKU (Rajewal), and Kulwinder Singh Machiana, its general secretary, were at Singhu a few days ago. After holding meetings with farmers here and dispelling rumours, they plan to go back soon. A ‘jatha’ of youths from Thatha Purana village in Sultanpur Lodhi headed out to Singhu amid reports of a police build-up at Ghazipur.

“Youths from Sarhali, Jandiala, Nakodar and other blocks are preparing to return to protest sites. Some have already started going back, others will go in a couple of days. The attempt to evict BKU leader Rakesh Tikait forcibly has angered farmers,” said Amarjot.

Machiana, who was holding the stage of the Sanyukt Kisan Morcha a few days ago, said, “Some of us have been deputed to dispel fake news about the agitation. Any attempt to disrupt our honest stir will fail. We are going village to village to speak to farmers about the real situation and will head back to Delhi borders on February 1. All those who came back will return.”

From Thatta Purana in Sultanpur Lodhi, an 11-member jatha headed to Singhu on Thursday. Surinderjit Singh, a village resident, said, “In view of the rumours being spread about the tractor parade, it is important we head back to Singhu.”

Dr Baljit Singh, national president of the Jai Jawan Jai Kisan Party floated by farmers youths, said, “Over 15 to 20 trailers left for Delhi borders from Patiala a few days ago. Everyone is keen to return to the protest site. There is anger among people for the way farmers have been blamed for the Red Fort incident. Everyone wants to head back and lend support to the movement.”

At least 50 tractor-trailers of the Kisan Mazdoor Sangharsh Committee left for Singhu today.

“After we saw at Singhu last night, many of us couldn’t sleep. Leaders called us to come soon as they need people there. We are going to strengthen the movement,” say villagers.

Ex-servicemen on faST in Gidderbaha

Muktsar: Former servicemen on Saturday observed a hunger strike in Gidderbaha in protest against the police action on farmers in Delhi. Kirpal Singh, president, ex-servicemen cell, Gidderbaha unit, said, “We have observed a hunger strike today against the lathicharge on farmers in Delhi.” Meanwhile, some advocates also lent support.


BJP and RSS behind stone-pelting on farmers at Singhu: Rajewal Alleges that the government is continually trying to provoke them to resort to violence

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Vishav Bharti
Tribune News Service
Chandigarh, January 30

Farmer leader Balbir Singh Rajewal on Saturday said the BJP and RSS were behind Friday’s stone-pelting incident on farmers at Singhu border.

He alleged that the government is continually trying to provoke them to resort to violence.

Addressing a press conference at the Kisan Bhawan here, Rajewal appealed to farmers, who are now heading to Delhi, to keep the struggle peaceful.

He said they had recovered from the unfortunate incident of January 26.


Also read: Bajwa, Deepender welcomed on Tikait’s protest site stage; call for resolution of stalemate
‘Mahapanchayat’ at Baghpat: How BJP leadership miscalculation strengthened farmers’ agitation, Jat bonding in UP, Haryana
BKU digs its heels in at Ghazipur border, more supporters pouring in
Protesting farmers begin one-day hunger strike
If protesting farmers are abused, it will make movement stronger: British MP Dhesi
Anna Hazare calls off his proposed fast

“We are not going for war. Only peace can assure our victory,” he said.

Rajewal said all the cases registered against farmer leaders or any other cases registered during farmers agitation would be discussed during negotiations with the government.

“We have been holding a peaceful agitation at Delhi’s borders since January 26. Today also the agitation is peaceful,” Rajewal, the president of the Bharatiya Kisan Union (Rajewal), told reporters.

“People in large numbers from Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttarakhand are reaching the protest sites,” Rajewal said.

“Possibly by February 2, there will again be a record gathering of people at the protest sites,” he said, adding that the agitation would remain peaceful.

Rajewal also condemned the Haryana government for suspending internet services.

The Haryana government on Friday decided to suspend mobile internet services in 14 more districts in the state until Saturday 5 pm “to prevent any disturbance of peace and public order”. Earlier it had suspended the services in three districts.

Rajewal accused the Centre of instilling a sense of fear among people by showing pictures of the “unfortunate incidents”, apparently referring to the January 26 violence in the national capital during a tractor parade by farmers.

 “The government is trying to mislead people through false propaganda in order to defame the ongoing agitation,” he alleged.

Rajewal appealed to those joining the agitation at Delhi’s borders to keep the protest peaceful.

 He asked them not to get provoked, which could affect the peaceful agitation.

“It is our responsibility to keep the agitation peaceful,” he stressed.

 Rajewal accused the government of trying to trigger violence by provoking the farmers at the protest sites. “But we are alert. We will not indulge in any kind of violence,” he said.

The farmer leader appealed to the Centre to shun its “stubborn attitude” and withdraw the three farm laws.

 On the next meeting between the protesting farmers and representatives of the government, he said “when they call us, we will certainly go”.

To a question on joining the investigation following notices issued by the Delhi Police to farmer leaders in connection with the Republic Day violence, Rajewal said, “They issued the notices to us on January 27 but an FIR in connection with the matter was lodged on January 26. Since they have already taken action, what reply are they seeking?”

 Asked again, he said, “We will send them a reply.” The Delhi Police has issued the notices to around 20 farmer leaders, including Rajewal, over the violence during the farmers’ tractor parade, asking why legal action should not be taken against them. — with PTI

The glorious side of tractor marches

The glorious side of tractor marches

We care for you: A special tractor-trailer carrying medical equipment for protesting farmers during the parade.

Even as videos showcasing violence and news of breaking of barricades began doing the rounds early on the morning of Republic Day, but for scores of participants and onlookers of the glorious tractor marches at the Singhu, Kundali and Tikri borders things remained peaceful as crowds viewed thousands of tractors march out on the customary parade which had been planned for Republic Day.

Miss us? A trolley bearing the photos of Shaheed Udham Singh (left), Ashfaqullah Khan (middle) and Chandrashekhar Azad can be seen during the march at the Singhu border.

At least 40,000 to 50,000 tractors paraded across the pre-set path at the Singhu alone. People climbed atop bridges, trucks, tractors, trolleys and trees to take in some of the action. The day witnessed thousands of tractors taking part in the march sheeted in Tri-colours in what has to be the biggest-ever show of farm diversity in the country’s history. It wasn’t until they came into an internet zone that they realised something had gone amiss in Delhi even as tractors marched peacefully in front of their eyes at Singhu and Tikri.

Elderly men recalled protests during the British era saying they had never seen anything like this before in their lifetime. Women congregated by the roads cheering on the moving cavalcades. Meanwhile, huge clumps of police and paramilitary forces lined the borders to hold the march.

Top of the world: A tableau rolls in at Kundli with the Shaheed Bhagat Singh’s cut-out towering above the gathering.

Many considered the parade a wedding between Delhi and Punjab, of Indian national pride and tribute to freedom struggle martyrs, which were the reigning themes of decked up tractors. Elderly men dressed as grooms (with sehras tied on their heads as well as tractors), Bhagat Singh, Rajguru, Sukhdev and Udham Singh’s photos enveloped the vehicles. Some even spent lakhs on tractors and were rueful of the fact that their hard work never made it to TV due to the pictures of violence ruling the discourse for the day.

— Aparna Banerji


BJP has ‘torn to shreds’ dignity of democracy: Priyanka on FIR against Tharoor, journalists Trend of threatening public representatives, journalists dangerous, she says

BJP has ‘torn to shreds’ dignity of democracy: Priyanka on FIR against Tharoor, journalists

Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, PTI photo

New Delhi, January 30

Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi Vadra on Saturday hit out at the BJP over FIRs filed against Congress MP Shashi Tharoor and six journalists, alleging that the ruling party has “torn to shreds” the “dignity of democracy” by this action.

The Congress general secretary said the trend of the BJP government threatening public representatives and journalists by filing FIRs is “very dangerous”.

“Respecting democracy is not the government’s prerogative but it is its responsibility. The atmosphere of fear is like poison for democracy,” Priyanka Gandhi said in a tweet in Hindi.

“The BJP government has torn to shreds the dignity of democracy by FIRs against senior journalists and public representatives,” she said.

Congress MP Shashi Tharoor and six journalists have been booked by the Noida Police for sedition, among other charges, over the violence during the farmers’ tractor rally in Delhi, officials said on Thursday.

The journalists named in the FIR are Mrinal Pande, Rajdeep Sardesai, Vinod Jose, Zafar Agha, Paresh Nath and Anant Nath. An unidentified person has also been named in the FIR.

Madhya Pradesh police have also filed a First Information Report (FIR) against Tharoor and the six journalists over their ‘misleading’ tweets on the violence during the farmers’ tractor rally in Delhi.


Rakesh Tikait is the cynosure of many eyes – not just farmers As Ghazipur becomes the centre of the farmer protest, this police constable-turned-farmer-leader becomes a key driver

Rakesh Tikait is the cynosure of many eyes – not just farmers

Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU) spokesperson Rakesh Tikait at Ghazipur border during the ongoing farmers agitation against Centres farm reform laws in New Delhi on Friday. PTI photo

New Delhi, January 30

His tears exercised an emotive pull even he may not have envisaged, helping turn the tide for a movement that seemed to have lost both sheen and momentum after the violence on Republic Day. It was but a moment in time and Rakesh Tikait was the man in it.

He was once a Delhi Police constable, tried his hand at electoral politics and been a farmer leader for years. But Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU) leader Tikait has broken out of the confines of western Uttar Pradesh to find a space in the national spotlight as arguably the most powerful farm leader of the day.

The two-month farmer movement against the Centre’s three farm laws was till now dominated by protesters from the fields of Punjab and Haryana who set up camp at the Singhu and Tikri border points into the city. Now, the focus has shifted to Ghazipur on the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border where farmers are gathering in thousands to boost the fight that seemed to have been weakening only two days ago.

A day after the Republic Day violence in Delhi, when a section of farmers taking part in the tractor parade broke through barriers, clashed with police and stormed the Red Fort for a few hours, the farmer game it seemed to be over. Morale plummeted and many farmers returned home.

On Wednesday night, the atmosphere was tense at Ghazipur. The Ghaziabad administration issued an “ultimatum” to the protesters occupying a stretch of the Delhi-Meerut expressway to vacate as the January 26 clashes painted a not-so-peaceful picture of the peasant community.

And then came the Tikait moment. As security presence at the site escalated and fears grew that the protesters would be forcibly evicted, an emotional Tikait broke down while talking to reporters.

“The protest won’t be called off. Farmers are being met with injustice,” he said and even threatened to end his life for the cause.

The 51-year-old’s BKU leader’s call for continuing the protest against the government struck a deep emotional chord. Videos of his emotional outburst were circulated across multiple platforms.

It led to his brother Naresh Tikait calling a ‘mahapanchayat’ at their home town in Muzaffarnagar on Friday where tens of thousands of farmers gathered to back the movement.

The crowd at Ghazipur border that had reduced to 500 on Thursday night grew manifold over the next 12 hours, running into well over 5,000 in next 24 hours. The farmer movement was not just revived but further energised.

Tikait, who has been part of a delegation talking with the Centre over the ongoing protest, is also one of the accused in the January 26 violence in Delhi that saw one farmer dying when his tractor overturned and hundreds of people, including police personnel, being injured.

He has denied the allegations of conspiracy and demanded a judicial probe into the violence, blaming infiltrators in the tractors’ parade of the unrest.  To be named as an accused by the Delhi Police is perhaps strange for Tikait, who served as a head constable in the force but quit in 1992-93 when he had to deal with a farmers’ agitation led by his father, the legendary Mahendra Singh Tikait.

Born on June 4, 1969, in Sisauli village of Muzaffarnagar district in western Uttar Pradesh, Rakesh Tikait joined BKU after quitting the Delhi Police and gained prominence as a farm leader after the death of his father to cancer in May 2011.

Mahendra Tikait, who was hailed as “messiah” of farmers, had inherited the ‘Chaudhary’ title of the regional Baliyan khap (a social and administrative system in parts of north India) at the age of eight from his father. Going by the tradition of the khap, the title passed on to his elder son and Rakesh Tikait’s elder brother Naresh.

But Rakesh Tikait, a BA graduate from the Meerut University, was designated national spokesperson of the BKU. He has two younger brothers—Surendra, who works as a manager in a sugar mill, and Narendra, engaged in agriculture.

 The father of three—two daughters and a son—has been at loggerheads with various governments on a range of farmers’ issues, including loan waivers, minimum support price (MSP), power tariff and land acquisition in states such as UP, Haryana Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh.

He also tried his hand at elections but lost both times.

 In 2007, he contested the UP Assembly polls from Khatauli constituency in Muzaffarnagar as an independent candidate. In 2014, he fought the Lok Sabha election from Amroha district on a Rashtriya Lok Dal (RLD) ticket.

It’s an affluent family.

Ahead of the 2014 polls, Tikait had declared assets worth Rs 4.25 crore, including Rs 10 lakh cash, and liabilities of Rs 10.95 lakh with land worth over Rs 3 crore forming the biggest chunk of his assets.

 He also declared three criminal cases against him in the election affidavit. These cases were lodged in Meerut and Muzaffarnagar in Uttar Pradesh, and Anuppur in Madhya Pradesh.

The vocal farmer leader had to spend nights behind the bars for defying public servant’s orders during several of the protests that he has led in the past decade.

Having dug in his heels along with his supporters at the Ghazipur border amid a deadlock with the Centre over the new farm laws, Tikait on Saturday was once again teary-eyed.

But this time overwhelmed by emotion as villagers, including children, reached the protest site carrying water, homemade food and buttermilk, after he announced he would drink water only when farmers will bring it since the local administration had barred water tankers at the protest site.

 Rakesh Tikait is now the cynosure of many eyes—and it’s not just farmers. — PTI

38 cases, more than 80 arrests so far over tractor parade violence: Officials R-Day tractor march by farmers against the three recent agriculture laws had turned violent

38 cases, more than 80 arrests so far over tractor parade violence: Officials

Farmers gather in front of the historic Red Fort during a protest against farm laws introduced by the government, in Delhi, India, on January 26, 2021. Reuters file photo

New Delhi, January 30

The Delhi Police has so far registered 38 cases and arrested 84 people in connection with the violence during a tractor parade by farmers here on Republic Day, officials said on Saturday.

The tractor march by farmers protesting against the three recent agriculture laws had turned violent, leading to chaotic scenes on the streets of the national capital on Republic Day.

Thousands of protesting farmers had clashed with the police during the parade. Many of them, driving tractors, reached the Red Fort and entered the monument.

They also hoisted flags on the domes and placed a flagstaff at the ramparts of the national monument, where the national flag is unfurled by the prime minister on Independence Day.

Police had asked nine farmer leaders to join the investigation in the case on Friday, but no one turned up. — PTI


How BJP’s miscalculation strengthened farmer agitation, Jat bonding in UP, Haryana The story of ‘roti-beti ka rishta’ and ‘jat pride’ and the second major miscalculation in the agitation

How BJP's miscalculation strengthened farmer agitation, Jat bonding in UP, Haryana

BKU president Naresh Tikait, along with other leaders, during a ‘mahapanchayat’ organised to mobilise support for the farmers’ agitation at Delhi borders against Centre’s farm reform laws, in Muzaffarnagar on Friday. PTI photo

Vibha Sharma

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, January 30

Baghpat, Sonepat and Rohtak—they may be in different states (Uttar Pradesh and Haryana) but members of the ‘Jat’ community of the region share strong socio-cultural ties/bonding called “roti-beti ka rishta”.

What the events of the past few days in the ongoing farmers’ agitation, especially those revolving around BKU leader Rakesh Tikait, have done is strengthened those bonds.

Perhaps, this is the second time the BJP leadership miscalculated the agitation, the first being underestimating farmers and their agitation.

A day after the highly-successful ‘mahapanchayat’at Muzzaffarnagar, which decided that the Ghazipur agitation would continue, a similar event is now being planned at Baghpat, the bastion of ‘Jat’ leaders Ajit Singh and son Jayant Chowdhury.

Baghpat may be in Uttar Pradesh, and is an hour’s drive from Sonepat, but the implications of another ‘mahapanchayat’ are expected to be felt not just in Yogi Adityanath’s Uttar Pradesh but also in Manohar Lal Khattar’s Haryana—incidentally both non-Jat chief ministers.

BKU spokesperson Rakesh Tikait’s tears have not impacted only Ghazipur but also Singhu in Haryana.

A day after Muzaffarnagar ‘mahapanchayat’, BKU president Naresh Tikat has said that a similar event had been planned in Baghpat on January 31.

Naresh Tikait on Friday said it was “their mistake” to support the BJP candidate, Union Minister Sanjiv Balyan, against RLD chief Ajit Singh in the last Lok Sabha elections.

After the death of BKU founder Mahendra Singh Tikait, the organisation lost much of its support base, say observers.

In fact, Rakesh Tikait lost when he contested the elections.

But the visuals of Rakesh Tikait, a Jat, becoming sentimental and breaking down, were enough to stir emotions among his community who “collectively felt humiliated”. Perhaps the BJP has inadvertently increased his relevance, bringing together the community, and giving purpose and strength to Tikait brothers and their organisations.

“Jats stand by each other in ‘dukh’. It is a typical characteristic of the community which the BJP misunderstood and turned what could have been a possible resolution into a prestige issue for them. The basic feeling now is that ‘BJP ne dukhi kar diya kyoki wo ‘Jat’ hai’ (BJP created problems for him because Rakesh Tikait is a ‘Jat’)”, explains Prof Sudhir Panwar.

After Naresh Tikait calling off the agitation two days back, there were visible signs of  thinning of protests at the Ghazipur protest site.

Sources say even though an “agreement” was reached with the Tikait brothers that the protest site would be vacated, the increase in security forces and presence of Loni MLA Nand Kishore Gujjar and his supporters “vitiated the atmosphere”.

Asserting that he would not surrender and would also call more people to join the protest if needed, Rakesh Tikait broke down saying “he would rather commit suicide than leave and end the protest against the farm laws”.

Following that, Naresh Tikait quickly called an emergency meeting and appealed to supporters to reach Ghazipur and scheduled the Muzzafarnagar ‘mahapanchayat’.

Coming to the first miscalculation, many observers say the Narendra Modi government not just “underestimated” the agitation but also the determination and resolve of the Punjab farmers who managed to reach and hold on at the Delhi borders despite so many hurdles.

 Had it taken care of the situation in Punjab, it would not have escalated to this level, they say.

Quite clearly, Punjab BJP leaders did not give the correct feedback of the situation in the state to the Centre. Whether a similar situation is now being repeated in Uttar Pradesh remains to be seen.


Govt made a mistake by pushing farm laws, shouldn’t make another by implicating farm leaders: Azad to Modi Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha demands discussion on farmers issues after the budget session recess, also seeks restoration of J&K statehood

Govt made a mistake by pushing farm laws, shouldn’t make another by implicating farm leaders: Azad to Modi

Ghulam Nabi Azad. PTI file

Aditi Tandon

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, January 30

The Congress on Saturday warned the government against wrongfully implicating the agitating farmer leaders, saying the government had made one mistake of pushing the farm laws through Parliament but should avoid the second mistake of targeting genuine protesting leaders.

Speaking at the all-party meeting chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi today, Leader of Opposition in the Rajya Sabha and Congress veteran Ghulam Nabi Azad demanded a discussion on farmer issues on priority when the Budget Session resumes after recess.

He said: “The government can stand on prestige with anyone but should not stand on prestige with our farmers, who produce food for the nation.”

Azad said the Opposition had warned the Centre against pushing the laws without sending them to a standing or a select committee of Parliament.

Condemning the Republic Day violence, Azad said the incidents involved lumpen elements who should be punished.

“We condemn the Republic Day incidents. Never have we seen such a thing on January 26 or August 15. This would have never happened had the government needed the Opposition and allowed Parliamentary scrutiny of farm laws. That way, the government could have ensured that the concerns of farmers are addressed,” said Azad, warning the government of the agitation swelling up if the government continued to implicate farmer leaders.

“When I was a chief minister, I saw that no one objected if a terrorist was killed but if an innocent person was killed in the name of terrorism, there was always a furore,” said Azad, asking the government to pause and rethink the rules of engagement with the farmers.

Azad also demanded a discussion on economy and the the declining GDP and jobs noting, “Given the hike in petrol and diesel prices, I can say it is easier to buy a car these days but difficult to top it up with fuel.”

Azad also asked the Centre to bring a bill urgently to grant full statehood to Jammu and Kashmir, saying a sensitive border state could not be left to officers and bureaucrats.

“Now, the district development council and panchayat elections have been concluded in Jammu and Kashmir. Now there’s no excuse to not restore JK’s statehood,” said the former JK chief minister.