NPP flays CM for advocating division of J&K on Irish style

Excelsior Correspondent
NEW DELHI, Oct 30: Chief patron of the National Panthers Party and member National Integration Council Prof Bhim Singh has alleged that J&K Chief Minister Omar Abdullah has been exposed for advocating communal division of J&K on the Irish style.
In a press statement issued here today, the Panthers Party supremo strongly condemned the remarks of the J&K Chief Minister in which he had suggested that Irish Plan should be implemented in J&K State. NPP leader said that this statement  deserved to be condemned by all the nationalist parties and thinkers.  Prof Singh alleged that J&K Chief Minister has committed a grave criminal offence in violating the ethics  and provisions of the oath of office which he has made to uphold unity, integrity and sovereignty of India.
NPP leader demanded that Omar Abdullah should be brought to justice without any leniency for challenging the integrity of India by preaching secession.  “He has taken up the board which his grand father had relinquished in 1975 by signing an agreement  with Mrs Gandhi’s Government to accept the Accession unconditional. The J&K CM has challenged the accession which is now a part of history and any challenge to it amounts to sedition,” Prof Singh maintained.
The Chief Minister has started browbeating the Centre by exploiting the innocent people of State  by challenging the accession, pleading for communal division of State which the people of J&K had rejected in 1947 by saying no to Jinnah. He alleged that NC had been working for implementation of  the outrageous and communal Dixon Plan since 1951. The Jewish  judge of Australian High Court, Owen Dixon had proposed a communal division of  J&K. He had been appointed by the Anglo-American Bloc on behalf of Security Council. Dixon Plan reflected the  substance of communal division of Ireland in 1922, Ireland was split into two, a sovereign state of south Ireland having Catholic majority  and established as Catholic state in 1982 and Northern Ireland having majority Protestants, remained under the loose control of United Kingdom. It was a communal division between Churches which have adverse effect on the politics of Great Britain, Prof Singh added.