Have quit 'armed struggle' in 1984, have turned Gandhian: Yasin Malik in court.
Jammu & Kashmir Liberation Front-Yasin (JKLF-Y) chairman Yasin Malik, in his affidavit submitted to the UAPA tribunal that reviewed the ban on JKLF-Y, claimed he gave up "armed struggle" in 1994 as a means to achieve JKLF-Y's object of establishing a "United Independent Kashmir", in favour of a "Gandhian way of resistance".
Yasin, who founded JKLF-Y in 1988, is a prime accused in the sensational killing of four Indian Air Force personnel at Rawalpora, Srinagar, in 1990, with witnesses having identified him as the main shooter earlier this year.
Jammu & Kashmir Liberation Front-Yasin (JKLF-Y) chairman Yasin Malik, in his affidavit submitted to the UAPA tribunal that reviewed the ban on JKLF-Y, claimed he gave up "armed struggle" in 1994 as a means to achieve JKLF-Y's object of establishing a "United Independent Kashmir", in favour of a "Gandhian way of resistance".
Yasin, who founded JKLF-Y in 1988, is a prime accused in the sensational killing of four Indian Air Force personnel at Rawalpora, Srinagar, in 1990, with witnesses having identified him as the main shooter earlier this year.