The NC MLA from Lolab said that the rebuke of the Army officer by a senior officer after that incident restored his faith in the system. He said that this incident showed how issues can be resolved through dialogue. Sharing his story, the MLA said that when I was young, there was a repressive action in my area.
You must have often seen in films that a misguided or misguided youth falls prey to the system and takes the wrong path. But the teachings of a true and honest officer also brings him on the right path. But something similar has happened in real life also. National Conference MLA Qaiser Jamshed Lone tells his story of how his faith in the system was restored at a time when he wanted to become a terrorist. Speaking during the motion of thanks on the Lieutenant Governor’s address in the Jammu and Kashmir Assembly, Lone said he wanted to become a terrorist after being tortured and humiliated by an army officer as a teenager.
The NC MLA from Lolab said that the rebuke of the Army officer by a senior officer after that incident restored his faith in the system. He said that this incident showed how issues can be resolved through dialogue. Sharing his story, the MLA said that when I was young, there was a repressive action in my area. I was a student of 10th class. Lone said during his speech in the House that along with me, 32 youth were caught for questioning. Lone told that an army officer had asked about a youth who had joined the terrorists. He replied that he knew the young man as he lived in his area.
The NC MLA said that he was beaten for this. Then he asked me whether the terrorist was present in action. I replied in the negative and was beaten again. He said that later a senior officer came to the spot and talked to him. The NC leader said that he asked me, what do you want to become in life? I told him I wanted to be a militant. He asked me the reason and I told him about the torture that happened to me. Lone said the senior officer’s public reprimand to his junior restored his faith in the system. He said they later learned that out of the 32 youths who were interrogated, 27 had become militants.
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