The separatist leader Abdul Ghani Bhat of Jammu and Kashmir died at the age of 90
Srinagar, September 17 (IANS). Former Hurriyat conference president and separatist leader, Professor Abdul Gani Bhat, died on Wednesday in his home in the Bottingu town in Sopore. Family sources confirmed that Professor Bhat, a resident of the Bottingu village in the Sopore area in the Baramulla district, is breathing his last night. He was sick for a few days. He was 90 years old. Abdul Gani Bhat was active in the separatist politics of Jammu and Kashmir. According to the family, information about his funeral prayers will be given later. Bhat, who was born in 1935 in Bottingu Village near Sopore in North Kashmir, grew up in a family where education was important. He studied at the Historic SP College in Srinagar, then studied postgraduate in Persian and later obtained a law degree at Aligarh Muslim University. When he returned to his home state, he began teaching Persian in Poonch’s Government Grade College. It was a career in which he remained active for more than two decades. He then entered politics. In 1986 he founded the Muslim United Front. Later, a coalition of separatist groups founded in 1993, all parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC) was the president of the Hurriyat Conference (APHC) and also the President of the Forbidden Political Faction, Muslim Conference, Jammu and Kashmir. When then Governor Jagmohan ended his services for anti-national activities, he was a teacher in a government college in Sopore. Professor Bhat later actively participated in separatist politics and was the leading leader of the Muslim United Front. It was a group of different separatist parties that led against the national conference led by Farooq Abdullah in the 1987 election. It is believed that in the 1987 election, Muslim United Front leaders were extensively directed to keep them out of the state meeting. It is generally believed that the youth election agents and supporters of the separatist leaders in 1987 crossed the border over the border and returned with weapons, in January 2011, in January 2011, in January 2011, while they could tackle a Srinagar seminar, he said that some of our own people, our beloved, who were killed. After this statement, there was a panic over Kashmir. -Ians pack/ share these story tags