BJP office set on fire, arson and violence in Leh, Sonam Wangchuk calls off strike

    Protests for Ladakh’s statehood and Sixth Schedule spiraled into violence with arson and clashes in Leh, prompting Sonam Wangchuk to end his 15-day hunger strike and appeal for calm

    Protests for Ladakh’s statehood and Sixth Schedule spiraled into violence with arson and clashes in Leh, prompting Sonam Wangchuk to end his 15-day hunger strike and appeal for calm
    Protests for Ladakh’s statehood and Sixth Schedule spiraled into violence with arson and clashes in Leh, prompting Sonam Wangchuk to end his 15-day hunger strike and appeal for calm

    Sonam Wangchuk urges peace after Ladakh protests erupt in violence

    Climate activist Sonam Wangchuk on Wednesday called off his 15-day hunger strike as the movement for statehood for Ladakh and extension of the Sixth Schedule took a violent turn, with the BJP office and several vehicles set on fire and hundreds of people taking to the streets. Flames and dark smoke clouds could be seen from afar amid a complete shutdown in the Ladakh capital. The administration imposed prohibitory orders under Section 163 of the BNSS to ban the assembly of five or more people, officials said.

    “I request the youth of Ladakh to stop the violence forthwith, as it only causes harm to our cause and further deteriorates the situation. We do not want instability in Ladakh and the country,” Wangchuk told his supporters who had gathered in large numbers at the venue of the strike. As the clashes intensified, Wanchuk also put out a video message on his X handle appealing to the youth to remain peaceful and stop violence.

    The Ladakh Apex Body (LAB) youth wing called for the protest after two of the 15 people, who were on a 35-day hunger strike since September 10, were shifted to a hospital after their condition deteriorated on Tuesday evening. The Constitution’s Sixth Schedule, meant for the tribal population of the four northeast states of Tripura, Meghalaya, Mizoram, and Assam, makes special provisions in terms of governance, powers of the president and the governor, types of local bodies, alternate judicial mechanisms, and financial powers exercised through autonomous councils.

    The movement for extending the Sixth Schedule to Ladakh has been gathering pace.
    A fresh round of talks is scheduled between the Ministry of Home Affairs and Ladakh representatives, comprising members of the LAB and the Kargil Democratic Alliance (KDA), on October 6. The two bodies have been jointly spearheading an agitation over the past four years in support of their demands and have held several rounds of talks with the government in the past.

    Responding to the protest call, Leh town shut down and large crowds assembled at the NDS memorial ground and later took out a march through the streets of the town, chanting slogans in support of the Sixth Schedule and statehood, officials said.

    The situation worsened when some youth pelted stones at the headquarters of the BJP and the Hill Council. Police and paramilitary forces, deployed in strength across the town, lobbed teargas shells to bring the situation under control, the officials said. Groups of youth set ablaze a security vehicle and some more, and also targeted the BJP office. They set fire to furniture and papers within the complex and one of the buildings.

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