Srinagar: Lt Governor Manoj Sinha salutes after unfurling the Tricolor during 75th Independence day function amid heavy rains at Sher-e-Kashmir Cricket Stadium, in Srinagar, Sunday, Aug. 15, 2021. | (PTI Photo/S. Irfan)
Srinagar: For the first time since militant violence started in Jammu and Kashmir in early 1990s, no curfew or restrictions were imposed across Kashmir where flag hoisting and other ceremonies of I-Day passed off peacefully.
Internet facility remained uninterrupted in Kashmir as did the movement of private transport. People moved about in Srinagar city and other cities and towns of the Valley without any restrictions although pedestrian movement was less because of the public holiday on Sunday.
Teachers went to their schools to attend the hoisting of the national flag. The attendance of teachers during the ceremony at educational institutions had been made mandatory.
Thee flag was hoisted at 23,000 schools across J&K while similar hoisting was done at all Panchayats, block and tehsil headquarters of the union territory. Instead of bungalows of ministers and district development commissioners, flags were hoisted at district headquarters by chairpersons of the district development committees (DDC) as elected representatives of the people.
Smartly turned out contingents of police and other security forces, including the Army marched before the podium during functions in provincial and district headquarters.
Interestingly, there was no protest shutdown or blackout call by any separatist organisation this year, a sharp and perceptible departure from their usual practice since the beginning of the separatist violence.
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