Rubaiya Sayeed kidnapping case: Kashmiri separatist Yasin Malik appears before special court virtually
Rubaiya, daughter of former Union Minister and Jammu and Kashmir chief minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed, was abducted from near Lal Ded Hospital on 8 December 1989. She was freed five days later after the then-VP Singh government, supported by the BJP, released five terrorists in exchange

File photo of Yasin Malik from a court hearing. AFP
New Delhi: Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) chief Yasin Malik appeared before a special court via videoconferencing on Thursday in connection with the 1989 kidnapping of Rubaiya Sayeed, daughter of then Union Home minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed.
Chief Prosecutor Monika Kohli told reporters, “Malik was to be produced in court as per the production warrant. He appeared virtually.”
She added that Malik, who is lodged in Delhi’s Tihar Jail in a terror financing case, was not produced physically due to a Ministry of Home Affairs order restricting his movement.
Rubaiya did not appear for the hearing after filing an exemption application. “It was approved by the court, so she did not appear,” Kohli said.
During the last hearing on 15 July, Rubaiya had identified five accused, including Malik, and “the question of identifying the accused again today (on Thursday) was never there”, Kohli said.
Malik on Thursday once again insisted on physical appearance to cross-examine the witness.
Rubaiya was abducted from near Lal Ded Hospital in Srinagar on 8 December 1989, while her father, Mufti Mohammad Sayeed, was the Union Minster of Home Affairs. She was freed five days later after the then-VP Singh government, supported by the BJP, released five terrorists in exchange.
Now living in Tamil Nadu, Rubaiya is listed as a prosecution witness by the CBI, which took over the case in early 1990.
Malik (56) is lodged in Tihar Jail after he was sentenced by a special National Investigation Agency (NIA) court in May. He was arrested in early 2019 in connection with a 2017 terror financing case registered by the NIA.
He is the chief of JKLF, a Kashmiri separatist group which was active in militant activities during the insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir in the late 80s and 90s. The group has been held responsible for an active role in various attacks on security forces and civilians, including the Kashmiri Pandit exodus.
Malik had observed a 10-day hunger strike from 22 July after the Centre did not respond to his plea to physically appear in the Jammu court hearing in the abduction case.
The next hearing in the case is on 24 November.
With inputs from PTI
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