While welcoming Singh's statement, Chairman of moderate Hurriyat Mirwaiz Umar Farooq said the Centre has realised that red lines do not work in politics or diplomacy, the chief of hardline faction, Syed Ali Shah Geelani said peace cannot be achieved till promises made by India to the people of Kashmir at the national and global level are fulfilled.
Terming it as a "welcome change" and an "acceptance of the reality", he said there is no other option for India and Pakistan but to engage with each other and take along the people of Kashmir.
He suggested that the Centre need to revisit the policies of "shedding the beaten track and take new initiatives" of former Prime Minister A B Vajpayee to address Kashmir issue.
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He also accused the state government of using "oppressive methods" to silence the separatists.
The Mirwaiz threatened mass agitation if the curbs on the movement of separatists are not withdrawn immediately.
Meanwhile, dismissing Singh's statement, Geelani said "It is not an issue for us whether we are invited or not. Our only concern is that the promises made by India to the people of Kashmir at the national and global level are fulfilled."
He said Kashmir was not a border dispute between India and Pakistan, but an "internationally accepted dispute and the solution of which lies in implementation of UN resolutions."
Geelani alleged that plans were being made by BJP and RSS to change the demography of Jammu and Kashmir by holding an all-India level medical entrance test.
"They will then be selected at all-India level and if students from here are selected, they will be sent to different states and doctors from other states will be forced upon us.
About his successor in his party Tehreek-e-Hurriyat and the Hurriyat Conference amalgam, Geelani said the leader would be chosen after consultations following his death.