A group was allegedly denied permission to organise the seminar after a club hosting it claimed that police was "not willing" to show a green signal apprehending that it "might create problems" in the city.
"What is the message you will send by banning the seminar and discussion on Kashmir and Balochistan? Such things happen in Pakistan. By doing this you are pushing the agenda of the ISI and Pakistani government. Kashmir is an integral part of India and how can you stop discussion on Kashmir in a state like India," Maj Gen (retd) G D Bakshi told reporters.
"This is ridiculous that a discussion is being stopped just because it is on Balochistan and Kashmir. This is not right to stop discussion on Kashmir, this should not have happened," former army general Shankar Roy Chowdhury said.
Bakshi said he has requested the organisers to take legal action against the club for "infringement" on the fundamental right of speech.
"But all of a sudden, the Club told us to omit the name of Kashmir from the programme and not to call two speakers who are known for their voracious anti-Pakistan statements. We said it is not possible following which the club informed us that the police is not willing to give us permission with Kashmir as the theme, as police is apprehending that it might create problems in the city," Chowdhury told PTI.
The speakers in the programme included Lt Gen (Retd) J M Mukherjee, Maj Gen (Retd) G D Bakshi, Sushil Pandit, Arif Mohammad Khan besides Pakistan-born Canadian writer Tarek Fatah and singer Abhijeet Bhattacharya.
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