The fresh detention under PSA against Bhat was condemned by the hardline Hurriyat Conference which called for a strike on Saturday. The PSA allows detention of a person for a minimum of six months without trial.
Bhat, who was released last month after spending over four years in jail under PSA, had been arrested on April 17 on charges of waging war against the country and sedition after he hoisted Pakistani flag and chanted anti-national slogans during a rally organised for hardline Hurriyat Conference leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani.
The 45-year-old hardline leader had been remanded to a seven-day police custody after his arrest.
Police today said he has been sent to Kotbalwal jail in Jammu after being shifted from Srinagar during the night.
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Bhat had applied for bail before Chief Judicial Magistrate Budgam which heard the arguments of the prosecution and the petitioner's counsel yesterday. The court has reserved its orders on the bail plea till Saturday.
Police had registered a case against Bhat, Geelani and several other separatist leaders under Sections 121-A (waging war against the country), 124 (Sedition), 120-B (Criminal Conspiracy), 147 (rioting) of Ranbir Penal Code (RPC) among others. Bhat is the only one to have been arrested so far in the matter.
Geelani asked the people to hold peaceful protest demonstrations after Friday prayers tomorrow and observe a shutdown on Saturday against Alam's detention.
The Hurriyat hawk said Chief Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed had backtracked on his promises made in the election manifesto.
"Before and even after the election drama, Sayeed used to make tall claims and tried to portray himself as a pro-Kashmir politician. However, his slogans like 'battle of ideas' and 'dialogue, not bullets' have proved a farce and he has surrendered before Delhi. He has backtracked on the promises made in his election manifesto on the issues of release of political prisoners, AFSPA, return of power projects, settlement of west Pakistan refugees and return of Kashmiri Pandits," he said.
"This @jkpdp & @BJP4India Govt after the Modi/Mufti accord is a change alright but a change for the worse, no doubt about it," Omar wrote on twitter.Com.
He pointed out the discrepancies
between the ruling PDP's election manifesto, which included releasing political prisoners and the actions taken by the state government headed by the regional party.
"Masarat Alam detained under PSA & shipped to Jammu; new recruits to be paid stipend for years together & @jkpdp promised voters a change?" he asked on the microblogging site.