Birmingham city council today withdrew its permission for a planned rally to mark "Burhan Wani Day" on Saturday after India lodged a protest with the UK government against the "glorification of terrorists".
The rally was being planned by UK-based Kashmiri groups to mark the first death anniversary of the commander of the Hizbul Mujahideen militant outfit killed in a gun battle with Indian armed forces in the Kashmir Valley on July 8 last year.
India on Monday protested to the UK over the planned rally.
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India's deputy high commissioner, Dinesh Patnaik, sent a "note verbale" on Monday to the Foreign Office including details of Wani's crimes and propagation of violence in the Valley.
"A rally on Kashmir is a different matter but to glorify and eulogise a terrorist is unacceptable. The UK itself has suffered at the hands of terrorism in the last few months and lives have been overturned as a result. How can law and order allow such a glorification of terrorists and propagation of violence," wrote Patnaik.
The senior diplomat also questioned if the UK government would allow the same UK-based protest groups, which have their origins in Pakistan, to organise a rally in favour of Pakistani-origin Khuram Butt and other terrorists involved in the attack on London Bridge last month which claimed eight lives.
"If the same people celebrating Wani were to plan a similar glorification of Khuram Butt and the other London Bridge terrorists, would this country's law and order allow that to go ahead as well," he questioned, adding that the joint statement issued following British Prime Minister Theresa May's visit to India in November 2016 had categorically stated joint action against all forms of terrorism.
A "note verbale" is an unsigneddiplomatic communication prepared in the third person and is used by foreign missions to highlight issues of importance between countries.
The UK Foreign Office had said the note "has been looked at" and would be handled by the relevant geographical desk within the department before a response can be issued.
A meeting was held earlier this week in Sparkbrook area of Birmingham to plan for the rally, which was scheduled to take place outside the Council House on Victoria Square in the heart of the city in the West Midlands region of England on Saturday afternoon.
Groups such as Tehreek-e-Kashmir Europe are believed to be involved in the organisation of the rally as part of a so- called 'Martyrdom Day' call for Wani from Pakistan-occupied Kashmir.
Some promotional material for the eventcarrying Wani's imageread:"We will take back what is ours forcefully. We will not rest until Kashmir is free from Kuffars and hoist the flag of Islamic Ummah."
The same groups were caught on camera waving images of Wani and 'We Want Freedom' posters during the India vs Pakistan Champions Trophy match at Edgbaston Cricket Ground in Birmingham on June 4.
Any rallies planned in the UK are required to seek police permission in advance.
With the City Council withdrawing its permission for the rally on Saturday, it will be illegal for the gathering to go ahead on July 8.
The latest communication between the Indian high commission in London and the Foreign Office reflects an increasingly outspoken stance being taken by the Indian government over sensitive issues.
The Indian high commissioner to the UK, Y K Sinha, had spoken out last week against what he described as "anti-India activity" on British soil.
"The way the UK permits anti-India activity on its soil, in Delhi people are quite perturbed about that. We are also a democratic society but we do not discuss issues that affect our friends and allies,"he had said during the launch of a new book on India-UK ties titled 'Winning Partnership'.
The Indian community in Birmingham is also mobilising to lobby local councillors and MPs to register their protest against the proposed rally.
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