Srinagar:
Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah today challenged BJP's Prime Ministerial candidate Narendra Modi, saying he was ready for a debate on Article 370 "anytime, anywhere".
"If they want a debate on Article 370 with me, let them tell me where and when they want to talk about it. Even if they want to hold the debate in Ahmedabad, we are ready for the debate anytime," Mr Abdullah said at public rally in Srinagar.
He was reacting to the Gujarat Chief Minister's call for a debate on Article 370 and whether it has benefited the people of the state.
"I am surprised that those who know nothing about Jammu and Kashmir are commenting on Jammu and Kashmir. Those who have not read Article 370 are talking about it. Article 370 does not talk about property rights nor the residency laws... Article 370 is a provision that connects this state to the rest of the country," he said, referring to the points raised by Mr Modi during his rally at Jammu on December 1.
"We know who has damaged Article 370 and how much it has affected the state of Jammu and Kashmir," he said.
Mr Abdullah also criticised, what he called, Mr Modi's "lack of knowledge" about the people of Jammu and Kashmir.
"I am more surprised that those who are occupying high positions, and dream of occupying higher position, how little knowledge they have about the people of Jammu and Kashmir. One such leader made a speech in Jammu recently and claimed that injustice is being done to Gujjars in the state... Ours is perhaps the only state which has given Scheduled Tribe status to the community. Modi sahib, if you had to raise this issue, you should have done it in Rajasthan where Gujjars are sacrificing their lives for this status," he said.
The Chief Minister said Mr Modi lacked basic knowledge of the Shia community and criticised him for not raising the issue of Kashmiri Pandits during his Jammu visit.
Mr Abdullah said his National Conference has been maintaining that Kashmir was incomplete without the Pandits and it was imperative that they should return to the Valley.
"It was the slogan of Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah 'Sher-e-Kashmir
ka kaya irshad, Hindu, Muslim, Sikh
Itehaad'. We don't divide people, we don't pit people against each other," he said.