Sajjad Lone parted ways with his brother Bilal Gani Lone in February 2004 to float his own faction of People's Conference founded by his father. (File photo)
Jammu:
Sajjad Gani Lone, younger son of People's Conference leader Abdul Gani Lone who was assassinated in 2002 in Srinagar, was sworn in as a minister for a second time in the PDP-BJP government since he broke ranks with separatists nearly a decade ago.
He has got a Cabinet berth from the BJP quota. Born on December 9, 1966, Mr Lone is the younger son of Hurriyat leader Abdul Gani Lone who was assassinated on May 21, 2002 by terrorists in Eidgah ground of downtown Srinagar.
His father's killing was a turning point for Mr Lone and though he continued in Hurriyat Conference, he was accused by hardline separatist Syed Ali Shah Geelani of fielding proxy candidates in the 2002 Assembly polls.
This led to a vertical split in the separatist amalgam.
He parted ways with his brother Bilal Gani Lone in February 2004 to float his own faction of People's Conference founded by his father.
The healthy turnout in the 2008 Assembly polls, which were held immediately at the end of the Amarnath land row agitation that left 60 people dead, brought a change of mind in Mr Lone, who called on the separatists to review their strategy for being heard in Delhi.
He took the electoral plunge in April 2009 and contested as an independent candidate from Baramulla Lok Sabha seat.
"I will take the problems of Kashmiri people to the Indian Parliament," he had said but was defeated by the National Conference candidate Sharifuddin Shariq.
The 49-year-old, who married daughter of Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front founder Amanullah Khan from Pakistan, spent the next five years to galvanise his party cadres.
He gave a miss to the 2014 Lok Sabha polls himself but fielded a candidate from the north Kashmir constituency who lost.
He was elected to the state Assembly from Handwara constituency in the election held in 2014.
He defeated sitting minister Chaudhary Mohammad Ramzan of National Conference and his one-time "proxy" Ghulam Mohiuddin Sofi, who contested on a PDP ticket.