SRINAGAR: Hurriyat leaders in Indian Administered Kashmir are demanded the cancellation of a concert by celebrated conductor Zubin Mehta to be staged in the disputed territory next month, saying it would legitimise Indian “state repression”.
The concert by the Mumbai-born Mehta on September 7 was being organised by the state tourism department in Indian Administered Kashmir and the German embassy in New Delhi.
Veteran Hurriyat leader Syed Ali Geelani appealed to Germany to call off the concert, saying it “legitimises state repression” in the conflict-riven territory.
Another senior Hurriyat leader, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, echoed Geelani's call and suggested money for the concert would be better spent on a “Kashmir-German friendship hospital”.
“Musical concerts and killings can't go hand-in-hand... Germany has to understand the ground situation,” he told reporters.
Civil society and human rights activists in Kashmir also urged Germany to call off the concert, saying in a letter it “must not allow itself to be party to activities that seek to further legitimise the Indian occupation”.
Both the Kashmir state government and the German embassy declined comment.
Mehta, 77, will conduct the Bavarian State Orchestra in works by Beethoven, Haydn and Tchaikovsky for an invited audience of 1,500.
The event will be held in the sprawling Shalimar Mughal gardens under the mighty Chinar trees on the banks of the picturesque Dal Lake in the state's summer capital Srinagar.
Not all Kashmiris oppose the concert.
“It's a lifetime opportunity to listen to timeless music live,” art critic Lalit Gupta told AFP.
German ambassador Michael Steiner said last week the concert was “for the people of Kashmir”.
“With the magic power of music, crossing geographical, political and cultural borders, we want to reach the hearts of the Kashmiris with a message of hope,” he said.
Mehta announced last year at a reception in New Delhi he would like to play in Kashmir, adding he would “cancel every appointment” to do so.
He told India's IANS news service he had fond memories of a trip to Kashmir in the 1970s with his wife and children.
“We fell in love with it,” he said.
The Kashmir Monitor in an editorial noted the concert was not an international show but “an individual's show.
Musicians from different countries do travel to other countries and perform there.”
”But as things happen in Kashmir, there is little scope for one to separate politics from other aspects of life,” the newspaper said.