Members of different opposition parties,including Kashmiri regional groups that oppose Modi’s policies but are pro-India,joined Gandhi’s rally in Srinagar in snow and bitter cold.
Hundreds of police and paramilitary soldiers blanketed Srinagar’s Lalchowk area and restricted public movement,allowing only people with passes issued by the Congress party to enter the venue.
Dressed in a traditional Kashmiri tunic worn during the winter,Gandhi,52,and other leaders stood on an open podium inside a cricket stadium.
The march was to “raise a voice against the hate” and “open shops of love in the bazaar of hate,” he said.
Gandhi accused Modi,his home minister and the national security adviser of stoking violence and said he wanted to show that India was a “country of love”.
Gandhi began the “Bharat Jodo Yatra” or “Unite India March” in Kanyakumari,a coastal town at the southernmost tip of India,on September 7. The march was live-streamed on a website,covered 3570 kilometres and crossed 12 states before finishing in Indian-controlled Kashmir.