AJK traders, transporters to resume business from today

Published June 28, 2026 Updated June 28, 2026 07:04am
OFFICE-bearers of traders and transporters bodies in Muzaffarabad address a press conference on Saturday.—Photo by the author
OFFICE-bearers of traders and transporters bodies in Muzaffarabad address a press conference on Saturday.—Photo by the author

MUZAFFARABAD: Traders and transporters in Muzaffarabad division announced on Saturday that markets and public transport would resume normal operations from Sunday after the administration assured them of adequate security and uninterrupted fuel supplies, signalling the first major easing of the shutdown during the ongoing agitation in Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK).

At a joint press conference at Central Press Club, representatives of traders’ bodies and the transporters’ union also distanced themselves from the proscribed Joint Awami Action Committee (JAAC), alleging that the movement, which they had initially backed over public issues such as subsidised electricity and flour, had deviated from its original objectives after June 9 and was now pursuing a political and constitutional agenda beyond the mandate of traders and transporters.

They urged protesters to resolve outstanding issues through dialogue, appealed to traders to reopen their businesses and called for restoration of internet services to facilitate commercial activity.

The press conference was addres­sed by Gohar Kas­­hmiri, senior vice chai­r­man of the Markazi Anjuman-i-Tajran Muzaff­arabad, Raja Abrar Must­afa, president of the Mad­ina Market Traders Associ­ation, and Khawaja Azam Rasool, president of the Divisional Transport Oper­a­t­ors Union. They were joined by office-bearers of several other trade bodies, including Banaras Zaman Bhatti of the Barbers and Beauticians Association and Raja Asif of the Poultry Dealers Association.

Representatives distance themselves from JAAC due to deviation from ‘original objectives’ of their protests

As news of the announcement spread by word of mouth, shops in several neighbourhoods of Muzaff­ar­abad began reopening on Saturday afternoon, altho­ugh business activity rem­ained thin in many areas.

Meanwhile, in Poonch division, where the sit-in on the outskirts of Rawalakot continued, more than 100 residents staged a demonstration in Hajira, demanding that JAAC activists remove blockades from the two main roads linking the town with Rawalakot and Abbaspur.

They warned that if the activists did not reopen the roads, they would clear them themselves on Sunday and also reopen businesses.

At the Muzaffarabad presser, Mr Kashmiri said traders had played a key role in the movement while it focused on securing relief for ordinary citizens, winning reduced electricity tariffs and subsidised flour. However, he said traders had not been consulted when the movement changed course and could not associate themselves with post-June 9 developments.

He said the inclusion of the issue of the 12 reserved seats for refugees from occupied Jammu and Kashmir in the charter of demands had shifted the movement’s focus, even though it was a constitutional matter that should be settled through legal and democratic means. “We do not understand why there was such insistence on this issue. Negotiations require flexibility from both sides if disputes are to be resolved,” he said.

Maintaining that their movement had always remained peaceful, Mr Kashmiri said challenging the writ of the state was unacceptable and urged traders to pursue their outstanding issues through negotiations rather than confrontation.

Mr Mustafa said traders had backed the campaign for nearly three years while it remained focused on basic public issues, including affordable flour, electricity and healthcare. “The issue of the 12 reserved seats is a constitutional matter that can only be resolved by the elected assembly. It is not for traders to decide,” he said.

“We stood with the Action Committee as long as it remained on the right course. But after it was declared proscribed and matters began moving in another direction, we collectively decided that we would neither remain part of it nor continue supporting it,” he added.

Stressing that Pakistan was their country, he said traders respected its institutions and armed forces and app­­ealed to young people not to all­ow themselves to be drawn into unrest.

He also urged the authorities to restore internet services and ensure uninterrupted diesel and petrol supplies, saying businesses were suffering because of the disruptions.

Mr Rasool, who also served as administrator of Muzaffarabad Municipal Corporation during previous PML-N government, said transporters had joined the movement in its early stages and that he himself had been a member of its core committee. However, they parted ways after demands continued to expand despite the acceptance of economic demands.

He said transport services had remained suspended not because transporters supported the strike but because road blockades and fuel shortages had exposed valuable public transport vehicles to the risk of damage. “Now that the administration has assured us of fuel supplies and security, public transport across Muzaffarabad division will resume from Sunday,” he said.

Mr Rasool said transporters could never support any movement directed against Pakistan or its armed forces, adding that constitutional questions such as the 12 reserved seats had nothing to do with the concerns of traders and transporters. He urged participants in the Rawalakot sit-in to disassociate themselves from those whom he accused of hijacking the movement to pursue a separate agenda, and called for preserving AJK’s tradition of peace and social harmony.

Published in Dawn, June 28th, 2026

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