Under limitations, Omar Abdullah, the chief minister of Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK), was compelled to climb the Mazar-e-Shuhada’s boundary wall at Naqshband Sahib in Srinagar in order to honor the martyrs of July 13, 1931.
The Dogra Maharaja’s army killed about 22 Kashmiris on July 13, 1931, for demonstrating outside Srinagar’s Central Jail in support of Abdul Qadeer, who was accused of encouraging people to rebel against the Dogra Rule.
On the anniversary of an uprising in 1931, Kashmiri leaders were prevented from visiting the graveyard by Indian soldiers, who also placed limits on political leaders’ movements.