Mirwaiz Omar Farooq

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Mirwaiz Muhammad Omar Farooq (born 23 March 1973) is the chairman of the All Parties Hurriyat Conference, a coalition of disparate political parties in Jammu and Kashmir that wish independence for the state. He attended Burn Hall School in Srinagar.

Mirwaiz Omar Farooq enjoys popular support in Kashmir, particularly in his hometown Srinagar. A Mirwaiz(preacher) of Kashmir and head of the Omar faction of Hurriyet he has both an important religious and political role in the politics of the Valley.

Placed on the stage at the age of 17, following the assasiantion of his father, Mirwaiz Maulvi Farooq,then the leader of Awami Action Committee, Omar Farooq united 23 Kashmiri militant organizations into the APHC. He maintains that dialogue must take place with India and Pakistan, so long as the Kashmiri aspirations are heard as well.

After joining of Shabir Shah with Omar Farooq's Hurriyet recently, the Mirwaiz has grown into a more powerful political entity with his moderate secessionist stand. Syed Ali Shah Geelani, who heads the Geelani faction of Hurriyet, remains his biggest competitor.

Mirwaiz Maulvi Umar Farooq is a popular political figure in Kashmir. Leader and acting chairman of the All Parties Hurriyat Conference, Mr. Farooq joined politics at a young age of 17 in 1990, after his father Mr. Mirwaiz Maulana Farooq, was assassinated.

Mirwaiz is the term for the traditional leader of Muslims in Kashmir. He inherited the title as the 12th Mirwaiz and was the founder chairman of the Hurriyat in 1993. Before he began an active career in Kashmir politics, he nurtured the ambition to become a software engineer. He holds a master's degree in Islamic studies.

Mirwaiz is known to be one of the more traditional among the Kashmiri separatist leaders. He has attempted to bridge the gap between his faction and that of hardliner separatist organisation of Syed Ali Shah Geelani. This effort was a precursor to his visit to Pakistan occupied Kashmir and Islamabad in June this year.

His Pakistan visit saw a major change in his approach to the Kashmir issue. He announced that the United Nations should not be involved in solving the Kashmir issue. Till January this year, he had maintained his belief in an UN sponsored resolution of the problem.




[edit] External links

Time Asia on Omar Farooq:[1] http://www.rediff.com/news/2005/sep/05spec2.htm