 Thank you very much. I'm grateful of all of you that you have made it convenient for us, for me to meet all of you here this afternoon. And I'm grateful to my very, very dear comrades, Sitaramya Churi, who was relentlessly fought the battle for my survival and my treatment and my coming to Delhi and providing my opportunity to meet friends like you here. And then I must be grateful to the honorable Supreme Court and the team of the liars who have permitted me to be here, to enjoy moments of freedom here in the capital of my country, the country of all of us, many of us. See, I must tell you, I must take this opportunity. I am really very disturbed. We have seen difficult times in Kashmir. We have seen Kashmir remaining disturbed for a longer period since 90 itself. There has been destruction, deaths, and all that. We have been witnessing. But telling you the truth, my own feelings, I have seen even the worst days, even when we got lost our friends, my family, members, and attacks on my person. I was not so disturbed as I am feeling today. The reason is that I see with my own eyes a strong feeling emerging within me. Could it ever have been possible to see such a horrible time? I'm posing this question to myself. When I see myself, that the very foundations of the unity of the people of Jammu and Kashmir with the Union of India are getting assaulted by those who are mandated to protect those very foundations of the constitution. It's a big surprise for me. Rather, I feel shocked about it. We were not having much expectations from today's regime. But nevertheless, I, as a citizen, was never thinking of that they will be so much desperate that with one go, you will say goodbye to those constitutional provisions which were negotiated by the leaders of Jammu and Kashmir with the founders of the constitution of India here in Delhi, which was result of a long and protracted struggle in Kashmir as well. When the raiders came, people resisted. When Maharaja Hari Singh was himself vacillating whether to join Indian Union or not. But the people of Kashmir, despite all odds, decided not to accept the dictates from the other side, but to join secular India. They were not forced. They were not compelled. Rather, it was out of the sense, out of those values which were, which was out of those commonalities which were between the two moments of Kashmiri people who fought against autocracy and the rest in the country who fought against the British rule. Today, those bonds which were created by the very hard work of the people of Kashmir and the rest of the country, the leadership here, those have been assaulted. I am worried about that far. No consultation, no discussion, no debate. That's why, as a citizen just, a concerned citizen, I want to talk to through you the citizens of my country, whichever part they are, whichever politics they belong to, including those who are followers, who are followers of today's party, which is an authority in Delhi. I want to appeal to all of them as citizens. Please listen to us. You have listened one version. Please listen to the version of the people of Kashmir as well. We don't want to be, we don't want to be killed. We don't want to be died, seen to be destroyed. We are now Farouk Abdullah and all others who are not terrorists now. Tariqami has not turned to be an alien element for my country. I am not a foreigner. Now, I have paid price for that, and I am proud of that. Not at all. That was my duty. I did that. But today, this is my question. Take us along. We don't ask for anything. An average Kashmiri doesn't ask for anything. The stars don't ask for anything. We don't ask for heavens. We just want to give us the chance to march with you. In 2016, when we were in mass unrest in Kashmir, the opposition parties, in which all the political parties were opposed, we met with Prime Minister Modi. I said that the situation is very bad. We have to take care of it. And our soldier is not responsible for this. Because this is not his duty. He didn't do anything wrong. Don't put this burden on his shoulders, Prime Minister. This situation is bad. This is our duty, which is in this room. We are all politicians. This is a political pain. Because of these political mistakes, we have to get rid of this situation in your leadership, in this room. And how? I said, accept Kashmiris. Accept Kashmiris. And what do we have to do to accept them? I said, talk to them. I won't take much of your time. My leader, General Secretary, will explain all other issues. My point is now, you see, as we are living in this world, and you are settled, our ears hear that we are normalcy. We are in Delhi. And you are settled in a city. If your internet is shut for seven days, your telephone is shut, what will happen? Where will the business reach? What will happen to the children? What will happen to the hospitals? And what will happen to the media? And still, we are told that today, the shops are not open, schools are not open. In every institution, there is a national health insurance scheme. How many people have benefited from this? Nothing. And then they say that everything is fine in the evening. Tell me, what is this mantra? No mantra. And then one thing is said, that no one is dead. They are slowly dying. They are dying. And because of this, I appeal to the people of the entire country, I don't know if I can appeal to the government, whether my voice will reach them or not. But I appeal to the poor people, I appeal to you. We also want to live. A Kashmiri speaker is speaking here, an Indian speaker is speaking here, we also want to get a chance to stay alive. This is a request, send this message, if you can.