College and university students, lawyers, political parties, traders and various other organisations took out separate protest rallies in solidarity with the army and against the Pakistan for "aiding and abetting terrorism".
Jammu and Kashmir National Panthers Party (JKNPP) activists took out a rally from the Press Club area of the city and held protest demonstrations amid anti-Pakistan slogans.
They also burnt down the effigy of Pakistan and demanded the country should be declared as "terrorist state".
Dubbing the neighbouring country as a "threat to the peace in South Asian region", JKNNP leader castigated Pakistan for pushing fidayeens' to carry out terror attacks on the security personnel in Jammu and Kashmir, besides "endorsing support to secessionists in the Valley".
Singh lambasted Pakistan for its "malicious and mischievous" designs in sponsoring militant attacks on defence installions in the state and abetting terror attacks across the country.
The JKNPP leader said Pakistan's "notoriety" had now assumed "alarming proportions" as Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had on the eve of Eid announced "to continue its support to secessionists and other disruptive forces in Kashmir".
Singh said the statement was followed by the most "cowardly and deadliest" terror attack on the Indian Army in last two decades and unveiled the "nefarious designs of the belligerent neighbour to destabilise India".
He alleged Pakistan has not been "mending ways" despite repeated warnings at appropriate forums and held the "rogue country responsible for the ongoing mayhem in Kashmir which had left thousands of security personnel injured".
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