The House, where Mufti's daughter and Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti was conspicuous by her absence, also paid tributes to former state Governor Gen (retd) K V Krishna Rao, former Speakers of Lok Sabha, Balram Jhakar and P A Sangma, three ex-ministers and two former members of the House. Opposition NC leader Omar Abdullah was also not present.
Speaker Kavinder Gupta introduced the obituary references for the nine leaders, who had died between the last session of the assembly in October last year and beginning of the ongoing budget session yesterday.
Mohammad Shafi Uri of National Conference (NC), the first to speak, said Mufti had a glittering political career.
He chose the occasion to highlight the need for finding a solution to the Kashmir problem.
Uri, a former minister and ex-MP, said forming a regional party PDP by Mufti was a message to the "Delhi establishment that Jammu and Kashmir has a special status and special identity". Mufti had left Congress to float PDP in 1999.
He referred to the decision of the PDP founder to form an alliance with the BJP in the state following the fractured mandate in 2014 Assembly elections.
Despite Mufti terming the alliance as "coming together of North Pole and South Pole", the yearning for peace and reconciliation and resolution of Kashmir issue between India and Pakistan continued, Uri said. He said the pursuit of peace was the policy of National Conference as well.
Taking a dig at the BJP, the NC veteran said the global political scenario has changed and the buzzword now is development.
"Ek vidhan Ek Nishan (One constitution, one flag) is being raised no more," he said referring to BJP's old slogan with regard to Jammu and Kashmir which has a separate flag.
Congress leader G M Saroori used the occasion to highlight
Mohammad Yousuf Tarigami of CPI(M) said the most important contribution of Mufti was to promote dissent in politics.
"In presence of the towering personality of (NC's) Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah, he dared to do politics of a different point of view," Tarigami recalled.
Deputy Chief Minister and senior BJP leader Nirmal Singh said coming together of the BJP and PDP to form a coalition government in the state showed that if there is sincerity towards serving the people, ways will emerge for it.
Controversial Independent MLA Sheikh Abdul Rashid said Mufti was an "Indian by conviction".
"Being an Indian (in Kashmir) is not crime. When whole of Kashmir was up in revolt (in 1989), he (Mufti) became the Home Minister of the country. He changed parties (Congress to Janata Dal to Congress and then formed PDP) but whatever he did was in the interest of India," Rashid said.
He also raked up Mehbooba's absence from the House on the occasion.
"Mehbooba Mufti is the Chief Minister of the entire state but today she should have cancelled all her engagements and been present here as we pay tributes to Mufti Mohammad Sayeed. Anyways, it is her personal matter also," he said.
Veeri, who was overcome by emotions, said "It is difficult for me, being a political worker of Mufti sahib, to be here."
(Reopen DES20)
The Legislative Council also paid tributes to Mufti, Rao and 7 others, with Chairman Haji Inayat Ali introducing the obituary references.
Opposition NC leader Sajad Kichloo said Mufti "rose above party politics while talking to us (opposition members). There are only a few leaders like him in the state and the void left by him is hard to fill."
Mufti proved his capacity and political commitment by creating a regional party and then taking it to power in a short time. "No other party in any state had done so," he said.
Many others, cutting across the party lines, paid tributes to the former Chief Minister as well as the other leaders.
Describing Mufti as visionary, Education Minister Naeem Akhtar said the biggest homage to him would be to bring the people of the state closer to each other.
"It is his biggest inheritance that he introduced real democracy here and made it competitive by giving an alternative to the people. He changed the discourse here. Trying to establish peace between India and Pakistan is his lasting contribution," he said.
The House also observed a two-minute silence as a mark of respect for the former chief minister and others mentioned in the obituary reference.
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