"Tall, stentorian promises of 'ache din' have amounted to 'Ache Din' for a chosen few in terms of their personal welfare while common people have been left to fend for themselves by a brazenly insensitive and callous dispensation," Abdullah said, addressing a NC workers' convention in Doda district.
He said lack of direction and political will have compounded the perception of political uncertainty in the state whereas the government should have tried to provide a hope of inclusive development, reconciliation and peace.
"Mufti (Mohammad Sayeed) Sahab's government ordered an unprecedented crackdown on normal life and undertook hundreds of preventive arrests for organising the Prime Minister's rally in Srinagar, where sadly the Prime Minister snubbed the Chief Minister and categorically asked him to mind his own business as his suggestions about the Kashmir issue were not required, rendering PDP and Mufti Sahab absolutely irrelevant viz-a-viz the larger political process," Abdullah alleged.
Abdullah said the human cost of the conflict between
India and Pakistan were "way too grave and serious for us to become comfortable in a status-quo arrangement and approach".
"This would not only create an atmosphere of disillusionment with the democratic institutions but would also harm the hard-earned dividends of peace in the state."
"There is no south pole or north pole. Both PDP and BJP come from the same stock of opportunistic politics... They have reneged on every single statement they made to garner votes and have surrendered all their respective political demands for petty trappings of political power," he said.
He wondered how BJP impetuously joined hands with PDP notwithstanding the fact Prime Minister Narendra Modi had vowed to "free" Jammu and Kashmir from the rule of both National Conference and PDP.
He said disenchantment among the people has reached an unprecedented level. "The sense of anti-incumbency against this present government within the very first year is much greater than the engineered, fake perception of anti-incumbency against the previous NC-led government at the culmination of entire six-year tenure," Abdullah said.
He said regional polarisation and efforts to divide the people on the basis of their religions could have short-term political advantages for the ruling parties, Jammu and Kashmir will always stick to its legacy of inclusiveness, secularism and tolerance.
The former chief minister said that development has been pushed to back burner while public grievances were mounting unheard with each passing day.
He said Consumer Affairs & Public Distribution (CAPD) outlets lacked sufficient supplies and utility services were craving for maintenance. "The promise of 24x7 power supply has turned out to be a counter nightmare with unprecedented and unscheduled power cuts haunting the people of the state at the very onset of the winter season," he said.
