The 45-day long yatra will end on August 15, coinciding with the Shravan Purnima festival.

  • 95,923 pilgrims have performed the Amarnath Yatra since it started on July 1
  • No yatri convoy moved from Jammu towards Kashmir Valley on Monday
  • Separatists had called for a protest shutdown on Monday to commemorate death of Burhan Wani
  • Agencies

Jammu, July 8:

Over 95,000 pilgrims have performed the ongoing Amarnath Yatra in the past seven days, officials said. However, no fresh batch of pilgrims was allowed to move from Jammu on Monday due to the law and order situation.

Separatists have called for a protest shutdown on Monday to commemorate the death of Hizbul commander Burhan Wani.

Burhan Wani was killed in Kokernag area of Anantnag district on July 8, 2016 in a gunfight with the security forces.

“No yatri convoy moved from Bhagwati Nagar Yatra Niwas in Jammu towards Kashmir Valley on Monday,” a police officer said.

To date, 95,923 pilgrims have performed the Amarnath Yatra since it started on July 1. The 45-day long yatra will end on August 15, coinciding with the Shravan Purnima festival.

Situated at 3,888 metres above the sea-level in Kashmir’s Himalayas, the Amarnath cave shrine houses an ice stalagmite structure that symbolises mythical powers of Lord Shiva, according to the devotees.

The ice stalagmite structure waxes and wanes with the phases of the moon.

Jammu and Kashmir Governor Satya Pal Malik on Sunday said the annual Hindu pilgrimage has been possible with the support and assistance of the local Muslims.

Satya Pal Malik also asked people to bear with the curbs imposed on civilian traffic on the national highway for two hours daily as it concerns the safety and the security of the pilgrims.

“You know what happened on the national highway on February 14 this year,” Satya Pal Malik said while he referred to the terror strike on the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) convoy in Pulwama district of Jammu and Kashmir in which 40 troopers were killed.

Meanwhile, All India Radio (AIR) is starting an FM radio station in the Baltal base camp to flash weather forecasts, traffic information and devotional content for the information of the pilgrims.