Leh: Jailed activist Sonam Wangchuk has appealed to the people of Ladakh to maintain peace and unity and continue with the ongoing struggle for statehood and safeguards under the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution in the true Gandhian way of non-violence, his lawyer said on Sunday.
Wangchuk conveyed the message through the legal advisor of Leh Apex Body, Haji Mustafa, who along with the activist’s elder brother Ka Tsetan Dorjey Ley, met him at Jodhpur jail in Rajasthan on Saturday.
Wangchuk said that unless there is an independent judicial inquiry into the killing of the four people during the September 24 violence, “I am prepared to stay in jail”.
He was detained on September 26 in Leh under the stringent National Security Act (NSA), two days after violent protests demanding statehood and Sixth Schedule status for Ladakh left four people dead and scores of others injured in the Union Territory. Authorities have accused Wangchuk of inciting the violence.
The Supreme Court is slated to hear on Monday a plea filed by Wangchuk’s wife, Gitanjali J Angmo, challenging the climate activist’s detention under the NSA and seeking his immediate release.
Mustafa posted Wangchuk’s “message” on his personal social media accounts, including X and Facebook, on Sunday after meeting the activist.
“I am doing well, both physically and mentally and thank everyone for their concern and prayers. My heartfelt condolences to the families of those people who lost their lives and my prayers with people who are injured and are arrested,” Wangchuk said.
He said there should be an independent judicial inquiry into the killing of the four people. Unless that is done, “I am prepared to stay in jail”.
“I stand firmly with Apex Body and the KDA and the people of Ladakh in our genuine constitutional demand for Sixth Schedule and statehood and whatever actions Apex Body takes in the interest of Ladakh, I am with them, wholeheartedly.
“I appeal (to) people to keep peace and unity and continue our struggle peacefully – in the true Gandhian way of non-violence,” Wangchuk said.
The Ladakh administration had ordered a magisterial probe into the violence, but Kargil Democratic Alliance (KDA) and Leh Apex Body (LAB), who are spearheading the agitation, have decided to stay away from talks with the Centre scheduled for October 6 till a judicial inquiry is ordered and all those detained, including Wangchuk, are released.
SC to hear wife’s plea challenging Sonam Wangchuk’s detention on Monday
The Supreme Court is slated to hear on Monday a plea filed by Sonam Wangchuk’s wife Gitanjali J Angmo challenging the climate activist’s detention under the National Security Act, and seeking his immediate release.
According to the apex court’s cause list for October 6, the plea would come up for hearing before a bench of Justices Aravind Kumar and N V Anjaria.
Wangchuk was detained under the stringent National Security Act (NSA) on September 26, two days after protests demanding statehood and Sixth Schedule status for Ladakh left four people dead and 90 injured in the Union territory.
Wangchuk is lodged in Jodhpur jail in Rajasthan.
In her plea filed through senior lawyer Vivek Tankha and lawyer Sarvam Ritam Khare, Angmo has also questioned the decision to invoke the NSA against Wangchuk, which allows detention without a trial for up to 12 months.
Filing the habeas corpus (bring the person) writ, the spouse of the detained activist sought urgent listing of the plea and a direction to the Ladakh administration to “produce Sonam Wangchuk before this court forthwith”.
It also sought immediate access to the detenue, and quashing of the preventive detention order.
The plea, which named the Ministry of Home Affairs, the Ladakh UT administration, deputy commissioner of Leh, and the Jodhpur jail superintendent as parties, also sought a direction to them to “allow immediate access of the petitioner to her husband, both telephonic and in person”.
The plea alleged that Wangchuk’s detention was “illegal, arbitrary, and unconstitutional”, violating the fundamental rights guaranteed under Articles 14, 19, 21 and 22 of the Constitution.
“Wangchuk, who has been an internationally acclaimed innovator, environmentalist, and social reformer, has always espoused Gandhian and peaceful methods to highlight the ecological and democratic concerns of Ladakh,” it said.
On September 26, Wangchuk was detained by the deputy commissioner of Leh under Section 3(2) of the NSA, as he was recovering from a prolonged fast to highlight Ladakh’s demand for constitutional safeguards under the Sixth Schedule.
He was swiftly shifted to the Central Jail in Jodhpur without being provided medicines, personal belongings, or access to his family and counsel, the plea said.
No grounds of detention have been furnished till date, either to Wangchuk or to his family, the petition submitted.
His wife alleged that she has been kept under virtual house arrest in Leh, while students and staff of the Himalayan Institute of Alternatives, Ladakh (HIAL), founded by Wangchuk, are facing harassment, intimidation, and intrusive investigations.
“The arbitrary transfer of Wangchuk to Jodhpur, the harassment of students and staff of HIAL, the virtual house arrest of the petitioner herself, and the false propaganda linking Wangchuk to foreign entities clearly demonstrate mala fide state action intended to suppress democratic dissent and peaceful environmental activism,” the plea said.
Wangchuk’s detention has also inflicted severe mental pain and anguish on the people of Ladakh, who revere him as their leader, it added.
“A recent tragic incident has been reported where a member of the Ladakh Buddhist Association committed suicide, allegedly depressed after his (Wangchuk’s) detention, underscoring the devastating psychological impact on the community,” it said.
“Direct respondents to ensure that Sonam Wangchuk is provided with his medicines, clothes, food and other basic necessities forthwith,” the plea said.
It also sought a direction to the authorities to place before the top court “the order of detention along with grounds of detention and all records pertaining thereto”.
It sought a direction to the respondents to produce a medical report of Wangchuk, after immediate doctor consultation, before the court.
“Stop immediate harassment of HIAL and its members/students who have done no harm and are tirelessly working for the benefit of the ecology,” the plea said.






