Akhilesh Yadav urges Sonam Wangchuk to end hunger strike
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Samajwadi Party president Akhilesh Yadav on Tuesday, 14 July 2026, made a public appeal to Ladakhi activist Sonam Wangchuk urging him to break his hunger strike, while launching a sharp attack on the Bharatiya Janata Party for what he called its indifference to civil-society protests.
Context
In his post on X, Yadav addressed Wangchuk directly, writing — translated from Hindi — 'Sri Sonam Wangchuk ji se hamara ati vinamra aagraha aur savinay appeal hai ki wo apna anshan tod den' ('We humbly and respectfully appeal to Shri Sonam Wangchuk to break his fast'). He said Wangchuk's life was 'priceless for the entire world' because it embodied commitment to humanity, the environment, and democracy in equal measure.
Yadav argued that continuing the fast-unto-death against the BJP government was futile, describing the ruling dispensation as a 'principleless, corrupt system' ('siddhantaheen, bhrasht tantra') incapable of moral change. He said those consumed by arrogance — 'jinmein ahankaar hota hai unmen parishkaar nahin hota' ('those who harbour ego cannot be refined') — could not be moved by sacrifice.
Policy Backdrop
Ladakh was carved out of Jammu and Kashmir and granted Union Territory status in 2019 following the abrogation of Article 370. Since then, residents have mounted sustained campaigns demanding full statehood, inclusion under the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution, and stronger protections for the region's fragile ecology against commercial mining and infrastructure projects.
Sonam Wangchuk, founder of the Students' Educational and Cultural Movement of Ladakh (SECMOL) and a Magsaysay Award-winning innovator, has led multiple public fasts and protest marches since 2023 to press these demands. His campaigns have drawn national and international attention to glacial melt, land-rights concerns, and the absence of an elected legislature in Ladakh.
Yadav invoked the concept of 'satyagraha' (truth-force) against what he called 'sattagraha' (lust for power), accusing BJP leaders of looting even temples in their hunger for authority — a rhetorical contrast aimed at delegitimising the government's moral standing in the face of non-violent protest.
Stakeholders and Impact
Wangchuk's protest has drawn solidarity from environmental groups, youth organisations, and opposition parties across the country. Yadav's statement extends that cross-regional alliance, positioning the Samajwadi Party alongside civil-society movements in border and hill regions — a pattern seen among non-BJP parties seeking to highlight federal asymmetry and environmental governance failures.
For Ladakhi residents, the stakes include both constitutional rights and ecological survival. Glacial retreat and unregulated mining threaten livelihoods that have depended on traditional water and land use for centuries. Yadav called Wangchuk a 'lighthouse' (prakash stambh) for all those fighting negative forces on behalf of citizens, youth, democracy, and the environment.
The SP chief also took aim at what he called the BJP's 'underground, unregistered associates' — a reference to affiliated organisations — framing the broader opposition task as defeating this 'mahapapi-adharmi' (greatly sinful, unrighteous) combine permanently.
What's Next
All eyes are now on whether Wangchuk heeds appeals from opposition leaders and civil-society voices to suspend his fast while political pressure is maintained through other channels. Any statement from the Ministry of Home Affairs on Ladakh's administrative status, or a possible parliamentary discussion during the ongoing monsoon session, could shift the political calculus significantly.
Yadav's intervention signals that Ladakh's demands for statehood and Sixth Schedule protections will remain a live issue in national opposition politics, with the SP likely to raise it in Parliament and on the campaign trail ahead of future state elections.