At the Mahara Prison recently, we saw a group of prisoners being killed who were protesting against the corona virus.
At that time, in front of the prison, I saw the tears of mothers who cried for the lives of their children, and I was reminded of the tears of mothers in the South who brought me into politics 32 years ago.
Those mothers shed tears for the missing and murdered children. Then we saw the tears of mothers in the North.
We saw the tears not only of terrorists and extremists in this country but also of the relatives of children who have become targets of state terrorism.
We are killing, dying, the children of our own country.