Srinagar, Oct. 4 -- Gitanjali Angmo, wife of Ladakhi education reformer and climate activist Sonam Wangchuk, has approached the Supreme Court to challenge his detentionunder the National Security Act (NSA). The habeas corpus petition, filed under Article 32 of the Constitution, was moved on October 2, following Wangchuk's arrest on September 26. He is currently being held in Jodhpur Central Jail, Rajasthan, after being detained in connection with protests demanding statehood for Ladakh. While the specific grounds raised in the petition are yet to be made public, the matter is expected to be taken up for urgent hearing once the Supreme Court reopens after the Dussehra break on October 6. "I have sought relief from the Supreme Court of India through a habeas corpus petition against @Wangchuk66's detention. It is one week today. Still I have no information about Sonam Wangchuk's health, the condition he is in nor the grounds of detention," wrote Gitanjali Angimo on social networking site X. Wangchuk, a Ramon Magsaysay awardee known for his work in education and environmental sustainability, was taken into custody after protests in Leh turned violent on September 24, resulting in the deaths of four people during police firing. Authorities alleged that Wangchuk played a key role in inciting the demonstrations. On September 30, the Ladakh administration issued a statement justifying Wangchuk's detention, accusing him of repeatedly invoking the idea of "self-immolation" in his public speeches, drawing parallels to protest tactics used in Tibet. Officials claim this rhetoric posed a serious threat to public order. Angmo, who co-founded the Himalayan Institute of Alternative Learning (HIAL) with Wangchuk, has expressed concern over her husband's detention. In a public statement issued on September 30, she stated that she has not been able to speak with him or access a copy of the detention order. Two days ago, Angimo had written to President Draupadi Murmu for her intervention in the matter She had earlier lashed out at the police, CRPF and home ministry for situation in Ladakh during September 24 violence, while also defending her husband's hunger strike saying he has always been "Gandhian" in his ways and was being made a "scapegoat" to weaken his movement. Leh Apex Body and Kargil Democratic Alliance (KDA), which are spearheading the protest for statehood and extension of the Sixth Schedule to Ladakh, had already declared that they won't participate in talks with the Centre till climate activist Sonam Wangchuk and others arrested in Leh were released and a judicial probe is ordered into the firing at protests on September 24. The talks with the Centre were scheduled for October 6 in New Delhi. However, on Thursday the deputy commissioner had ordered a magisterial probe into the incident and had sought the report within four weeks. Earlier, the home ministry had cancelled the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) licence of the SECMOL, one of the organisations founded by Wangchuk, with "immediate effect"....