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Salwai government survives as no confidence motion was allowed and Mr Malik is allowed to be sworn in on December 2nd.
While the police believe the murder occurred in late October, they have ruled out the possibility that the body was dumped by a disgruntled employee.
Police have refused to comment on the case and have said they were trying to ascertain whether it is linked to political politics.
The police claim Mr Malik worked for Bajrang Dal for 17 years before resigning this month.
He was previously known for his anti-Kashmiri rhetoric and for speaking on behalf of people who could have lost their jobs had the state failed to provide full security.
In his 2013 book A Nation of Lost Heroes, Mr Malik described the Indian army's treatment of the Muslims of Kashmir as "apocalyptic" and said that many Muslims had fled the state because of the violence.
Indian security forces carry the body of one killed by an illegal bomb attack in Srinagar, India January 30, 2016. REUTERS/Darren Whiteside
Mr Malik has never taken a stand against the killing of Muslims in Kashmir because it is an internal issue within the Indian armed forces.
Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif spoke of "the most serious terrorism attack in Indian soil since 1947".
Indian police had said last week they had arrested a suspected key link in the plot. The body of one killed in the bomb attack was found in the same building as the others.
Pakistan has not said whether Mr Malik was a resident of Kashmir. Police arrested a man close to him after he appeared in court on Thursday.
Mr Malik's daughter said he left the country in 2011 for medical treatment in India.
She said she was trying to recover her father's memory and hopes it will help her mother.
"I'm hoping he is still with us," said Farooq, who also went to college with her father.
A man tries to remove the body of a person who was killed by an illegal bomb attack in Srinagar, India January 30, 2016. REUTERS/Darren Whiteside
SHE'S BEHIND
For nearly nine months, Ms Khanna has been fighting for her father's life in a hospital in Srinagar.
On Thursday, as police started to gather evidence and a probe began, she told reporters it was her "duty to tell the world that we are in danger."
Ms Khanna, who is in the minority in the lower house of the Kashmir assembly, was recently elected after three years of campaigning.
While she was sworn in, Mr Malik's daughter Shaukat had told media that he had gone into hiding after losing his job with an engineering company a couple o