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So, is new media only reinforcing old stereotypes?


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Ah just some kids frustrated over spending their childhood with some paedophile. They will grow up once they will forget their past.:D

:lol:

Funny, they probably spent their childhood in Kashmir with Mirwaiz and his folks! :azn:

Didn't know they had to go through that dreaded experience as well in Kashmir! :lol:
 
Ah just some kids frustrated over spending their childhood with some paedophile. They will grow up once they will forget their past.:D

:lol:

News to me. Never knew Mirwaiz spent his childhood with some Pakistani militants. No wonder. Militants always attack from back door. God bless NWFP of Pakistan.
 
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:agree: Land of \gandhi where Gandhi was killed by saffron terrorists.

What about the land of Quaid - e - Azam where none of his dreams came true and just the opposite of what he fought for has prevailed and does still now. :agree:
 
They may belong to an RSS ideology club. Anyway shows more about what all pro-India parties in the Kashmir conflict are all about. Can't silence protests, then resort to violence.

These protesters are not from RSS etc. they are Kashmiri pundits who have suffered due to terrorist and radicals.

Kashmiri pundits have been murdered, raped, property looted, houses burned and become refugee in their own country.

They have every right on the earth to protest.


People should not be Hippocrate when some radicals pelt stones, harm commoners or burn public property many in pakistan are sympathetic to them. :hitwall:

But they keep their eyes closed on the biggest sufferer the innocent Kashmiri Pundits who belongs to Kashmir.
:angry::angry:
 
It would've been if India would've controlled its mobs... But with this attack Indian democracy has earned a big fat Zero.

So a mob attack on the Chauri Chaura Police Station in February 1922 made Gandhi a violent man?

What a logic is that?
 
I think you are right ..... Some youth in kashmir (only 2 %) is attacked by this paedophile .............. They will surely grow up once they will forget their past.:D

:lol:

After reading your past posts and attitude I am not much skeptical about you too. Looks like such victims are present on defence.pk with user names as defence organizations of their countries.;)
 
Funny, they probably spent their childhood in Kashmir with Mirwaiz and his folks! :azn:

Didn't know they had to go through that dreaded experience as well in Kashmir! :lol:

But weren't they kicked out of IOK. Highly probabe that they might have spent their childhood in some refugee camp backed by Indian military.;)

News to me. Never knew Mirwaiz spent his childhood with some Pakistani militants. No wonder. Militants always attack from back door. God bless NWFP of Pakistan.

Well a victim can tell us more about such issues and we would surely want to know more about your childhood from you.:lol:
 
These protesters are not from RSS etc. they are Kashmiri pundits who have suffered due to terrorist and radicals.

Kashmiri pundits have been murdered, raped, property looted, houses burned and become refugee in their own country.

They have every right on the earth to protest.


People should not be Hippocrate when some radicals pelt stones, harm commoners or burn public property many in pakistan are sympathetic to them. :hitwall:

But they keep their eyes closed on the biggest sufferer the innocent Kashmiri Pundits who belongs to Kashmir.
:angry::angry:



from now gujrati muslims should also attack indian leaders after all gujrati muslims have been murdered, raped, property looted, houses burned and become refugee in their own country.
 
Mirwaiz Umar Farooq is one of the most sensible separatists. He calls for dialouge but alas now with the humiliation with which their leader has been treated Kashmiris will come out in even greater force next time. Of course you indians will argue back what was he doing in changidarh, he has no buisness there etc etc. but ironically this is the same leader who has unlike geelani and others called for pundits to come back., these same people are beating him up. Nice way of achieving your goal.
 
Mirwaiz Umar Farooq is one of the most sensible separatists. He calls for dialouge but alas now with the humiliation with which their leader has been treated Kashmiris will come out in even greater force next time. Of course you indians will argue back what was he doing in changidarh, he has no buisness there etc etc. but ironically this is the same leader who has unlike geelani and others called for pundits to come back., these same people are beating him up. Nice way of achieving your goal.

No beating happened.. He was heckled.. There was an interesting line I read once..

" The price of my freedom of expression is my duty to defend yours"

Now if a separatist leader can get rights to stand in Chandigarh and advocate secession, some patriotic Kashmiris also deserve the same right to protest against that.

And we all know us Punjabis are a little too expressive and emotional ;)
 
Timeasia.com

Asian Heroes

farooq.jpg


He Goes in the Name of Peace
Young, modern and pragmatic, Islamic leader OMAR FAROOQ is Kashmir's last and greatest hope
By ALEX PERRY

To his enemies, he's a traitorous separatist. To his Kashmiri allies, he's an upstart. To his people, he is simply the bearer of hope. But almost everyone makes the same grim prediction about 29-year-old Omar Farooq: one day, his straight talking is going to get him killed. Consider the constituencies that Farooq, Kashmir's top Muslim leader, has a habit of offending. Indian security forces: "Killers and looters with a license." Pakistani militant groups: "Virtual thieves, using the Kashmir conflict to solicit funds, of which almost nothing is passed to the people." Fundamentalist Muslims: "I don't see a balance between Islam and modernization anywhere." Farooq can utter such truths because he is beholden to no one except his God and his people. "You've got to worry about him," says a Western diplomat in New Delhi. "Every time we meet, I'm just a little relieved he's still there."

Farooq never wanted to be there in the first place. As a 17-year-old with a passion for computers, his father Mohammed's work as the mirwaiz—high priest of Kashmir and a figurehead for the nascent Muslim rebellion against India—held no interest. He remembers how on a clear morning in May 1990, he went to see his father in his office in the mirwaiz's palace in Srinagar, only to turn away when he heard the familiar sound of heated religious discussion behind the door. Then, shots rang out. Five ... six ... seven, loud as cannons, spaced and deliberate. Farooq, his mother, sisters and the servants ran to the outhouse. "He was lying down," says Farooq. "There was blood, there were wounds ... The doctors did their best, but ... " The funeral drew 400,000 people. "They were coming to me and saying, 'Are you ready to take over?'" Grief-stricken and suddenly facing an inheritance he barely understood and which appealed even less, Farooq followed his father's body to the mosque. The enraged crowd clashed repeatedly with Indian security forces. Farooq says the Indians shot dead 65 mourners. "But even as they were hit and fell, new ones appeared. Nobody let my father's body drop." Farooq had never seen such devotion. A few days later, ignoring his distraught mother's pleas, he hesitantly accepted his birthright as the 15th mirwaiz.

That was 12 years ago, when Kashmir's Muslim insurgency was just five months old. Today, Farooq is a plain-speaking preacher trying to win a war without firing a gun. From the start, he has used the moral authority of his ancient office to display a thoroughly modern pragmatism in the search for a solution. In 1993, Farooq united 23 separatist and militant groups in the Hurriyat Conference, which he has led into negotiations with India, Pakistan and diplomats all over the world. "Some people say we must join with Pakistan, others that we must have independence," he says. "I'm not going to set any target that another side can dismiss outright. I will go for any solution that restores the dignity of the people of Kashmir." Youth, instead of inexperience and immaturity, has given him energy. Crucially it also gave him a flexibility that contrasts well with the tired intransigence and blood-feud intrigues endemic to Kashmir. Diplomats and militants alike have found themselves able to accept his no-nonsense attitude, backed by his unquestioned credentials as the true voice of Kashmir.

Frank as ever, Farooq admits he wasn't always happy with his ordained position as a man of peace. As he grew into adulthood, Farooq watched the rebellion turn into one of the world's bloodiest. "I'd visit houses where a child had been killed by the Indians or where the father had died in custody and I'd think, 'Why not pick up the gun? Why not fight? I could form the biggest army in Kashmir.'" That Omar Farooq did not—when he could have—is why there is still hope for Kashmir.

http://www.time.com/time/asia/features/heroes/farooq.html
 
Mirwaiz Umar Farooq is one of the most sensible separatists. He calls for dialouge but alas now with the humiliation with which their leader has been treated Kashmiris will come out in even greater force next time. Of course you indians will argue back what was he doing in changidarh, he has no buisness there etc etc. but ironically this is the same leader who has unlike geelani and others called for pundits to come back., these same people are beating him up. Nice way of achieving your goal.

You are forgetting the fact, the people who beat him were infact Kashmiri..so if he changes his stance based on todays event and vents out on Kashmiri Pandit , it will vindicate India's stand.
 

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