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Kashmir | News & Discussions.

So, is new media only reinforcing old stereotypes?


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She is looking only what is happening openly. There are games played internally, like people organizing protest and planning to create stir, hence she is incompetent to comment.
 
The only solution to kashmir is for you to hand over the territories you have been illegaly holding since 1948. Once we join it with our territories, the average kashmiri will feel that his land is in one piece. This problem will not end until pakistan stops it's illegal occupation of Indian territories. Look at ll the problems you guys have created for the kashmiris.

u must be kidding??? :cheesy: PA is in barracks in Kashmir while ur army is having a flag march on the streets of illegally held Kashmiri territories..... look at the problems u guys created by not abiding by the UN resolutions on Kashmir
 
The only solution to kashmir is for you to hand over the territories you have been illegaly holding since 1948. Once we join it with our territories, the average kashmiri will feel that his land is in one piece. This problem will not end until pakistan stops it's illegal occupation of Indian territories. Look at ll the problems you guys have created for the kashmiris.

:rofl::rofl: maaaaan i think this is the joke of the century!!!! who taught you this RSS,BAJRANGDAL or BJP??? seriously hilarious!!
 
so what??????/ its mean you have no answer don't post go kitchen drink some cold drink and come back all these threads you just write so what so what so what its your level of post shameless you are.:angry:

Do you agree with Altabh Bhai's views on Partition?

Do you agree with your President that Indians and Pakistani's are a lot alike (or something like that he said)?

GB
 
Just want echo to h240c comments
These are very tragic moments for Kashmiris, hope they somehow be successful in there pursuit for a just cause..!Pakistanis will always provide moral support to Kashmiris.
 
Kashmiri deaths

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Regrettably the world at large, including lame duck OIC, has taken no notice of the unrest in the valley and of gross violations of human rights there. –Photo by Reuters

Dawn Editorial
Thursday, 08 Jul, 2010
The rising number of civilian deaths in Indian-administered Kashmir highlights the failure of India’s policy that has relied on a coercive apparatus instead of political tools to crush the current wave of protests in Srinagar and elsewhere.

So far 15 people have been killed since trouble began in mid-June with the shooting to death of a schoolboy by Indian troops. It is significant that it is the urban areas which are the bastion of the Kashmiri unrest, the protesters being unarmed people. This says a lot about the character of the movement against Indian occupation and belies New Delhi’s claim that foreign elements are behind the stir. As top Kashmiri leader Mirwaiz Umar Farooq said the other day the struggle was indigenous and that “these killings will not deter us from pursuing our goal of independence”. If only the Indian leadership could grasp this truth.

Regrettably — and it is a measure of the failure of Islamabad’s diplomacy — the world at large, including lame duck OIC, has taken no notice of the unrest in the valley and of gross violations of human rights there. Fortunately, some human rights’ bodies, including those in India, keep tabs on the situation and do not fail to draw the world’s attention to the special ‘search and arrest’ powers which enable the Indian security agencies to suppress the Kashmiri people. Last week, Amnesty International asked the Indian government to hold an inquiry into the civilian deaths and take action both against security personnel and against protesters found involved in rights’ violations. New Delhi is now reported to be considering modifying if not withdrawing the special powers which the security personnel regularly abuse to deal with Kashmiris.

Force has failed to crush the Kashmiri people’s yearning for freedom. That New Delhi should abandon political means is stupefying. Even the Indian army chief had the good sense to declare that the situation in Kashmir needed a political solution. In a newspaper interview last month, Gen V.K. Singh, while claiming that the army had done its job, said, “Now the need is to handle the situation politically.” This is coming from the head of an army which has deployed a minimum of half a million troops in the valley to hold the Kashmiri people back.

While the Indo-Pakistan relationship is bogged down in India’s Mumbai obsession, one hopes Pakistan’s foreign minister will make his Indian counterpart realise, when the two meet on July 15, that an end to the rights’ violations in the valley will help create an atmosphere conducive to forward movement on normalising Indo-Pakistan relations.


DAWN.COM | Editorial | Kashmiri deaths
 
Guys,

Arundhati Roy is nothing more than an opportunists and selling her controversial news for earning quick bucks. She may very well be on payroll of Indian govt to earn sympathies of separatists.

Here is a brief bio

Arundhati Roy was born in Shillong, Meghalaya, India, to a Keralite Syrian Christian mother, the women's rights activist Mary Roy, and a Bengali father, a tea planter by profession.

She spent her childhood in Aymanam in Kerala, and went to school at Corpus Christi, Kottayam, followed by the Lawrence School, Lovedale, in Nilgiris, Tamil Nadu. She then studied architecture at the School of Planning and Architecture, New Delhi, where she met her first husband, architect Gerard da Cunha.

Roy met her second husband, filmmaker Pradip Krishen, in 1984, and played a village girl in his award-winning movie Massey Sahib. Until made financially stable by the success of her novel The God of Small Things, she worked various jobs, including running aerobics classes at five-star hotels in New Delhi. Roy is a cousin of prominent media personality Prannoy Roy, the head of the leading Indian TV media group NDTV,. She lives in New Delhi.

Is this face familiar to you?

Prannoy_Roy_1.jpg
 
Chidambaram tells Kashmir youths to stay indoors, says curfew to continue
AFP, Jul 8, 2010
SRINAGAR: The government on Thursday appealed for parents in Kashmir to keep their teenage sons indoors after the deaths of several young men in violent protests over the last month.

At least 15 people have died in separate incidents as security forces opened fire to break up angry demonstrations held across the Muslim-majority Kashmir valley.

Each death has triggered further violence despite appeals for calm from the state's Chief Minister Omar Abdullah. Teenagers and young men have often been among those throwing stones at security forces during the rallies.

"It is important that people do not come on to the streets and start stone pelting," Home Minister P. Chidambaram told reporters in New Delhi, saying the restrictions on all public movement would remain in force for some days.

"Children, especially young boys, should remain indoors. I think there is a responsibility of parents to ensure that," Chidambaram said.

Tens of thousands of Indian soldiers, paramilitary troops and police were on patrol in Indian-controlled Kashmir, enforcing the curfew in Muslim-majority towns.

The shutdown was imposed in Srinagar on Tuesday after three protesters died in firing by the security forces.

The city has been the focus of protests since June 11, when a 17-year-old student died from a police tear gas shell.
 
Security force's intercepted telephone calls and intelligence sources also confirms that people are hired for money to do all those violence on the streets.

These only hurt poor people and govt of Kashmir.
 
Security force's intercepted telephone calls and intelligence sources also confirms that people are hired for money to do all those violence on the streets.

These only hurt poor people and govt of Kashmir.

what a load of bullshit & nonsense!! this will just piss off the Kashmiris more!! :disagree:
 
what a load of bullshit & nonsense!! this will just piss off the Kashmiris more!! :disagree:

No! they should know the force behind staging all these...


"The conversation is between two separatists, Ghulam Ahmad Dar and Shabir Ahmed Wani. The taped conversations refer to a protest rally in Budgam. There is talk of money changing hands - "You are getting money, but not doing enough." And then, alarmingly, about the need for more people to die - "There must be some more deaths" and "10-15 more people should be martyred."


Is some of the Kashmir violence planned and instigated?
 
Even after being aware of the fact that cell phone conversations in IOK are monitored ... Wani & Dar used their own personal cell phones to talk about their action plan.... i need to pat the backs of the guys who intercepted this conversation :)
 
Even after being aware of the fact that cell phone conversations in IOK are monitored ... Wani & Dar used their own personal cell phones to talk about their action plan.... i need to pat the backs of the guys who intercepted this conversation :)
You think they'd stand a chance even if did change their numbers. You think we won't have thought of that? Don't be childish.
 

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