What's new

2 consecutive days of Low intensity blasts in India

Status
Not open for further replies.
There is nothing much that we can do than - creating little awareness by using the internet as a medium - supporting the right government. Every body need not join the security forces to prevent terrorism. Everybody has a role to play for the country and I too have a role to play for my country and I am doing it.

There nothing much anyone can do dear unless the lust for getting more power and desire to becoming regional and super power is put behing by some countries. as far creating awareness well honestly most of you and us on internet are not doing so rather, creating hatred.
secondly internet is not availble to most of masses in India or Pakistan. Even if it is, most of the foras are in English while majority of the population is illiterate in this part of the world. Internet dosnt help create awareness among most of the population of India and Pakistan.

As far creating awareness among people for supporting the right government then you had use some other mass medium to do so such a radio and TV but alas with due appology in India electronic media is doiing nothing but creating more hatered after such incidents and in normal days the India media is deliberatly avoiding discussing burning problems of billions of Indians and only try to show them bollywood or IPL and all glamour as if there was no hunger, no other problem in India.

It seems the elite brahman controlled media dosnt want common Indian to get aware about his rights.
 
.
Did you even took a second before going on with this rant of yours what am i writing and to whom and against what.
Unlike you we don't blame you for the terrorist attacks that happen in Pakistan and we face it like men do and not hide behind excuses and find other to put a blame on.

This is really hilarious. :lol:

Really, joke of the just started century.

There is no nation like Pakistan that is so much into conspiracy theories and "the whole world is conspiring against us" syndrome!

You don't have to go far to see this. Just look at any Pakistani newspaper and almost any opinion published there. Look at 90% of the posts here, you own posts that you are discriminated because of being "Muslim"!

And it is not only "Hindu" India that blames you for terror, the "blamers" includes the Christian West and your Muslim neighbor Afghnaistan!

Why not stop for a minute to see if there is any truth is those allegations? All of them are conspiring against Pakistan?
 
.
Normally people die once in lifetime, but cowards die everyday.
 
.
^^ So true. They may hide in their holes for some time, but smoked out they will be.

And then meet the justice. Brutally, as they deserve.
 
.
I'm sure Pakistan must be behind it as always or perhaps ISI since it is a state within a state according to your definition.:disagree:
Wake up and stop whining. Don't blame us for your failures, get your acts straight and face it. Don't look for excuses and someone to put a blame on. You failed in protecting your citizens why cant you just accept the reality and for once leave Pakistan out. We have our own stuff to take care off and do not have time for such nonsense.

Is Islam the sole prerogative of Paksitan? When was this passed?

When the push will come to shove you will realise!
 
.
It seems the elite brahman controlled media dosnt want common Indian to get aware about his rights.

Let this idiotic dream be your watchword so that you move from crisis to crisis!!
 
.
This is really hilarious. :lol:

Really, joke of the just started century.

There is no nation like Pakistan that is so much into conspiracy theories and "the whole world is conspiring against us" syndrome!

You don't have to go far to see this. Just look at any Pakistani newspaper and almost any opinion published there. Look at 90% of the posts here, you own posts that you are discriminated because of being "Muslim"!

And it is not only "Hindu" India that blames you for terror, the "blamers" includes the Christian West and your Muslim neighbor Afghnaistan!

Why not stop for a minute to see if there is any truth is those allegations? All of them are conspiring against Pakistan?

What the **** are you talking about Vinod? What has discrimination got to do with terrorism and how exactly is it related to my post? Also as for blaming by the christian world, do quote an example where the world accuses Pakistan of state sponsoring terrorism. Afghanistan don't even mention it, is it really a country, we know on who's finger tips Karzai is dancing these days, hardly matters. And as for you guys its a all days work and a normal tradition to blame Pakistan. If you are so sure why don't you guys exactly provide the proof that is often neglected when demanded off. Just by the usual rant, you can't proof a damn thing other then how stupid you guys look.
 
.
Is Islam the sole prerogative of Paksitan? When was this passed?

When the push will come to shove you will realise!

Thanks but no thanks. better see what happening inside your house before something else comes shoving.
 
.
Can I ask you just 1 question. Where are the 15-20% of Hindu population in pakistan that were present during the partition? Currently its less than 1.6%.

What did you do to them. Thanks to our media, and democracy that you know what is going on in India.

And what about the millions of banglidesis killed in East Pakistan just before liberation war ?

jpZDyB446FI[/media] - 1971 Genocide in East Pakistan (Bangladesh) - 1

For a starter what about the million that got killed in Kashmir?

SITUATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN INDIAN OCCUPIED KASHMIR

The Crimes of the Indian occupation forces, numbering more than half a million, against the people of Kashmir have now reached genocidal proportions, presenting the worst example of state-sponsored terrorism. Because, the people of Jammu and Kashmir were pledged by no less an authority than the UN Security Council to exercise their right to decide their future under conditions free from coercion and intimidation. However, the peaceful movement of the Kashmiri people for the realization of this right and the respect for their fundamental human rights has been crushed with brute force.

Over the past six years, in particular, the suffering of the Kashmiri people has reached an indescribable intensity and magnitude. All human rights enshrined in the Charter, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the human rights covenants have been flagrantly violated by the Indian security forces. Since October 1989, some 38,000 Kashmiris have been killed by the Indian occupation forces, over 5000 women (young and old) have been raped, thousands have been maimed and thousands have been thrown in jail without any recourse to legal action. Torture, extrajudicial executions, disappearances, willful destruction of property and forced displacement are the order of the day. Kashmiris, despite a virtual media blackout, have been trying to bring these horrors to the attention of the international community.

An iron curtain hangs across Kashmir as India refuses to allow visits by Amnesty International, International Educational Development and other human rights and humanitarian organizations. However, these restrictions notwithstanding, some commendable organizations have been able to document the abuses perpetrated by India in occupied Kashmir in report after report.

Security forces have also repeatedly raided hospitals and other medical facilities, even pediatric and obstetric hospitals. During these raids, the security personnel have forced doctors at a gunpoint to identify recent trauma patients. Because of their injuries, the security forces have suspected these patients of militant activity. Injured patients have been arrested from hospitals, in some cases after being disconnected from life-sustaining treatments. The security forces have also discharged their weapons within hospital grounds and inside hospitals, and have entered operating theatres and destroyed or damaged medical supplies, transports and equipment. Doctors and other medical staff frequently have been threatened, beaten and detained. Several have been shot dead while on duty; others have been tortured. 1

Many of those seeking medical care are released detainees who have been subjected to torture. In fact, virtually everyone taken into custody by the security forces in Kashmir is tortured. Torture is practised to coerce detainees to reveal information about suspected militants or to confess to militant activity. It is also used to punish detainees who are believed to support or sympathize with the militants and to create a climate of political repression. The practice of torture is facilitated by the fact that detainees are generally held in temporary detention centres, controlled by the various security forces, without access to the courts, relatives or medical care. 2

Methods of torture include severe beatings, electric shock, suspension by the feet or hands, stretching the legs apart, burning with heated objects and sexual molestation. One common form of torture involves crushing the leg muscles with a heavy wooden roller. [a] This practice results in the release of toxins from the damaged muscles that may cause acute renal (kidney) failure. This report documents a number of such cases which required dialysis. Since 1990, doctors in Kashmir have documented 37 cases of torture-related acute renal failure; in three cases the victims died. 2

Rapes:

On 23 February 1991, a particularly serious incident occurred in the mountain village of Kunan Poshpura. More that 800 soldiers of the 4th Rajput Regiment surrounded the village. They rounded up the men outside and then broke into

houses in search of arms. Many women were attacked. The delegation was told that somewhere between 23 and 60 women were raped in the course of that night. 3

We wished to investigate the nature and importance, as well as the socio-psychological and political details of the issue, by questioning women attacked by the Indian security forces. 3

We were able to identify seven cases of rape and one case of sexual molestation, where no sexual act occurred. The victims come from several villages in the Kashmir valley. One of these cases took place very recently (in 1993), while the others occurred in 1991-2. 4

With regard to the testimonies of these women, as well as to information obtained from other women who related what they knew about the rape of neighbours or relatives, the following points should be made. 4

It cannot be said that the rape of Muslim women is a systematic or generalised practice. It is only carried out by the Indian security forces (there is no case of rape committed by either the police or by non-Muslim civilians). Rape is sometimes linked to pure acts of vengeance for colleagues killed or wounded by the militants. Sometimes it is simply gratuitous aggression combined with sadistic impulses, which may stem from a soldier's humiliating living conditions and from a general inhumane attitude towards unarmed civilians. It is often committed by soldiers under the influence of alcohol. 4

The most horrific sexual attacks occur when a family member is believed to belong to an armed militant group. 4

There are also cases of rape and/or sexual humiliations of various kinds which take place during the interrogation of suspected militants. Such acts may be committed against a family member forced to attend the interrogation in order that a maximum of information may be extracted. 4

It is not possible to confirm that rape is being used systematically by the Indian security forces as a weapon to provoke a mass exodus of the population. However, it is certain that army officers are turning a blind eye to catalogue of sexual attacks and that the security forces are acting with impunity. 4

It should be noted that young, unmarried women are sometimes taken away for days to the soldiers' camps. This practice is mentioned in the testimony of four women from different areas. Some of these young women, having become pregnant, have committed suicide, preferring to die rather than to dishonour their families. 4

In Jammu and Kashmir, para-military groups, especially the Border Security Forces (BSF), and the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), are primarily responsible for unacknowledged detentions, "disappearances" and other human rights violations; a smaller number are perpetrated by the army. The police are rarely accused of committing them and are themselves reportedly critical of excesses committed by the security forces. Although all the security forces theoretically operate under the supervision of the Director General of the Jammu and Kashmir Police (presently M.N. Sabharwal) in practice the army and paramilitary forces act independently of the local police. 5

In Jammu and Kashmir, security forces routinely detain young men whom they suspect of supporting armed secessionists or to have either harboured militants or their arms and ammunition. Relatives of such people are also detained. In practice any young Muslim man living within a village, rural area or part of town noted for activities of any of the pro-independence or pro-Pakistan groups can become a suspect and a target for the large-scale and frequently brutal search operations described in Jammu and Kashmir as "crackdowns." These involve arbitrary arrests of dozens or even hundreds of people who are often tortured. Recent press reports indicate that "a catch 22" situation has developed; Kashmiris, who may not have been in favour of secession in the past, have become so alienated by what they perceive as the Indian Government's persistent sanctioning of grave human rights violations by the security forces in the state that their sympathies for secessionist groups have increased. This, in turn, makes virtually the whole population suspect in the eyes of the security forces. Police officer Kumar told Reuters on 19 April 1993: "Anyone who utters the word independence can be arrested. That means everyone." 5

In most cases, the victims of these killings are picked up during "crackdowns" -- cordon-and-search operations in which the security forces surround neighbourhoods or villages and compel all male adults and teen-aged boys to assemble for identification. Hooded informants point out alleged militants or militant sympathizers. Those pointed out are detained; almost inevitably, a certain number are executed within hours of their arrest. These executions are not aberrations; they are not occasional excesses of overzealous security officers. These killings are calculated and deliberate, and they are carried out as a matter of policy. 6

Human rights violations have risen dramatically in Jammu and Kashmir since late 1989, the start of the campaign for secession or for the state to join Pakistan. Many thousands of Kashmiris are arbitrarily detained under special laws that lack vital legal safeguards and provide the security forces with sweeping powers to arrest and detain. They are held for months or years without charge or trial. Torture by the security forces is a daily routine and so brutal that hundreds have died in custody as a result. Scores of women claim that they have been raped. Efforts by relatives to use legal avenues to obtain redress have been persistently frustrated: court orders to protect detainees are routinely flouted and the legal machinery in the state has broken down. A judge of the Jammu and Kashmir High Court said in October 1994 that the rule of law in the state had ceased to exist. 7

Initially, the authorities made hardly any efforts to disguise deaths in custody. The disfigured bodies of the victims were simply dumped on roads or in rivers, or were returned to the police or relatives. More recently, the government has sought to cover up such killings by attributing them to "encounters" between militants and the security forces, or claiming that the victims died in cross-fire. However, the government has consistently failed to provide any evidence to support its version of events, and in many cases there is incontrovertible evidence -- including from medical reports and the police -- that the victims died in the custody of the security forces. 7

The army and paramilitary forces continue to torture and kill detainees with virtual impunity. There is evidence that officials at the highest level condoned a "catch and kill" policy: suspected armed separatists picked up though "crackdowns" are shot dead rather than arrested and taken to court. Vital legal safeguards have been suspended under special laws which give the security forces broad powers to arrest and detain and to shoot to kill in contravention of international human rights standards. Special laws making the security forces immune from prosecution encourage them to act with impunity. 7

The Indian Government has proclaimed that its policy regarding Jammu and Kashmir is one of openness and transparency. However, it has consistently refused to cooperate meaningfully with United Nations mechanisms for human rights protection. United Nations experts on torture and extrajudicial, summary and arbitrary execution have not been invited to visit India as they requested and international human rights monitoring bodies such as Amnesty International continue to be denied access to the state. 7

The behaviour of the Indian occupation regime in Kashmir is singular in so far as it has enjoyed total immunity from restraint imposed through international action or persuasions. No word of disapproval, much less condemnation has been uttered by the international community. There has not been a call on India to cease and desist from the murderous course it has chosen for itself in Kashmir. Such passivity, such unfeeling and such indifference, let no one blame the Kashmiris for concluding, account to encouragement of tyranny.

The Kashmiris' demand is very simple. They want to be free of military occupation and to decide their future by a democratic vote, impartially supervised. A mechanism for the exercise of this right has already been defined by the United Nations Security Council, which was not only supported by Canada but co-sponsored, too. This mechanism needs to be activated and implemented.

The unbearable suffering of the people of Kashmir cannot be brought to an end, nor the constant danger to regional peace removed unless concerted pressure is brought on the Indian Government to turn to the path of sanity and civilized conduct. It would be in the long-term interest of India itself to settle the unresolved dispute of Kashmir.

While India pursues a policy of terror, the Kashmiri people and their leadership have consistently maintained their hope in peace. The Kashmiri leadership had joined together in a united front: the All Parties Hurriyet Conference (APHC). The APHC, which represents the combined political will of the Kashmiri people, seeks a peaceful and negotiated settlement through a tripartite dialogue.

The solution of Kashmir is both urgent and vital. It has a far more populous and strategic area than other trouble spots in the world. The arson and mass rapes by the Indian occupation forces are no less humiliating in Kashmir than in Bosnia. The torture and imprisonment in Indian-occupied Kashmir is no less intense as it is in Burma. In fact the pain, suffering and humiliation in Kashmir is intensified because the people of Kashmir have been under Indian occupation for nearly half a century.

Canada's Role

When the Kashmir dispute erupted in 1947-1948, Canada championed the stand that the future status of Kashmir must be determined by the will of the people of the territory and their wishes must be ascertained through an impartial plebiscite under the supervision and control of the United Nations.

Canada was one of the principal sponsors of resolutions 47, 51, 80, 96, 98 and 122 on the India Pakistan question, submitted jointly among others by Belgium, China, Colombia, the United Kingdom and United States of America.

Following the resolution, Canada and other leading members of the United Nations Commission for India and Pakistan adhered to that position.

It was a distinguished Canadian, General Andrew McNaughton, who as the president of the Security Council, sponsored the proposal for the basic formula for a settlement, which was incorporated in the resolution of that commission adopted on August 13, 1948 and July 5, 1949.

Conclusion

Canada is uniquely qualified to play a role in unknotting the Kashmir issue and persuading India just as it did to South Africa to end apartheid. The Canadian government should encourage the government of India to start tripartite negotiations involving the governments of India, Pakistan and the accredited representative of the Kashmiri people.

The role would entail no deployment of Canadian troops, no financial cost, and no adversary relations between Canada and India. Yet, this would help in halting the violations of human rights and set a stage for a peaceful and lasting solution.

Kashmiri-Canadians are however, seriously concerned that in the absence of "high media images" of abuses in Kashmir, public and government opinion in North America is not adequately sensitized about the gravity of the crisis which is created by the fact that 600,000 Indian troops over a population of less than thirteen million. The absence of media images is due in part by the iron-curtain imposed by the Indian government. It is also true that the situation in the "far-flung Kashmir has no direct bearing on the stability" of Europe or North America! It is in this context that Kashmiri-Canadians look towards the International Centre for Human Rights and Democratic Development and other conscientious groups, to meet the information gap and mobilize public opinion in order to save the people of Kashmir from further abuses that are now reaching genocidal proportions.

Kashmiri-Canadians seek ICHRDD's understanding and hope the International Centre for Human Rights and Democratic Development will address the worsening situation in Kashmir. The KCC, earnestly hope that the ICHRDD will extend full support for the struggle of the Kashmiri people in attaining their fundamental right of self-determination.

Footnotes

1 Human Rights Asia Watch 1993 "The Crackdown in Kashmir: Torture of Detainees and Assaults on the Medical Community."

a These techniques, in particular the stretching of the legs and the roller treatment, are used by the police and security forces throughout India, and have been widely documented in Punjab.

2 Physicians for Human Rights and Asia Watch 1993 "The Crackdown in Kashmir, Torture of Detainees and Assaults on the Medical Community."

3 Federation International Des Ligues 1993 "Violations of human rights committed by the Indian Security Forces in Jammu and Kashmir."

4 Federation International Des Ligues 1993 "Violations of human rights committed by the Indian Security Forces in Jammu and Kashmir."

5 Amnesty International 1993 "An Unnatural Fate 'Disappearances' and impunity in the Indian State of Jammu and Kashmir and Punjab."

6 Human Rights Watch Asia 1994 "Continuing Repression in Kashmir: Abuses Rise as International Pressure on India Eases."

7 Amnesty International 1995 "Torture and deaths in custody in Jammu and Kashmir.

Better look at your own track record before asking us about ours.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
. .
One wonders isnt the off topic going by Indians on this forum in this thread is the proof of their weak allegations and claims for blaming Pakistan or Muslims for these blasts.

Why you guys are shying away from discussing the real topic here ;)
but if you are happy to do so then well we are also ready to discuss whatever you want to
 
.
Here's another one the glorifying character of India's secularism that is often portrayed to the world.
Human Rights Developments

The Hindu nationalist policies espoused by India's governing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its affiliate organizations undermined the country's historical commitment to secular democracy. Violence against Christian, Muslim, and Dalit, or "untouchable," populations was one result. Areas of separatist violence such as Kashmir and northeast India were marked by grave human rights abuses on the part of Indian security forces and armed rebel groups. Violence against women continued, from infanticide to dowry-related deaths to attacks on women whose male relatives were sought by the police. A major campaign on Dalit rights gathered strength, but some human rights defenders were targets of a state-sponsored backlash against their activism.
Human Rights Developments

Abuses by all parties to the conflict were a critical factor behind the fighting in Kashmir. Emboldened by the successful hijacking of an Indian Airlines plane in December 1999 that secured the release of three jailed associates, pro-independence guerrillas or "militants" in the region stepped up their attacks on civilians, as well as on camps and barracks of government forces. The Indian army, operating under the Jammu and Kashmir Disturbed Areas Act and the Armed Forces (Jammu and Kashmir) Special Powers Act, continued to conduct cordon-and-search operations in Muslim neighborhoods and villages, detaining young men, assaulting other family members, and summarily executing suspected militants. Many Kashmiri civilians were killed or injured as a result of being caught in a crossfire between soldiers and militants, or in skirmishes and shelling between Indian and Pakistani troops across their countries' common border, known as the Line of Control.

In January, the Indian army, after its own investigation, announced that fifty-six of its personnel in Kashmir would be punished for committing human rights violations. The punishments ranged from discharge to denial of promotion. National and state human rights commissions, however, were barred from investigating army and paramilitary personnel.

On March 20, just before U.S. President Clinton's visit to South Asia, thirty-six Sikh men were shot dead in Chithisinghpora, Anantnag district, by unidentified gunmen reportedly dressed in army uniforms. In the weeks that followed, Sikh residents took to the streets demanding protection, while hundreds of Muslim villagers staged protests against Indian security forces. They alleged that in the aftermath of the Sikh massacre, blamed by the army on militants, many Muslim civilians had been "disappeared" or killed.

In early April, at least seven people were killed when police opened fire on Muslim protestors demanding the exhumation of the bodies of five men killed by members of the Indian army's Special Operations Group in Anantnag district. The protestors claimed that the men hadbeen detained in the aftermath of the Chithisinghpora massacre and killed in a "staged" encounter. On April 6, the charred and disfigured bodies were exhumed. DNA tests were performed to confirm their identities, but as of this writing, the government had not released the results.

On June 26, the Jammu-Kashmir state assembly approved a controversial autonomy plan that was subsequently rejected by the Indian federal cabinet. On July 24, the Hizb-ul-Mujahideen, Kashmir's largest armed guerilla group, declared a unilateral ceasefire and announced its willingness to enter into negotiations with Indian authorities. On July 29, India suspended its offensive against the group, but hopes of a peaceful resolution to the conflict were dashed by a series of massacres on August 1 and 2 that left ninety Hindu pilgrims dead in Pahalgam, in the Kashmir valley. The massacres were believed to have been carried out by militant factions opposed to the ceasefire, but reports suggested that some of the victims were killed by fire from Indian security forces. On August 8, Hizb-ul-Mujahideen called off the ceasefire, citing the Indian government's refusal to include Pakistan in three-way peace talks. Indian Home Minister L.K. Advani on August 22 rejected calls for an immediate judicial inquiry into the Pahalgam massacre.

Militants were believed responsible for several attacks against Hindus, who form a minority in the state. On August 19, a group of men carrying assault rifles entered two houses in the village of Ind, Udhampur district, and opened fire on the occupants, killing four. Two nights earlier, another group of gunmen had raided several Hindu homes in the village of Kot Dara, killing six. Some of those killed in the Kot Dara attack were reported to have been members of the local Village Defense Committee (VDC), established by the state government in the hill districts ostensibly to protect all of the region's inhabitants. The VDCs recruited their members almost exclusively from local Hindu communities, however, and were seen by militants as adjuncts of the Indian security forces.

Caste violence continued to divide the impoverished state of Bihar. There, the Ranvir Sena, a banned private militia of upper-caste landlords that had been operating with impunity since 1994, waged war on various Maoist guerrilla factions, such as the People's War Group (PWG). These guerrilla groups advocated higher wages and more equitable land distribution for lower-caste laborers. The cycle of retaliatory attacks claimed many civilian lives.

On April 25, upper-caste Rajputs shot and killed four Dalits and seriously injured three in Rohtas district, Bihar. Rajputs subsequently burned down the entire Dalit hamlet, leaving all twenty-five families homeless. The attack was reportedly in retaliation for the killing of two Rajputs a few days earlier by members of the outlawed PWG. On June 16, in Miapur village in Bihar's Aurangabad district, the Ranvir Sena slaughtered thirty-four lower-caste men, women, and children. Survivors reported that police left the scene when the attacking mob entered the village. The massacre was reportedly to avenge the killings by Maoist guerrillas of twelve upper-caste Bhumihars the week before, and thirty-four Bhumihars in March 1999. Some Ranvir Sena members were arrested in the weeks that followed, but there was no precedent for successful prosecutions in such cases.

Police blamed the July 13 killings of four upper-caste Hindus in Garwah district on the PWG. On September 13 the Maoist Communist Centre, another armed group, slit nine people's throats in Ranchi district. The victims included Muslims and tribespeople.

Bihar was not the only state affected by caste violence. On March 12, seven members of a Dalit family were burned alive in their homes by an upper-caste mob in Kolar district, Karnataka state. The attack was preceded by the stabbing of an upper-caste man in a nearby village. Although police were aware of escalating tensions in the area, they failed to take preventive action.

Attacks against Christians, which have increased significantly since the BJP came to power in March 1998, continued. By mid-year over thirty-five anti-Christian attacks had been reported throughout the country, with the states of Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh-both BJP-led-particularly hard hit.

Activists belonging to militant Hindu extremist groups such as the Bajrang Dal and the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (World Hindu Council, VHP) were often blamed for the violence. Both groups are members of the sangh parivar, an umbrella Hindu organization that boasts the ruling BJP as its political wing. These Hindu groups blamed the violence on popular anger over Christian efforts to convert Hindus. While government officials at the state and central level condemned the attacks, they did little to prosecute those responsible.

On January 31 a year-long manhunt came to an end with the arrest in Orissa of Bajrang Dal activist Dara Singh. Singh was wanted in connection with several murders, including those of Australian missionary Graham Stuart Staines and his two sons in 1999. Christian relief at the arrest was tempered, however, by a state government order, believed to be aimed at limiting the activities of Christian missionaries, requiring a police inquiry before anyone adopted a new faith.

The state governments of Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh lifted a ban against civil servants joining the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (National Volunteer Corps, RSS), a sangh parivar member. In Gujarat, Delhi, and Orissa, district administrations conducted surveys to assess the activities and whereabouts of minority community members and leaders. Meanwhile, the BJP and its allies continued to implement their agenda for the "Hinduization" of education, mandating Hindu prayers in certain state-sponsored schools and revising history books to include what amounted to propaganda against Islamic and Christian communities.

On April 11, three Christian missionary schools were ransacked and six people beaten in related attacks by the Bajrang Dal in Mathura, in BJP-led Uttar Pradesh. The group sought to justify its actions by calling the schools "machines for conversion." On April 21, a group of Christians was attacked near the city of Agra. These attacks followed the beating to death of two tribal Christians in Hazaribagh, and an attack on two nuns and a priest in Mathura.

On June 7, a Catholic priest was battered to death while sleeping outside his school in Uttar Pradesh. Government officials were quick to rule out any religious motive, attributing it to burglary. Within days the sole witness to the attack, Vijay Ekka, died in police custody. Ekka had told parishioners who visited him in detention that he was being tortured by the police and that he feared for his life. Two policemen were arrested and a magisterial probe was ordered after a Christian organization filed a complaint.

In May, the National Commission for Minorities (NCM), a government agency, issued a report stating that attacks against Christians were either accidental or the unrelated actions of petty criminals. Outraged Christian activists said the report showed that the government condoned attacks on Christians. Earlier reports by the NCM, issued before it was overhauled by the central government in January, had recommended prosecutions for such attacks and accused the government of willful neglect at all levels.

In June, a series of blasts damaged Christian churches in Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, and Goa. A month later, crude bombs were set off in two more churches in Karnataka. In August, police charged members of a Muslim sect, allegedly based in Pakistan, with masterminding the attacks. Human rights activists maintained that the arrests were meant to deflect attention from Hindu hardliners' campaign of anti-Christian violence.

On July 14, the Maharashtra state government announced its intention to prosecute Bal Thackeray, leader of the right-wing Hindu organization Shiv Sena, for his role in inciting Bombay's 1992-1993 riots in which over 700 people, the vast majority of them Muslims, were killed. The decision to prosecute came two years after a government-appointed judicial commission had named Thackeray as one of those responsible for the violence. On July 25, amid rioting by Shiv Sena supporters, Thackeray was arrested only to be released a few hours later after a judge ordered the case closed on the grounds that the statute of limitations relating to the incitement charges had expired.

Violence in the northeastern states, particularly Assam, continued throughout the year, claiming many civilian casualties. Members of the United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA), a militant group seeking Assam's independence from India, repeatedly clashed with the police and with surrendered ULFA members working with the government, known as "SULFA." The Bodo Liberation Tigers (BLT) fighting for a separate homeland for the Bodo tribal people extended their ceasefire by one year beginning September 15.

In April, the Law Commission of India recommended the introduction of the Prevention of Terrorism Bill into parliament. If enacted, the bill would reinstate a modified version of the notorious Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act (TADA), repealed in 1995. TADA had facilitated tens of thousands of unjustified arrests, torture, and other violations against political opponents, social activists, and human rights defenders. Human rights organizations protested against the bill arguing that, if enacted, it would have similar effects.

In a positive move, the law commission also called for sweeping changes to the country's rape laws following an increase in the incidence of sexual violence. Women's rights activists welcomed this recommendation. Female infanticide persisted as the female to male ratio continued to drop-a reflection of the lower status of women and girls, who were more likely to be deprived of food, education, or health services, or to be seen as an economic liability under the dowry system.

Women whose relatives were sought by the police continued to be detained. In February, in Tamil Nadu, twelve women were illegally detained and tortured and repeatedly sexually assaulted in custody because of their ties to a suspected robber who had himself died in police custody. The National Human Rights Commission, a government-appointed body, also took particular note of alarming numbers of deaths in police custody.

Police brutality against Muslim students of the Jamia Millia Islamia, an institution of higher education in Delhi, made national headlines. On April 9, while searching for two criminal suspects, hundreds of police broke into one of the institution's dormitories and physically assaulted Muslim students, destroyed their property, and vandalized the campus mosque.

Two days earlier, members of the State Reserve Police beat and arrested up to forty-six demonstrators following a protest against the proposed Maroli-Umbergaon Port Project in Gujarat. While all were released on bail within forty-eight hours, six of the protesters were beaten in custody by police. One, Col. (retired) Pratap Save, suffered a brain hemorrhage, went into a coma, and died from his injuries on April 20.

In June, the Indian navy alerted Sri Lankan authorities to the presence of forty-seven Sri Lankan refugees who had become stranded on an island between the two countries while fleeing to India. A Sri Lankan naval vessel then picked them up and took them back to Sri Lanka. In August, Indian authorities in Mizoram state forcibly repatriated over one hundred ethnic minority Chin refugees who had fled from Burma.
 
.
:) thank you for the idiotic advise ;)

I would not comment as to who is idiotic since being an Indian, the Webmaster will forget that you are the one who has initiated the same.

Allah bless you all!

Afer all, you know best, like losing NWFp!
 
.
What the **** are you talking about Vinod? What has discrimination got to do with terrorism and how exactly is it related to my post? Also as for blaming by the christian world, do quote an example where the world accuses Pakistan of state sponsoring terrorism. Afghanistan don't even mention it, is it really a country, we know on who's finger tips Karzai is dancing these days, hardly matters. And as for you guys its a all days work and a normal tradition to blame Pakistan. If you are so sure why don't you guys exactly provide the proof that is often neglected when demanded off. Just by the usual rant, you can't proof a damn thing other then how stupid you guys look.

If you are pointing towards the USA, I am saying the same.

Karzai (the legitimate head of the elected government of Afghanistan, recognized by the world including Pakistan) is making the allegations that ISI is indulging in terror inside Afghanistan and supporting terrorist Taliban to destabilize the country. He can't be saying so without USA support.

2+2 = 4.

Proof! What proof do you want? Seriously! Can any proof satisfy you?

Dawood's residential address is published in your own newspapers. Jawed Miandad marries his son to that terrorist's daughter but you continue your pathetic denials as if you are fooling someone even now.

It is not about "proof", it is about the moral strength to see the reality.
 
.
Ice cold,

What has your post got to do with the subject?

Are you OK?

All you faculties functioning?

Before our goo0d Webmaster finds some loophole to ban me, as he normally does since he is beyond reason and comprehension of the English language or whether the word 'Moslem' is used by genuine Islamic sites ,let us say I am concerned about your health!
 
.
Status
Not open for further replies.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom