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Anti-India Protests Erupt in Kashmir Amid Deadly Fighting

Kashmir issue will bring the ultimate doom and end of bharat mata india.
 
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I cannot do much about it, if you are not aware of the implication of the impinging of Indian law on Kashmiri state law. It is only apparent from your remark that you are aware of some deeper mystery and wish to keep it from others. There is nothing like that, and your remarks only show that you have been brainwashed into some half-baked notions by Sanghi propaganda.



In other words, as usual, you don't know what to say, and choose the most mysterious way to confess this. Good; do continue. You are most informative.


Ok genius..

A straight forward yes or No question.

Do rest of Indians enjoy the same benefits and privileges in Kashmir that Kashmiris enjoy in rest of India?

Let's see your serpentine brain try to respond to a simple yes or No question.

Wait, you answer will be "I don't need to answer your Bhakth question"....am I on the page deary?

We are not talking about information but rather the faculties needed to process it..

Btw, good to be part of the establishment here isn't it? ;)
Can give negative ratings to posts exposing you.
 
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Sometimes i have feeling that why this insurgency has no results since 1947... i know they have less resources ... but also they lack in planning and intellegeance. Also it seems they are not united as before..Perfect use of limited sources and unity may hit indian scums hard.
Yes u are right i can write in detail abt it as i am half kashmiri ,there have been numerous factors behind it where one is lack of aggressive fighting drive otherwise hum punjabi and pathan hotay Kashmiris ki jagah tau in two feet kay hindus kee shakal aisi bigaar kay rakh detay kay in ki himmat na hoti to occupy the territory.
 
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Ok genius..

A straight forward yes or No question.

Do rest of Indians enjoy the same benefits and privileges in Kashmir that Kashmiris enjoy in rest of India?

Yes. Except ownership and transfer of land to an heir or heiress not qualified to inherit.

Let's see your serpentine brain try to respond to a simple yes or No question.

Wait, you answer will be "I don't need to answer your Bhakth question"....am I on the page deary?

We are not talking about information but rather the faculties needed to process it..

You wouldn't know about that in a century of Sundays.

Btw, good to be part of the establishment here isn't it? ;)
Can give negative ratings to posts exposing you.

Yes.

Yes u are right i can write in detail abt it as i am half kashmiri ,there have been numerous factors behind it where one is lack of aggressive fighting drive otherwise hum punjabi and pathan hotay Kashmiris ki jagah tau in two feet kay hindus kee shakal aisi bigaar kay rakh detay kay in ki himmat na hoti to occupy the territory.

Kahin aur to koshish to kiye the, kahin to nahin pahunchay? Ab idhar kyon ucchal rahe hain?
 
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Kashmir issue will bring the ultimate doom and end of bharat mata india.
InshaAllah

Their land?

well, not going to debate mate. One fact though, we will kill anyone who want "freedom" to the last person. We will make sure there won't be anyone left to cry freedom.
You can only kill innocent people and that your mentality that resulted in separation and India will be broken into smaller states...that's the only solution for peace in the region.
 
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There isn't much hope left for India in IoK. When Sanghis say Kashmiris don't want to be part of Pakistan, well guess what? No one cares. We only support them on humanitarian grounds.

They don't want to be Pakistanis either. Even more simple.

That's not for you to decide. Its not like Pakistan want Kashmir, we are even ready to give away Pakistan controlled Kashmir. It should exist as independent muslim majority country with full freedom which isn't possible with hindu India.
 
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There isn't much hope left for India in IoK. When Sanghis say Kashmiris don't want to be part of Pakistan, well guess what? No one cares. We only support them on humanitarian grounds.



That's not for you to decide. Its not like Pakistan want Kashmir, we are even ready to give away Pakistan controlled Kashmir. It should exist as independent muslim majority country with full freedom which isn't possible with hindu India.

The grounds on which you support them are not material. The means by which you support them are. No one cares what grounds you support them on.

And it is for us to decide what will happen to a component of the Indian Union. What you want to do with Pakistan occupied Kashmir is of no concern to us; we are not in the business of building Muslim majority countries.

You tried a military solution, pushing in soldiers to stiffen the ranks of armed marauders. You tried another military solution 18 years after that, pushing in multiple groups of special forces men. You tried 24 years after that, pushing in multiple groups of trained and armed terrorists. Finally, 10 years after that, you tried a clandestine occupation of our border posts, in the hope that an international furore would be good publicity and would help you achieve your aims.

None of these worked.

So stop being such a hypocrite, stop talking piously about your motives for your support, everyone can see everything, it's time to take a hike.
 
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Does this place anything look like Kashmir?
We can also make such a video about Kashmir...

@beijingwalker
Before poking your nose in other countries internal matter look at yourself...

https://www.thequint.com/photos/life-in-tibet-since-1959

In Pictures: Life in Tibet, Overshadowed by China Since 1959
Tibet, an innately peaceful country, has seen more than its fair share of violence. When the 14th Dalai Lama fled Chinese oppression and arrived in India, Tibet was crumbling. A direct assault on their culture and traditions and a threat to their life and property, left Tibetans overwhelmingly insecure. Since then, many have immigrated to other countries, but a number of them remain in Tibet.

While China refuses to recognise Tibet as an independent entity, Tibet continues protesting against Chinese control.

Let us experience the ordeal, through glimpses.

thequint%2F2018-03%2F7b253a2d-7565-4e1b-bbf2-02527d7dcd5e%2F2678bbc8-9275-47f5-81e2-3a8e9f748392.jpg

Tibetan monk Jampa Tenzin and protesters in Lhasa, Tibet in 1987
(Photo Courtesy: John Ackerly/Free Tibet)
thequint%2F2018-03%2Fa781eeb3-200c-49e7-80d1-8eaf152f4a3a%2Ff7455cae-6c29-4cd7-bb9e-790b510aa859.jpg

A still from the Tibetan uprising of 1987.
(Photo Courtesy: John Ackerly/Tibetan Buddhism in the West)
With violent and non-violent protests and domestic resistance, Tibet has struggled to retain its identity and cultural independence. Rebellion is practised everyday, even through seemingly small acts such as keeping pictures of the Dalai Lama carefully concealed in homes and workplaces.

thequint%2F2018-03%2F67c7878f-48d2-469c-a5a5-ed5bad695461%2Fbf75852e-1f5b-4513-a6f7-4498bd625bd8.jpg

A Tibetan vendor moves a photograph of the Panchen Lama to reveal a picture of a young Dalai Lama in front of the Jokhang Temple in Lhasa on 26 May 1998.
(Photo: Reuters)
thequint%2F2018-03%2F4b57201b-9e47-4fea-81bb-8faa4d6567e3%2Fbf23e545-f827-40ad-b608-f5077a4d845e.jpg

This photograph, taken on 23 June 1999, shows an empty throne of Dalai Lama reserved in the Patola Palace, Lhasa.
(Photo: Reuters)
When the Chinese administration opened the first train going to Lhasa in 2006, it faced a lot of criticism. According to media reports, exiled Tibetans and right groups said that it facilitated an influx of long-term migrants who could threaten Tibetans' cultural integrity.

thequint%2F2018-03%2Fe58b67dd-70c4-40bc-8f90-a794334ffd7a%2Fd25612e7-be60-4fe1-904b-ba9388c7b90d.jpg

Passengers sit on board the first train at Lhasa railway station as it heads for Lanzhou in Gansu province 1 July 2006.
(Photo Courtesy: Reuters)
An extension of this railway was opened in 2014.

2008 saw a series of violent protests in Tibet. These started in Lhasa, but subsquently spread to other Tibetan regions. According to estimates, 18 civilians were killed and 382 injured.

thequint%2F2018-03%2F6668614e-ec3f-4461-88d9-725672a4fc46%2F5fd6a3e4-89b9-4007-8e2f-160dccecc36b.jpg

March 2008 protests saw a series of burnings.
(Photo Courtesy: Uprising Archive)
thequint%2F2018-03%2F4478be74-880a-4534-959f-f0d2a7c4a0c6%2F42cf36d1-1d2a-4eb5-b52b-e2212c358352.jpg

Tibetans burning a Chinese flag in March, 2008.
(Photo Courtesy: Reuters)
thequint%2F2018-03%2Fc3d6b52b-5d47-4186-b0c1-fef6f26de9da%2Fc505b60b-3bdc-4e7b-a9e0-d1d35302b547.jpg

Lhasa burning on 14 March 2008.
(Photo Courtesy: Bianca Reijnders/Uprising Archive)
This unrest began as an annual observance of Tibetan Uprising Day but subsequently transitioned into riots and killings. While the Chinese administration blamed the Dalai Lama for the events, the Dalai Lama said that the unrest was caused because Tibetans were extremely discontent.

thequint%2F2018-03%2Fc343b38c-206d-404b-86ab-c702dd867f5a%2F7c250718-ce9e-440c-8e8d-fd88a2fc2e36.jpg

Parts of Tibet saw heavy destruction in March, 2008.
(Photo Courtesy: Kadfly/Uprising Archive)
thequint%2F2018-03%2Ff789f7f7-d40a-478d-8ae3-d3b2735224ab%2Ffd3d95a6-64f2-4082-91b4-a7c043a86fb3.jpg

A convoy of armoured personnel carriers (APC) travel through the streets of Lhasa, Tibet March 15, 2008.
(Photo: Reuters)
On 4 May and 1 July 2008 the Government of the People's Republic of China and the Dalai Lama held talks on the riots.

thequint%2F2018-03%2F4f918666-d301-4854-bff9-1d1ddbfed4db%2F1aa3ce0f-7568-4e1f-9f5f-faaec530cdd3.jpg

A 1950s Chinese fighter jet displayed at a square in front of Potala Palace in Lhasa - a seemingly symbolic representation of the presence of Chinese military.
(Photo Courtesy: Claro Cortes IV/Reuters)
Tibet has seen various degrees of violence. Over 152 Tibetans have self-immolated in protest inside Tibet since 2009.

thequint%2F2018-03%2Fbfd63b95-6367-45a9-bf2c-86a8a02a7fdb%2Fde5dfba8-b845-4f34-a9d4-725286e23d45.png

A Tibetan self immolates.
(Photo Courtesy: Central Tibetan Administration)
Tibetans today continue to live under Chinese occupation. Their resistance to Chinese influence on their culture and traditions remains, because faith is primary for Tibetans and they hold their history and values close to their hearts.

According to an NGO called Free Tibet, Tibetans also believe that along with threatening their language, culture and history, "China's government is plundering Tibet's natural resources and destroying its environment."

thequint%2F2018-03%2F1759532b-75e0-4cc5-a19c-039d19a08597%2F80107609-a517-4fd6-8608-51ba6758a829.jpg

A delivery man of Alibaba’s logistics unit Cainiao checks his phone as he delivers a parcel in Lhasa on 14 January 2018.
(Photo Coutesy: Reuters)
thequint%2F2018-03%2Fc4b5d679-caec-4e62-85de-ee9d52b067fc%2Fe360754d-67cf-4a4d-a563-fcae79eb0e44.JPG

China in occupied Tibet.
(Photo Courtesy: 卫纳夜格@Raj/Twitter)
First Published: 16.03.18

 
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Yes u are right i can write in detail abt it as i am half kashmiri ,there have been numerous factors behind it where one is lack of aggressive fighting drive otherwise hum punjabi and pathan hotay Kashmiris ki jagah tau in two feet kay hindus kee shakal aisi bigaar kay rakh detay kay in ki himmat na hoti to occupy the territory.
Your Mother or Father from AJK, right?
 
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India disintegrating faster than I thought. :enjoy:
 
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We can also make such a video about Kashmir...

@beijingwalker
Before poking your nose in other countries internal matter look at yourself...

https://www.thequint.com/photos/life-in-tibet-since-1959

In Pictures: Life in Tibet, Overshadowed by China Since 1959
Tibet, an innately peaceful country, has seen more than its fair share of violence. When the 14th Dalai Lama fled Chinese oppression and arrived in India, Tibet was crumbling. A direct assault on their culture and traditions and a threat to their life and property, left Tibetans overwhelmingly insecure. Since then, many have immigrated to other countries, but a number of them remain in Tibet.

While China refuses to recognise Tibet as an independent entity, Tibet continues protesting against Chinese control.

Let us experience the ordeal, through glimpses.

thequint%2F2018-03%2F7b253a2d-7565-4e1b-bbf2-02527d7dcd5e%2F2678bbc8-9275-47f5-81e2-3a8e9f748392.jpg

Tibetan monk Jampa Tenzin and protesters in Lhasa, Tibet in 1987
(Photo Courtesy: John Ackerly/Free Tibet)
thequint%2F2018-03%2Fa781eeb3-200c-49e7-80d1-8eaf152f4a3a%2Ff7455cae-6c29-4cd7-bb9e-790b510aa859.jpg

A still from the Tibetan uprising of 1987.
(Photo Courtesy: John Ackerly/Tibetan Buddhism in the West)
With violent and non-violent protests and domestic resistance, Tibet has struggled to retain its identity and cultural independence. Rebellion is practised everyday, even through seemingly small acts such as keeping pictures of the Dalai Lama carefully concealed in homes and workplaces.

thequint%2F2018-03%2F67c7878f-48d2-469c-a5a5-ed5bad695461%2Fbf75852e-1f5b-4513-a6f7-4498bd625bd8.jpg

A Tibetan vendor moves a photograph of the Panchen Lama to reveal a picture of a young Dalai Lama in front of the Jokhang Temple in Lhasa on 26 May 1998.
(Photo: Reuters)
thequint%2F2018-03%2F4b57201b-9e47-4fea-81bb-8faa4d6567e3%2Fbf23e545-f827-40ad-b608-f5077a4d845e.jpg

This photograph, taken on 23 June 1999, shows an empty throne of Dalai Lama reserved in the Patola Palace, Lhasa.
(Photo: Reuters)
When the Chinese administration opened the first train going to Lhasa in 2006, it faced a lot of criticism. According to media reports, exiled Tibetans and right groups said that it facilitated an influx of long-term migrants who could threaten Tibetans' cultural integrity.

thequint%2F2018-03%2Fe58b67dd-70c4-40bc-8f90-a794334ffd7a%2Fd25612e7-be60-4fe1-904b-ba9388c7b90d.jpg

Passengers sit on board the first train at Lhasa railway station as it heads for Lanzhou in Gansu province 1 July 2006.
(Photo Courtesy: Reuters)
An extension of this railway was opened in 2014.

2008 saw a series of violent protests in Tibet. These started in Lhasa, but subsquently spread to other Tibetan regions. According to estimates, 18 civilians were killed and 382 injured.

thequint%2F2018-03%2F6668614e-ec3f-4461-88d9-725672a4fc46%2F5fd6a3e4-89b9-4007-8e2f-160dccecc36b.jpg

March 2008 protests saw a series of burnings.
(Photo Courtesy: Uprising Archive)
thequint%2F2018-03%2F4478be74-880a-4534-959f-f0d2a7c4a0c6%2F42cf36d1-1d2a-4eb5-b52b-e2212c358352.jpg

Tibetans burning a Chinese flag in March, 2008.
(Photo Courtesy: Reuters)
thequint%2F2018-03%2Fc3d6b52b-5d47-4186-b0c1-fef6f26de9da%2Fc505b60b-3bdc-4e7b-a9e0-d1d35302b547.jpg

Lhasa burning on 14 March 2008.
(Photo Courtesy: Bianca Reijnders/Uprising Archive)
This unrest began as an annual observance of Tibetan Uprising Day but subsequently transitioned into riots and killings. While the Chinese administration blamed the Dalai Lama for the events, the Dalai Lama said that the unrest was caused because Tibetans were extremely discontent.

thequint%2F2018-03%2Fc343b38c-206d-404b-86ab-c702dd867f5a%2F7c250718-ce9e-440c-8e8d-fd88a2fc2e36.jpg

Parts of Tibet saw heavy destruction in March, 2008.
(Photo Courtesy: Kadfly/Uprising Archive)
thequint%2F2018-03%2Ff789f7f7-d40a-478d-8ae3-d3b2735224ab%2Ffd3d95a6-64f2-4082-91b4-a7c043a86fb3.jpg

A convoy of armoured personnel carriers (APC) travel through the streets of Lhasa, Tibet March 15, 2008.
(Photo: Reuters)
On 4 May and 1 July 2008 the Government of the People's Republic of China and the Dalai Lama held talks on the riots.

thequint%2F2018-03%2F4f918666-d301-4854-bff9-1d1ddbfed4db%2F1aa3ce0f-7568-4e1f-9f5f-faaec530cdd3.jpg

A 1950s Chinese fighter jet displayed at a square in front of Potala Palace in Lhasa - a seemingly symbolic representation of the presence of Chinese military.
(Photo Courtesy: Claro Cortes IV/Reuters)
Tibet has seen various degrees of violence. Over 152 Tibetans have self-immolated in protest inside Tibet since 2009.

thequint%2F2018-03%2Fbfd63b95-6367-45a9-bf2c-86a8a02a7fdb%2Fde5dfba8-b845-4f34-a9d4-725286e23d45.png

A Tibetan self immolates.
(Photo Courtesy: Central Tibetan Administration)
Tibetans today continue to live under Chinese occupation. Their resistance to Chinese influence on their culture and traditions remains, because faith is primary for Tibetans and they hold their history and values close to their hearts.

According to an NGO called Free Tibet, Tibetans also believe that along with threatening their language, culture and history, "China's government is plundering Tibet's natural resources and destroying its environment."

thequint%2F2018-03%2F1759532b-75e0-4cc5-a19c-039d19a08597%2F80107609-a517-4fd6-8608-51ba6758a829.jpg

A delivery man of Alibaba’s logistics unit Cainiao checks his phone as he delivers a parcel in Lhasa on 14 January 2018.
(Photo Coutesy: Reuters)
thequint%2F2018-03%2Fc4b5d679-caec-4e62-85de-ee9d52b067fc%2Fe360754d-67cf-4a4d-a563-fcae79eb0e44.JPG

China in occupied Tibet.
(Photo Courtesy: 卫纳夜格@Raj/Twitter)
First Published: 16.03.18
The last time Tibet had a major conflict was 10 years ago, lasted just for one day. Now Tibet had many highwayss and trains connecting this region with everywhere else in China and became the hottest tourist spot in the whole counry, Tibet may have more tourists than the local residents everyday now. How about India occupied Kashmir?
 
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Yes. Except ownership and transfer of land to an heir or heiress not qualified to inherit.

Your serpentine tongue strikes AGAIN.

Yes but with a caveat I see..
I especially like how the serpentine tongue takes the most basic and most profound of the basic rights and make it sound as if it is a small thing.

Since your duplicity is on a roll today, let's expound little bit on the "small" caveat which you feel does not make much of a difference.

Care to let all your fans know what the effects are on not owning a land in a state does to a person in terms availing the state benefits like getting a state govt job, getting admission in schools, being eligible for state benefits etc?


You wouldn't know about that in a century of Sundays.

Oh the tyranny of number crunching...Wait, you didn't get that did you?
Can I quote "century of Sundays"? :D


That's what I like about you, utterly duplicitous and extremely proud of it.
But you are nothing special. We see them all the time in India.
 
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