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Dangerous 'ally' Pakistan's killing us

Alan Howe
A Gift from Alan Howe for our Indian friends.

* From: Herald Sun
* January 17, 2010 8:41PM
INDIANS are a riot. Indeed, there are about 60,000 riots reported in India each year.

It boasts it is the world’s largest democracy, but that “democracy” is very much a work in progress, and the progress is slow.

Much of the country still has well-populated pockets of feudal brutality, deadly caste war, and murderous religious conflict.

Indians still carry out so-called honour killings, an unpleasant business in which concerned male family members, worried about the class, religion, background, or maybe just the look of a girl’s fiance or husband, brutally kill one or both for bringing shame upon them. Apparently no irony is intended.
Along with the popular takeaway chicken tikka masala, honour killings are a notable Indian export.

Just last month a young secretary and mother was found dying in a London street, bashed and with her right hand missing. Her husband and his mate have been charged with her murder.

It’s reported she’d wanted a divorce. I can’t think why.

Geeta Aulakh’s family is from Punjab, India’s most socially and economically advanced state, but life there can be barbaric. It was also home to Nitin Garg, the young graduate murdered here recently.

Were it not such a tragic and serious matter, you could almost have found amusing Indian politicians, and that country’s sub-standard media, lecturing Victoria on our “racist” attitudes.

Among Indian politicians calling for more action to prevent “racist” attacks was External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna, who threatened: “This heinous crime on humanity, this is an uncivilised attack on innocent Indians. It will certainly have some bearing on the bilateral ties between our two countries.”

Another minister rudely dismissed our police chief with an impertinent insult.

He inherited a Victoria Police that has been unnecessarily secretive and defensive for years, ever since Neil Comrie had the top job.
So it was like a breath of fresh air when he loudly went in to bat for his officers, and you and me, telling his Indian critics “there are over 33,000 murders in India every year; 8000 of those are actually brides being killed because the dowry’s not sufficient”.

Like more than a few Australian men, some Indian chaps are hopeless in the kitchen, but they are also more careless; their stoves so often blow up, killing their wives. It is called stove killing or bride burning. What really happens is that the grumpy husband douses his inadequate wife in kerosene and sets her alight, blaming his jerry-built cooker.

I don’t suppose they’re all guilty; I’m sure you’ve been in a few houses yourself when the stove’s blown up.

I’ve had my moments with the missus, but I’ve never looked to the Hotpoint for an answer.

According to the United Nations, more people are murdered in India than in any other country. The figures should shame the Indian Government and its police, but they’d rather demand, as Mr Krishna did when Mr Garg was murdered, that Australia “speedily” catch the killer.

I have some advice for Mr Krishna. In 2007, the last complete year for which figures on Indian murders are available — but you’ll appreciate there’s a lot of adding up to do — 32,318 murders were reported. The conviction rate was 35.5 per cent.

India’s Minister for Police should get on his bike — or bullock cart — and “speedily” chase down those 20,845 scoundrels who escaped conviction.

Punjab’s police chief is P.S. Gill and, like Overland, he is newly appointed. He has his work cut out for him.

According to India’s National Crime Records Bureau, Mr Gill has to deal with perhaps 800 murders a year, and as many kidnappings and abductions among a population only somewhat greater than Australia’s.

His officers are kept busy, sometimes on matters that less commonly clutter the diaries of their Australian counterparts: for instance, about 1000 unidentified bodies turn up each year in Punjab. Bodies, not missing people.

Since Mr Garg was killed, many Indians — not just those indolent thugs burning effigies of Kevin Rudd — have turned on Australia and Australians and lazily and reactively branded us as racist.

The head of the Right-wing Hindu Shiv Sena party, Bal Thackeray, said he would bar Australian cricketers from playing locally. “We will not allow kangaroo cricketers to play in Mumbai … Our boys are being stabbed, burnt and shot at in that country,” he said.

I am unaware any of “his boys” have been “burnt”, but maybe he’s confusing himself with local cases.

There were also calls for a trade embargo, a predictable call to suspend the recruitment of students by Australian universities and, hurtfully, “Bollywood superstar” Amitabh Bachchan’s rejection of an honorary degree from a Brisbane university.

Who? I looked him up on the internet, and just last week he won a local best-actor award. Receiving it, he said: “It feels strange to win a best-actor award. I mean, what exactly am I doing here?”

I have no idea, mate, but keep talking.

Nitin Garg’s death is a tragedy. For him, his family in Punjab, his friends, and for our community.

We don’t know yet who killed him. It probably was an opportunistic robbery gone wrong, but he may have been killed by someone out to harm an Indian. He may have even been killed by an Indian. They have form, home and away.
Well, maybe one: Australia is a safer and more tolerant country than India will ever be.



Its also great to see what Western media also thinks of India

its a LIE, jhoot hai yeh sab.......incredible india hai....... :rofl: @indians

by the way, why do indians come up with such articles when they know alot is said about them as well and that they are a third world country, and that they can get embarrassed and degraded by such articles? looking in the mirror is better. these indians are totally paranoid and in state of denial....
 
hitler-speech-lie.JPG
 
all countries are in the mood to fuk paks fucture
 
What a disgusting article. Pakistan has done more to fight terrorism and suffered more from the war on terror than any other nation. The whole deal with Osama hiding in Pakistan has been overblown. Now that Afghanistan is a war zone and Saudi Arabia has disowned him, where else is he going to hide that allows him ready access to Afghanistan? Here too, Pakistan is a victim of terrorism. It is not the fault of the people of Pakistan that Osama chose to hide there. This stream of Pakistan-bashing is senseless and does not help the fight against terrorism.


He could have hid in Iran, or Tajikistan..why only Pakistan..because he was sure that no one would find him in Pakistan..

He was sure that either the Pakistani establishment was so useless that it would not find him
or it was complicit with him
 
Does living near a military base mean they come knocking on your door? I too live near a military base and it is no different than living anywhere else as far as your privacy is concerned. The whole bash Pakistan movement has been based on specious arguments like these. Living in the same town as a criminal does not make the entire town criminal.

You seems not understand my post. Isn't there no difference between you and Osama?
 
I noticed a common theme in this forum. If you point out to a Pakistani, "your house has no roof," his first reply will be "India has three houses with no roof." This may be true....but how does that help keep the rain out?
 
Who told them to came to Afghanistan !!
"Mauot nu massi kinei akhya ?"
 
Ten years of hunt can be regarded as ten years of failure by US.Osama was tracked in Tora Bora in 2001 but US failed to capture or kill him,has anyone asked them why? can we say he may have support in US army which helped him fleeing.
After fleeing Tora Bora he remained in afghanistan for 4 more years.he continued his activities there were clear reports of arab and Pakistani media about his presence in two provinces,again wht did not US acted?
Osama came to Pakistan in 2006,Pakistan got many of Al-Qaida and Taliban people and quickly handed over to US,this was a huge mistake.US reached Osama by getting clues from them.Now Obama is taking the credit as he has to win election.

It is not the question of whether US failed or not, it is the question of how Osama could live deep inside Pakistan for such long time

Let me ask you a question

Why did US marines completed the operation in Abbottabad without informing Pakistani army, while Pakistan army was just a stone throw away from Osama's hideaway?
 
He could have hid in Iran, or Tajikistan..why only Pakistan..because he was sure that no one would find him in Pakistan..

He was sure that either the Pakistani establishment was so useless that it would not find him
or it was complicit with him

What proof do u have he wasn't killed in new Delhi
 
It is not the question of whether US failed or not, it is the question of how Osama could live deep inside Pakistan for such long time

Let me ask you a question

Why did US marines completed the operation in Abbottabad without informing Pakistani army, while Pakistan army was just a stone throw away from Osama's hideaway?

If our Guys couldn't see Seal Team 6 of over 80+ who flew into Pakistan what makes u think or ask they could have seen 1 single Osama.
 
Little gets seen on what we have done or been loosing and will loose the lives we loose every day... we have done more then anyone has some friends are only out for the interest to me thats not a friend but again politics is a bit_ch.
 

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