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Indian state terrorism against Kashmiris, minorities flayed

London, August 15 (KMS): Kashmiri, Sikh and Naga Diaporas in London, representing a common front against Indian imperialism, have condemned the oppression and human rights violations by Indian troops in their territories.

A joint statement issued in London on 64th anniversary of India’s independence, reiterated to continue the liberation struggles in their respective territories to secure freedom for their nations. It appealed the international community to dismantle the illegal occupation of their homelands by India.

The statement said, “Since 1947 India has forcibly denied our sovereign rights under international law. India has snatched our right to determine our own political status, to control our natural resources ourselves and to protect our populations and territories from human rights abuses amounting to genocide.”

The statement said that India was not sincere to settle the disputes on Kashmir, Khalistan, Nagalim, Assam, Manipur and Bodoland. “All the disputes have arisen from a common source which is India,” they added.

Flaying the deployment of occupation troops in the territories, the statement said that Indian troops were killing hundreds of thousands of people with impunity to muzzle their just voice for their right to self-determination. “The occupation authorities were committing extra-judicial killings, disappearances, rape, torture, illegal detentions and extortion in these areas,” it maintained.

Quoting the August 2009, United States Commission for International Religious Freedoms’ report, which put India on its watch list of states that fail to protect minority religious groups, it said that recent years have seen massive rights abuses by the troops directed towards Christians, Muslims and Sikhs in Indian occupied territories. “The peace and stability in South Asia can not prevail till the resolution of these disputes,” it added.

Indian state terrorism against Kashmiris, minorities flayed | Kashmir Media Service
 
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:woot::woot::woot::victory::victory::victory:

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Dole is not the answer, dignity is
Shoe hurled at Chief Minister has a lot to convey. PM needs to go beyond just a package
GUEST COLUMN BY SEEMA MUSTAFA


A sub inspector sitting in the VIP enclosure at the Independence Day enclosure threw a well-polished shoe at Jammu and Kashmir chief minister Omar Abdullah. And within minutes became a hero in the Valley with the internet buzzing with comments about his ‘heroic’ deed.
Omar Abdullah did not blink an eye, went on to take the salute and remained a picture of total composure. The tragedy is that he has lost the goodwill of his people, and there were not many sympathetic voices for him as the reactions started pouring in. The policeman will be dealt with, no doubt firmly, but the government of Jammu and Kashmir will have to sit up and take serious stock of its isolation in the state.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in the last week has come out with a long appeal to the people of the state to abjure violence, and to embrace peace and reconciliation. It was a speech high on rhetoric and very very low on substance. Except for announcing an expert panel of some corporate honchos to recommend job opportunities for the young people of Jammu and Kashmir, there was nothing else that the Prime Minister had to contribute to the ongoing crisis in the state.
There were no suggestions, there were no proposals, it was almost as if the speech was forced as the government had come to the conclusion that it needed to make a gesture. In fact, if the good doctor had dispensed with the rhetoric altogether and instead focused on substantive immediate proposals he would have earned some goodwill and response. The silence from the state was almost ominous as this time around most leaders and political groups did not even bother to reject the speech as it did little to arouse interest and confidence. Omar Abdullah tried to announce some jobs et cetera, but this was completely overshadowed by the brown shoe that missed him by inches.
The separatists, or more specifically Syed Ali Shah Geelani, have drawn a long plan to ensure that the Ramzan days are not spent in just fasting, but in action. Strikes, protests have become the order of the day. It is becoming increasingly clear to the world that the agitation in the Valley has acquired a momentum of its own and will not be quelled by batons and bullets.
The tragedy is that New Delhi has still not woken up. It is still hoping that the intensity will pass, and the National Conference or the Congress or the Governor depending whose rule it finally is, will be able to handle the situation. A security expert perhaps spoke for the top echelons of government when he said, “we have gone through so much we will go through this as well.” What he did not say, and was obviously not interested in even asking was ‘ at what cost?’
And that is the problem. There is a disinterest, a disconnect that prevents the rest of India from even recognizing what is going on in Kashmir. The security agencies, including the intelligence, really does not want to even accept that the protests are spontaneous, that the people are angry and unhappy, and that the pressure cooker is now boiling without a valve to let off steam. And the politicians, including those who matter in the current dispensation, take their cue from the bureaucrats because they themselves have little knowledge and understanding of any situation.
The result is the current protest in Kashmir is seen through a security prism, and not as a protest involving the people. The prejudice against Kashmir is at its peak in Delhi with all political parties ---Left to Right---totally unable and unwilling to take action. The proposal to send an all party parliamentary delegation to the Valley has come to nought, and there is not a single political leader in Delhi today who one can speak to on Kashmir in the hope he or she will understand and urge action. The corruption in the Commonwealth Games had the government acting, with the Prime Minister taking command and constituting a Group of Ministers to handle the crisis as the recognized top body.
But the situation in Kashmir has not elicited the same reaction. Dr Manmohan Singh has in fact, reversed what he said himself earlier. The declared intention of the central government was to generate a dialogue so that a consensus on a way forward, on a broad definition of autonomy, and other such matters could be reached. He has now said in what is a complete turn about, that autonomy can only be discussed if there is a consensus. And who is going to help bring about that consensus? No answer.
There was not a word in the Prime Minister's speech about resuming talks with all the political parties, the separatists and now the youth within a specified time frame. It is absolutely essential for the centre and the state apparatus to reach out to the people and bring into play a series of measures that will address the anger to some extent at least, and give a reprieve from violence. Dole is not the answer, dignity and respect is.
A beginning can be made by:
-releasing the young people who have been arrested in the past weeks as well as the political prisoners;
- withdrawal of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act in suggested phases, within a specified time limit. After all the withdrawal of the Army from Srinagar ten years ago worked, despite the hesitation of the government and the cynicism of political parties;
- a judicial commission headed by a well known, impartial panel of judges should immediately be appointed to look into the missing persons charges. Again a time frame for the report and implementation of recommendations should be fixed.
- the National Human Rights Commission should be directed to constitute a team of eminent citizens to hold a Peoples Hearing into the charges of human rights violations.
- a political panel of credible MPs from different political parties should begin consultations with the youth.
One can go on and on. There is so much that needs to be done and this has nothing with handing out money as if Kashmiris are standing with begging bowls. Some are, but the people know and despite them. Immediate action should be taken to restore some level of trust so that talks can begin immediately at all levels, and with all concerned sides. One has written a lot about this, so no need to go into the specifics again.
The governments will do well to remember that the shoe hurled by the sub inspector reflects anger, and if this has affected the Jammu and Kashmir police then the need to move forward acquires even greater urgency.
Prime Minister Singh will do well to remember that people are not the Congress party. They are not fools and do not take kindly to being treated as such. Rhetoric might please some in Delhi, it has stopped working for the Kashmiris a long long time ago.

Dole is not the answer dignity is Lastupdate:- Mon, 16 Aug 2010 18:30:00 GMT GreaterKashmir.com
 
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Policeman hurls shoe at IHK chief minister

SRINAGAR: A policeman flung a shoe at Indian-held Kashmir (IHK) Chief Minister Omar Abdullah at an Independence Day event on Sunday, which saw thousands of Kashmiris in the streets protesting against Indian rule.

Security was tight across the Muslim-majority Kashmir Valley for the annual national holiday, which locals traditionally mark as a “black day”. At the main official function in a sports stadium in the Kashmiri summer capital Srinagar, Abdullah had just unfurled the Indian national flag when the show was thrown. The minister was not hit and the policeman, who had chanted “we want freedom” was quickly overpowered by bodyguards. Police identified the attacker as Abdul Ahad Jan. “He is mentally unsound and facing charges in a criminal case. He has already been suspended for his criminal activities,” a police statement said. “Hurling a shoe is better than hurling a stone,” Abdullah commented after the incident. The chief minister heads the National Conference, the main pro-India party in IHK.

Stone-throwing protesters have been defying almost daily curfews over the past two months and clashing with police in Srinagar. afp

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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Indian state terrorism against Kashmiris, minorities flayed

London, August 15 (KMS): Kashmiri, Sikh and Naga Diaporas in London, representing a common front against Indian imperialism, have condemned the oppression and human rights violations by Indian troops in their territories.

A joint statement issued in London on 64th anniversary of India’s independence, reiterated to continue the liberation struggles in their respective territories to secure freedom for their nations. It appealed the international community to dismantle the illegal occupation of their homelands by India.

The statement said, “Since 1947 India has forcibly denied our sovereign rights under international law. India has snatched our right to determine our own political status, to control our natural resources ourselves and to protect our populations and territories from human rights abuses amounting to genocide.”

The statement said that India was not sincere to settle the disputes on Kashmir, Khalistan, Nagalim, Assam, Manipur and Bodoland. “All the disputes have arisen from a common source which is India,” they added.

Flaying the deployment of occupation troops in the territories, the statement said that Indian troops were killing hundreds of thousands of people with impunity to muzzle their just voice for their right to self-determination. “The occupation authorities were committing extra-judicial killings, disappearances, rape, torture, illegal detentions and extortion in these areas,” it maintained.

Quoting the August 2009, United States Commission for International Religious Freedoms’ report, which put India on its watch list of states that fail to protect minority religious groups, it said that recent years have seen massive rights abuses by the troops directed towards Christians, Muslims and Sikhs in Indian occupied territories. “The peace and stability in South Asia can not prevail till the resolution of these disputes,” it added.

Indian state terrorism against Kashmiris, minorities flayed | Kashmir Media Service

As far as I know the Nagas are now demanding the integration of all Naga inhabited areas of North East to create a greater state of Nagalim within the ambit of the Constitution not a sovereign state.Khalistan movement as we all know is now all dead. Wonder how these seccessionist organizations that operate in other countries conveniently forget ground realities..Much ado about nothing.:hang2:
 
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Can someone post detailed info on the kind of demands made by Nagas?
 
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Sorry Ejaz if you wish to believe establishment propaganda that is fine but the truth is that after this incident police started a smear campaign against him and he seems to be punished severly to be admitted in ICU at SKIMS.

Hospitalised

Hakeem Irfan
Srinagar Aug 15: Abdul Ahad Jan, 52, who was arrested for hurling a shoe at Chief Minister Omar Abdullah during the August 15 function at Bakhshi Stadium, was admitted at SKIMS for “accelerated hypertension” Sunday evening. According to doctors, Jan also had some minor bruises when he was brought to the hospital.

"Jan has been admitted in hospital for accelerated hypertension," said Medical Superintendent SKIMS, Dr Syed Amin Tabish.
Jan is being treated at SKIMS under detention and is likely to remain there for next few days.
"He will be given anti-hypertensive drugs and will take some time to recover. It is a gradual process. But hopefully he will be much better tomorrow," said Dr Tabish.
Meanwhile, doctors present at SKIMS said Jan had minor bruises on his body at the time of his preliminary examination at the hospital.
"He had some minor bruises on body," said a doctor pleading anonymity.
 
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16 August 2010 Last updated at 01:30 GMT
The angry housewives setting Kashmir ablaze
By Soutik Biswas
BBC News, Srinagar

Whenever there are protests demanding "freedom from India" in her crowded neighbourhood in Srinagar, Firdousi Farooq makes a point of participating, her four-year-old son in tow.

Joining such demonstrations in Indian-administered Kashmir these days is fraught with risks.

Security forces have often fired on stone-pelting protesters, killing over 50 people, mostly teenagers, in the past two months as the valley has been convulsed by what most locals call a fierce peoples' "uprising" against India.

So what makes a mother of three hit the angry streets of Kashmir?

Ms Farooq's eldest son, Wamiq, was killed in January when a tear gas shell fired by the police exploded on his head.

The 14-year-old top-of-the-class student, who loved watching cartoons and dreamed of becoming a doctor, had stepped out for a game of cricket.

The police report describes him as a "miscreant who was part of an unlawful assembly", at which the forces had fired tear gas shells in self-defence.

Very few - including his neighbours, lawyers and journalists - believe this.


'Subjugation'
Sitting in her home in the crowded old city, Ms Farooq says she had decided to hit the streets after her son's "murder".

"Why should I not protest? Why should I not pick up a stone? I am doing this in the honour of my martyred son. I am doing this for azadi (freedom) from subjugation and repression," she says defiantly.

Firdousi Farooq is just another addition to the burgeoning army of women who have been taking part in the protests in Kashmir this summer.

You see them on the streets; you see them in the pictures.

Young and old, middle-class and poor, mostly dressed in floral tunics, they defy the armed forces, pelting stones at them, shouting slogans and singing anti-India songs. When night falls, some of them even lead protests with their children.

Out of more than 50 people killed in the latest round of violence, three have been women.

Yasmeen Jan, 25, was standing near a window inside her house in Batamaloo on 6 July, watching a demonstration wind by when she was hit by a bullet allegedly fired by security forces.

"Mummy maey aaw heartas fire" (Mummy, my heart has taken fire), she told her mother, turning away from the window, before collapsing on the floor, dead.

Fifteen-year-old Afroza Teli took a bullet in her head during a protest demonstration in Khrew village in Pulwana district on 1 August. She died later in Srinagar.

Angry Kashmiris set fire to an irrigation office, a revenue office and a court building after her death. A police station and a police vehicle were also set on fire.

Aisha Shiekh, a 55-year-old housewife and resident of Srinagar, was allegedly hit by a stone flung from a sling shot by the security forces when she was walking with her granddaughter to buy milk on 7 August. She died from her wounds a day later.

This is not the first time that women in Kashmir have come out in droves to protest, but their numbers and impact appear to be greater than ever before.

"This time the intensity of protests by women is more. You can also see more women protesting. Women have borne the brunt of the Kashmir conflict, and it is not surprising that they are at the end of their tether," says Kashmiri journalist Afsana Rashid.

Rape
As Bashir Ahmed Dabla, who teaches sociology at Kashmir University says, Kashmir's women have "seen their children husbands and fathers being killed in the conflict, and routinely humiliated by the security forces"

Studies have shown there are up to 32,000 widows of the two-decade-long conflict in the Kashmir valley, and nearly 100,000 orphans. Another 10,000 men have allegedly disappeared during the conflict, says a rights group.

Then there are some 400 "half-widows", whose husbands disappeared in the custody of troops or police. Women have also been the target of rape by the security forces.

"Women have been compelled to come out and protest because of the injustice and repression," says Professor Dabla.

Parveena Ahangar, a softly spoken housewife turned feisty activist, has been making a regular trek from her Gangbugh residence to the city's downtown every month, to protest against the disappearances during the conflict.

Ms Ahangar's son Javed was 16 when he was picked up by security forces in 1990 from the family home. He never returned.

The indefatigable woman has travelled around the world to highlight her cause, leaving behind her husband, debilitated and out of work after 10 surgeries, and her remaining three children, including a daughter.

"As long as I am alive, my struggle with go on. I want a simple answer from the authorities: Where did these men go?"

The coming out of women in the Muslim-dominated Kashmir valley has been helped by the fact that they have been traditionally freer than their counterparts in many parts of the world.

They have not observed the purdah, or faced religious or cultural segregation from men, say sociologists. Men and women have always worked in the farms together, prayed side by side in mosques and participated in religious congregations.

Key role
They have traditionally played an important role in the neighbourhood citizens' committees, preparing food for their protesting menfolk and taking the injured to hospitals.

The pro-freedom movement has also thrown up a number of women leaders - both fundamentalists and liberals.

"Kashmiri women are among the most politicised women in the subcontinent," says Professor Dabla.

Zaitun Khan, a 20-something homemaker, is one of them - she remembers participating in "peaceful" protests when she was in college, but is now determined to hit the streets to demand freedom.

Her brother Fayaz Ahmed Wani, who worked as a labourer in the floriculture department of the government, was hit by a bullet fired by the forces and killed while on his way to work on 6 July.

Mr Wani was 29, and left behind his wife and two daughters.

"I will go and join the protests now," says Ms Khan.

"He never protested or threw a stone in his life. But he died. How many more men will have to die? I want to go out and protest and demand freedom. Freedom to live."

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Women have joined protests in large numbers

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Ms Farooq joined protests after her son was killed

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Women have borne the brunt of the conflict

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Women have led night protests in Kashmir
 
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Well, Omar deserves it, He should resign, Kashmir is not the right place for an Un-Professional amateur to Begin his carrier
 
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Well, Omar deserves it, He should resign, Kashmir is not the right place for an Un-Professional amateur to Begin his carrier

i think we have give all power to militery for five years so all terrorism in J&K will be finish by them
 
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i think we have give all power to militery for five years so all terrorism in J&K will be finish by them

Thats Not Possible, India tried Armed Forces Special Power act, remember??? Get presidents rule over J&K and Automatically Armed forces would come into Power, would replace the CRPF... And Yes If Only that could Happen
 
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Kashmir is India’s integral part: PM

Says dialogue only within this framework

Sheikh Ahmed

New Delhi, Aug 15: Asking agitating youth in Kashmir to end violence, Prime Minister Sunday said within the framework of the State ‘being an integral part of India’, New Delhi was willing to move forward in any talks with those who abjure violence.

Addressing 64th Independence Day function from the ramparts of the historic Red Fort against the backdrop of recent unrest in Kashmir, Singh expressed regret over the loss of lives in the two-month-long agitation in Kashmir which has left about 58 civilians dead.

"The years of violence should now end,” Singh said in his speech delivered in Urdu.

He asked the Kashmiri youth to end violence as it would not benefit anyone. Underlining that Kashmir is an integral part of India, Singh said, "Within this framework, we are ready to move forward in any talks which would increase the partnership of the common man in governance and also enhance their welfare."

He said the government is ready to talk to every person or group which abjures violence.
Recalling his recent meeting with political parties from Jammu and Kashmir where he had expressed willingness to consider autonomy within Indian constitution if there was consensus, he said, "We will endeavour to take this process forward."

Singh at the All Party meeting, which was attended by all parties barring the PDP, had urged the people to give peace a chance and assured to address the sense of alienation of people through political means. He had said if there was a wide consensus in Jammu and Kashmir, political devolution could be considered within the four walls of the constitution. He also set up a high-level expert committee headed by C Ranagarajan to formulate job plan for Jammu and Kashmir

On relations with Pakistan, Prime Minister said the government wants to resolve all differences with Pakistan but made it clear that the dialogue cannot go far unless terrorism emanating from there ends.
"As far as Pakistan is concerned, we expect from them that they would let their territory to be used for acts of terrorism against India. We have been emphasizing this in all our discussions with Pakistan. If this is not done, we cannot progress far in our dialogue,” he added.


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It is great that, the Indian PM from historic Red Fort on August 15 has made it clear that the solution to Kashmir is within the framework of Constitution, laying other speculations to rest
 
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