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So, is new media only reinforcing old stereotypes?


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Be realistic; why should they leave their homes? If I set up checkpoints in your own home, will you just willingly leave behind your home and belongings and settle somewhere else? Hell no. You will obviously resist the occupation.

The separatists want separation from hindustan; not from Kashmir

Who is asking them to leave their homes....they can stay all they want here but only with the Blue-back passports with 4 lions on it.

If they desire any other passport they can migrate to the country that issues them..Simple.


p.s. not all seperatists want to join Pakistan either; we in Pakistan support a plebicite in Kashmir, and this is known to the world.

Thank god u realised the first part.As for the second part..yeah the world very well knows wat Pakistan is upto.;)
 
Its integral part of India then why bother to discuss it with Pakistan? - Never heard that Chinese discussing about status of Tibet with the world. Indians are confusing.

It is because pakistan is supporting the terror groups and is openly declaring support for the so called jihadists :taz: .
 
Who is asking them to leave their homes....they can stay all they want here but only with the Blue-back passports with 4 lions on it

good point...if anything, you are forcing them to stay indoors? Why? because of their call for freedom from hindustan

curfews are not being respected because people have much frustration and anger to let out; they have no other avenues or ways to express their anger and frustration

by killing those protestors, you are fanning the flames for more unrest. And instead of understanding the GROUND REALITIES, you resort to diversionary tactics and blaming ISI/Pakistan for it.

As i always say -- purely Kashmiri local phenomenon. You reap what you sow.

If they desire any other passport they can migrate to the country that issues them..Simple.

simple only to those who think laathi charges and suppression are ways to promote/ensure peace in the valley

recent events unfolding will have me and a lot others think otherwise :)


Thank god u realised the first part.

i'm not in denial mode.

As for the second part..yeah the world very well knows wat Pakistan is upto.;)

Several million of our countrymen have suffered from terrorism, biblical-level floods, and outside efforts to meddle inside -- but with that said, world knows very well Pakistan stands shoulder to shoulder with the people and the land of Kashmir.

And our moral support to Kashmiri bretheren will never cease.
 
kashmir was never legally given to india

the actions of a tyrant are invalid and unrepresentative of the people

india constantly needs to engage in cognitive dissonance vis a vis kashmir, the screams are getting louder





FOR PEOPLE on this forum the one little thing we can do is to get the message about kashmir as much as we can, WE CAN MAKE THE WORLD LISTEN
 
kashmir was never legally given to india

the actions of a tyrant are invalid and unrepresentative of the people

india constantly needs to engage in cognitive dissonance vis a vis kashmir, the screams are getting louder





FOR PEOPLE on this forum the one little thing we can do is to get the message about kashmir as much as we can, WE CAN MAKE THE WORLD LISTEN
Let the keep screaming and tearing their own vocal chords needlessly trying to garner sympathy for a cause that has no base or validity. You've tried the so-called internationalization already. The 'world community' can talk all it wants due to their right to talk, but that's about it.
 
The Hindu : Front Page : A mother, a son and Kashmir's education tragedy


Islamist radical Asiya Andrabi wants schools and colleges shut. Her son wants a passport to study abroad

In June, some private schools briefly reopened, but shut down again after Andrabi's warning

Secessionists have long insulated their children's education from the troubled region's politics


SRINAGAR: Last month, Kashmiri Islamist leader Asiya Andrabi lashed out at parents worried about the consequences the weeks of violent street protests she has spearheaded might have for their children.

“Losses of life, material and the education of children,” she said in a July 13 statement, “are inevitable in our freedom struggle. But these cannot be reasons to make compromises. The material sacrifices made by students, cart-pushers or daily-wage labourers have no value when compared to those who are ready to make the supreme sacrifice for the cause of freedom.”

But documents filed in the Jammu and Kashmir High Court suggest that the fugitive Dukhtaran-e-Millat leader's son does not want to be among the tens of thousands of school and college students who have been locked out of educational institutions since June — or to join the ranks of those dying on Srinagar's streets.

Petition for passport


In a petition filed before the court on April 30, 2010, Ms. Andrabi's teenage son Muhammad Bin Qasim asked that he be issued a passport in order to pursue college education abroad.

Filed on behalf of Mr. Qasim by a maternal uncle, since he was then a minor, the petition says the teenager has “applied for admission in Malaysia and has indicated his first choice as Bachelor of Information Technology and second one as Bachelor of Laws [sic.].”

June 1992-born Qasim, the documents show, applied for a passport on March 2, 2010. He applied for admission to a university abroad after obtaining 553 out of a possible 750 marks in his final year school examinations last year.

However, the Jammu and Kashmir Police, which verify the antecedents of passport applicants, claim that the 18-year-old could be a threat to the state's security. In a May 24, 2010 response to Qasim's application, senior additional advocate-general A.M. Magray has stated that the teenager may be “misused” by his anti-India family if allowed to travel abroad.

The Jammu and Kashmir government's affidavit relies on the fact that several of Qasim's relatives have been key figures in the State's anti-India movement. His father, Ashiq Husain Faktoo, a former member of the terrorist group Jamiat-ul-Mujahideen, is serving a life sentence for the 1992 murder of human rights activist H.N. Wanchoo. Inayatullah Andrabi, another of Qasim's uncles, was a founder of the Jamaat-e-Islami's student wing, the Islami Jamaat-e-Tulaba. Qasim, then just three, himself spent 13 months in prison along with his parents after their arrest in 1993.

Ms. Andrabi's inflammatory polemic has given an increasingly ugly shape to the protests in Kashmir. Earlier this month, she condemned representatives of religious minorities who met with Tehreek-i-Hurriyat chief Syed Ali Shah Geelani to voice their concern at communal strains in the ongoing mobilisation. “Minorities can ask for security from the majority only after we get freedom from India,” she said. Ms. Andrabi also claimed, without basis, that Hindu fundamentalists in Jammu had “burned alive a number of Kashmiri Muslim drivers.”

But there is nothing to show that Qasim is involved in his parents' politics. Last summer, Ms. Andrabi dragged her son home from Jammu, after learning that he had been selected to play in a national-level cricket tournament. “How,” Ms. Andrabi had told the media, “can I let him play for India? My son will never serve a country that is our enemy. It is just impossible.”

“I was playing,” Qasim responded in an interview, “for Kashmir. Cricket is my passion. After Islam and my parents, cricket is everything for me. I just wanted to play at least one national-level match in my life.”

Bleak future


Hundreds of Kashmir families have been exploring educational opportunities outside the region. Schools and universities have been shut since early this summer, when protests on Srinagar's streets began to escalate. In June, some privately-run schools briefly reopened — but shut down again after Ms. Andrabi warned that she would not be responsible for the consequences. Educational institutions in Jammu have since reported a surge in applications.

Kashmir's élite, including anti-India secessionists, have long insulated their children's education from the troubled region's politics. Incarcerated Islamist leader and lawyer Mian Abdul Qayoom, for example, sent one of his three daughters to study medicine in Darbhanga in Bihar. His nephew is a ninth-semester student at the Dogra Law College in Jammu — a privately owned institution owned, perhaps ironically, by local Congress leader Gulchain Singh Charak. Two other nephews, and a niece, obtained degrees in law and science from Pune.

The unfortunate ones


“The élite of our society,” journalist Manzoor Anjum wrote in an editorial commentary in the Urdu-language newspaper Uqab last month, “had already sent their children outside Kashmir for the pursuit of education, and those who had not done so earlier are doing so now. But the people who cannot afford to do so, who are in the majority, are caught between the devil and the deep [blue] sea. The bleak future of their children stares them in the face.”
 
Relief efforts bind Muslims, Buddhists of Ladakh

JAMMU, Aug 16: “Deep in our heart, there is a ray of hope…..Good time will be back again…”, “We shall overcome the loss…..If we keep faith alive in us.”
Read the placards placed alongside the small counter of “relief-cum-information cell” set up by few Ladakhi students for Leh cloud burst, flash floods victims in Jammu.
While the striking slogans full of positivism immediately grab the attention, the move, though a very small one, inspires one and all.
They are not only nursing a ray of hope, they are also making efforts to “bring back the good times” though in their small ways.
In this hour of devastation, which has shaken this small yet well-knit community, these students are contributing their bit by donating their pocket money for the souls in distress back in their native land under the aegis of All Ladakh Students Association Jammu.
The magnitude of tragedy is enormous by this community of few hundreds. Nevertheless they themselves took an initiative and set the pace of this campaign with whatever little they had to offer. These students are also helping disseminating information about the affected to the fellow students here in Jammu region. They are receiving queries from Ladakhi students studying in Dehradun, Delhi and Chandigarh as well. The Association is also keeping a track of affected students.
It is notable that there are 3000 students from Leh studying in Jammu University and other educational institutions of Jammu region while from Kargil there are 1000-1500 students.
So far the Association has been able to track three or four students only in Jammu who are directly or indirectly affected by this tragedy. They are already in Leh.
Another remarkable aspect is that sinking all the religious differences, the students from both Leh and Kargil, both Budhhists and Muslims stand united in this testing time – yet another rare virtue to be emulated by the people of two other regions of this communally volatile state.
Gesture is unique and so is the way being adopted for this campaign – calm and gentle. Small counters are set up in different localities of Jammu to grab the attention of philanthropists. Everyday the location gets changed.
They had used the electronic channels to make an appeal to the people to come forward to contribute their bit in whatever way possible for them. Donation is accepted in both the kind and cash.
As Tsering Norphel president All Ladakhi Student Association Jammu informs, “Our main relief collection centre is Ladakh House just opposite the Rail Head Complex where the relief both at micro as well as macro level is being collected. Our major focus is on the collection of mineral water bottles, blankets, band-aid and other first-aid material, masks, gloves besides warm clothes. As far as cash (bigger amount) is concerned we’ve given an Account No 13062. All the donors can deposit cheque in the favour of All Ladakh Student Association Jammu.”
Till last week, these untiring student enthusiasts had collected Rs 2.5 lakhs besides 4-5 tonnes of other material. “We’re utilizing even this amount to but the things which are urgently required by the affected families there. While we’ve taken this initiative, we’re getting an overwhelming response from all sections of the society in Jammu and even from outside the state, including the Jammu University Vice-Chancellor and the student organisations. Our MLAs Qamar Ali Akhoon and Nawang Rigzin Jora, who are ministers as well, too are a great support system for us, readily available to us anytime,” Norphel asserts.
He makes a special mention of Sanjay Singha of Narmada Industries in Bari Brahmana, Alok Gupta of Mumbai Star Union for their generous help and SSP Basant Rath and SHO Bus Stand for helping them channelizing this whole campaign.
These students are in a hurry to provide relief to the victims– reason soon the winters will set in and the cold desert will become inaccessible. “The relief should reach them well in time. Right now the aid is pouring from all sides but soon they would be out of sight and so would be their plight,” they share their worries.
Given this awe-inspiring spirited zeal of Ladakhi students and their unflinching faith, optimism, one is convinced that definitely the loss will be overcome very soon – and `Good time’ will certainly be back. Just a matter of time- that’s for sure!
 
Kashmir Images :: Details

Baramulla, Aug 16: An unruly mob attacked ambulance of Sub-district Hospital Pattan and roughed up doctors including Block Medical Officer (BMO) Pattan near Singhpora Pattan Monday.
“It was in the afternoon when our ambulance was stopped by hundreds of youth near Singhpora Pattan. The angry youth asked for the BMO who happened to be with us. And when the BMO asked what was wrong, an angry youth swooped on him and slapped him saying that ambulance was not available to them,” one Dr. Manzoor Ahmed said while talking to ‘Kashmir Images.
“During the assault, the angry youth also hurled choicest abuses at us and misbehaved with a female doctor whom we had picked up from Primary Health Center Singhpora Pattan,” Dr. Manzoor added.
“They pelted stones on the ambulance and smashed its windowpanes,” alleged the doctors.
Denying the allegations about the non-availability of ambulance, he said that the ambulance always remains available at Sub-district Hospital. “Some youth had asked for it to visit an injured youth of Singhpora who is admitted in SKIMS Soura but that time ambulance had gone to fetch staff of the hospital,” he clarified.
The doctors and paramedical staff threatened to go on strike following the assault on staff and BMO saying they were feeling insecure.
“We put our lives to risk and work under precarious circumstances but despite that people fail to realize our limitations. It is very unfortunate,” said the medicos.
 
Kashmir Images Near LoC, Omar talks of peace

“When table is available, why to go for stones?”
Says good Indo-Pak relations imperative for peace, development


Keran, Aug 16: Describing good Indo-Pak relations imperative for peace and development in both the countries, Chief Minister Omar Abdullah today said Jammu and Kashmir has always been the recipient of the dividends of thaw in Indo-Pak relations.
Addressing a public meeting here on Monday, the Chief Minister underlined the need for free trade and travel across the LoC to enhance economic activities and broad-base people’s interactions.
Omar stressed on brotherly Indo-Pak relations and said that dialogue between the two countries in a friendly atmosphere will pave way for settling all issues and contributing for lasting peace in the sub-continent.
“In the last 60 years’ period we have witnessed three-and-half wars between the two countries without yielding any positive result. This highlights the need for addressing the issues peacefully,” he said. The Chief Minister said that the bad affects of gun and violence have engulfed Pakistan and there is immediate need for this country to join hands with India to fight “terrorism” and help cultivate peace for the larger interests of the two people.

Omar welcomed the Government of India’s recognition of the fact that the accession of Jammu and Kashmir to India had taken place under unique circumstances necessitating addressing political issues of the state in a special manner.
He also welcomed the Prime Minister’s statement on the issue of autonomy and said that time has provided a historic opportunity to the people of Jammu and Kashmir to take advantage.
He said he has always advocated addressing political issues of Jammu and Kashmir politically and his party has stood for the restoration of autonomy to Jammu and Kashmir.
On the present law and order situation in the Valley, Chief Minster said that stone pelting and violence will never prove prudent for anyone to ventilate his opinion and stress on the issues.
“We have undergone a saga of militancy and we know it has yielded nothing for us,” he said and appealed to all shades of the people to help restore normalcy and work for peaceful settlement of political issues on table.
“When dialogue process is available, why to resort to stone pelting and hartals?” he questioned the leaders “perpetrating these tactics” adding that when they can discuss anything on the table and put forth any solution to the problems in a free and fair atmosphere of dialogue, there is no need to disturb the peace and put everyone in trouble.
The Chief Minister said that during elections, he asked votes from the people for development and his government in last 18 months has focused on ‘Pani, Bijli, Sadak, Taleem and Sahet’ (drinking water, electricity, roads, education and health), flagging employment and employability the major sectors of government concern.
“We have promised to be facilitators in the talks at internal and external levels and my government is actively involved in it,” he added.
The Chief Minister expressed sorrow over the economic losses in the recent torrential rains in the border area of Keran and said that government will take every measure to rehabilitate the affected families and restore the infrastructure. He announced six months’ ration for the affected families and special recruitment drive for the youth of the area. He also said the demand of the people for separate development block for the area would be actively considered in the right forum and assured them concrete steps by the government for all-round development of the area.
The public meeting was also addressed by Minister of State for Tourism and Housing, Nasir Aslam Wani, MLA Kupwara, Mir Saifullah while as MLC Nasir Khan was present on the occasion.
 
Officer lauded in Indian Kashmir for hurling shoe

By AIJAZ HUSSAIN (AP) – 12 hours ago

SRINAGAR, India — Fifteen police officials have been suspended after an off-duty officer flung a shoe at Indian-controlled Kashmir's top elected official during India's independence day ceremony — an insulting act lauded by thousands of Kashmiris, news reports said.

The public reaction to Abdul Ahad Jan's stunt during Sunday's ceremony in Srinagar underscores the continuing anti-India sentiment in the predominantly Muslim region which has been rocked by unrest since June. At least 57 people have died in the violence.

Jan was in a high-security gallery of top officials and ministers when he hurled a shoe at Chief Minister Omar Abdullah during the ceremony at a soccer stadium.

He also threw a black flag toward Abdullah while shouting, "We want freedom." Neither item hit Abdullah.

Jan was immediately arrested and authorities later said he was mentally unstable and had been suspended from work in May.

"It was a major security breach and we're probing how he managed to sit in the top officials gallery," said a police officer on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to speak with media.

The officer said 15 police were suspended for lax security that allowed Jan to enter the stadium.

After his arrest, thousands of supporters shouted pro-independence slogans outside Jan's house and showered flowers on his wife as young men played musical instruments, local newspapers reported Monday.

Anti-India sentiment runs deep in Kashmir — the Himalayan region divided between predominantly Hindu India and Muslim-majority Pakistan but claimed in full by both. Most people favor independence from India or a merger with Pakistan.

Jan's brother, Sanaullah Jan, accused authorities of lying when they said Jan was mentally unwell and had been suspended.

"He is very sensitive and felt sad over the killings in the (Kashmir) valley," Sanaullah Jan was quoted as saying by the English-language Greater Kashmir daily newspaper.

Following his arrest, Jan was hospitalized later Sunday after he became sick, the officer said.

On Monday, Jan again shouted pro-independence slogans at the hospital and told reporters he wanted to meet Abdullah. "I'll expose all the lies of state police," he said.

The recent unrest in Indian Kashmir has been reminiscent of the late 1980s, when protests against New Delhi's rule sparked an Islamic insurgency that has so far killed more than 68,000 people, mostly civilians.

Separatists says they will continue protesting during the current Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

On Monday, thousands of armed police and paramilitary soldiers patrolled nearly deserted streets in Srinagar — the main city in the region — and other major towns and enforced a strict curfew in most of the region. Troops laid razor wire and erected steel barricades to block access to downtown.

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved
The Associated Press: Officer lauded in Indian Kashmir for hurling shoe
 
I want to throw my shoe too at someone, ideally the rubber chappal ,so when it hits someone in face it will make a snapping sound
 
every three days born one hero of she these days,hahhahahha
 
viva le resistance..soon shoes will be declared WMD and all delegates have to attend without shoes.
 

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