It is bewildering what a lot of myth and urban legend has grown up around these events, and how unwilling young people - of all nationalities - remain about doing their homework.
I find that these themes recur in cycles. Once one batch is presented the evidence, and gets an involuntary opportunity to mull over it, and stops presenting their original distorted views, another bunch enters the forum and puts forward the same views. I feel like Sisyphus sometimes.
Yes, because an un-elected person cannot represent the will of the people of Kashmir.
Wrong on two counts. First, he was a sovereign prince, and the state was literally his possession. He was given exactly the same status as 561 others, no more, no less. Why do you find the example of Kashmir worth fighting about, and not that of all the others?
You are also wrong about the will of the people of Kashmir. The organization that had complete domination over the hearts and minds of the people of Kashmir was the National Conference. Shortly before independence, a minority faction based in Muzaffarnagar broke away and returned to its old name, and proclaimed that it favoured merger with Pakistan. The original National Conference continued to function in Srinagar and enjoyed the overwhelming support of the people of the vale. Led by the National Conference, the people of the vale resisted the invaders as much as they could, and fully supported Indian operations. Sheikh Abdullah himself has testified to the events of those times, and the reaction of the Kashmiri masses to the sickening loot, rape and murder committed by the invaders.
Just like Kashmir, Hyderabad was also a princely state which had a Muslim ruler but Hindu population.
He decided to join Pakistan but India send its troops into Hyderabad and annexed it
Operation Polo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is why I wish young people, even young people of mature years, would read up on the background.
Hyderabad had never acceded to Pakistan. It had entered into a standstill agreement just like several other states. It was then that communal riots broke out. Razakars under a fanatic leader ran riot and killed scores from the other community. Even the Prime Minister, the Nawab of Chhatri, resigned, unable to cope with the attacks on him. And he was a Muslim!
It was only then, with the situation rapidly going out of control, that India intervened.
And Hyderabad still had not acceded to Pakistan.