What's new

Thank you Jinnah for Pakistan. Thank God ...Modi RSS brutality against Muslims

If you had a slightly better working brain, you'd understand that he is an Indian first and Muslim second, he might have been born and brought up in India making him an Indian inside out so his OvEr-Th3-ToP aGgReSsIoN is pretty much justified

You still don't get it.

Your comparison doesn't make sense because of several socio-political factors which your simplistic, reductionist thinking apparently can't comprehend. Allow me to lay them out for you as spoon-feeding seems to be the preferred method of knowledge acquisition on this forum:

1.) The trauma of partition and the blood that was shed to create a separate homeland for Muslims leaves some psycho-social baggage on the Muslims still left in India; the minorities in Pakistan do not have the same history of potentially being in a neighboring homeland where they could dictate their own fate

2.) The entire "experiment of Pakistan" was predicated upon the belief that Muslims in India may very well have their rights complicated at best and snatched away at worst --- something that Indian Muslims are now feeling

3.) Pakistan does not have and has not had a government that is essentially the political wing of a supremacist and extremist cult that inherently believes that the nation should be cleansed of other faiths and must become some kind of Hindtuva ideal; we have fought TTP and others for holding such beliefs rather than elected a member of the TTP's political shura as our PM (as India did when they elected Modi, who has a very RSS-type ideology.)

When you take all of this together, his over-the-top aggression (or, to use your more flamboyant presentation: OvEr-Th3-ToP aGgReSsIoN) --- especially compared to the more subdued celebrations of the several Indian Hindus in the same class --- suggests that, as many minorities subconsciously feeling marginalized often do, he was over-compensating as is typical in "more loyal than the King" approaches to proving patriotism stemming from deeper insecurities.

We are going in circles. I was NOT surprised that he would celebrate his win --- but the vigor in which he did. If you so strongly believe that I had no grounds to be surprised, then the events of the past few days in Delhi seem to suggest otherwise. BTW, I do get your point --- he is an Indian national supporting his team and has every right to do so aggressively!
 
There shall be more blood..more lynching, rapes and murder of mulsims....

We must fortify our emotional, intellectual and spiritual defences.

Muslims of MaqboozaHindustan have conditioned themselves to submission as a bargain of existence...and by the total sell-out of their so-called leaders...who are on the FacistState's payroll from start...just have a look at them 'leaders' of IoJK!

It is too easy for us to criticise Muslims of MaqboozaHindustan and mock them... have we, Paks, not made an existential bargain whence we live abroad?

Let us never loose our Humanity!

Afterall, we are Paks..with the BiggestHeart in the world!!!

Excellent post.
 
When modi came to power, people thought he will repeat Gujrat modal. And people were right. He did, is doing, will do.
When people elect street hooligan as there leader , then this is common phenomenon in national politics. In 10 years , he is playing very positive role in the destruction of Indian social fabric.
 
Just talked to a few friends from dehli...
These ppl are scared and gave an ostritch mentality. They have literally given up hope.

Till a month ago they were upbeat and pompous about their strong presence in dehli but these attacks over past few days have shaken them to the core.
One person from old dehli said to me how can we react bcoz if we go after these goons and take revenge then they will make dehli another gujrat. My reply was ok, sit down and wait for ur turn then. Bloody ignorants... They expect bajrang dal to show mercy.
https://www.opindia.com/2020/02/del...aujpur-chandbagh-police-murder-stone-pelting/
 
If you are basing your opinion on a government propaganda outlet like this instead of listening to sane brains out there like Ravish Kumar, and doing independent research, then congrats for being brain dead and you deserve a brain dead maniac like Modi as your "leader".
Ravish kumar may be brain dead, but Muslims are no Saints here. Petrol bombs, empty bottles, stones and bricks were found on the terrace and inside Hussain’s house
http://www.msn.com/en-in/news/newsi...-by-surprise/ar-BB10xcpJ?li=AAggbRN&ocid=iehp

Mobilisation, stockpiling ahead of riot caught Delhi police by surprise

Mobilisation of mobs ready to run riot and prior stockpiling of projectiles by residents of affected areas took police by surprise as the scale of this week’s communal violence in the Capital became clearer in the initial investigation conducted thus far, officials in the know said on Friday.

Reports said 350 empty cartridges were recovered after over 500 rounds of gunfire during the three days of rioting in which 82 people received bullet injuries; the body count rose to 42 by Friday, with hundreds still being treated in hospitals for grievous injuries.

Heavy use of unlicensed countrymade pistols appeared to be a departure from convention when it comes to communal riots in the country, in which most victims have historically succumbed to blunt force trauma or been hacked or burnt to death, said one of the officials cited above. “Petrol bombs, empty bottles, stones and bricks were found on the terrace and inside Hussain’s house,” a senior official of the Forensic Science Laboratory (FSL) said about AAP councillor Tahir Hussain who has been booked for murder. Investigators said such stockpiling appeared to have been a tactic deployed by scores of households in affected areas as people anticipated trouble or were willing to stir it themselves.

The resultant violence caught law-enforcement authorities off-guard, pointing to a larger intelligence failure, former officials said, to gear up for a riot in which one of the victims was, tragically, an Intelligence Bureau officer.

Prakash Singh, former director general of Uttar Pradesh police, on whose recommendations the Supreme Court issued a landmark judgment on police reforms, said, “It requires no intelligence to gauge the build-up in the area in the run-up to the riot. You will have to be blind not to act. Police could have carried all-night searches and detained all those from whose homes stones were found. The police are equally culpable of the deaths that have happened.”

Singh, who also served as director general of Assam police, said it is difficult to believe that a force of 90,000 cannot stop a riot in north-east Delhi.

“You need don’t instructions from government to act or not act. Even a sub-inspector can act on such a situation. That man Shahrukh pointing a pistol at the police officer showed the absence of the fear or respect for the law.”

The police have registered 148 cases and arrested or detained over 600 people in north-east Delhi, as the area stuttered towards normalcy while tension in some pockets still hung in the air.

Two special investigation teams (SITs), formed on Thursday to probe the national capital’s worst communal violence in at least three decades, visited the riot-ravaged areas, hunting down people who have been linked to the rampage.

Delhi Police, counting the losses, will follow the Uttar Pradesh model and make arsonists pay for the damage caused to public and private properties, two officials familiar with the move said.

Police are probing allegations that countrymade pistols were stocked by petty criminals and handed over to alleged outsiders who ran amok during the riot that started off as clashes between those supporting and protesting the Citizenship (Amendment) Act.

HT could not independently verify these reports. Special commissioner of police (law and order) SN Shrivastava said: “I have not come across any such numbers regarding the bullets fired, recovery of empty cartridges, or stocking of firearms by criminals.”

The number of those arrested or detained is likely to increase because raids are being conducted in Delhi and adjoining states, police spokesperson Mandeep Singh Randhawa said at a press briefing.

People stepped out of homes and shops were opened on Friday. Civic workers swept the streets littered with broken glasses and stones. But tension was palpable in some areas.

A 50-year-old Muslim scrap dealer was killed in the Shiv Vihar area early on Friday, his son said, though the local police did not confirm this. Even Randhawa said there was no report of fresh violence in the area.

“Some incidents of violence are being reported continuously. We have not heard of any death but residents are still in rage,” Deewan Singh, a 40-year-old resident of Shiv Vihar, said.

Friday prayers at mosques in the area — the first since the riot — passed off peacefully, local peace committee members said. Earlier in the day, mosques appealed for peace and harmony.

HT visited 10 mosques; five of them were vandalised. People who used to visit the mosques that were damaged visited neighbouring areas under police and paramilitary watch. There was heavy presence of security personnel outside empty mosques as well.

Delhi Police also initiated an “outreach programme”, and their officials met imams and maulvis of mosques. Residents alleged that on Sunday evening — hours after the first stones were thrown — at least 10 trucks carrying men with backpacks parked on a service lane in Bhajanpura.

“These people did not look like labourers. All were young men, between 20 and 30 years. Who knows what they were carrying in their backpacks? It could be stones, it could be weapons,” Om Veer, a 42-year-old shopowner, said.

At his press briefing, Randhawa said of the 148 first information reports (FIRs) filed so far, 25 cases were under the Arms Act. The others were related to murder, attempt to murder, rioting, attacking security personnel, damaging public and other offences. He said AAP councillor Tahir Hussain was still at large.

A police team visited the house of a man identified as Shahrukh. On Monday, he was caught on camera approaching a policeman while pointing a pistol at him, turning to another direction in the nick of time and then firing a few rounds in the air. He and his family members have absconded.
 
An Indian Muslim made fun of me at an Ivy League (so he wasn't an idiot) because Pakistan lost to India in some cricket match. He was SO pumped that India had beaten Pakistan. I was a little shocked at his aggression. Muhammad tha uska naam. I bet he didn't see this coming.

Indian Muslims need to stop appeasing their Hindu masters and pretending that everything's okay.

Give him my regards. Lol
 
Ravish kumar may be brain dead, but Muslims are no Saints here. Petrol bombs, empty bottles, stones and bricks were found on the terrace and inside Hussain’s house
http://www.msn.com/en-in/news/newsi...-by-surprise/ar-BB10xcpJ?li=AAggbRN&ocid=iehp

Mobilisation, stockpiling ahead of riot caught Delhi police by surprise

Mobilisation of mobs ready to run riot and prior stockpiling of projectiles by residents of affected areas took police by surprise as the scale of this week’s communal violence in the Capital became clearer in the initial investigation conducted thus far, officials in the know said on Friday.

Reports said 350 empty cartridges were recovered after over 500 rounds of gunfire during the three days of rioting in which 82 people received bullet injuries; the body count rose to 42 by Friday, with hundreds still being treated in hospitals for grievous injuries.

Heavy use of unlicensed countrymade pistols appeared to be a departure from convention when it comes to communal riots in the country, in which most victims have historically succumbed to blunt force trauma or been hacked or burnt to death, said one of the officials cited above. “Petrol bombs, empty bottles, stones and bricks were found on the terrace and inside Hussain’s house,” a senior official of the Forensic Science Laboratory (FSL) said about AAP councillor Tahir Hussain who has been booked for murder. Investigators said such stockpiling appeared to have been a tactic deployed by scores of households in affected areas as people anticipated trouble or were willing to stir it themselves.

The resultant violence caught law-enforcement authorities off-guard, pointing to a larger intelligence failure, former officials said, to gear up for a riot in which one of the victims was, tragically, an Intelligence Bureau officer.

Prakash Singh, former director general of Uttar Pradesh police, on whose recommendations the Supreme Court issued a landmark judgment on police reforms, said, “It requires no intelligence to gauge the build-up in the area in the run-up to the riot. You will have to be blind not to act. Police could have carried all-night searches and detained all those from whose homes stones were found. The police are equally culpable of the deaths that have happened.”

Singh, who also served as director general of Assam police, said it is difficult to believe that a force of 90,000 cannot stop a riot in north-east Delhi.

“You need don’t instructions from government to act or not act. Even a sub-inspector can act on such a situation. That man Shahrukh pointing a pistol at the police officer showed the absence of the fear or respect for the law.”

The police have registered 148 cases and arrested or detained over 600 people in north-east Delhi, as the area stuttered towards normalcy while tension in some pockets still hung in the air.

Two special investigation teams (SITs), formed on Thursday to probe the national capital’s worst communal violence in at least three decades, visited the riot-ravaged areas, hunting down people who have been linked to the rampage.

Delhi Police, counting the losses, will follow the Uttar Pradesh model and make arsonists pay for the damage caused to public and private properties, two officials familiar with the move said.

Police are probing allegations that countrymade pistols were stocked by petty criminals and handed over to alleged outsiders who ran amok during the riot that started off as clashes between those supporting and protesting the Citizenship (Amendment) Act.

HT could not independently verify these reports. Special commissioner of police (law and order) SN Shrivastava said: “I have not come across any such numbers regarding the bullets fired, recovery of empty cartridges, or stocking of firearms by criminals.”

The number of those arrested or detained is likely to increase because raids are being conducted in Delhi and adjoining states, police spokesperson Mandeep Singh Randhawa said at a press briefing.

People stepped out of homes and shops were opened on Friday. Civic workers swept the streets littered with broken glasses and stones. But tension was palpable in some areas.

A 50-year-old Muslim scrap dealer was killed in the Shiv Vihar area early on Friday, his son said, though the local police did not confirm this. Even Randhawa said there was no report of fresh violence in the area.

“Some incidents of violence are being reported continuously. We have not heard of any death but residents are still in rage,” Deewan Singh, a 40-year-old resident of Shiv Vihar, said.

Friday prayers at mosques in the area — the first since the riot — passed off peacefully, local peace committee members said. Earlier in the day, mosques appealed for peace and harmony.

HT visited 10 mosques; five of them were vandalised. People who used to visit the mosques that were damaged visited neighbouring areas under police and paramilitary watch. There was heavy presence of security personnel outside empty mosques as well.

Delhi Police also initiated an “outreach programme”, and their officials met imams and maulvis of mosques. Residents alleged that on Sunday evening — hours after the first stones were thrown — at least 10 trucks carrying men with backpacks parked on a service lane in Bhajanpura.

“These people did not look like labourers. All were young men, between 20 and 30 years. Who knows what they were carrying in their backpacks? It could be stones, it could be weapons,” Om Veer, a 42-year-old shopowner, said.

At his press briefing, Randhawa said of the 148 first information reports (FIRs) filed so far, 25 cases were under the Arms Act. The others were related to murder, attempt to murder, rioting, attacking security personnel, damaging public and other offences. He said AAP councillor Tahir Hussain was still at large.

A police team visited the house of a man identified as Shahrukh. On Monday, he was caught on camera approaching a policeman while pointing a pistol at him, turning to another direction in the nick of time and then firing a few rounds in the air. He and his family members have absconded.




Good keep going.
I like Indians like you.
You are going to help bring India down while we sit and watch the show.
 
After thanking Allah i i thank him first among human beings on 1900s . All those people who sacrificed for pakistan pak you all acheive ultimate success in here after.

Thank you for Islamic republic of Pakistan :pakistan:
 
Good keep going.
I like Indians like you.
You are going to help bring India down while we sit and watch the show.
What about the violence in Pakistan which has been going on for all these years. Like you We too were watching the different military operations launched by the Pakistani army lke Zarb E adab or This is That.

First of all I have seen more violence in your backyard Karachi then elsewhere. I am referring to the Mohajir violence of 1980’s . It is really mind blowing, The politicians (MQM,PPP) exchange insults, humiliating abuses against one another while party workers trade gunfire and bullets. It is said that there are more guns available in Karachi then Delhi or lawless FATA.U can see the army conveys in the video rushing to the troubled place. In Pakistan the army distributes cheques to the supporters of Khadim Hussain Rizvi (founder of Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan) for stopping the protest. In Delhi there is no such thing.

 
First of all I have seen more violence in your backyard Karachi then elsewhere. I am referring to the Mohajir violence of 1980’s . It is really mind blowing, The politicians (MQM,PPP) exchange insults, humiliating abuses against one another while party workers trade gunfire and bullets.
Thankfully those days are long gone. India lost its long term investment Altaf Hussain after the army operation sent them packing to cleaners. Now PPP and PML N left :sniper:
 
Good keep going.
I like Indians like you.
You are going to help bring India down while we sit and watch the show.
This will not bring Bharat down on its own. The so called international community will not intervene. Neither will Pakistan. The Muslims of Bharat are own there own. In physical and material terms.
 
This will not bring Bharat down on its own. The so called international community will not intervene. Neither will Pakistan. The Muslims of Bharat are own there own. In physical and material terms.


Does anyone need to intervene to help drown some one who is already drowning?
 

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom