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THE FORGOTTEN WAR IN KASHMIR IS TURNING NASTY

sbh02

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Ever since they entered into a cease-fire agreement in the disputed Kashmir, relations between Pakistan and India never seemed to be unraveling.

Over the past month and a half, however, the South Asian giants are on the brink of redefining their relationship and essentially unscrambling thanks to a full-blown pro-independence uprising in India-controlled Kashmir.

It began with the killing of a popular and talismanic rebel commander, Burhan Muzaffar Wani, on July 8 in south Kashmir. In no time, Kashmir erupted in anger.

The funeral prayers for the 21-year-old—offered back-to-back 40 times—were participated in by more than 200,000 locals, despite a government clampdown. Countless absentia funeral prayers in Kashmir’s mosques followed.

Since then, the valley has been witnessing tense nights and curfewed days. About 70 stone-pelting protesters and bystanders have been shot dead. Kashmir’s hospitals are full of patients targeted with bullets and other lethal ordnance. Their number has swelled to 8,500 in the past 51 days as the longest-ever and strictest curfew of the last 30 years endures.

India has come under fire for using deadly pellet-firing shotguns (or the pump-action shotgun). Officially, more than 1.3 million rounds of pellets have been fired on protesters in Kashmir, blinding or maiming hundreds. New official data reveals that more than 1,400 have received ricocheting pellets in the eyes. Billed as “non-lethal” weapons by the Indian paramilitary Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), pellets are taking lives in Kashmir. A few weeks ago, doctors at one of the region’s key hospitals discovered more than 300 pellets in the torso of a dead boy.

The pump-action shotgun is also used as a war weapon. These guns are used in close-quarters combat and were used by the U.S. Army in the Vietnam War.

The doctors’ association in Kashmir is worried over how to pass pellet-hit patients through MRI scanners. The scanners, the association says, generate a strong magnetic field as a result of which pellets lodged in the body could move. Doctors say this would be particularly dangerous if the iron or lead pellets are located near vital organs like the brain, heart or spinal cord.

The use of pellets in Kashmir has been likened to the use of white phosphorus in Gaza or the use of chemical weapons in Syria. New reports suggest that India could introduce “PAVA shells,” a chili-based ammunition, after widespread condemnation of shotguns.

Other weapons Indian authorities have used to block the Kashmir rage include oleoresin grenades, flash bombs, electron shells, plastic bullets, pepper balls and stun grenades. Recently, Indian armed forces admitted using electron shells against protesters without offering any description of the newly introduced weapon.

These arsenals, according to a doctor friend, have taken a toll on suckling and expecting mothers, the elderly, and heart and asthma patients. As well as more doctors, Kashmir urgently needs weapons experts to better advise the embattled government on the effects of ordnance before it is used.

Night raids, roadblocks, stone pelting, killings, and deadly sieges of villages and cities have reached unprecedented levels in the past 51 days. Internet and mobile services remain blocked. Pressure on local media and a self-embargo of news out of Kashmir by much of India’s national media means the protests in Kashmiri villages go largely unreported. Except for reports on a few Middle East–based TV channels, the uprising in Kashmir has received scant global attention.

Even as the current standoff between Indian soldiers and Kashmiri protesters endures, the organizers, under house arrest or in hiding, including the region’s powerful Hurriyat (an amalgam of several pro-independence parties), have vowed to continue protesting until India pulls back troops and agrees to hold a referendum backed by the U.N. in the region.

The organizers direct the uprising by issuing protest calendars every week. People in hamlets and towns, wary on account of the failed protests of 2008 and 2010, follow the protest timetable to the minute, sometimes with a ferocity that surprises even the campaigners themselves. Trade bodies, fruit growers, contractors, rights activists and even teachers have thrown their weight behind the campaigners.

As India tightens control of the region and vows to defeat what it alleges are “radicals” paid for by neighboring Pakistan, the government in Islamabad has written to the Arab League, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), the U.N., Pope Francis and others seeking diplomatic support on the dispute. Islamabad is dispatching 22 envoys to meet world leaders in the hope of garnering more support.

Away from the realities on the ground in Kashmir, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi chose in a speech on August 15 to increase tensions by raising the human rights issue of Pakistan’s Baluchistan province. However, the Indian opposition parties and a section of the Indian intelligentsia were quick to scoff at Modi’s unrealistic equivalence between Kashmir and Baluchistan. Modi’s rhetorical tactic of applying an illogical substitution to expose Pakistan’s fault lines has only united Pakistanis against India.

For its part, the OIC called for a referendum in Kashmir—as it has done many times in the past. Powerful OIC states like Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Oman hold some sway over India. New Delhi buys petroleum hydrocarbons from the Gulf and also receives billions of dollars from the Middle East in remittances.

India has a sizable Muslim population, yet it remains blocked in the OIC. Privately, Pakistani officials acknowledge that the country might even support India joining the OIC in return for New Delhi agreeing to settle the Kashmir dispute.

With the U.S. and the U.N. refusing to designate the Kashmir rebellion as terrorism, the mutiny in the mountains could continue for decades as more young men are drawn into the conflict. Since Wani’s killing, scores of young men have joined the rebel bands living in the forests.

Though not a big threat to the more than half a million Indian troops stationed in Kashmir since 1947, funerals of the young fighters draw tens of thousands of villagers and townspeople and often turn into pro-independence rallies that are dispersed with the full might of the Indian army.

While it may seem that Kashmir is slipping away from Indian control, past experiences suggest that the Himalayan region can expect even more militarization by the central government in Delhi and even more violence from the rebels.

But the greatest danger is that both Pakistan and India are armed with nuclear weapons and have shown little interest in reducing the size of forces or their stockpiles of nuclear missiles.

In the past seven decades, India and Pakistan have fought three wars—two full-blown encounters and a mini-war in 1999 in the Kargil heights over Kashmir. Though the advent of nuclear weapons in the region may have averted full-scale conventional confrontations between the two countries, the saber-rattling by the Asian superpowers, and the carte blanche various non-state actors in the region enjoy, means Kashmir will remain a flashpoint of global concern.

We ignore it at our own risk.

http://www.newsweek.com/forgotten-war-kashmir-turning-nasty-494184
 
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This struggle must come to a logical conclusion, with or without the help of the UN. India has not left any stone unturned in order to suppress the struggle and destabilize Pakistan in return, so it's time that Pakistan took her gloves off. You got to play nasty if the game is nasty. Pakistan had the opportunity to settle the dispute in 1962 but failed to do so because of the US pressure. This is another or perhaps the last opportunity, this time Pakistan is seemingly free from the US influence.
 
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This struggle must come to a logical conclusion, with or without the help of the UN. India has not left any stone unturned in order to suppress the struggle and destabilize Pakistan in return, so it's time that Pakistan took her gloves off. You got to play nasty if the game is nasty. Pakistan had the opportunity to settle the dispute in 1962 but failed to do so because of the US pressure. This is another or perhaps the last opportunity, this time Pakistan is seemingly free from the US influence.
yes but the Indian Army is not occupied by anything else like it was in 1962.
 
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yes but the Indian Army is not occupied by anything else like it was in 1962.

India is occupied by something invisible to naked eye, it will only come to play after the first shots are fired. The US was behind india in 1962 and the US is is still behind india, it didn't make any difference in 1962 and it won't make any difference now.
 
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India is occupied by something invisible to naked eye, it will only come to play after the first shots are fired. The US was behind india in 1962 and the US is is still behind india, it didn't make any difference in 1962 and it won't make any difference now.

ofcourse with help of mighty bangladeshis who sold us out in 1971 we will overcome india and retake kashmir :lol:
 
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This struggle must come to a logical conclusion, with or without the help of the UN. India has not left any stone unturned in order to suppress the struggle and destabilize Pakistan in return, so it's time that Pakistan took her gloves off. You got to play nasty if the game is nasty. Pakistan had the opportunity to settle the dispute in 1962 but failed to do so because of the US pressure. This is another or perhaps the last opportunity, this time Pakistan is seemingly free from the US influence.

Take Gloves off eh ?

What does a BD mind think Pak did in 47-48, 65, 71 & 99 ? what did it get in return ?

Get Nasty ? when have anything between India & Pak been not nasty ?

Lost Opportunity in 62 ? Back then Pak which included your land too was firmly in the Grip of the West , part of all sorts of pacts - CENTO, SEATO etc all of which had one thing thing in mind - Keep the Commies out.

Does your mind tell you that Ayub could have gone against the powers that feted & propped him ? Would the West allowed Pak to step in to subvert a nation fighting the Commies ?

Get real.



yes but the Indian Army is not occupied by anything else like it was in 1962.

Read comments above

ofcourse with help of mighty bangladeshis who sold us out in 1971 we will overcome india and retake kashmir :lol:


Please dont stop them, they like to believe they are in the big league !
 
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Over the past month and a half, however, the South Asian giants are on the brink of redefining their relationship and essentially unscrambling thanks to a full-blown pro-independence uprising in India-controlled Kashmir.
:laughcry:
That's the biggest piece of crap I've seen written anywhere. For your kind info, only 5 Sunni majority districts out of 22 in Kashmir are creating problems. The remainder care a damn!

'Full blown' my a$$! :omghaha:
 
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India is occupied by something invisible to naked eye, it will only come to play after the first shots are fired. The US was behind india in 1962 and the US is is still behind india, it didn't make any difference in 1962 and it won't make any difference now.

US with India?? That too back in 1962 ?? You must be kidding. :p:

At-least care to read some history dude.
 
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This struggle must come to a logical conclusion, with or without the help of the UN. India has not left any stone unturned in order to suppress the struggle and destabilize Pakistan in return, so it's time that Pakistan took her gloves off. You got to play nasty if the game is nasty. Pakistan had the opportunity to settle the dispute in 1962 but failed to do so because of the US pressure. This is another or perhaps the last opportunity, this time Pakistan is seemingly free from the US influence.
Stop being a cheer leader when big players are playing.
 
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India is occupied by something invisible to naked eye, it will only come to play after the first shots are fired. The US was behind india in 1962 and the US is is still behind india, it didn't make any difference in 1962 and it won't make any difference now.

You know when US was against India and India still kicked arse? 1971 :rofl::rofl::rofl:

And invisible to naked eye? Is it some kind of Jinnat or something? Like Darwesh Zaid Hamid once suggested? :rofl::rofl::rofl:

Next time, please be clear about your opinion. And, to be clear, China will not do rat's arse even if India killed all Kashmiri and sold their body organs for profit. Hey, it is standard business practice in China.

And firing first shots, oh well, India Pakistan are never at peace. Shots keep on flying day-in day-out. Nothing has yet appear and nothing will ever appear. We will kill Kashmiri separatists like pigs and will roast them like pigs. Those who oppose can squeal like, well, pigs.
 
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US with India?? That too back in 1962 ?? You must be kidding. :p:

At-least care to read some history dude.

He's actually right, surprising though it may seem.

Nehru appealed to JFK, and the US sent arms and ammunition, including automatic rifles. The Indian Army was still using bolt-action .303 SMLE rifles.
 
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Pakistan doesn't need to do anything. Hard or soft approach by India towards Kashmir hasn't worked. The Kashmiri people saw the NC playing politics in 2010, in the next elections, they got the PDP to power. Mehbooba Mufti had a certain amount of legitimacy in the Kashmir Valley, particularly in south Kashmir and insurgency ridden districts.

On August 15, her speech was antithetical to that of Modi. Then ex CM Omar Abdullah visited Delhi, and spoke of the failure of the PDP to address the atrocities against the civilians. Then we heard reports that Modi was thinking of replacing the PDP CM and get governor rule there.

At the point of which, Mehbooba Mufti took a hardline stance to save her job. In fact, she and the PDP have lost all support in the Kashmir Valley. The kashmiri society has fractured badly, and India will see the effects of that. Even after the curfew was lifted, there are strikes all over. The kashmiri people have been brutalized, their suffering dehumanized by the state and central governments, in the longest curfew recorded in the Valley in quite some time.
 
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