Indiarox
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India is loosing kashmir now
Nope not happening any time soon J&K also has Buddhists,Hindus and Minorities not to mention the Pundits of the valley.
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India is loosing kashmir now
Do you expect the cops to stand and stare when their are quarter pound stone hurled at them at a rate of 40-50 per min.http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/14/world/asia/14kashmir.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss
Deadly Clashes Continue in Kashmir
By LYDIA POLGREEN
Published: August 13, 2010
Kashmiri protesters run for cover as Indian paramilitary soldiers chase them during a protest in Srinagar, India on Friday.
NEW DELHI Kashmiris demanding independence from India flooded the streets in protests across the troubled region Friday[Rolling, your 'suggestion' just went down that drain which empties in Gulf of Mexico], clashing repeatedly with the police and Indian security forces, the
Four people were killed, bringing the total number of dead to at least 55 since the unrest began in June. Kashmiris have been marching in increasing numbers, and in increasingly bold defiance of strictly enforced curfews, in an effort to force India to withdraw its troops from the disputed region, which is claimed by India and Pakistan. It was the first Friday of the Ramadan fasting month, and many people in the mostly Muslim region tried to visit mosques to offer prayers.
The clashes dampened hopes that Ramadan, during which Muslims neither drink nor eat from sunrise to sunset, would cool the simmering anger here. The protests, which began when a teenager was killed by a tear gas shell in June, have spiraled into a broad, unarmed popular revolt that Indian authorities have struggled to control.
Poorly trained and equipped security forces use live ammunition to fend off angry, stone-throwing crowds. The resulting deaths have fed still more protests, and the state government has resorted to calling in still more troops to try to wrest control of the streets.
On Friday police officers fired on a crowd of protesters in the town of Pattan, and a 58-year-old man died of injuries sustained there. In the separatist stronghold of Sopore a large crowd gathered after Friday Prayers and threw stones at a camp occupied by Indian paramilitaries, who opened fire, killing two people, the police said. In Kupwara, a local official ordered the police to open fire on a crowd of 2,000 people who had gathered in defiance of curfew, police officials said. A 23-year-old man died of a gunshot wound.
In Srinagar, the regional capital, officials did not impose curfew, and Friday Prayers were held at the historic, pagoda-shaped mosque for the first time in six weeks. Officials had feared violence if they tried to prevent worshipers from visiting the mosque.
Many Indian paramilitary forces were deployed in Kashmir to fight a brutal, Pakistan-backed insurgency that swept across the Kashmir Valley in the 1990s. They operate under special laws that shield them from prosecution, and many Kashmiris say that this has led to many human rights violations in the region.
Hari Kumar contributed reporting.
New Recruit
Nope not happening any time soon J&K also has Buddhists,Hindus and Minorities not to mention the Pundits of the valley.
Do you expect the cops to stand and stare when their are quarter pound stone hurled at them at a rate of 40-50 per min.
New Recruit
because people in Kashmir just have a reasonless 'fetish' to just throw stones, right?
Oooo....my mighty indian (civil) armed forces (the one who claim to be the backbone of a regional superpower and on the basis of which she extends her influence all around its borders) is trying justifying use of excessive force against stone peddlers.
FAIL!
Do you know the effects of a quarter pound stone can have on the body when its hurled at you???
You guys are talking as though the Protesters are hurling pillows at the cops and the cops shoot back.
Amid conflict, mental stress, Kashmiris resort to suicides
* Resident says he tried 13 times to end his pain with suicide, sometimes slicing open his wrists
* Psychiatrist says depression, stress, mental illness are rampant as everyone is suffering
* Teens, torn apart by killing of relatives by Indian troops, regularly sniff glue, liquids, cooking gas
SRINAGAR: The wounds of Kashmirs never-ending war are reflected in Arshad Maliks red, downcast eyes, in the tremble of the cigarette in his hand, in the self-inflicted knife scars gouged into his left forearm.
Tormented by unrelenting memories of death and violence, he tried 13 times to end his pain with suicide, sometimes slicing open his wrists, other times swallowing fistfuls of pills, he said. I was crying inside, but there was nobody I could talk to because everyone was grieving, the 36-year-old said. More than two decades of brutal warfare between militants and largely Hindu Indian troops in this Himalayan region have left Kashmiris exhausted, traumatized and broken. The rate of suicide, once unthinkable in this Islamic society, has gone up 26-fold, from .5 per 100,000 before the insurgency to 13 per 100,000 now, according to Dr Arshad Hussain, a psychiatrist. Depression, stress and mental illness are rampant. Directly or indirectly, everyone is suffering, said Dr Muzzaffar Khan, who runs a small rehab clinic in Srinagar, the main city in Indian-held Kashmir (IHK).
One man turned to drugs after seeing an uncle and two cousins shot in front of him; another became an addict after he was kidnapped by a pro-government militia, Khan said. A third-grader wouldnt go back to school for two years after he watched gunmen break into his classroom, tie up his teacher and shoot him, another doctor said. Villagers accustomed to late-night searches by security forces have developed midnight knock syndrome and are so jumpy they cant sleep without pills, Khan said. Despite the fierce fighting, the tight-knit Muslim families of IHK formed a durable safety net. That fell apart when an insurgency erupted against occupying Indian troops in 1989. Children were caught in the crossfire between militants and the pro-Indian forces. Others were forced into informing on their families. Parents disappeared in the middle of the night, many into mass graves where their bodies were never unidentified.
An estimated 68,000 people were killed. Nearly every one of the valleys 6 million people has been touched by violence. The conflict has created two lost generations, the teenagers of 1989 who saw their childhoods collapse into civil war, and the teenagers of today who never had a childhood at all.
About 19 percent of Kashmiris suffer from depression, said Dr Mushtaq Margoob, a psychiatrist who has done extensive studies on trauma in IHK. Nearly 16 percent have post-traumatic stress disorder. In the US, less than 7 percent of adults suffer from depression and 3.5 percent have post-traumatic stress disorder, according to the National Institute of Mental Health. They see someone get killed in their presence, some friend, some relative, and they get stuck in that moment, Margoob said. IHKs mental health network is overwhelmed. Before the conflict, Margoob and the other doctors at the psychiatric hospital in Srinagar saw 1,700 patients a year; now they see 100,000, he said. A newly opened psychiatric ward in a nearby hospital sees another 40,000.
One-third of Kashmiris questioned in a 2006 Doctors Without Borders survey said they had thought of killing themselves in the previous month. Most said they were nervous, tense or worried, were easily frightened and suffered from trembling hands. Nearly half had trouble sleeping and cried more than usual.
Children, inured to the violence, have become angry, aggressive and helpless, said Margoob. Worse, they dont fear death. It is this generation that picked up rocks in violent protests this summer, ignoring a crackdown by security forces that has killed more than 50 people. There is a complete breakdown of the social fabric, said Dr Waqar Bashir, who is haunted by the 9-year-old he was unable to revive after the boy hanged himself four months ago. Children that young are simply not supposed to think about suicide, he said. Drug abuse has become widespread. IHK, a traditional centre of mystical Sufi Islam, has a long history of opium and marijuana use in cultural practices. But now many are addicted to smoking heroin and hash, while others are taking codeine-laced cough syrup and prescription opiates from the rash of unregulated pharmacies that sell even morphine without a prescription. Teens regularly sniff glue, liquids and cooking gas. ap
Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
indian army ki jay...!!