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Two girls shot dead in Kashmir

Any kind of killing is unjustifible. But i think moderation here should be in the lines of BBC. Here, there were killings in kashmir which was blamed on indian security forces. However the threads all in this forum was readly accusing indian army for that. So i would suggest, we should be impartial in judgement, and should not become propaganda tools, especially when we all are open to lot of information. Justice should not be twisted to favour once self.
 
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Sopore girls: Children of a lesser God?​



Sometimes home is best experienced by way of detachment…through picture perfect postcards that don’t capture people’s hypocrisy and your subsequent disappointment by it. Particularly so when your home is Kashmir! The abduction and murder of two teenaged sisters in Sopore, Akhtara & Arifa, for ‘Moral Turpitude’ as reported by Mail Today News paper by alleged Lashkar terrorists is medieval in its exhibition and impact.

What’s more heart-wrenching is that there have been no protests over the two murders, as say happened over the Shopian alleged rapes & murderers. Not like people are scared of protests! If 15 year old boys can face off a police van and tear it to bits with bricks and stones, they surely can let out a few slogans against what is obviously a grave crime against the very fabric of Kashmiri society by brutal gun-totting terrorists.

If two young Kashmiri women being dragged out of their home and shot dead in cold blood doesn’t shake the conscience of people and evoke condemnation with a wide spread anger, what will? And yet it’s this collective inability of the Kashmiri people to see, recognise and raise their voice against cutting-across-lines-brutality that this incident has highlighted & underlined. If the cry for justice for the victims of the Shopian alleged double rape & murder rang across Kashmir, why not a similar cry for justice for these two sisters? Or has Kashmir decided that it’s okay for terrorists to abduct and murder its daughters & sisters as long as there’s a convenient label to attach to the heinous crime?

On the contrary, there’s an argument that the murder of these girls is justifiable in the larger ‘Azadi’ narrative. As if ‘Azadi’ is blood thirsty demon that needs the two young sisters sacrificed at it’s altar to quench its sacrificial thirst.

Even as condemnation from separatists has been muted, even main stream political leaders – the notable exception being CM Omar Abdullah – have been apologetic in their reactions to the incident! PDP Chairperson Mehbooba Mufti who visited Shopian at the peak of the protests in the 2008, hasn’t deemed it fit to even issue a strongly worded statement condemning the murders unequivocally, let alone visit the family.

One can’t even begin to imagine the magnitude of protests that would’ve hit Kashmir if there was even a slight hint or indication that the security forces were involved in the incident in any way and the political opportunism that would’ve been on display subsequently.
 
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The point is these two were not killed by the those accused in mass media..it was rather a RAW response to defame LeT by black ops..which has add further misery and loss of life to kashmiris. Only indians read and belive this kind of rubbish..the perpuators easily blew their own cover by their own ignorate..the operational domain of LeT is millitant activism against India, not taliban style moral policing...so it looks fishy here!
 
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The point is these two were not killed by the those accused in mass media..it was rather a RAW response to defame LeT by black ops..which has add further misery and loss of life to kashmiris. Only indians read and belive this kind of rubbish..the perpuators easily blew their own cover by their own ignorate..the operational domain of LeT is millitant activism against India, not taliban style moral policing...so it looks fishy here!

What better can I expect from a person doing his Masters in Conspiracy Theories. :lol:

As the bolded is concerned then they automatically become terrorists and keep up with your terrorist support and remember not to blame the terrorist attack in any of your cities on India.

And yes this is true;

Or has Kashmir decided that it’s okay for terrorists to abduct and murder its daughters & sisters as long as there’s a convenient label to attach to the heinous crime?
 
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Any proof these were LeT and not common criminals?
Or pathetic RAW operatives?

Take that to your thick head --- RAW's ambit of operations is not within the Indian borders.

But anyway you are not going to accept that and keep prattling they are not Lashkar terrorists. So why bother.

Anything happens in Pakistan RAW, anything in Sri Lanka RAW, Anything in BD RAW, anything in Kashmir RAW.

Damn I seriously wish RAW was atleast 1/10 th effective as you ppl make it out to be.
 
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Shutdown in Sopore over recent killing of two girls
Posted On Saturday, February 05, 2011 at 10:18:10 AM

Srinagar A woman separatist group on Friday held a demonstration here against the killing of two teenaged girls by Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) militants in Sopore town of north Kashmir earlier this week.



Zamrooda Habib of Muslim Khwateen Markaz (Muslim Women Centre), a constituent of the hardline faction of Hurriyat Conference, accompanied by her party members led a protest in Lal Chowk, Srinagar against the killing of the two sisters.

Pg-14-03.jpg

Women separatists from J&K called for a complete shutdown in the Valley and asked for a detailed probe into the killings of the two teenagers from Sopore

The activists carried placards and shouted slogans demanding justice for the two slain sisters - Kulsuma, 19, and Yasmin, 17.

“We protested against the inhuman killing of two innocent girls. Anyone involved in the killing should be brought to justice,” Zamrooda said.

Locals and policemen say that they still do not know the reason why the two sisters were killed by the militants.


Police said that the two girls were killed by LeT men but a spokesman of the banned outfit denied the allegations.

The apple town of Sopore observed a complete shutdown on Friday to protest the killing of the two sisters.

The call for the shutdown was given by Hurriyat leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani.

Shutdown in Sopore over recent killing of two girls, News - Nation - Mumbai Mirror
 
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Why should one believe in a blog whose credentials are known to be sympathetic to the far right in the veil of national interest.
 
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Take that to your thick head --- RAW's ambit of operations is not within the Indian borders.

So, still no proof that it was LeT, eh?

Just two dead girls, police incompetence, and a convenient propaganda story.

It might as well be RAW, or aliens, or ... the infamous ISI...
 
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So, still no proof that it was LeT, eh?

Just two dead girls, police incompetence, and a convenient propaganda story.

It might as well be RAW, or aliens, or ... the infamous ISI...

Why bother as I said previously , but rest assured those animals (Lashkar 'freedom fighters') will be sent to their rightful place soon.
 
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Sopore girls part of Christian group, says Kerala evangelist


The case of the murder of two teenaged sisters by suspected militants in Sopore has a new twist. Paul Ciniraj Mohammad, a Christian evangelist based in Kerala’s Kottayam district, has claimed that “the girls were active participants of an underground Christian group.”
J&K Police, however, termed the evangelist’s claim as “false”. They said their investigation found the claim to be factually incorrect” and that “there are no missionaries active in Sopore.”

“I had seen the girls during my visit to Sopore a few years ago, “ Paul Ciniraj Mohammad told The Indian Express . “The girls were not converts. They had started reading the New Testament of the Bible. I suspect that the militants might have come to know about the group and the girls’ involvement in its activities,” he said.

Ciniraj, who runs an evangelical group, Salem Voice Ministries, said the Christian group was working among Muslims in a secret manner. “Only three or four members of the group are converts, whereas others are dedicated believers in Christianity. An evangelist from Kerala had been operating in Sopore,” he said.

“The girls were illiterate. But the Christian group had given them basic education to enable them to read the Bible. The Sopore group is an independent Pentecost one, not affiliated to any church,” he said.

Ciniraj, himself a converted Christian, preaches the Gospel only among Muslims. A native of Thiruvananthapuram, Ciniraj said he converted to Christianity when he was in college, three decades ago.

J&K Police, however, flatly denied Ciniraj’s claim. “We did investigate it discreetly as soon as we heard about this claim. We didn’t find any truth in it,” Superintendent of Police, Sopore, Altaf Khan said. “There are no missionaries working anywhere in Sopore area. There is absolutely nothing that could suggest any such thing”.

Police said that Lashkar-e-Toiba militants were behind the killings. Both United Jihad Council—a conglomerate of militant groups operating in J&K—and Lashkar denied it. “These innocent girls have been killed by the Indian agencies to create confusion among the people and to defame the Lashkar-e-Toiba,” the Pakistan-based chief spokesman of the outfit, Abdullah Ghaznavi, said in a statement to a local news agency. Lashkar posters that appeared in the town had claimed responsibility for the killings. The Lashkar spokesman said the outfit was also probing the killings. “We have ordered a probe at our own level,” Ghaznavi said. “Whosoever is found involved (in these killings) will be handed over to the people of Sopore.”

On January 31, Akhtara, 19 and her younger sister Arifa, 17 were killed by suspected militants, who dragged the sisters out of their home at 7.45 pm and shot them dead. According to the family, Akhtara was cooking and chatting with her mother and younger brother Ghulam Jeelani, 16, while Arifa was upstairs. Their father was in the mosque. “A gunman barged in. His face was covered by a black muffler. Only his eyes were visible. Two others followed him,” said Jeelani. “They were speaking Urdu. One spoke a few words in Kashmiri.”
 
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The Indian hysteria based on unsubstantiated claims shows the desperation in trying to discredit the freedom fighters.

It also gives a window into what kind of biased 'law enforcement' system the Kashmiris have to put up with. No wonder they want to be liberated from the Indian occupation.
 
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Well even if there is not 100% certainty on who killed these sisters, we do have 100% certainty on who killed Mirwaiz Umar Farooq's father, Sajjad Lone' father and many other separatist leaders. This has been confirmed by none other than the separatist leaders themselves. That they were host dead by separatist militants.

So its not surprising that militants are killing their own people, just liek TTP and Afghan Taliban kill their own people for having opposing viewpoints.
 
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Two girls injured in militant attack in Kashmir


Tue Feb 15 2011 23:20:30 GMT+0530 (India Standard Time) by IANS ( Leave a comment )


Srinagar, Feb 15 (IANS) Two girls were injured when separatist guerrillas attacked their house in Baramulla district of north Kashmir late Tuesday night, police said.Guerrillas opened fire at the house of Muhammad Akbar Lone in Wagoora village, injuring his 16-year old daughter Shaista and his 8-year old granddaughter, Moomina.

“The two injured girls were immediately shifted to hospital where condition of one of them is stated to be serious,” a police officer said.

Senior police officers have rushed to the spot along with reinforcements.

No group has yet claimed responsibility for the attack.

Two sisters were gunned down by guerrillas in the adjacent Sopore town early this month.
 
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A Kashmiri Journalist reports to Tehelka on the murders. Should put to rest any doubt on wether militants were behind their murder.

Sopore sisters fall to militant bullets. But the angry Valley looks the other way
Tehelka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazine

IN A congested neighbourhood of old decaying houses, mourners arrive quietly through narrow muddy lanes. On the evening of 31 January, suspected militants dragged two teenaged sisters out of their home in Sopore, Jammu & Kashmir, and shot them dead in cold blood. This time, there were no cries of revenge from angry boys on the streets nor demands for investigations. In the silences and whispers, it seems as if something ominous — rather than horrendous — has happened.

In Muslim Peer, where most of the residents are related to each other, the pauses and measured answers of the girls’ relatives are surprising. There is a palpable feeling of fear and also of an overnight alienation. The victims’ family suddenly feels out of place after rumours that the girls were not only “immoral” but also informers for the security forces.

“Why else would militants kill them? Of course, they had a questionable character too for which they had been warned before,” is a common refrain in the town located 35 km northwest of Srinagar.

Akhtara, 18, and Arifa, 16, were beautiful and poor and often it is a tragic mix, more so when they refused to conform to the accepted morality of Sopore, a Jamaat-e- Islami and militant stronghold.

According to locals, the sisters used to roam around the market at dusk, laughing and chatting on their cell phones. “Akhtara was warned in April and asked to mend her ways but she continued to behave improperly,” says a shopkeeper.

At around 7.45 pm on that fateful day, Arifa was cooking rice in the kitchen of her 8x10 ft single-room home. Akhtara was upstairs at her uncle’s place cleaning fish. Their father Ghulam Nabi Dar, a manual labourer in a ration depot, had gone to the mosque. Their mother Fareeza, a housewife who can no longer walk because of arthritis, was sitting with her 15-year-old son Ghulam Jeelani when the door suddenly opened and three masked men clad in phirans walked in.

“One of them asked my daughter to come out. I knew something was amiss but I had no idea it would go this wrong,” says Fareeza. “We all fell at their feet, begging them to tell us if we had done something wrong. But they said they just wanted to ask a few questions.”

“Outside, it was like a crackdown,” says a neighbour. Almost everyone heard the noises but no one came out. “There were 6-7 armed men who had cordoned off the area. When we tried to open a window, they warned us to stay inside. We were too afraid to go out,” says a relative.

The gunmen locked Fareeza inside and went up to get Akhtara. “Her uncle tried hard to stop them but they hit him and took the girls away. Some of us followed them but they sent us back saying they just want to talk to them alone. They said it was better for us to go home and not make them angry, and we returned,” recalls Shareefa, their aunt, whom Akhtara used to help with the fish.

Jeelani, who is frail and looks younger than his 15 years, hovered around, unable to understand what to do. Sometimes, he hugged his sisters and sometimes begged the gunmen to leave them alone, but his pleas fell on deaf ears

Fifteen minutes later, gunshots shattered whatever little hopes the family had left. The bodies were found in Rahim Sahib neighbourhood. One was riddled with six holes, the other with four, including one through the head.

“One of the sisters had a broken arm and another had broken teeth. Their back had been lashed and I couldn’t count the injuries,” says a relative who gave the sisters their final bath before burial. Not many people attended the funeral, as it was almost certain that it was militants who had killed the “immoral girls”.

THE POLICE had given out the names of two local Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET) militants — Muzaffar Naikoo alias Muz Maulvi and Waseem Ganai — within hours of the killings but the United Jehad Council (UJC) refuted the police claim and vowed to conduct its own investigation.

Everyone in Sopore seemed to have known the sisters or maybe their murder increased their “notoriety”. “They used to go out to the market at dusk, talk on cell phones on the street and also roamed around STF (Special Task Force) camps,” was the common refrain. But no one saw them entering an STF camp and the police say that none of their informers dare enter the camp through the bus yard.

There’s nothing to prove that the girls were informers. They haven’t stashed any riches, certainly not in their home. They don’t have a television or a bathroom.

Akhtara cleaned fish for Rs.4 a kg and used to work about four hours a day. “Even when she was dragged out, she had fish scales and stench on her hands,” recalls Shareefa.

Ritual condemnations came from several sides but no real words of anger or outrage were said. After the UJC denied any role in the killing, Hurriyat (G) gave a protest call insinuating that it was the work of State agencies. A day later, LeT posters appeared all over the town claiming responsibility for the killing. “We killed the two girls because their behaviour was improper and they were involved in degraded activities like informing the security agencies,” the poster read. It also threatened to take action against those who had started raising questions about the murders. No proofs and explanations of the girls’ involvement as informers were provided.

As for the mainstream political parties, the People’s Democratic Party, which acts as human right champions in the Valley, didn’t talk about the issue for days. The PDP made a passing reference about it five days later in its angry statement over the killing of Manzoor Ahmad Magray, 21, by the army in Handwara on 5 February.

Chief Minister Omar Abdullah visited Magray’s family a day after his killing, but bypassed a numbed mother, a distraught father and hurt brother. However, he was the first to tweet about the murders but no one from Dar’s house was following him on Twitter.

Meanwhile, human rights group Coalition of Civil Society, which sent its volunteers to the family, said that the real task was to work beyond statements and make these acts intolerable in our society.

“If the militants have killed the girls for promiscuity, then we have a huge task ahead of us because it is not the job of militants to decide who is promiscuous among us and give punishments. This is against international human rights principles and is certainly against Islam,” says Khurram Parvez, a human rights activist. “And if the girls were informers, we strongly condemn it because we don’t accept civilian killings and we had got UJC to agree to it,” he says.

Dar is a broken man and it is hard to imagine him carrying a load on his bent back as he has been doing for the past 15 years. Fareeza hasn’t moved from a relative’s home where she wails and sings elegies to her dead daughters. Jeelani roams around the bylanes like a ghost.

Their 8x10 ft room — with wires hanging from its low ceiling and the rough cement walls turned black — suddenly seems to have become big for the family that was always cramped for space.

In a distant corner, Fareeza wails in her elegy. “We were two daughters and a mother, we used to joke and laugh together. Tomorrow when everyone will go, who will I talk to? Without her crutches how will a cripple live, come back my daughter, come back to me!”
 
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