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We are losing the battle in Kashmir: Indian Army Commander.....!!!!

So your Hindus pray to Punjabi Sharda Peeth hmm thats a new one
Bhimber and mirpur have pothwari speakers other districts have pahari and neelum and parts of muzzafarabad have Kashmiri speaking population
It was the bordering area of the state ofcourse it will have multiple languages and multiple ethnicities
Districts%2BList%2Bof%2BAzad%2BKashmir%2BNAT-NTS%2BPakistan.png



Better than being from a country where you end up dead for eating beef and end in mass graves if you protrst against state attrocities

Don't expect Indians to know a thing about Kashmir, regardless of which side of the border it is. In all my years on this forum and subsequent discussions on Kashmir, time and time again they have exposed themselves to be totally ignorant of Jammu and Kashmir region and its history.
 
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You like the company of neighbor's neighbor, i mean Afghans....
So i can arrange a tent for you at Afghan Refuge Camp....:-)
I am Jat so Punjab and Sindh is my home too so i will take back what's mine if India break :/
 
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So your Hindus pray to Punjabi Sharda Peeth hmm thats a new one
"my" Hindus wut ? :what:

Bhimber and mirpur have pothwari speakers other districts have pahari and neelum and parts of muzzafarabad have Kashmiri speaking population
yeah, tiny pockets of that tiny bit you call "azad", so ?

It was the bordering area of the state ofcourse it will have multiple languages and multiple ethnicities
denial :disagree:

what you call 'Kashmir' in Pakistan is really just punjabi north extension, and most of the people have very little to nothing to do with any 'Kashmiri' culture.
 
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I am Jat so Punjab and Sindh is my home too so i will take back what's mine if India break :/

Fine, i will help you to find your Ancestors Home....:enjoy:
Lets hope there will be no Metro Bus Station on your land....
 
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"my" Hindus wut ? :what:


yeah, tiny pockets of that tiny bit you call "azad", so ?


denial :disagree:

what you call 'Kashmir' in Pakistan is really just punjabi north extension, and most of the people have very little to nothing to do with any 'Kashmiri' culture.
Neelum is tiny ?

Oh yeah so something magical happens at loc that ethnicities change hmm

Oh wow so a non Kashmiri will tell others who is Kashmiri and who is not?
 
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Neelum is tiny ?

Oh yeah so something magical happens at loc that ethnicities change hmm

Oh wow so a non Kashmiri will tell others who is Kashmiri and who is not?
admit it, the fact is that generations of Pakistani north Punjabis have deluded themselves into thinking that they are genuine Kashmiris when truth is they're not.. an unbelievably overwhelming majority of Pakistanis who claim to be 'Kashmiri' are in fact Punjabis.

what's next, 'mirpur' is culturally Kashmiri ? :lol:
 
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India army commander told all this to journalist of Times of Islamabad and he then reported it. Wtf..it is like Pakistani commander giving interview to arnab goswami about balochistan.
 
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Indian-Army.jpeg




SRINAGAR: On a crisp morning Indian troops surrounded a sleepy, riverside village in the disputed mountain region of Kashmir. Intelligence had suggested three anti-India rebels were hiding out in homes set among the willows and poplar trees.

As the soldiers prepared to lay siege on a cluster of houses, they were surprised by a barrage of rocks, bricks and abuse hurled by hundreds of villagers demanding they go away. The rebels also began firing, drawing the soldiers into a battle on two fronts. Two students and one rebel were killed before the troops eventually retreated and the other militants got away, VOA reported.

The incident marks a recent shift in how local Kashmiris are responding to the hundreds of thousands of Indian soldiers deployed in the Himalayan territory. For decades, local villagers had remained behind locked doors when troops arrived to root out rebels bent on ending Indian control over the region.

Frustrated after decades of political stasis and worn out by military operations to root out rebels from their midst, many Kashmiris are rising up at the first sight of troops entering their villages, and protecting the very militants Indian forces are trying to locate.

“We’re all militants now. Our men, women and children are all warriors against Indian rule,” said Adbul Rashid, a farmer of Lelhar in his mid-40s. “Stones are now the people’s weapons.”

When the soldiers returned to Lelhar in April, the villagers were ready. Public announcements asking women and men to beat back the troops had already gone out from the minarets of various mosques, and the troops were met by a hail of rocks.

Intense clashes erupted, but this time the soldiers did not fire. And the three hiding militants fled to safety.

Indian military officials estimate there are some 200 militants in the region, staging attacks on Indian law enforcement and crossing back and forth over the de facto border with Pakistan. It’s a steep drop from the 20,000 estimated to have waged the insurgency in the early 1990s, but military officials say their job is getting harder as the villages increasingly get involved.

“It’s a big problem, a challenge for us to conduct anti-militant operations now,” said Lt. Gen. D.S. Hooda, India’s senior military commander in the region. He noted that armed soldiers had little hope of competing with the militants for public sympathy.

Most citizens in the mostly Muslim region have long resented the Indian presence, and support rebel demands that Kashmir be independent or part of Pakistan.

“Frankly speaking, I’m not comfortable anymore conducting operations if large crowds are around,” Hooda said. “Militarily, there’s not much more to do than we already have done. We’re losing the battle for a narrative.”

Human rights activist Khurram Parvez said “India’s military might have crushed militancy to a large extent, but they’ve failed to change people’s minds,” “Their support for militants and freedom (from India) is now increasingly manifesting in fierce ways.”

Indian forces admit the village defiance is forcing them to change their strategy.

During an average counterinsurgency operation, general law and order has become more important to tackle than the actual operation itself. It’s a matter of serious concern,” top paramilitary officer Nalin Prabhat said.

“Earlier the sight of an army soldier would send us into hiding,” said Zahoor Ahmed Reshi, sitting amid the rubble of what was once his home in the southern village of Gudroo, near Lelhar. The modest wood house was destroyed by an army mortar fired at a rebel who took shelter there during a firefight.

When the village came under siege again in May, hundreds of men and women clashed with the soldiers to help three trapped militants escape.

“People have overcome their fear,” the 48-year-old villager said. “Everybody is now saying, it’s do or die.”

Sooner or later - I hope, sooner - the Army will get that reaching the spot with a pure military orientation is not going to work any more; the overground supporters of the underground, people like Khurram Parvez, have succeeded in capturing the narrative. What is needed is a tactical shift, with a 'soft' element specifically given the task of neutralising the stone-throwers. This is possible, and has to be done soon; for two reasons.

With every successful avoidance of capture of terrorists, we get an increasing number of increasingly experienced operators in the region. The earlier very rapid termination of their activities used to mean that they were raw in the field and died early. This is not happening at quite that rate.

The second factor that demands that the problem be resolved quickly is that the terrorists have changed targets. They no longer attack the Army or the paramilitary. They have shifted targets to the armed and unarmed Kashmir Police. This now underlines the ambiguity in the position of the Kashmir Police. They have been in the forefront of the resistance to the terrorists, but they have also carried on the regular day-to-day law and order responsibilities of any regular society. Now that is weakened; in recent incidents, three unarmed traffic constables were killed, in an echo of earlier urban insurgency outside Kashmir decades ago.

The Kashmir Police is partly to blame itself. It hurts to say so, but over the last two months, there were some shocking incidents of gunning down in cold blood of apparently unconnected individuals. This has led to a strengthening of the narrative of the NGO support structure for the terrorists, and has focussed the attention of the terrorists on the Police, not on the armed killers but on the rank and file, who are now unnerved at the thought of being killed at will while on, for instance, on traffic duty.

This phase will be overcome, but it requires the Police top administration to understand that the psychological battle has shifted to a new battleground, and they need to cope with it effectively.


Stupidly misleading title (shock) but this is the crux of the matter:





Losing the battle for the narrative doesn't translate into "losing the battle in Kashmir".

The security forces have done their job- they have sealed the LoC almost entirely and rooted out the terrorists in the state so their job (as military/security officers) is all but done. Now it is up to the civlian institutions to step in and create a prosperous state for all those who have unfortunately faced decades of unimaginable suffering thanks to a proxy war waged against India. It is now a matter of winning "hearts and minds" and it is foolish to expect security men (army or police) to be able to deliver in this regard, they are trained, equipped and drilled to fight and conquer.

This is where the problem lays- the civlian governments are simply failing in their job by not creating employment opportunities or meeting the aspirations of their constituents. This is also where Modi has made a HUGE blunder by entering into a coalition in JK, unless the GoI can pursue their devlopment agenda with full vigor in the state the problems will persist but their coalition is already proving to be ineffective and fragile hence the turmoil will continue.


+ This also, IMHO, further emphasises the need to revoke Article 370 so that JK can be connected to the rest of India and all the subsequent investment/employment opportunties this will bring.



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I agree completely.

However, the political situation in the state also needs to be looked at.

There is a HUGE amount of correction needed to the stories that are going around. Why people are looking at the battle for the narrative is quite simple; the Tehreek has concocted its own version of events before, during and after independence, and have been spreading it assiduously through social media. When this false and mischievous narrative is corrected with proper references and without adjectives and adverbs finding excessive space, most young people realise that they are being taken for a ride.

It also helps that azaadi supporters have bitter stories about the crude way in which they are treated if they mention that they support a third alternative, neither for India nor for Pakistan, but to be ruled by themselves. People have begun to realise - the CM has actually spoken out about it - that Pakistan has her own objectives and motives, and those barely touch the good of the Kashmiri people.

Dreaming is very important things to achieve goals.

Not a dream in perpetuity, nor a dream induced by intoxicating substances.

Can't agree more, the military has done a commendable job, on the other hand their civilian counterparts are failing

I tried to point to the reasons for this.

The civilian counterparts might mean two bodies, not exclusive, connected, but distinct.

The civilian counterparts consist of the Kashmir Police and of the administrative machinery. The Kashmir Police is now the focus of attack, and I am not sure that we should be talking of their failing; that is not accurate. They are no longer able to support the military and para-military as they used to do even weeks earlier, because of this pressure. Part of it is due to their own failure to maintain professional standards. Part of it is due to the fact that they are required to maintain law and order impartially, and when they took quick action during the unruly behaviour of non-Kashmiri students at the Srinagar NIT, they attracted a lot of criticism from the bhakt lobby. That was embittering; they had had to do much the same when their own Kashmiri students had misbehaved, and then faced criticism from the soft supporters of the underground.

This is where the divisive character of the Sangh has a direct bearing on the situation.

The civilian counterparts could also mean the administrative and the political machinery. Unfortunately, it has not taken a grip yet; it has been weeks since Mehbooba took over. A contributing factor is that the recent troubles have been centred on south Kashmir, hitherto relatively peaceful and as always a support base for the PDP. There is pressure on the PDP from three directions, from the United Command, pointing to the new phenomenon of civilian cover for terrorists, from the soft supporters of the underground, which has increased its tempo of working and from their own supporters, demanding the benefits of development hand-in-hand with a lowering of violence in day-to-day life. It is only when she copes with these three simultaneously that that part of the civilian administration will show results.

army has done its job, now its time to hand over law and order to JK police and go back to border.

The J&K Police needs to get its act together, fast, and in the teeth of an unprecedented observation of every action that it takes.

@

To some extent that title is a fact.....!!!
Just leave this....!!!! Continue with thread....

That is not for you to judge. You are basing your observations and your comments on a misleading and mischievously worded news item in an obviously biased publication. The perspective is different when seen through the lens of direct observation and interaction, and a daily communication with disparate elements in the Valley.

Independence of Kashmir???

And there goes AJK and Baltistan from Pakistan..what will remain of Pakistan then???

on topic...

http://www.satp.org/satporgtp/countries/india/states/jandk/data_sheets/annual_casualties.htm

yup,we lost it.Thats why terrorist attacks are getting decreased each year..

In terms of success in infiltrating terrorists, the Pakistan Army and the deep state are at an all-time low. It is the inability of the political administration to sort out their differences and take effective action on the ground that is causing the trouble.

We should deal with them as China deals with uighurs.

Then we will become China.

God forbid.
 
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Because with oppression you can,t change the heart and minds of local population.
Slowly overtime in the long run no doubt will be on the losing side.
 
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Why you guys always include Pakistan in every discussion?

Pakistan has stated many times that we are ready to take our forces out from siachen if india takes it forces out so that Entire Kashmir can decide their fate. (1) Everyday kashmir under indian control protests for independence but it doesn't happen in AJK. Azad Kashmir is open and there is no military clashes but what happens in your occupied kashmir is in front of the entire world. (2)

As far as Gilgit Baltistan is concerned its part of Pak and will remain part of Pak. G-B is demanding from Pakistan to make it its fifth province. G-B isn't part of discussion, only kashmir is part of discussion. (3)

India has forcefully occupied part of kashmir. Its military has kept part of Kashmir with it brutally. Don't you know how women are protesting there just because of your armed forces? (4)

(1) That is a mysterious comment. In what way will withdrawing troops from Siachen influence a Kashmiri decision? Are you even aware of the geophysical context? There is not a single voter in the Siachen area.
(2) Even for a Pakistani speaking from the Pakistani point of view, this is a shameless statement. There is unrest in Indian administered Kashmir purely because from the time of Zia, crores of rupees have been pumped into Kashmir, to create a small, hard-core body of agitationists who support Pakistan. They live in a democratic India; in a non-democratic Azad Kashmir, every particle of dissent has been crushed out of existence by a ruthless military regime. Even with the best efforts of this hard-core group, the majority of Kashmiris who talk of azaadi talk of an independent, third-party solution, of independence for Kashmir, an alternative that was removed from the options offered by some schools of thought in the UN by the strenuous efforts of the Pakistani representative.
(3) This is what you say. This is what the moderate section of the Indian political establishment was also willing to concede. You have ensured that the position is lost forever by your own trouble-making efforts. Now that Pakistan has irritated the right-wing, hyper-nationalist sentiment in India over the last 26 years, and now that political power is exercised by that same right-wing, hyper-nationalist sentiment, you may count on this account being re-opened.
(4) Only a cynic determined to preach propaganda would ignore facts and distort history like this.

I am kind of lazy to create my own version of these down below paragraphs written by a senior member....
i am sure @Tipu7 will not sue me for copyright....:D
Enjoy indians....

Hi

Whenever you donate blood, they cross match your blood group first.
If they match, the patient receive the pack of blood.

What happen when you give blood to someone whose blood group is different?
That blood kills whole body as it circulate through body via arteries and veins.

Same is case with organ donation, you cannot receive the organ in your body who is not part of you or not cross match you. If you do you are creating big trouble for you, slow painful death in which cancer start from organ and spread in entire body, ultimately killing you.


Same is situation with Kashmir and India.
It was never part of India and will never be.
Regionally, religiously, politically, historically, geographically, traditionally, socially and economically it is much close to Pakistan.

But India love to play evil guy here, for accessing land route to Middle Asia and Europe, for cutting land link of Pakistan with China, to develop strong grip over Afghanistan and Iran, to control rivers of Pakistan and to gain unbeatable strategic advantage in region, India need Kashmir, whole of it along with Gilgit and Baltistan.........

And this greed will kill India some day.
India is big country and strong too. But a strong thing is as strong as its weakest point.
And Kashmir is India weakest point.
Someday it will kill India surely but steadily. And Pakistan knows it very well .........
Cancer is already there, you need to facilitate it's spread and get the job done.......

Kashmir is MORE THAN enough to bleed India to death, all we have to do is to provide the cut and prevent blood from clotting......
final result?
First weakness, then dizziness then fainting out then extreme shivering then suffocation and ultimately a slow painful death due to wastage of excessive blood :-)

Death of India will start from Kashmir
MARK MY WORDS ........


Fanciful imagery will not cover up the fact that Pakistan has tried for sixty plus years, and in doing so, has polluted its own internal processes, by sponsoring terrorism in plain view of the entire world, but has not succeeded so far.

Will it succeed in future? That is begging the question: will she be around to see it succeed? Because while these feverish attempts have been made, Pakistan herself had sunk deep into crisis. Now that the crisis is being lifted, inch by painful, bloody inch, it is time for you to think things through for yourselves: you have seen the effects of sponsoring terrorism on your western border. Does that not give you a clue about how to safeguard your state further, against the toxins that you are spreading inside your own body through sponsoring terrorism on your eastern border?


So your Hindus pray to Punjabi Sharda Peeth hmm thats a new one
Bhimber and mirpur have pothwari speakers other districts have pahari and neelum and parts of muzzafarabad have Kashmiri speaking population
It was the bordering area of the state ofcourse it will have multiple languages and multiple ethnicities
Districts%2BList%2Bof%2BAzad%2BKashmir%2BNAT-NTS%2BPakistan.png



Better than being from a country where you end up dead for eating beef and end in mass graves if you protrst against state attrocities

You need to educate yourself about the status and significance of Sharada Peeth to Kashmiris.

Neelum is tiny ?

Oh yeah so something magical happens at loc that ethnicities change hmm

Oh wow so a non Kashmiri will tell others who is Kashmiri and who is not?


There are many who can help you with that.

Because with oppression you can,t change the heart and minds of local population.
Slowly overtime in the long run no doubt will be on the losing side.

Did you hear yourself speak? Do you say this to yourself when the situation applies to yourself? Do you need a reminder?
 
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not intoxicating dreams but a struggle since dogra Raj.

A meaningless statement. That struggle, in the states, was initiated by the Congress; it was thwarted by the British and the princes acting together. Kashmir was the only exception, where GB was kept out of the scope of Dogra administration until 1947. It was also one of only three states where one of the two Dominions interfered materially, and wholly unethically, arming dissidents and fomenting armed uprising. That is what created Pakistan Administered Kashmir, that is what created the Northern Territories.

It is not their struggle, it is Pakistan's effort to wipe out the ignominy of not living up to the principle of parity on which the country itself was born.
 
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I agree completely.

However, the political situation in the state also needs to be looked at.

There is a HUGE amount of correction needed to the stories that are going around. Why people are looking at the battle for the narrative is quite simple; the Tehreek has concocted its own version of events before, during and after independence, and have been spreading it assiduously through social media. When this false and mischievous narrative is corrected with proper references and without adjectives and adverbs finding excessive space, most young people realise that they are being taken for a ride.

It also helps that azaadi supporters have bitter stories about the crude way in which they are treated if they mention that they support a third alternative, neither for India nor for Pakistan, but to be ruled by themselves. People have begun to realise - the CM has actually spoken out about it - that Pakistan has her own objectives and motives, and those barely touch the good of the Kashmiri people.

Indian army will never let us down. ;)
The job of the IA is done in JK IMHO. They don't need to be postioned in the same aggressive fashion for just 200 terrorists. Rather they should withdraw to their bases and to the LoC and ensure the terrorist flow along the border is well and truly halted at source (or as close to the source as possible). Position some SF and quick reaction teams in strategic locations from where they can react when those animals dare to raise their heads.

I think the role of the IA needs to switch from the nodal securty agency in the state to a support element for the state institutions. As it stands JK is a net beneficary of economic support from the centre, they need to have their hands held and be made to standalone like every other state in the union, why do they deserve special status? The IA should thus be training the JKP and the state administration should be charged with the running of the state, why exactly is the IA running schools and colleges for Kashmiri students? Because the state itself is failing in that regard.

The civilian counterparts consist of the Kashmir Police and of the administrative machinery. The Kashmir Police is now the focus of attack, and I am not sure that we should be talking of their failing; that is not accurate.
I think it is fair to call a spade a spade, the terrorists are targetting the weakest links and that is the JKP. The CAPFs and IA/RR are formidable foes and they know they cannot hold their own against them but the JKP is a very soft target and hence they have been hit again and again. It is time for them to step up to the plate and ensure their state is protected, the IA/CAPFs can support this but they should not be at the forefront, this is only encouraging a dependancy wherein the JKP are not self-sufficent. A baptism of fire is needed, it will be a painful learning expereince but one that is vital for the long term success of the state.
 
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7 lakh indian occupier terrorists can not change the fact that Kashmir, culturally, religiously, lingustically, historically, geographically and racially has always been with the rest of Pakistan in form of any empire or any civilization.


Source (Book) - Kashmir: Its Aborigines and their Exodus


On Jan, 04, 1990, a local Urdu newspaper, Aftab, published a press release issued by Hizb-ul-Mujahideen, asking all Pandits to leave the Valley immediately. Al Safa, another local daily repeated the warning.These warnings were followed by Kalashnikov-wielding masked Jehadis carrying out military-type marches openly. Reports of killing of Kashmiri Pandits continued to pour in. Bomb explosions and sporadic firing by militants became a daily occurrence.

Explosive and inflammatory speeches being broadcast from the public address systems of the mosques became frequent. Thousands of audio cassettes, carrying similar propaganda, were played at numerous places in the Valley, in order to instill fear into the already terrified Kashmiri Pandit community. Recalling these events, the former Director General of Jammu and Kashmir Police, Shri M M Khajooria says, “The mischief of the summer of 1989 started with serving notice to the prominent members of the minority community to quit Kashmir.

The letter said, ‘We order you to leave Kashmir immediately, otherwise your children will be harmed- we are not scaring you but this land is only for Muslims, and is the land of Allah. Sikhs and Hindus cannot stay here’. The threatening note ended with a warning, ‘If you do not obey, we will start with your children. Kashmir Liberation, Zindabad.”1

They signaled the implementation of their intentions quite blatantly. M. L. Bhan of Khonmoh, Srinagar, a government employee, was killed on Jan 15, 1990. Baldev Raj Dutta, an operator in Lal chowk, Srinagar, was kidnapped on the same day. His dead body was found four days later, on Jan 19, 1990, at Nai Sarak, Srinagar.The body bore tell-tale marks of brutal torture.

Night of Jan, 19, 1990

Though curfew was imposed to restore some semblance of order, it had little effect. The mosque pulpits continued to be used to exhort people to defy curfew and join Jehad against the Pandits, while armed cadres of JKLF marched through the streets of the Valley, terrorizing them no end.

As the night fell, the microscopic community became panic-stricken when the Valley began reverberating with the war-cries of Islamists, who had stage-managed the whole event with great care; choosing its timing and the slogans to be used. A host of highly provocative, communal and threatening slogans, interspersed with martial songs, incited the Muslims to come out on the streets and break the chains of ‘slavery’.

These exhortations urged the faithful to give a final push to the Kafir in order to ring in the true Islamic order. These slogans were mixed with precise and unambiguous threats to Pandits. They were presented with three choices — Ralive, Tsaliv ya Galive (convert to Islam, leave the place or prish). Tens of thousands of Kashmiri Muslims poured into the streets of the Valley, shouting ‘death to India’ and death to Kafirs.

These slogans, broadcast from the loud speakers of every mosque, numbering roughly 1100, exhorted the hysterical mobs to embark on Jehad. All male Muslims, including their children and the aged, wanted to be seen to be participating in this Jehad.Those who had organized such a show of force in the middle of a cold winter night, had only one objective; to put the fear of death into the hearts of the already frightened Pandits. In this moment of collective hysteria, gone was the facade of secular, tolerant, cultured, peaceful and educated outlook of Kashmiri Muslims, which the Indian intelligentsia and the liberal media had made them to wear for their own reasons.

Most of the Kashmiri Muslims behaved as if they did not know who the Pandits were. This frenzied mass hysteria went on till Kashmiri Pandits’ despondency turned into desperation, as the night wore itself out.

For the first time after independence of India from the British rule, Kashmiri Pandits found themselves abandoned to their fate, stranded in their own homes, encircled by rampaging mobs.Through the frenzied shouts and blood-curdling sloganeering of the assembled mobs, Pandits saw the true face of intolerant and radical Islam. It represented the complete antithesis of the over-rated ethos of Kashmiriyat that was supposed to define Kashmiri ethos.

The Pandits could see the writing on the wall. If they were lucky enough to see the night through, they would have to vacate the place before they met the same fate as Tikka Lal Taploo and many others. The Seventh Exodus was surely staring them in the face. By morning, it became apparent to Pandits that Kashmiri Muslims had decided to throw them out from the Valley. Broadcasting vicious Jehadi sermons and revolutionary songs, interspersed with blood curdling shouts and shrieks, threatening Kashmiri Pandits with dire consequences, became a routine ‘Mantra’ of the Muslims of the Valley, to force them to flee from Kashmir. Some of the slogans used were:

“Zalimo, O Kafiro, Kashmir harmara chod do”.

(O! Merciless, O! Kafirs leave our Kashmir)

“Kashmir mein agar rehna hai, Allah-ho-Akbar kahna hoga”

(Any one wanting to live in Kashmir will have to convert to Islam)

La Sharqia la gharbia, Islamia! Islamia!

From East to West, there will be only Islam

“Musalmano jago, Kafiro bhago”,

(O! Muslims, Arise, O! Kafirs, scoot)

“Islam hamara maqsad hai, Quran hamara dastur hai, jehad hamara Rasta hai”

(Islam is our objective, Q’uran is our constitution, Jehad is our way of our life)

“Kashmir banega Pakistan”

(Kashmir will become Pakistan)

“Kashir banawon Pakistan, Bataw varaie, Batneiw saan”

(We will turn Kashmir into Pakistan alongwith Kashmiri Pandit women, but without their men folk)

“Pakistan se kya Rishta? La Ilah-e- Illalah”

(Islam defines our relationship with Pakistan)

Dil mein rakho Allah ka khauf; Hath mein rakho Kalashnikov.

(With fear of Allah ruling your hearts, wield a Kalashnikov)

“Yahan kya chalega, Nizam-e- Mustafa”

(We want to be ruled under Shari’ah)

“People’s League ka kya paigam, Fateh, Azadi aur Islam”

(“What is the message of People’s League? Victory, Freedom and Islam.”)

Wall posters in fairly large letters, proclaiming Kashmir as ‘Islamic Republic of Kashmir’, became a common sight in the entire Valley. So were the big and prominent advertisements in local dailies, proclaiming their intent:

‘Aim of the present struggle is the supremacy of Islam in Kashmir, in all walks of life and nothing else. Any one who puts a hurdle in our way will be annihilated’.

Press release of Hizb-ul-Mujahideen (HM) published in the morning edition of Urdu Daily ‘Aftab’ of April, 01, 1990.

‘Kashmiri Pandits responsible for duress against Muslims should leave the Valley within two days’.

Head lines of Urdu Daily, Al Safa, of April, 14, 1990.

‘With Kalashnikov in one hand and Quran in the other the Mujahids would openly roam the streets singing the Tarana-e- Kashmir.’
 
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