Judged:
1
1
1
Sep 9, 2009 | Posted by: roboblogger
Comments
|
Judged:
1
1
1 |
||||
|
Judged:
1
1
1 While the massacre of the Uygher is purely fabricated, the killing of the Kashmiri in occupied Kashmir is real and happening daily. Who is responsible for the terrorist assaults in Mumbai, India? Both groups [Jaish-e-Muhammad and Lashkar-e-Taiba] have their roots in the conflict over the disputed Himalayan state of Kashmir. So the Pakistani did it, huh! While it is so easy to blame it on the Pakistani, which is the usual Indian Government tactics. According to terrorism expert Jason Burke, all signs point towards a homegrown local Indian outfit. And I agree! Where did all those freedom fighters hide after they landed in Mumbai? Did they booked into the 5 stars hotel! I sure you will agree with the term "freedom fighters" since you were so supportive of Uyghur terrorists in China. You mustn't be double standard or you will be shown as a hypocrite! Paul Cruickshank wrote: "If capability and track record are anything to go by, it is likely that the attack was either carried out by Indian Mujahedeen, an indigenous Indian militant group or a Kashmiri militant group with ties to al-Qaida such as Lashkar e Toiba, or some combination of the two....At the very least this seems, therefore, to have been an "al-Qaeda inspired" attack." The Kashmiri aren't gonna forget the recent massacre so soon! Not to mention the the evergrowing Naxalite rebels all over India! So how many more bombs will be triggered in India? And is India going to send their Special Force going to shoot at anything that move like they did in the Taj Hotel in Mumbai? |
||||
|
Since: Mar 08
|
Judged:
1
1
1 |
|||
|
Judged:
1
1
1 According to police officials, the incident took place in the morning when troops fired at an unruly mob at Bandipora, 52 km from here, for curfew violation and for resorting to violence against security personnel. Read: "army fired on a crowd" Why aren't the Western Media focusing on these killing by the India Army? Here is another: Masroof Sultan said he was on his way to college chemistry finals when Indian security officers pulled him off a city bus, hauled him to an interrogation camp, accused him of being a terrorist and tortured him with repeated electric shocks. The troops then drove the 19-year-old student to a deserted canal bank and leaned him against a tree, where, Sultan recalled, five officers fired at him. Sultan crumpled to the ground, and one of the officers pumped another three bullets into his body. Two hours later, the Indian security forces told police to retrieve the corpse of a militant who had been killed near the canal in the cross-fire of a gun battle. The only unusual part of Sultan's story is that he lived to tell it. Doctors said the husky teenager, who lost an estimated 13 pints of blood, survived primarily because none of the bullets punctured vital organs or vessels. |
||||
|
Judged:
1
1
1 Don't get me wrong! I am no terrorist supporter. My message for the Indians here is they should look at their own backyard before poking their nose into other people's countries internal affair. |
||||
|
Here's more especially for Globe Son from India:
In recent months, a conflict little noticed in most of the world has begun to escalate in the deceptively bucolic mountain valley of Kashmir, where residents say Indian army and security forces are waging a brutal campaign of torture, terror and killings against militants fighting for independence. While militants also are accused of murders, rapes and other atrocities, residents say Indian troops are far more brutal. The struggle is choking everyday life in Kashmir, where many more civilians are dying than either military forces or rebels. According to records maintained by local journalists, lawyers and doctors, between 12,000 and 20,000 people have been killed in slightly more than three years of violence. "We are living in fear and terror," said Amina Nazir, a shopkeeper's wife. Her tidy second-floor apartment overlooks the charred debris of Srinagar's main shopping area, Lal Chowk, where government forces burned more than 200 houses and shops last month in retaliation for a guerrilla attack on an empty military building. "There is no justice, no law and order," Sultan said in a bedside interview at the Bone and Joint Hospital, where he has undergone four operations for the injuries he received April 8. "A security person can do what they want to catch any person. I am not a militant. I just wanted to do my studies." Indian officals interviewed in New Delhi insisted that Sultan was a militant who was caught in the cross-fire of a gun battle between guerrillas and security forces. The battle over Muslim-dominated Kashmir has led to two of the three wars fought between Pakistan and India, both of which lay claim to the jagged snowy peaks and lush green valleys where generations of British colonialists escaped the New Delhi heat aboard wooden houseboats floating serenely on Lake Dal. U.S. military officials view Kashmir and the tensions it has created between the neighboring countries as one of the world's most likely flash points for nuclear war. A growing number of political observers in the region believe the 46-year-old struggle can only be resolved with pressure from the United States or the United Nations. The United States recently has entered the debate by warning Pakistan that it risks being named a terrorist state if it continues arming, training and financing the guerrillas in Kashmir. U.S.officials also have raised concerns with India over alleged human rights abuses by its military forces. In addition to its political standoff with Pakistan, India finds itself in a struggle with its own people. Kashmir was granted an unusual status during the partition of Pakistan and India in 1947, and it has remained a disputed territory ever since. In the last four decades, the sentiment of the residents has fluctuated among apathy, a desire to become part of Pakistan and support for independence from both countries. Violence erupted in late 1989 when militant Kashmiris, frustrated by years of political stalemate, drew strength from the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan under pressure from guerrilla forces. Aided by arms and other support from Pakistan, the militant Kashmiris launched their own war for freedom. Residents of the far northern Indian state are so opposed to New Delhi that the conflict has become to India what Vietnam was to the United States and Afghanistan to the Soviet Union: a debilitating war costing millions of dollars and thousands of lives with no coherent political policy to control it and little chance of victory. "It's an absurd figure we're spending for no reason whatsoever," Salman Khurshid, India's minister of state for external affairs, said in describing the budget drain of deploying a minimum of 300,000 troops along the Indian-Pakistani border and throughout the valley. |
||||
|
So tell me why aren't the Western reporting this instead of focus on Xinjiang this and Tibet that?
For the almost 8 million residents of the Kashmir region, the effects of the violence have been devastating: Life in a valley that centuries of writers and poets have described as paradise on Earth has become a nightmare. Parents say they live in terror that their children will be killed in gun battles on the way home from school. Social life has dried up, with citizens afraid to venture out of their houses after dusk. Most governmental institutions have ceased to function, and the tourist-driven economy has collapsed. Security forces daily cordon off large sections of the city, pulling hundreds of residents out of their homes in search of militants and weapons. Each day, young men suspected of being militants are nabbed by Indian security and military forces in what residents have dubbed "catch-and-kill" operations. There are no reliable figures on the number of people who have been killed as a result of the violence, but most estimates - including those by the U.S. State Department - suggest that civilians suffer the greatest number of casualties. For instance, in February, March and April of this year, the Kashmir Times newspaper reported, the death toll from the violence was 371 civilians, 291 militants and 42 soldiers. Human rights organizations have issued scathing reports on the conflict. "The security forces have been given free rein to murder detainees in custody, kill civilians in reprisal attacks and engage in torture, rape and arson - all with impunity," said Patricia Gossman, who has written recent reports for the New York-based human rights group Asia Watch. In an interview with the national news magazine India Today, Jammu and Kashmir Gov. K.V. Krishna Rao replied to a question about deaths in custody and human rights violations: "I genuinely feel bad if torture leads to death." Khurshid said there are extenuating circumstances: "I'm not justifying for a minute what any officer has done in any part of Kashmir, but one has to understand the stress in which they are working. We're not fighting kids throwing stones - we're fighting trained militants." With more than 30 different militant groups vying for power and control of territory, the guerrillas are accused of executions, rapes and extortion, particularly against Hindu minorities living in the valley. "People are fed up with both sides," said a Srinagar businessman who asked that he not be identified for fear of retribution from one side or the other. "We are sandwiched between the two and dare not speak out about either side." The cities and countryside of Kashmir look like war zones. The streets are dotted with sandbagged command posts draped in rope netting to protect security troops from the grenades that militants routinely lob at them. Indian security forces, uncertain who is friend or foe, keep their fingers on their gun triggers. Doctors, human rights workers and others who document abuses by both government forces and militants have become targets. Since last December, three of the valley's most prominent critics of human rights violations - particularly those involving atrocities by government forces - have been shot dead. |
||||
Mumbai terrorists aren't gonna forget the recent attacks on them so soon! |
||||
| ||||
|
There is no conclusive evidence of who killed the men, although Farooq Ahmed Ashai, the chief orthopedic surgeon of the Bone and Joint Hospital, was shot while driving his car past a military bunker.
"I feel very insecure," said Mufti Bahauddin Aftab, a former chief justice and human rights activist who said the killings of his colleagues prompted him to curtail his own investigations. "I hesitate to go out of my house now. Everybody feels scared. There's no accountability. Where there is no accountability, it is a free- for-all by uniformed people." Javed Mohammed Mir, acting president of the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front, one of the largest militant organizations here, acknowledged that some atrocities have been committed by militants and said that a "coordination committee" of six militant organizations has considered the evidence and executed about a half- dozen of their "antisocial" members. Throughout the Kashmir valley, government services have become almost nonexistent, but most alarming, according to some human rights activists and attorneys, is the collapse of the criminal justice system. (So this is the democratic India you so proudly defended) From police on the street to justices on the state Supreme Court, the legal system has been abused, compromised and corrupted to terrorize and unjustly imprison innocent victims, they said. The violence has devastated the local economy, which was almost entirely dependent on a world-renowned tourist industry. In 1988 - the biggest boom year for tourism - 722,000 people visited the region's serene lakes, majestic mountains and poplar-dotted valleys, infusing $200 million into the local economy and government coffers. Last year, only 10,400 hardy tourists visited the area. Businessmen and craftsmen say some of their trades may become impossible to pursue if the upheavals continue. The Victorian houseboats that line the shores of the lakes near Srinagar have been a major tourist draw for more than a century, ever since laws prohibiting British citizens from owning land in Kashmir prompted them to improvise and build palatial floating retreats on the water. All but a handful of the region's hotels have been commandeered by Indian soldiers, who have lined the windows with sandbags and allowed magnificent gardens to be overrun by weeds. Kashmir's top religious leader, Mir Waiz Farooq, 19, who inherited the mantle at an unusually young age after his father was shot and killed three years ago, said he believes India, Pakistan and the rebels are incapable of negotiating a solution. "We appeal to the United States to intervene as they did in the {Persian} Gulf War and in Afghanistan," he said. |
||||
|
Are the Uyghers really being massacred!!!
One thing is for sure in India.. INDIA Brutally Torturing & Murdering Innocent KASHMIRI MUSLIMS. Indian hate crimes against the Kashmiri Muslims are on the rise again and Kashmiri civilians are paying heavy price for that. Indian Think Tanks have become extremely powerful and are controlling majority of the media channels by hiding these facts about the brutal Indian Army that uses violence as weapon to punish these innocent Kashmirs for being Muslims. Recently Indian soldiers raped and killed two Muslim women brutally which shook up the entire Muslim world . It was at least heard in the public and the Indian Think Tanks were unable to hide these facts. Kashmiris are dying every day more brutally than we can actually imagine. They are tortured, burned, raped every other day. Since January 1989 95,000 to 200,000 have been killed by the Indian Army . 70,000 tortured and disappeared. These killing included 30,000 Women being gang raped & Molested 20,708 and 113,798 arrested. Massive protests and clashes erupted in Indian Kashmir yesterday after the bodies of an 18-year-old woman and her 23-year-old aunt were found amid claims that they had been raped and murdered by Indian soldiers. Indian authorities said the women appeared to have drowned in a local stream. Anger over the deaths brought thousands to Shopian, where protesters hurled rocks at security forces and ransacked government offices. Police fired tear gas and used batons to break up the protests, said a local police officer, adding that at least 25 people were injured. Human-rights groups and separatist leaders have long accused the Indian military of using rape and sexual molestation to intimidate the local population. From Facebook. |
||||
Jonny boy: there are other threads for Kashmir where you can pour your respectable thoughts. The massacre of Uighurs is as fabricated as the Tianenmen Square massacre. As for who's responsible for the Mumbai attacks - the world knows it very well, and i don;t need to talk about it here. grow up, before you come back and blog here |
||||
you are right. People can't forget once they are dead. |
||||
Well Goby Boy! Wake up! Your motherland is certainly no Angel Land! My advise for a small child like you is to go and post in your own India forum where you are free to fabricate fresh lies about others out of jealousy and glorify your motherland India. Meanwhile Terrorism by Indian Army is REAL and not a FABRICATION! Go home and drink your cow urine as advise by your former premier. Indian urine like tall Indian tales get better after one pint. Good for growing kid like you! You may actually grow tall with it like your tall tales! Goby Boy! By the way, did you see the picture of cows passing by McDonald shop in Bangalore? While the farmers nearby have to battle over the ownership of the droppings, the COWDUNG! You can have the urine all for yourself! |
||||
Indian anti-terrorist solution: Shoot everybody on sight. Friends and foe alike! Victims have to accepted it Indian way and treat it as FATE! An act of the Hindu God! India Democratic System: From police on the street to justices on the state Supreme Court, the legal system has been abused, compromised and corrupted to terrorize and unjustly imprison innocent victims. |
||||
|
By the way, did you see the picture of cows passing by McDonald shop in Bangalore? While the farmers nearby have to battle over the ownership of the droppings, the COWDUNG! You can have the urine all for yourself!
Wait a minute! The cows are placed there for a purpose. So that McDonald local patrons can clean their hands and have a FREE pee by the way! Very innovative I must says, Goby Boy! Well Done! Indian way of conservation of water resources and global warming. |
||||
|
||||
Please note by clicking on "Post Comment" you acknowledge that you have read the Terms of Service and the comment you are posting is in compliance with such terms. Be polite. Inappropriate posts may be removed by the moderator. Send us your feedback.
| Topic | Updated | Last By | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Naked anti fur protest | Dec 7 | Rina | 1 |
| Bomb caused Russian train crash | Dec '09 | Editor at In... | 1 |
| Robot festival in Tokyo | Nov '09 | Adrian in Ta... | 1 |
| Obama begins Japan visit | Nov '09 | no2bs | 42 |
| Japan's First Lady masks | Nov '09 | justme | 2 |
| Mongolia eyes horse meat amid H1N1 | Nov '09 | Bearmon | 1 |
| Abdullah withdraws from Afghan vote | Nov '09 | Support Obama | 6 |