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View Full Version : It looks like Imran Khan is about to become Pakistan's prime minister



سيف الله
07-28-2018, 06:49 AM
Salaam

Change in Pakistan, wonder if he will make a difference?

here's what we can expect of him

Even a genuinely reformist candidate in the state has to find some kind of accommodation with the military – but that appeasement also carries the risk that the occupant of the presidential palace will find his middle class followers disillusioned


It is tempting to see the rise of Imran Khan in Pakistan as a sort of counterpart to the En Marche! phenomenon in France that propelled Emmanuel Macron to power. As Mr Khan enjoys a surge in support for his party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (Pakistan Movement for Justice, or PTI), and every chance of winning the elections this week, there are some parallels between the young French president and the youthful (though 65-year-old) Mr Khan.

Mr Khan enjoys a legendary charisma, mostly born of his cricketing prowess, as if Gareth Southgate or Harry Kane were running to be prime minister of Britain. We know him in Britain too as the former husband of Jemima Goldsmith, and thus brother-in-law to her brother Zac.

He has glamour, then, and a common touch that has seen his party make inroads in the populous Punjab, without which none can rule in Pakistan. Mr Khan has also made radical, reformist noises, pledged to rid his land of endemic corruption, and, more predictably, attacked the United States from its drone powered incursions into the Islamic Republic’s territory.

Mr Khan, in other words, promises much, and, like Mr Macron, founded and still leads his own political party, which at times is not much more than a fan club for its handsome head. (Though the basically populist PTI is much older than En Marche!)

Mr Khan and the PTI has done well in recent years in building support, mainly at the expense of two older parties, the vaguely progressive Pakistan Peoples Party, currently led by another member of the Bhutto dynasty, and the more conservative Pakistan Muslim League – Nawaz (PML-N), whose ex-leader, and former prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, was recently jailed on corruption charges.

All, however, is not what it seems. Mr Khan is widely regarded as being an ally of what remains the most powerful institution in the country and the only one, according to Mr Khan, that functions effectively – the army.

The generals, a ruthless though stabilising force in Pakistani society, are reportedly “pre-rigging” the election in Mr Khan’s favour, including the arrest of Sharif (which is not to say that the move was unjust). It seems that the PTI has suffered less from electoral violence than some of its rivals, including a terror attack at a rally in Baluchistan that killed 149 people.

Condemning corruption is not consistent with being cosy with the Pakistani army, a body that controls substantial chunks of the economy and has plenty of money and the muscle to get its way, on a national scale and by way of kickbacks and petty corruption and abuse of power. The army has frequently intervened in Pakistani politics, subverted democracy, and collaborated with religious extremists, including the Taliban in the 1980s, when young men such as Osama bin Laden were based there to fight America’s proxy war against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan.

The legacy of that haunts Pakistan to this day. The result is that even a genuinely reformist candidate in the state has to find some kind of accommodation with the military; but that appeasement also carries the risk that the occupant of the presidential palace will find his middle class followers disillusioned. If he chooses instead to challenge the army, then, like Mr Sharif, he may find himself more or less gently deposed.

Pakistan’s endemic problems with graft and corruption go a long way to explaining its long-term disappointing economic performance, despite a recent spate of growth. That matters in a predominantly young nation of some 200 million, and which must look with envy at what its neighbours India and China have been able to achieve in recent decades.

If Mr Khan is unable to do much about the corruption, then he will find the economy works way below its potential, and foreign investors, already wary of political instability and the backwash of violence from Afghanistan, will prefer to put their euros, yen and dollars into India.

Without economic growth, better public infrastructure, and opportunities, unemployment, health and education are harder to come by. Pakistan’s severe social problems, including the treatment of women and human rights generally, will remain intractable without money, something Mr Khan, a prominent philanthropist, at least shows awareness of.

Last, Mr Khan is no better placed to deal with tribalism than his rivals. He too enjoys a regional base of support in Punjab, and has had to rely on old-school defecting politicians from other parties and prominent families to bolster his support. He optimistically describes these mercenary politicians as “electables”, though corruptibles might be a better sobriquet.

Pakistan, then, may change under Mr Khan, and for the better, but it will take formidable skill to make this happen. Mr Khan has won for Pakistan many times on the cricket pitch; he will find his new job a much stickier wicket.

https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/editorials/imran-khan-pakistan-election-prime-minister-muslim-league-army-macron-en-marche-zac-goldsmith-a8460436.html

An old interview.

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Abz2000
07-28-2018, 08:49 AM
May Allah :swt: guide him to be truthful and just - and to care more about truth and justice in Allah's sight than the threats of blackmailers who most likely have a dossier on him.
What does make me wonder is how he managed to convince the usurers who have most countries in a stranglehold, and who use the American government as a goon - that he's a candidate who stands a chance.....
But Allah :swt: knows best and we'll probably know his actual leanings from the policies he implements.
If all countries manage to have the british east india cartel debts cancelled and come out of slavery to the usurers, the world could actually move forwards in prosperity - if they see the good sense in choosing to implement full spectrum Islamic teachings in obedience to Allah :swt: - their real guardian.


---

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euro...f_the_Americas

----

Research conducted by GreatGameIndia Magazine has revealed that the Rothschild family was one of the controller families of the East India Company.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rothschild_family


East India Company (EIC)
Attachment 6470

Attachment 6466
Flag

Attachment 6468
Coat of arms

Former type
Public
Industry: International trade
Fate : Dissolved, after being mostly nationalised in 1858
Founded : 31 December 1600
Founders: John Watts, George White
Defunct: 1 June 1874
Headquarters: London, England (Great Britain)

(Dissolved as a private company after invading and occupying the long dreamed of Atlantis and re-establishing as a country with the one eyed seal)

British America refers to the British Empire's colonial territories on the continent of North America and Bermuda, Central America, the Caribbean, and Guyana from 1607 to 1783

The British colonies in North America were formally known as British America and the British West Indies before 1776, when the Thirteen Colonies on the east coast declared their independence in the American Revolutionary War (1775–1783) and formed the United States of America.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_America


Bank of England:

Headquarters Threadneedle Street
London, EC2
England, United Kingdom
Established 27 July 1694;

The Bank was privately owned by stockholders from its foundation in 1694
until it was nationalised in 1946.


Attachment 6469
Great seal front u.s.a


Attachment 6467
Rothschild coat of arms
See also:

http://somicom.com/media/2015/03/06/...taxes-you-pay/


John Adams, 2nd US President
All the perplexities, confusion and distress in America arise, not from the defects of the Constitution or confederation, not from want of honour or virtue, so much as from the downright ignorance of the nation, of “coin”, “credit” and “circulation”.


Abraham Lincoln 16th US President
The money-power preys upon the nation in times of peace, and conspires against it in times of adversity. It is more despotic than monarchy, more insolent than the aristocracy, more selfish than the bureaucracy. It denounces, as public enemies, all who question its methods or throw light upon its crimes.

Thomas Jefferson US President
Single acts of tyranny may be ascribed to the accidental opinion of the day, but a series of oppressions begun at a distinguished period, unalterable through every change of ministers, too plainly prove a deliberate, systematic plan of reducing us to slavery.



NATIONAL DEBT CLOCKS . ORG

NATIONAL DEBT OF PAKISTAN


₨ 20,214,057,076,468


Convert to USD

Source: Pakistan Government Data



Interest per Year
₨2,033,240,253,313

Interest per Second
₨64,474

Debt per Citizen
₨96,395

Debt as % of GDP
73.90%

GDP
₨27,354,209,844,620

Population
209,700,000

https://www.nationaldebtclocks.org/debtclock/pakistan

That's pk Rs 3,868,440 interest/tribute to the Rothschilds per minute

X60 =232,106,400 per hour

X24 =5,570,553,600 per day ($59,184,000)

X7 =38,993,875,200 per week

X4 =155,975,500,800 per month

59 million dollars tribute a day from slave labour for wot? For having been colonized, raped, looted, and left like peasants by the rothschild run british east india co. opium dealers who now run the american racket?


Edit:

I've posted some information on the topic here:

https://www.islamicboard.com/world-a...ml#post2996595
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Abz2000
08-02-2018, 11:13 AM
Pakistanis earn $1513 a year on average Per capita income: A Pakistani now makes $1,513 a year - The Express Tribune which means an average Pakistani earns 12k–13k a month.

Rs 12,500 ÷ 30 days
=rs 416.66 per day
÷ 24
= rs 17.36 per hour
÷ 60
= rs 0.289 per minute
÷ 60
= rs 0.0048225309 per second

Rs 64,474 interest per second
÷ 0.0048225309 earnings per individual per second
=13,369,328.540746

Which translates into the equivalent of the ENTIRE earnings of 13,369,329 people on interest only, and that's without counting their food and other living costs.

Population 193.2 million (2016)
Sources: World Bank and United States Census Bureau

GDP 283.7 billion USD (2016)
Source: World Bank


283,700,000,000
÷193,200,000
=1,468.4265010352 USD

So that calculation is actually if you count every male and female including the elderly and the newborn babies. Whereas it is the people living on the lower rungs who pay the highest taxes through purchase of goods.



The usurers are lying when they claim that any people who are subject to usury are "free and independent" and that abusive and haraam slavery doesn't exist.



Usury is unlawful



18. (Pharaoh) said: "Did we not (nuRABBIKA) cherish thee as a child among us, and didst thou not stay in our midst many years of thy life?
19. "And thou didst a deed of thine which (thou knowest) thou didst, and thou art of the (KAAFIREEN) ungrateful (wretched deniers)!"
20. Moses said: "I did it then, when I was in error.
21. "So I fled from you (all) when I feared you; but my Lord has (since) invested me with judgment (and wisdom) and appointed me as one of the apostles.
22. "And this is the favour with which thou dost reproach me,- that thou hast enslaved the Children of Israel!"

From Quran, Chapter 26
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سيف الله
08-18-2018, 12:36 AM
Salaam

Like to share

The Meaning of Pakistan*

Richard Bulliet observes that without the Islamic Revolution, Iran would be a very similar country to Pakistan. That is, Iran would be a country dominated by an elite that is globally integrated, internationally oriented and culturally separated from most of its population. This elite would present itself as being liberal and modern, but it would, at the same time, contrive to ensure that ordinary people would have minimal access to education, healthcare, public infrastructure, and justice (Bulliet, 2017). The gap between rulers and the ruled would be so wide that the state would find its legitimacy and monopoly of lethal violence questioned. By making a comparison between Pakistan and its neighbour to the West rather than the East, and by conceiving of political Islam as a possible engine of the egalitarian transformation of a society, Bulliet’s counterfactual sketch enlarges the range of examples by which the story of South Asia is told and analysed.

Conventionally, the story of South Asia since 1947 is often presented as a study in contrasts, in which one of the successor states to the British Raj is considered to be more or less successful, and the other is deemed more or less to have failed. While it is the case that the failure of Pakistan can be exaggerated, there is a degree to which many people would accept that, at the very minimum, Pakistan has not achieved its potential. Among commentators on Pakistan and Pakistanis themselves, there is much debate as to how to account for the shortcomings of the country. One could summarize this discussion in terms of the reasons that are most often advanced as a primary cause of Pakistan’s failings.

A number of explanations circulate that purport to account for the failure of Pakistan. They include commentary that sees the problem in terms of a democratic deficit. It is argued that the absence of democracy in Pakistan has led to the crisis of governance, which has doomed any project of social transformation. Or there are narratives which blame ‘political Islam’ or ‘religious fundamentalism’ for the growth of violence and intolerance in the country. There are other arguments which emphasize socio-economic problems as the main reason for the country’s political plight. None of these cases are mutually exclusive and nor is the above list exhaustive, However, what is common to all of them is the way they are beholden to certain tropes found within Orientalism and its South Asian variant: Indology.

These tropes furnish the dominant accounts of Pakistan, which present it as an anomaly within South Asia. Within these reports, Pakistan always appears as a scandalous presence. Since Pakistan’s very creation is seen as an interruption of the essential unity of the sub-continent, therefore its continued existence is considered to be a historical mistake.

This illegitimacy of Pakistan is not only in relation to the ‘Indianness’ of South Asia but also in relation to what is considered standard practice in the world at large. This “double” orientalism helps to generate statements about Pakistan in terms of its difference from both India and the West (presented as the destiny of the world). It asserts that there are features absent in Pakistan which should be found in a “normal” country. This difference is considered to be objective and axiomatic, rather than a feature of a Eurocentric episteme.

The critique of Orientalism has ranged far and wide; to a large extent, the study of Pakistan in general, and in particular Pakistani politics, has remained immune to such a critique. There is a general perception that the critique of Orientalism is mainly concerned with epistemological matters and has little to offer in the form of substantive studies, and even less regarding practical suggestions as what should be done.

Seventy years on, the analysis of Pakistan has to be unchained from its moorings in the field of Indology. One way to do this is to re-contextualize the process of the formation of Pakistan, not within the confines of the geopolitics of the succession to the British Raj, but rather as part of a series of intellectual, political and cultural developments within the Islamosphere. In the process, I want to suggest that the comparison that Bulliet makes between Iran and Pakistan has a coherence which is not merely anecdotal but points to a specific structural logic. At the heart of this suggestion is a belief that historiographies centred on nation-states are not particularly useful in understanding the process of state formation that gave birth to these nation-states.

Kemalism is understood as the ideology, policy, and practices pursued by Mustafa Kemal in the remnants of the Ottoman state. The nationalist historiographical perspective would see Kemalism as a phenomenon related to the Turkish Republic, with very little salience for other societies. It is, however, possible to tell the history of Muslim societies in the wake of European decolonization through the exploration of the expanded concept of Kemalism as elaborated in A Fundamental Fear (Sayyid 2015). Kemalism is not a mere empirical category in this perspective, but rather an analytical metaphor which transcends the ex-Ottoman domains to include the policies and ideologies identified with diverse figures such as Reza Pahlavi (1878-1944) in Iran, Amanullah Khan (1890-1962) in Afghanistan, Sukarno (1901-1970) in Indonesia and Nasser (1918-1970) in Egypt. Kemalism understood modernity as de-orientalising (i.e. making Western) Islamicate societies, where Islam was a signifier of the Orient par excellence. In its various iterations and vernacularizations, Kemalism was a set of overlapping positions regarding the belief that only a national identity could be the vehicle of a hegemonic political subjectivity throughout the Islamosphere. The formation of Pakistan was a challenge to Kemalism. The movement for Pakistan is based on ethnicity or language but rather a politicized Muslim subjectivity. The demand that Muslims of the British Raj had to have a distinct homeland meant that being Muslim could not simply be dismissed as something that could be confined to the private sphere The mass mobilizations that sustained the demands for a Muslim homeland were only possible with what we have in Pakistan: the appearance of Muslim mobilization and the articulation of an Islamic ideological state

The quest for a Muslim nation in South Asia was both a confirmation of Indology and its rejection. It was a confirmation because it seemed to accept that India was Hindu; but it was a rejection because it sought to establish a Muslim homeland in India. The Pakistan movement was also a retort to the Kemalist consensus that the Muslim could not be a political subject. The two-nation theory constructed an Islamicate historical presence as something that could be projected into the future.

There were three possible subject positions around which an emancipatory or decolonial project could be built in the context of British-ruled South Asia. One, there was the possibility of a Pan-Indian identity. That is, taking the colonial difference as the primary form of identification and mobilization. A Pan-Indian subject would be organized not around an ethnicity or linguistic community or religious congregation; rather it would be the residual of British/European subject identity. Two, there was a possibility of a multinational South Asian subject: that is, South Asia would be a mere geographic expression containing a variety of countries approximating nation-states in which regions such as Gujarat, Punjab, and Bengal would form individual nations based on a distinct literature and language, shared territory and common cultural practices. The third possible subject position was a trans-local, trans-ethnic subject built along the widest possible principles, able to counter-act not only the Europeanness of the British Raj, but also an Indianess that was predominantly ‘Hindu’. It is this third possibility that frames the emergence of the very idea of Pakistan (Sayyid, 2014: 281-282).

The Pakistan experiment offered the chance of a mobilized Muslim subjectivity to build an ex niliho order. There was no antecendant Muslim state for Pakistan to recover or restore, therefore no option of building an political community around a pre-Islamic heritage. Unlike, say, Iran or Turkey, Pakistan’s founders were confronted by a constitutional void caused by the demise of the Mughal Empire in 1857 (Arjomand, 2007). The Pakistani constitution could not directly transfer the monarchical prerogative to the people; it is for this reason that the history of Pakistani constitution-making was protracted and contested (Sayyid, 2014: 282).

Mawdudi’s theorization of Pakistan as an ‘ideological state’ was a tentative attempt to recognize that the country that officially came to be on 14 August 1947 had no precedent in previous Islamicate states. The radicality of the formation of Pakistan arises from both the immense achievement of creating the largest Muslim state and creating it out of virtually nothing, with no direct precedent. The idea of an ‘ideological state’ was an attempt to locate the legitimacy of Pakistan not in its past like many other nation-states, but in the future. Ideology was a substitute for history in the formation of the ‘Islamic Republic’ of Pakistan. The theorization of Pakistan as an ideological state remained underdeveloped. This under-development was a product not so much of the failure to agree on the definition of what Pakistan means, or the failure to recognize the heterogeneous character of the newly formed character of the country. Such failings are symptoms, not explanations. The contested nature of Pakistan did not arise from Pakistan being insufficiently imagined, but rather it being insufficiently decolonized.

It is an aspect of this incompleteness of decolonization of Pakistan that has meant that much of the Pakistani elite failed to comprehend the meaning of its foundation. The formation of Pakistan would be the first major disruption of the Kemalist hegemony: the idea of a Pakistan was not based on the mobilization of subjects based on ethnicity or language, but rather on being Muslim – this politicizing of Muslim identity is precisely what the discourse of Kemalism rejected. So, we have in Pakistan the appearance of Muslim mobilization and the articulation of an Islamic ideological state. The idea that Islam constitutes an ideology was key – in other words, that Islam was not just a religion that had to be confined to matters of private devotion, but rather a system of belief with socio-economic impact. Thus, the attempt to describe Islam as an ideological state was an exercise in the (re-) politicization of Islam. The formation of Pakistan was made possible by the rejection of Kemalism. This rejection, however, was not sustained when it came to the working of the Pakistani state. The vision of Pakistan as an Islamic state began to be recuperated into the repertoire of Kemalist statecraft: this can be seen in the debates of the official language of Pakistan. Many policies could have been implemented, ranging from an authentic recognition of the multi-lingual character of the country and the abandonment of any attempt to have an official language; to a choice of official language which replaced all current linguistic hierarchies e.g. Arabic (or Farsi) in the context of South Asia. Instead, the policy followed made Urdu and English into official languages, with unfortunate consequences for other languages such as Bengali. Other similar changes occurred, e.g. Pakistani citizenship legislation restricted the rights of Muslims, even from South Asia, to become Pakistanis (Sayyid, 2014: 281-284).

In other words, Pakistan increasingly took the form of a conventional state in which continuity of colonial rule and Kemalist rule furnished its basic guiding principles. Once the mobilization in the name of Islam had created Pakistan, the leadership of the new country, for the most part, unaware of the radical nature of its formation, began to banalize its claims and the process of depoliticization of Islam started. Unlike other Kemalist entities, Pakistani’s Kemalist tendencies continued to run up against the founding narrative of Pakistan as a Muslim homeland. The recuperation of the Pakistani state in Kemalism meant that the decolonial potential of the experiment of Pakistan would remain unfulfilled. The tragedy of Pakistan remains that those who rule, do not believe in it and those who believe in it, so far, have not been able to rule it.

https://www.criticalmuslimstudies.co...g-of-pakistan/
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سيف الله
08-22-2018, 05:48 PM
Salaam

Another update, Looks like Imran Khan is showing a spine, lets see how long it lasts.



Imran’s wife ‘more scared than thrilled’ with new role

First lady’s veiled appearance at Pakistan PM’s oath-taking draws mixed reaction on social media


Islamabad: In her first media talk after her husband’s oath-taking ceremony, Bushra Bibi, the wife of new Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan, described her feelings at becoming the first lady of Pakistan as more of an overwhelming sense of responsibility than joy or excitement.

“I am more scared than thrilled or overjoyed,” she said while talking to media after the ceremony.

When asked if she wanted to give a message to the nation, she said coming to power was temporary, and the real issue was how one would serve the nation.

https://gulfnews.com/news/asia/pakistan/imran-s-wife-more-scared-than-thrilled-with-new-role-1.2268290

Predictable feminist response.

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سيف الله
09-02-2018, 08:39 PM
Salaam

Another update

Blurb

Pakistan's political and strategic significance for Iran began with Pakistan’s emergence as an independent state following the Partition of India in 1947. The Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, was the first head of state to pay a State visit to Pakistan in March 1950 and in the same month, a Treaty of Friendship was signed. But conflicting national security interests and the influence of wider competing powers have always played an important factor in shaping the Iran-Pakistan relationship, especially after the Islamic Revolution in Iran in 1979. I’m Kasim, this is KJ Vids and in this video, we will look into the relationship between Iran and Pakistan.

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سيف الله
09-12-2018, 06:58 PM
Salaam

Like to share

Blurb

Was IMRAN KHAN backed by the MILITARY?

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سيف الله
09-18-2018, 10:05 PM
Salaam

Like to share

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سيف الله
09-25-2018, 07:58 AM
Salaam

Looks like the Chinese are going to be dominating Pakistan economically for the foreseeable future.

Blurb

Having pledged 62 billion USD in dozens of energy and infrastructure projects, the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor is one of the largest commercial initiatives in South Asia. The corridor stretches along the length of Pakistan and the combined value of all the projects equals to all the foreign direct investment in the country since 1970. The megaproject also marks as China’s biggest overseas investment. Yet, a plan of this magnitude is not without its geo-economic challenges.

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سيف الله
09-28-2018, 02:20 PM
Salaam

Another update. Nice words but how will his vision will work in practice.

Blurb

Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan sat down with Al Arabiya News Channel’s Turki Aldakhil during his maiden foreign trip to Saudi Arabia. During the wide-ranging interview, Khan spoke on his first 100 days plan in office, foreign policy and how he aims to fight corruption in Pakistan.


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سيف الله
09-30-2018, 02:54 AM
Salaam

Another update

Bushra: Imran Khan will take time to change Pakistan

Pakistan’s elusive First Lady Bushra Maneka clears rumours in her first ever sit-down interview


Pakistan’s First Lady, Bushra Maneka had her first ever televised interview and people can’t stop talking about all the misconceptions she cleared about herself.

Maneka, who is also known as ‘Bushra Bibi’ has always tried to stay away from the limelight, even after marrying Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan.

However, the instances that she has been seen in public, she has been heavily criticised. From her dressing sense to her mannerisms have been analysed by local media and people.

Now, after her interview with Pakistani journalist Nadeem Malek, Maneka had a chance to speak on her behalf.

She defended her choice of attire and why she chooses to wear the niqab (face veil), praised Khan for being a “simple and humble man” and spoke about her philanthropic efforts.

She also cleared some other rumours surrounding her, such as, her not being fond of Khan’s pet dog and having a ‘spiritual dream’ about marrying him. She said that she takes care of ‘Mottu’, his dog and has never had such a dream.

Speaking about Khan’s role as Prime Minister, she said that he will be changing the face of Pakistan but that he needs some time.

“He does not have a magic wand,” she said.

The segment has gotten a reaction on social media and users are appreciating her answers to Malek’s questions. Soon after it aired, the hashtag #BushraBibi trended on Twitter.

Tweep, Samia Saeed, @TheSamiaSaeed, quoted Maneka and wrote: “‘By reducing a woman’s worth down to her appearance, we slyly diminish her role and her value as a contributor to society.’ Thank you #BushraBibi for helping those elderly, disabled, needy folk and may you continue to prove that a woman is more than just a piece of cloth.”

Similarly, user @eatsleepavoid, tweeted: “As a feminist, I really do not care what #BushraBibi wears. It is her choice to wear what she wants. On a side note, it is refreshing to see her talk about the poor and needy of the country. P.S not a PTI supporter.”

Whereas, Twitter user, Faisal Sherjan, @fsherjan, replied to those who aren’t as fond of the First Lady: “Three reasons why #DifferentlyAbledLiberals are so hurt by #BushraBibi’s interview with #NadeemMalik. They got scooped by a new channel. She was far more eloquent than any of them expected. She actually sounded more liberal than any pretensions they have.”

Many appreciated her for staying “firm on her beliefs”.

User Iram Ahmad Khan, @iram FarhanVirk, tweeted: “She stood firmly with her beliefs and didn’t impose them to others. That’s the best part of this interview. #BushraBibi”

However, there are those who are sceptical.

Twitter user and daughter of the late Pakistani politician Salman Taseer, Sara Taseer, @sara taseer, questioned: “Appreciate her deep concern for disenfranchised sector of society, invalids, orphans, and elderly. She’s vowed to bring change to their circumstances but while spending majority of her time in solitude. How will these two intentions match up? #BushraBibi”

https://gulfnews.com/news/asia/pakistan/bushra-imran-khan-will-take-time-to-change-pakistan-1.2283606

Heres the interview.

Blurb


Here is a interview and main points for you. from the First Lady of Pakistan Bushra Maneka Bibi wife of PM Imran Khan.


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سيف الله
01-09-2019, 08:05 PM
Salaam

Another update

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سيف الله
01-15-2019, 12:44 AM
Salaam

Another update



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ZeeshanParvez
01-15-2019, 11:25 AM
Attachment 6583Attachment 6584Attachment 6585


Imran Khan is either supremely ignorant about history, or paying homage to the man who abolished the Ottoman Khilafah by pushing a resolution through the Turkish Assembly by threats, sent the last Ameer of the Mumineen into exile, banned Islamic dress, insisted on European dress, abolished the Arabic script for the Turkish language, and who established a cult around himself such that people literally worshipped idols of him.





Trying to be all things to all people will only result in one thing - everyone will think you are a fool - especially when you man you paid homage to did everything he could to prevent the 'Medina model'.




Khan laid a wreath at Ataturk's Mausoleum and signed a formal guest book stating, "It is a matter of great honour for me to be present here to pay homage to one of the greatest statesmen and visionary leaders of the 20th century – Ghazi Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,"



"He was an epitome of courage, strength, resilience, forbearance, and wisdom." he wrote.



Mustafa Kemal is the man who played a major role in destroying the Khilafah in 1924 and was an open secularist. He claimed “Our inspiration (to rule) is not from the sky or divine, but merely from experience."



He also claimed, “the theology of an immoral Arab (i.e. Islam) is a dead thing. possibly it might have suited the tribes of the desert. It is no good for a modern progressive state. Gods revelation! There is no God. There are only the chains by which the priests and bad rulers bound the people down.”



This is the enemy of Islam that Imran Khan praises so highly!
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Alamgir
01-15-2019, 01:47 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by ZeeshanParvez
This is the enemy of Islam that Imran Khan praises so highly!
Asalamu Alaikum

He's also been appeasing China by blatantly saying he refuses to discuss or condemn the Uighur issue.

If only Amir Timur could see how spineless Muslims have become in front of the very people he was about to conquer...
Reply

anatolian
01-15-2019, 03:18 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by ZeeshanParvez
He also claimed, “the theology of an immoral Arab (i.e. Islam) is a dead thing. possibly it might have suited the tribes of the desert. It is no good for a modern progressive state. Gods revelation! There is no God. There are only the chains by which the priests and bad rulers bound the people down
Could you cite the source for this please? Havent heard of it before.

Atatürk did great things for this nation also along with all these anti-Islamic applications. Imran might be refering to those good things he did which every eastern national leader should have done for their nation. This anti-Ataturkist so called Islamic rhetoric makes no sense unless one day an Islamic leader does all the good things he did for his nation.

- - - Updated - - -

format_quote Originally Posted by Alamgir
Asalamu Alaikum

He's also been appeasing China by blatantly saying he refuses to discuss or condemn the Uighur issue.

If only Amir Timur could see how spineless Muslims have become in front of the very people he was about to conquer...
I dont know Imran Khan so much but I cannot see any sincere Muslim leader today either who can take any action against China. They are a super power and all the Asian countries need to trade with them. Unless the muslim countries unite as EU and have their own economic power they will have to go on to watch all the injustices these “powers” do to our brethren.

If Timur conquered China instead of atacking the Ottomans maybe we would not have this problem there. History is full of butterfly effects.
Reply

Alamgir
01-15-2019, 04:48 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by anatolian
If Timur conquered China instead of atacking the Ottomans maybe we would not have this problem there. History is full of butterfly effects.
Asalamu Alaikum

First of all, Amir Timur did not instigate his fight with the Ottomans. They attacked him first. Secondly, he was about to invade China, but he unfortunately passed away due to diseases just as the invasion was about to take-off.
Reply

سيف الله
01-15-2019, 07:40 PM
Salaam

Could you cite the source for this please? Havent heard of it before.

Atatürk did great things for this nation also along with all these anti-Islamic applications. Imran might be refering to those good things he did which every eastern national leader should have done for their nation. This anti-Ataturkist so called Islamic rhetoric makes no sense unless one day an Islamic leader does all the good things he did for his nation.
Heres a more substantiated quote.

I have no religion, and at times I wish all religions at the bottom of the sea. He is a weak ruler who needs religion to uphold his government; it is as if he would catch his people in a trap. My people are going to learn the teachings of science. Let them worship as they will; every man can follow his own conscience, provided it does not interfere with sane reason or bid him act against the liberty of his fellow man.
Source: "Ataturk" by Andrew Mango

Even I have to grudgingly conceed he saved Turkey from being divided up and instigated much needed reform. However its no secret he loathed Islam and the culture surrounding it and wanted to see it erased from the hearts of the Turkish people. He did a good job.

format_quote Originally Posted by anatolian
The problem is, not all turkish people care muslimhood at all. There are people who dont care Islam and/or muslim brotherhood. Turkish people are already culturally and mentally very diverse. We will see what this will bring us.
So its hardly surprising that he wont be popular among the faithful. Having said that IK has to be diplomatic, he's an important figure in Turkish history. I remember reading an incident (in Open Secrets by Israel Shahak) where an Iranian delegation (in the 1990s I think) objected to honouring Ataturk so they found some other way.

Off topic.


Alamgir

Asalamu Alaikum

First of all, Amir Timur did not instigate his fight with the Ottomans. They attacked him first. Secondly, he was about to invade China, but he unfortunately passed away due to diseases just as the invasion was about to take-off.
Maybe a Kings and General documentary can settle this.

Reply

ZeeshanParvez
01-16-2019, 09:06 AM
format_quote Originally Posted by anatolian
Could you cite the source for this please? Havent heard of it before.

Atatürk did great things for this nation also along with all these anti-Islamic applications. Imran might be refering to those good things he did which every eastern national leader should have done for their nation. This anti-Ataturkist so called Islamic rhetoric makes no sense unless one day an Islamic leader does all the good things he did for his nation.
Wut? He was a murtad. It doesn't matter what he did for a nation. The idea of a nation state is based on kaafir ideology anyway. He was an enemy of Islaam and no Muslim would defend him.
Reply

anatolian
01-22-2019, 09:21 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by Junon
Salaam



Heres a more substantiated quote.



Source: "Ataturk" by Andrew Mango

Even I have to grudgingly conceed he saved Turkey from being divided up and instigated much needed reform. However its no secret he loathed Islam and the culture surrounding it and wanted to see it erased from the hearts of the Turkish people. He did a good job.



So its hardly surprising that he wont be popular among the faithful. Having said that IK has to be diplomatic, he's an important figure in Turkish history. I remember reading an incident (in Open Secrets by Israel Shahak) where an Iranian delegation (in the 1990s I think) objected to honouring Ataturk so they found some other way.

Off topic.



Maybe a Kings and General documentary can settle this.

Wasalam. OK so from which source the author cited this saying of Ataturk? Obviously the author did not meet Ataturk directly.

I dont claim that Ataurk was even a Muslim. He could not be but I have yet to seen some where he openly proclaimed such a thing. However, what I claim is that he did not have an intention to erase Islam from the hearts of Turkish people. Even if that passage of the book is authentic as we see he says "let them worship as they will". I tink if he wanted to do that he would have closed masjeeds, or even destroyed them and prohibit people to perform the duties of the deen as in other examples of secularist dictatorships. He was not an Islamic leader we all agree, he abolished the Caliphate and Sharia instead of revising and reviving them. What he was angry the most was some power centers' using Islam in a negative way to control people for their benefits. Islam had been used by these kind of centers' for years in the late Ottoman era and people remained uneducated and less civilized compared to west because of that and this evently caused the corruption and decay of the sate. He regarded that the strongest reason of the decay of both Seljuk and Ottoman states.

- - - Updated - - -

format_quote Originally Posted by ZeeshanParvez
Wut? He was a murtad. It doesn't matter what he did for a nation. The idea of a nation state is based on kaafir ideology anyway. He was an enemy of Islaam and no Muslim would defend him.
This "enemy of Islaam" is a strogn word to be used for him. Though, he was an enemy of Islamists both in a positive and negative way.

- - - Updated - - -

format_quote Originally Posted by Alamgir
Asalamu Alaikum

First of all, Amir Timur did not instigate his fight with the Ottomans. They attacked him first. Secondly, he was about to invade China, but he unfortunately passed away due to diseases just as the invasion was about to take-off.
Aleykum salam. When the Ottomans attack Timur first? I dont know this. And what was he doing in Anatolia? It was an Ottoman land. He captured several Muslim cities and messacred people in them. Its true that Bayezid was harsh and impolite to him in his latters but Timur just didnt want a second Muslim sultan and sultanate on the planet during his reign as far as we understand. Thats the case for several other historic Muslim states. We fought each other more than nonmuslim states..
Reply

Alamgir
01-23-2019, 05:37 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by anatolian
When the Ottomans attack Timur first? I dont know this.
Whether you knew it or not, they did.

format_quote Originally Posted by anatolian
And what was he doing in Anatolia? It was an Ottoman land.
He did not take any Ottoman land by force until the Ottoman Empire attacked him.

format_quote Originally Posted by anatolian
He captured several Muslim cities and messacred people in them.
There was nothing wrong with him capturing Muslim cities, it enabled the unification of most of the Muslim world. Muslims from Anatolia to the Indus all lived in one political unit, subhan'Allah.

As for the massacres, he only did that to cities which resisted him. Those that joined him were spared.

format_quote Originally Posted by anatolian
Timur just didnt want a second Muslim sultan and sultanate on the planet during his reign as far as we understand.
You say that like it's a bad thing.
Reply

سيف الله
02-27-2019, 07:28 PM
Salaam

Rapid escalation in hostilities between Pakistan and India. PAK armed forces have performed well. Lets pray it doesnt get out of control. :phew

Some background.

Blurb


Tensions in Kashmir have been rising. India launched airstrikes on Pakistani soil for the first time since the 1971 India-Pakistan war. Pakistan claims to have shot down 2 Indian jets and captured one pilot. OGN will be keeping you updated.



Blurb

Spokesman Raveesh Kumar says that India has "unfortunately lost" a MiG-21 and that the pilot is missing. He said India is assessing the situation and acknowledged Pakistan said it was holding the pilot.



More comment.





Aftermath of the downing.















More analysis.











Hopefully cooler heads will prevail.







Prime Minister Imran Khans response.

Reply

سيف الله
02-28-2019, 08:01 PM
Salaam

What a surprise the Zios are involved.



Israel’s fingerprints are all over India’s escalating conflict with Pakistan

Signing up to the ‘war on terror’ – especially ‘Islamist terror’ – may seem natural for two states built on colonial partition whose

security is threatened by Muslim neighbours


When I heard the first news report, I assumed it was an Israeli air raid on Gaza. Or Syria. Airstrikes on a “terrorist camp” were the first words. A “command and control centre” destroyed, many “terrorists” killed. The military was retaliating for a “terrorist attack” on its troops, we were told.

An Islamist “jihadi” base had been eliminated. Then I heard the name Balakot and realised that it was neither in Gaza, nor in Syria – not even in Lebanon – but in Pakistan. Strange thing, that. How could anyone mix up Israel and India?

Well, don’t let the idea fade away. Two thousand five hundred miles separate the Israeli ministry of defence in Tel Aviv from the Indian ministry of defence in New Delhi, but there’s a reason why the usual cliche-stricken agency dispatches sound so similar.

For months, Israel has been assiduously lining itself up alongside India’s nationalist BJP government in an unspoken – and politically dangerous – “anti-Islamist” coalition, an unofficial, unacknowledged alliance, while India itself has now become the largest weapons market for the Israeli arms trade.

Not by chance, therefore, has the Indian press just trumpeted the fact that Israeli-made Rafael Spice-2000 “smart bombs” were used by the Indian air force in its strike against Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) “terrorists” inside Pakistan.

Like many Israeli boasts of hitting similar targets, the Indian adventure into Pakistan might owe more to the imagination than military success. The “300-400 terrorists” supposedly eliminated by the Israeli-manufactured and Israeli-supplied GPS-guided bombs may turn out to be little more than rocks and trees.

But there was nothing unreal about the savage ambush of Indian troops in Kashmir on 14 February which the JeM claimed, and which left 40 Indian soldiers dead. Nor the shooting down of at least one Indian jet this week.

India was Israel’s largest arms client in 2017, paying £530m for Israeli air defence, radar systems and ammunition, including air-to-ground missiles – most of them tested during Israel’s military offensives against Palestinians and targets in Syria.

Israel itself is trying to explain away its continued sales of tanks, weapons and boats to the Myanmar military dictatorship – while western nations impose sanctions on the government which has attempted to destroy its minority and largely Muslim Rohingya people. But Israel’s arms trade with India is legal, above-board and much advertised by both sides.

The Israelis have filmed joint exercises between their own “special commando” units and those sent by India to be trained in the Negev desert, again with all the expertise supposedly learned by Israel in Gaza and other civilian-thronged battlefronts.

At least 16 Indian “Garud” commandos – part of a 45-strong Indian military delegation – were for a time based at the Nevatim and Palmachim air bases in Israel. In his first visit to India last year – preceded by a trip to Israel by nationalist Indian prime minister Narendra Modi, Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu recalled the 2008 Islamist attacks on Mumbai in which almost 170 civilians were killed. “Indians and Israelis know too well the pain of terrorist attacks,” he told Modi. “We remember the horrific savagery of Mumbai. We grit our teeth, we fight back, we never give in.” This was also BJP-speak.

Several Indian commentators, however, have warned that right-wing Zionism and right-wing nationalism under Modi should not become the foundation stone of the relationship between the two countries, both of which – in rather different ways – fought the British empire.

Brussels researcher Shairee Malhotra, whose work has appeared in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, has pointed out that India has the world’s third largest Muslim population after Indonesia and Pakistan – upward of 180 million people. “The India-Israel relationship is also commonly being framed in terms of a natural convergence of ideas between their ruling BJP and Likud parties,” she wrote last year.

Hindu nationalists had constructed “a narrative of Hindus as historically victims at the hands of Muslims”, an attractive idea to those Hindus who recall partition and the continuing turbulent relationship with Pakistan.

In fact, as Malhotra pointed out in Haaretz, “Israel’s biggest fans in India appear to be the ‘internet Hindus’ who primarily love Israel for how it deals with Palestine and fights Muslims.”

Malhotra has condemned Carleton University professor Vivek Dehejia for demanding a “tripartite” alliance between India, Israel and the US – since they have all suffered “from the scourge of Islamic terrorism”.

In fact, by the end of 2016, only 23 men from India had left to fight for Isis in the Arab world, although Belgium, with a population of only half a million Muslims, produced nearly 500 fighters.

Malhotra’s argument is that the Indian-Israeli relationship should be pragmatic rather than ideological.

But it is difficult to see how Zionist nationalism will not leach into Hindu nationalism when Israel is supplying so many weapons to India – the latest of which India, which has enjoyed diplomatic relations with Israel since 1992, has already used against Islamists inside Pakistan.

Signing up to the “war on terror” – especially “Islamist terror” – may seem natural for two states built on colonial partition whose security is threatened by Muslim neighbours.

In both cases, their struggle is over the right to own or occupy territory. Israel, India and Pakistan all possess nuclear weapons. Another good reason not to let Palestine and Kashmir get tangled up together. And to leave India’s 180 million Muslims alone.

https://www.independent.co.uk/voices...-a8800076.html

Reply

سيف الله
03-01-2019, 07:38 PM
Salaam

Another update.

Indian pilot released, bad move on Imran Khan part should of waited until the current phase has died down.







Indian media behaving like tabloids.





Modhi in damage control mode



Reply

Singularity
03-01-2019, 11:27 PM
https://hotair.com/archives/2019/02/...-ones-talking/

Pakistan Ready To Talk With India To End War No One’s Talking About
ED MORRISSEYPosted at 8:01 pm on February 28, 2019


The world edged uncomfortably close to a nuclear war this week — and none of the principals in the conflict were named Trump, Putin, or even Michael Cohen. Pakistan and India have opened fire on each other in an escalation of the dispute over the Kashmir province, the first such clash of arms between the two in twenty years. Pakistan captured a downed Indian pilot after shooting down a sortie over Pakistan’s territory, and are now offering to repatriate him as “a gesture of peace”:

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan says he will release a captured Indian pilot tomorrow as a gesture of peace.

“We have captured a pilot of India. As a gesture of peace we are going to release him to India tomorrow,” said Khan. “I did try yesterday to talk to Narendra Modi only to de-escalate this situation. But this de-escalation effort should not be considered as weakness.”

He told lawmakers in the country’s parliament he hoped the international community would play its part in de-escalating tensions with India.

Modi did not sound a conciliatory note in return. He accused Khan of having “evil designs” on Kashmir and seemed to hint at an escalation rather than calm:


Speaking to party workers in a video conference on Thursday, Modi did not respond to an offer of dialogue from Khan, leaving open the possibility of further escalation between the two nuclear-equipped armies.

“The enemy tries to destabilise us, carries out terror attacks,” Modi said. “Their motive is to stop our growth. Today, all countrymen are standing like a rock to counter their evil designs.”

The two leaders have been exchanging taunts and demands over the last several days. Modi called on Khan this weekend to account for the initiating incident, a suicide attack on Pulwana on February 14th in India-controlled Kashmir that killed 42 soldiers. Modi reminded the Pakistani leader of his claim to be a “son of a Pathan” who will “speak true and do true”:

On Saturday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi threw a challenge to his Pakistani counterpart Imran Khan, asking him to act honourably by bringing to justice those responsible for the Pulwama terror attack. Addressing a rally in Rajasthan’s Tonk, PM Modi recalled the phone call he made to Mr Khan to congratulate him for winning the Pakistani elections last year.

He said “I told him there have been plenty of fights between India and Pakistan. Pakistan got nothing. Every time, we won. I told him let us fight against poverty and illiteracy. He told me, ‘Modi ji, I am the son of a Pathan. I speak true and I do true’. Today, the time has come for him to stand true to his words. I will see whether he stands true to his words or not”.

Yesterday, Khan urged Modi to start discussing peace or at least a truce. In a speech covered by NDTV, the Pakistani PM warned that neither country can afford “miscalculations,” given their nuclear status:



Speaking to local television channel Geo News on Thursday, Shah Mehmood Qureshi said that if the gesture will ease soaring tensions, Pakistan is prepared to return the Indian air force pilot it captured after downing “two fighter jets” over Pakistani airspace in Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

“I am sending a message to India: if the return of this pilot allows for a de-escalation, then Pakistan is ready to consider it,” Qureshi said. …

India has handed over its files on the deadly February 14 bombing to Pakistan, Foreign Minister Qureshi confirmed on Thursday.

“Today, [India] has sent a dossier … we have received it, we will examine it, and now come and speak to us on the basis of this dossier,” the foreign minister said.

Khan warned that if Modi didn’t take steps to dial down the tensions, the result “won’t be in my control.” That’s a rather chilling statement from one nuclear power to another. News of the conflict even intruded on the nuclear talks that captured most of the world’s attention in Hanoi. Trump told reporters that the US and other nuclear powers have already begun trying to calm both nations:

The US president, Donald Trump, who was addressing a press conference in Hanoi at the same time Modi was speaking, hinted that diplomatic efforts had begun behind the scenes.

“They have been going at it and we have been involved,” Trump said. “We have some reasonably decent news, hopefully it’s going to be coming to an end, this has been going on for a long time, decades and decades.”

The conflict between India and Pakistan goes back farther than the Korean War, and appears more likely to go hot. Pakistan’s dalliance with radical Islamist terror networks comes in large part from their Kashmir strategy. It makes little difference to India under those circumstances that the suicide bomber was a native Kashmiri. Pakistan’s provocations in the region and its alliance with groups like the jihadist terror network in which the bomber claimed membership provides a constant source of tension. And not just in India, either; Afghanistan is not far west of Kashmir, where the US has fought since November 2001 against the Taliban and its Islamist terror allies.

It’s in everyone’s interest to get India and Pakistan talking in earnest about settling the Kashmir question … even if few are actually talking about it.
Reply

سيف الله
03-02-2019, 11:12 AM
Salaam

Disappointing.





This is unfair and a big generalisation, but as a comment on their ruling classes he has a point.





Having said that looks like their has been a turnaround.



Im not sure if this is recent but he (his government) has spoke out in favour of Pakistan.



Media war







More politics











More on the current situation.









Reply

DanEdge
03-02-2019, 12:49 PM
Peace and love to the citizens of Kashmir from the US. [emoji173]️[emoji174][emoji173]️These people have suffered enough.
Reply

anatolian
03-02-2019, 05:03 PM
Its the problem anyway, there is no citizentship of Kashmir. They are a disputed people. India should recognize the muslim idendity of Kashmiris that take part in India.
Reply

سيف الله
03-02-2019, 07:48 PM
Salaam

Another update

Why has Kashmir been forgotten?

Amid all the talks of India-Pakistan war, the issue at the very heart of present tensions has been completely ignored.


"What are they saying about jung [war] over there? Does it look like it will happen?" For days now our families in Kashmir have been asking us the same questions, hoping that here in New Delhi, we would have some answers.

Uncertainty and fear took over our home region on February 14, when a suicide attack in the Pulwama district of Indian-administered Kashmir killed more than 40 Indian soldiers. We were quickly and collectively denounced as national traitors, harassed and attacked across Indian cities. The Indian media and political elite called for "revenge" and started beating the drums of war.

The Indian government imposed a curfew, cut down the speed of the internet and deployed more troops in Kashmir. The police and security agencies carried out hundreds of overnight raids, arresting political leaders and activists. Jamaat-e-Islami, a political and religious organisation, was banned.

Meanwhile, the Indian military was put on high alert and raids were launched on targets in Pakistan, which prompted a Pakistani response. Heavy shelling across the Line of Control (LoC) which separates Indian- from Pakistan-administered Kashmir began.

Many Kashmiris were forced to flee, others started to stock up on food and other basic goods, fearing an escalation. Big red crosses were painted on rooftops of hospitals in the hope that the fighter jets constantly circling above would not hit them.

The Kashmiri people, who have already lived through decades of daily aggression against their bodies, homes, psyches, and memories, are now facing the real possibility of an all-out war.

It is in such circumstances that our families have been calling and messaging us from miles away, hoping to hear from us some soothing words. Every day, they have been recounting how their nights are spent counting the number of jets in the sky. Every day, we have been wondering if we should go home and face the war together with our loved ones.

Meanwhile, headlines about an India-Pakistan "confrontation", "escalation" and an "impending war" have been dominating local and international media. News broadcasts have followed every detail of the Indian and Pakistani military actions, the attacks and the counter-attacks, the claims and the counter-claims. Reporters have documented every statement, every new development. Pundits have dissected every aspect of the conflict - from war capabilities to army structure, to weaponry and from military strategies to geopolitical realities.

Yet somewhere in all this noise about conflict and war, a simple fact has been left out: that Kashmir is the place where it is all being fought out. The Kashmir issue and the plight of Kashmiri people have been somehow rendered irrelevant, even though the current conflict between India and Pakistan has everything to do with the disputed region.

When international media talks of the history of India-Pakistan antagonism, it fails to recognise the fact that Kashmiris have borne the brunt of it. When Indian media talks about "terrorism", it fails to mention the fact that Kashmir is one of the most heavily militarised zones in the world.

There was a certain irony in calls by Indian officials and public figures calling for Pakistan to uphold the Geneva Convention in its treatment of the captured Indian pilot. In Kashmir, India has failed to apply not just the Geneva Convention, but much of international law for that matter. Kashmiris are still being jailed on political charges and used as human shields, while the United Nations resolution which mandates a referendum on self-determination to be conducted in Kashmir is yet to be implemented.

The current anti-war activism in India is limited to small demonstrations and #NoToWar posts on social media. The elephant in the room is once again being ignored. No one is talking about what true peace would actually entail.

Dominant narratives propagated by the Indian state and the mainstream media are muffling Kashmiri voices. At this moment, it is important to hear them speak and tell their stories of war. The killings, torture, enforced disappearances, sexual violence, mass blinding through the use of pellet shotguns, and everyday harassment in Kashmir cannot be swept under the carpet and ignored. This violence needs to be made visible because continuing or escalating the current security policies of the Indian government will only result in disaster.

Indians have to realise that there will be no peace until the Kashmir issue is resolved. If they truly want "no war", then they have to push first and foremost for the demilitarisation of Kashmir. And if they want international law respected, they should do so as well and hold the plebiscite mandated by the UN. Kashmiris should be allowed to decide their own fate.

https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/op...213038382.html

Reply

سيف الله
03-05-2019, 10:04 PM
Salaam

Another update.



Pakistan vows militant crackdown after Kashmir bombing

Dozens of members of militant groups have been locked up in a new security crackdown, including close relatives of the leader of the banned outfit claiming last month's Kashmir bombing, Pakistan said.

Pakistan's interior ministry said 44 members of proscribed organisations, including a brother and son of the Jaish-e-Mohammad leader Masood Azhar, were “taken into protective custody”.

The announcement came a week after India launched air strikes against what it said was a JeM training camp inside Pakistan plotting an imminent attack. The strike and a later jet dogfight brought the neighbours to their worst military confrontation in two decades.

Pakistan is widely accused of harbouring and sponsoring militant groups to project power in India and Afghanistan. Western officials have judged previous crackdowns to be mainly for show. JeM has been banned in Pakistan since 2002, but according to a US State Department assessment last year, it was still able to recruit, fundraise and train freely.

A statement released on Tuesday said Pakistan had “decided to speed up action against all proscribed organisations”.

Gen Talat Masood, a former senior military officer, said he believed this crackdown would be serious, because the government and military had come to view the groups as a liability.

He said: “Even if they had any utility at one point, now they don't and they are a drag.”

Threats to put Pakistan on a terrorist financing blacklist unless it takes more action have also weighed on the government and powerful military establishment, he said. Pakistan's economy is already groaning under a balance of payments crisis and can ill afford international sanctions.

“I think this time it will be more effective,” he said.

JeM claimed responsibility for the suicide bombing of a paramilitary police convoy in Pulwama in Indian-controlled Kashmir on February 14. At least 40 died.

Azhar's brother, Mufti Abdul Rauf, and his son, Hamad Azhar, were among those detained. Azhar himself is “unwell to the extent that he can't leave his house, because he's really unwell", Pakistan's foreign minister said last week.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/201...shmir-bombing/





Meanwhile







Reply

سيف الله
03-06-2019, 07:45 PM
Salaam

Another update.

Blurb

OGN interviews Kashmiri analyst Sheikh Mubashir, who lives in Srinagar, about the reasons for the escalation between Pakistan and India and how it is affecting the Kashmiri people.







Harassment.



I hope it doesn't come to this.

Reply

سيف الله
03-07-2019, 08:01 PM
Salaam

Two different perspectives on the recent conflict.

Blurb

Who benefited more from the recent situation in South Asia?



Blurb

The last time Pakistani and Indian warplanes bombed each other’s territory was in 1971. More than 10,000 troops perished, and Pakistan was torn apart, resulting in the new state of Bangladesh. Yet, at the time, neither Islamabad nor New Delhi had developed the nuclear arsenals that they wield today.

So, when Indian jets breached Pakistan’s airspace on February 26th, it marked the deadliest point of friction in South Asia in decades. But, how did the two countries come so close to the edge of madness and what exactly happened?




the strategic calculus has changed.



Reply

سيف الله
03-11-2019, 04:18 PM
Salaam

Another update. An Old documentary, this was made in 1998

Blurb

A ceasefire line was mapped out in the lower country but the politicians didn’t bother to negotiate a boundary here. It is after all, uninhabitable. But as the power struggle escalates, every bit of territory counts. The high altitude combat is costing each side $730 million dollars a year. At 19,000 feet both sides lose on average two soldiers a day to oxygen deprivation or frostbite. Those that are tough enough to survive often go mad with the ‘Siachen Syndrome’ - a result of the isolation, the constant bombardment, and the grim reality of having to kill the only other human beings they may see in their three month posting.

Caught in the crossfire, a shell explodes overhead. Aimed at the small valley town of Athamuqam, these shells are designed to spray hundreds of deadly metal fragments. India’s test of a nuclear artillery shell has the population daily expecting Armageddon. We meet a truck-full of Kashmiris fleeing the besieged town in search of food. There is nothing low-key about this fighting; it’s incessant and deadly. The K2 postings are a lesson in the lengths India and Pakistan are prepared to go, to secure the next victory in Kashmir.




Recent protests.



More politics



Reply

سيف الله
06-14-2019, 06:56 AM
Salaam

Another update.

Blurb

Off the Grid goes to India-administered Kashmir where daily humiliation by Indian forces seems to be pushing more and more people towards militancy.

The episode features an interview with the father of the Pulwama suicide bomber, testimonies of pellet-gun victims (Including an 18 month old girl), and a Kashmiri student who was forced to leave his campus after retaliatory attacks on Kashmiris following the Pulwama attack.




Reply

bint e aisha
06-28-2019, 10:54 AM
Please sign this petition to demand justice for Muhammad Bilal Khan, a 22 year old freelance journalist who was brutally killed in Islamabad.

http://chng.it/PvBt8PYc
Reply

سيف الله
07-05-2019, 08:47 AM
Salaam

Its getting hard for Muslims living in India. Hindutva ideology is taking its toll.

Blurb

Hindu extremists have been lynching Muslims at an alarming rate. See the information that the ruling BJP party doesn't want you to know.



Related thread

Disaster incoming for Indian Muslims
Reply

سيف الله
07-22-2019, 10:28 PM
Salaam

Another update.

Blurb

Pakistan’s current economic situation is very worrying, and prime minister Imran Khan will have a mountain to climb to get the economy back to its feet.

Almost all financial indicators have seen a downward trend, with the growth rate falling by almost 50 percent, and is expected to go down even further next year, which will be the country's lowest in the past 10 years.

The Pakistani rupee has lost a fifth of its value against the dollar since the beginning of this fiscal year, as well as inflation expected to reach a 10-year-high. If these trends continue, Pakistan could be facing a major economic crash in the next years.


Reply

سيف الله
08-04-2019, 11:10 AM
Salaam

Another update.

Blurb

A hostile takeover of Kashmir is in effect. More troops, phones cut, politicians under house arrest, curfew and more #prayforkashmir

A summary of the developments so far explained.






Kashmir tensions intensify amid India-Pakistan skirmishes

Tensions have soared along the volatile, highly militarized frontier between India and Pakistan in the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir, as India deployed more troops and ordered thousands of visitors out of the region.

Indian firing Sunday along the Line of Control that separates Kashmir between the rivals wounded a woman as the ongoing skirmishes spread fear in border villages, Pakistani police said. The frontier residents on the Pakistani side are either moving out to safer places or have begun construction of new bunkers, with some strengthening existing shelters near their homes.

Pakistan and India, who both claim Kashmir in its entirety, routinely blame each other for initiating border skirmishes, but the latest ones come amid the Indian government’s evacuation order of tourists and Hindu pilgrims and a troop buildup in its part of the region.

The measures have sparked fears in Kashmir that New Delhi is planning to scrap an Indian constitutional provision that forbids Indians from outside the region from buying land in the Muslim-majority territory. In recent days, Hindu-majority India has deployed at least 10,000 troops in Kashmir, with media reports of a further 25,000 ordered to one of the world’s most militarized regions.

In Pakistan’s portion of Kashmir, Mohammad Fareed, a retired government employee in Tufrabad village near the Line of Control, said he had spent over $3,000 to construct a concrete bunker for his family of 10. “It looks like the situation is getting bad,” he said, adding that the recent shelling and the dropping of cluster bombs had created massive fear.

“People are using their savings to build bunkers. After all, if you live you will do other things,” said Fareed.

Mohammad Altaf, a trader dealing in construction material, confirmed that people were buying concrete blocks and crushed stone to construct bunkers in and around their homes.

But Mohammad Nasim opted to shift his family from Chakoti village to a safer place. “God knows what will happen the next day so it’s not wise to make a bunker. Instead I am moving away from the border area,” he said.

Raja Farooq Haider, the prime minister of Pakistani-controlled Kashmir, announced Friday the sanctioning of about $19 million for community bunkers for residents living along the border.

Kashmir has grabbed the spotlight in recent days, months after a deadly militant attack on an Indian paramilitary convoy sparked cross-border air attacks and brought India and Pakistan to the brink of war. The recent escalation has come amid offers by President Donald Trump to mediate to resolve the Kashmir issue. While Pakistan welcomed the offer, India rejected it, saying the dispute was between the two countries.

Amid the evacuation order, hundreds of Indian and foreign visitors, including some Hindu pilgrims, continued congregating outside the main terminal at the airport in Srinagar, the region’s main city, seeking seats on flights out.

The Indian air force flew 326 tourists out of Srinagar, the Press Trust of India news agency reported. Out of 11,301 tourists, only 1,652 remained on Saturday, PTI said.

Tourists and pilgrims also took buses out of the region, with authorities busing out hundreds of Indian students from Srinagar colleges.

The order on Friday cited the “prevailing security situation” and the “latest intelligence inputs of terror threats with specific targeting” of the annual Hindu pilgrimage as reasons for the advisory. Several governments issued similar travel advisories.

Kashmiri politicians and ordinary residents fear the government measures are a prelude to doing away with Kashmir’s special status and intensifying an ongoing crackdown against anti-India dissenters. Kashmir, a region known for lush green valleys, lakes, meadows and dense forested mountains, has become notorious for security lockdowns and crackdowns.

In its election manifesto earlier this year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party promised to do away with special rights for Kashmiris under India’s constitution.

Rumors continued swirling in the region on Sunday, ranging from the disarming of Kashmiri police forces, to the Indian military taking over local police installations, to a sweeping military crackdown being planned ahead of India’s independence day on Aug. 15.

“India is getting cornered at the geostrategic level as America seeks Pakistani help for withdrawing from Afghanistan,” said Fayaz Ahmed, a political science teacher in Srinagar. “In turn, India is mounting pressure on Pakistan by building up tensions in Kashmir though militaristic approaches inside Kashmir as well as along the frontier.”

Meanwhile, Pakistan late Saturday accused India of using banned cluster munitions to target the civilian population, killing two people. The Indian army rejected the claim, saying Indian soldiers killed at least five attackers while foiling an attempt by gunmen from Pakistan’s side of Kashmir to target an Indian post.

Rebels in Indian-controlled Kashmir have been fighting Indian control since 1989. Most Kashmiris support the rebels’ demand that the territory be united either under Pakistani rule or as an independent country, while also participating in civilian street protests against Indian control. About 70,000 people have been killed in the uprising and the ensuing Indian crackdown.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world...=.80a7a9c502c2

History of the conflict, nice read.



Reply

سيف الله
08-04-2019, 02:45 PM
Salaam

Another update.




Thousands of tourists flee Kashmir after security alert

India claims it killed five militants trying to attack its forces in disputed region


Tens of thousands of tourists, pilgrims and workers have begun leaving the disputed region of Kashmir after local officials issued a security alert and India said it had killed at least five militants who were trying to attack its forces.

The Foreign Office on Saturday issued new advice to avoid all travel to Jammu and Kashmir, adding: “There is a risk of unpredictable violence, including bombings, grenade attacks, shootings and kidnapping.”

Germany and Australia gave similar warnings to their citizens.

Indian security officials ordered people to leave the Kashmir valley after they had found evidence of attacks planned by what they said were Pakistani military-backed militants on a major Hindu pilgrimage, the Amarnath Yatra – which ends in mid-August – in Muslim-majority Kashmir.

Officials called off the pilgrimage and asked the pilgrims and tourists to return home, causing panic as visitors scrambled to arrange transport. A separate government notice also advised hundreds of students from other Indian states to leave the Himalayan valley.

Anxious visitors, including some foreigners, flooded the airport at the main city Srinagar on Saturday, many without tickets for flights that day.

“Passengers who were scheduled to return in coming days have turned up in panic at the airport today,” said the manager of one airline operating the Delhi-Srinagar route. “It’s chaotic and not many will manage seats unless there are additional flights.”

Hundreds of Indian students from outside Kashmir were evacuated in buses. “All the non-local students have left the campus for their respective states,” an administrative official at the National Institute of Technology in Srinagar told AFP.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...P=share_btn_tw

Comments.



Reply

سيف الله
08-05-2019, 02:41 PM
Salaam

Situation is going from bad to dire, Kashmir is in lockdown.



India Is Creating Its Own West Bank in Kashmir

Erasing the troubled state’s autonomy will only inflame separatist sentiment and undermine the country’s standing as a liberal democracy.


Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government in India often claims that its actions are unprecedented -- that no government in India’s history has been bold enough to do what it does. Most of the time this is, to put it mildly, an exaggeration. But on Monday, they certainly went far beyond what any previous Indian government has done about the troubled state of Jammu & Kashmir. And that’s a big, big problem.

After a tense and terse build-up -- during which a major pilgrimage was canceled, the Kashmir Valley was flooded with soldiers and Kashmiri politicians were arrested -- Modi’s right-hand man, Home Minister Amit Shah, announced a set of Kashmir-related legal changes in Parliament on Monday. In essence they scrap the special status promised to Jammu & Kashmir when it became part of India seven decades ago; divide the state into two; and reduce the power of elected state politicians to pass laws and control the local police. Jammu & Kashmir will no longer have the rights and privileges of a state of the Indian Union, but instead be a Union Territory, with its laws requiring the assent and permission of the government in New Delhi.

Perhaps these changes will not be upheld by India’s Supreme Court. But, if they are, they would indeed be unprecedented. No Indian government has ever seriously wanted to disturb the delicate legal balance that underlies New Delhi’s claim to the Valley. Moreover, there is no doubt they will inflame separatist sentiment in Kashmir. Its residents are already simmering with anger at decades of repression and a constant military presence in their homes and villages. Now, in their eyes, their sole claim to autonomy and identity has been taken away.

What will these changes mean for Kashmir’s future, and India’s? If implemented fully, one big thing will change: Previously, only those from Kashmir could own land there; now the Valley could be flooded with settlers from outside. India has never played the demographic card -- used its overwhelming numbers elsewhere to render native Kashmiris’ demands moot, the way that Beijing has by urging Han Chinese to migrate to Tibet and Xinjiang.

Whether Kashmir will end up looking like those restive, semi-autonomous provinces, or more like the West Bank -- with armed settlers living in highly protected colonies amid a larger, disenfranchised population subject to arbitrary justice -- is not clear at the moment. Those are, however, the most likely options.

Neither would be in any way a positive for India. Whatever else, this country still aspires to be a liberal democracy respected worldwide, and it won’t be if it creates a Xinjiang or a West Bank in Kashmir, rendering people second-class citizens or putting them in camps. Nor do India’s people and economy have the resources to deal with a sustained, angry insurgency.

Worse, many other restive parts of India -- with shrinking populations, as opposed to the growing ones in Modi’s heartland of the north and west -- will be given fresh reason to fear this demographic bludgeon. Already various states are designing laws meant to deny employment to “outsiders.” The prospect of large-scale settlement would enrage sub-nationalists elsewhere in India, hardly a desirable outcome from New Delhi’s point of view.

The reasons that Modi’s government has done this have, therefore, nothing to do with India’s national interest. It’s all about pushing forward his Bharatiya Janata Party’s deeply rooted ideals of Hindu majoritarianism. Kashmir is India’s only Muslim-majority state and its autonomy is offensive to the BJP and its ideological fellow-travelers. Israel -- which they see not as a multi-ethnic democracy, but as a militant religio-nationalist state that knows how to treat Muslims -- has always been their ideal.

It’s also a simple electoral calculation: Whenever there is tension between Hindus and Muslims, the BJP does better in elections. The economy is visibly struggling and, like other populist-authoritarians, Modi may well see this as a good moment to double down on majoritarian identity politics.

The tragedy for Kashmir and India is that there is likely to be no real pushback against this decision. Modi’s parliamentary majority in this year’s general elections was large enough to have cowed the political opposition in New Delhi. The media has been muzzled or bought off, and independent institutions have had their wings clipped. The Kashmiris’ most popular leaders are far from sympathetic spokesmen: Those who are not corrupt, compromised or dynasts are largely al-Qaeda-loving Islamist fundamentalists.

Nor will there be any real pressure from abroad, at least to begin with. Donald Trump loves authoritarians more than liberal democrats anyway. And has anybody stepped up for Xinjiang? No, instead the world has cravenly kowtowed to Beijing. Then why should Modi worry that anyone will isolate India if it treats Kashmir similarly?

The only people who might object are those who recognize the road that this takes India down -- one which undermines its Constitution, strains its union and brutalizes its people. But those voices are few and stifled in India today.

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/ar...-will-backfire

Interesting comparison with the West Bank, no doubt Zios are involved.

Reply

سيف الله
08-05-2019, 06:51 PM
Salaam

Lots of comment.



A harder stance. (Ex - military)







A cautious stance.







Another Ex-military, perspective.







Reaction from the UK





Protests from Bangladesh.

Reply

CuriousonTruth
08-06-2019, 10:37 AM
I wish Bangladesh had a more conservative, anti-indian government. I would definitely have volunteered for military service against India.
Reply

Ahmed.
08-06-2019, 10:57 AM
I think Pakistan and Bangladesh should attack India from both sides... let's fix those cow worshippers once and for all :Emoji51:
Reply

CuriousonTruth
08-06-2019, 11:07 AM
format_quote Originally Posted by Ahmed.
I think Pakistan and Bangladesh should attack India from both sides... let's fix those cow worshippers once and for all :Emoji51:
Bangladesh government is an Indian proxy.

As I said the government would need to change, if Bangladesh had someone like Erdogan I would honestly enlist in the military without a doubt.

Anyway I don't think Pakistan will invade Kashmir without Chinese cooperation. If Pakistan and China both attack, then India would be royally screwed.
Reply

سيف الله
08-06-2019, 09:54 PM
Salaam

Another update.


Humiliating Kashmir is part of Modi’s plan to remake India


The brutal abolition of the region’s special status is another stage in the prime minister’s Hindu nationalist project

On Valentine’s Day this year, Narendra Modi went on a date with Bear Grylls. As the two men set off on an “adventure of a lifetime” in India’s Corbett national park, 500 miles to the north in the valley of Kashmir a suicide bomber drove a truck laden with explosives into a convoy of vehicles carrying Indian paramilitary forces. Forty troops were blown to bits in the blast. It was the bloodiest single atrocity suffered by Indian security personnel in the savage history of the Kashmir conflict.

A trailer for Grylls’ programme Man vs Wild, released last week by Discovery, shows the duo wandering the wilderness that afternoon, sniffing animal excrement and sharing laughs and survival techniques. Opposition politicians have seized on the film to accuse the Indian prime minister of not interrupting his escapade with Grylls immediately on news of the atrocity – a charge the government has denied.

Either way, Modi, a consummate method actor, was playing “the conservationist”. He added this role to an extensive repertoire – poet, sage, statesman, he-man, yogi – that he has deftly deployed to craft a cult of personality unrivalled in the democratic world, not least for a man who was once widely castigated as a Hindu supremacist. Within two weeks of the shoot, Modi, campaigning for re-election, ordered Indian jets to breach Pakistan’s airspace and bomb targets deep inside enemy territory. That decision, drawing south Asia’s nuclear-armed adversaries to the precipice of an all-out war, helped to seal Modi’s victory even before a vote was cast. And in the two months since his triumph, Modi has moved aggressively to consolidate his grip and establish himself as the father of what his worshippers call “New India”.

The solidification of the cult of Modi has been accompanied by an aggressive erosion of the legal and constitutional foundations on which the Indian republic stands. Last week the government arrogated to itself powers to designate individuals as terrorists. Presumption of innocence, legal representation and the right to judicial appeal – everything that distinguishes a civilised democracy from an autocracy – is severely restricted. Muslims and other minorities, favoured quarry of the lynch mobs emboldened by the regime, will be the principal targets of the new measures.

Lest there was any doubt, Amit Shah, Modi’s dreaded enforcer and the minister responsible for law and order, clarified in parliament that “urban Naxals” – a label that encompasses everyone from leftwing intellectuals to rootless cosmopolitans sceptical of the Modi regime – “will not be spared”.

Organised political opposition to Modi and the ruling Bharatiya Janata party is being meticulously wiped out. July ended with the collapse of a coalition government in Karnataka, one of the few states where the BJP was not in power, after opposition legislators dramatically switched sides and joined Modi’s party.

Now August has begun with the partition and abolition of the troubled state of Jammu and Kashmir – which acceded to India in 1947 on the assurance that it would be granted special constitutional safeguards – by a presidential decree. Kashmir is now under the thumb of the union government, and the region’s elected leaders have been thrown in jail. Communications, including land lines, have been cut off. Ordinary Kashmiris have no means of speaking to the rest of India. The most monumental redesign of Delhi’s constitutional arrangement with India’s sole Muslim-majority state, hatched in secrecy, occurred without a debate in parliament.

Modi’s willingness to take the risk was no doubt dictated by the reward. He has in one stroke ground down and humiliated Kashmiris, and held them up as an example to other Indian states, a demonstration that nobody is immune from his untrammelled authority. The termination of Kashmir’s special status is simultaneously a culmination of a longstanding Hindu nationalist yearning to domesticate the region’s dissenting Muslim majority and a successful test case for the project to remake the entirety of India in accordance with Modi’s ideology. What has happened there will be repeated elsewhere. A spike in militancy or even an outbreak of hostilities with Pakistan can only boost the fortunes of a leader who, presiding over a decelerating economy, has little to offer besides demagogy.

“One country, one system,” Modi’s acolytes cry with sadistic glee at Kashmiris who are curfewed and cut off from the world. Next week India will mark 72 years of independence from British rule. For many Indians, forced suddenly to pledge allegiance to a de facto one-party state under one supreme leader, it will be the beginning of an inquisition – not an occasion for celebration.

https://www.theguardian.com/commenti...special-status

Hindutva ideology in action.



Good to know









Sri Lanka and Maldives support Indias decision.



And of course the Zios



Taliban response.



The harsh reality



Its not all bleak





I wasnt expecting this.

Reply

سيف الله
08-07-2019, 11:34 AM
Salaam

More analysis.

Heating up all over


It looks increasingly as if the world wants war, despite the social mood metric of the stock market being at an all-time high.
New Delhi has declared it is revoking a decades-old constitutional provision that granted special powers to the Indian-controlled part of Kashmir. The move comes amid ongoing flare-ups between India and Pakistan over the region.

The majority-Muslim region that became part of India in the times of decolonization, and has been a point of dispute between India and Pakistan ever since, has enjoyed broad autonomy under the Indian constitution. It is the only Indian state that was allowed to have its own constitution.

All laws passed by the Indian parliament, except for those regarding defense, communications, and foreign policy, had to first be ratified by the local legislature before coming into force in Kashmir. Apart from that, only local residents could purchase land or property in the state or hold office there.

This will no longer be the case starting Monday, New Delhi has announced. A resolution to revoke Kashmir’s special status was introduced on Monday by Home Minister Amit Shah and enshrined in a decree signed by President Ram Nath Kovind, the ceremonial head of India.
Translation: The Hindu nationalists are intending to crack down hard on India's Muslims. I wouldn't be at all surprised if there were large-scale population transfers in the cards. Remember, we're living at the end of one of the greatest global peacetime expansions in human history. The correction will therefore likely be of similar scale and scope.

http://voxday.blogspot.com/2019/08/h...-all-over.html
Reply

سيف الله
08-07-2019, 03:44 PM
Salaam

Another update



This triumvirate of evil has turned its sights on Kashmir


Russian revolutionary leader Lenin once said, “Show me who your friends are, and I will tell you what you are.” If we apply this to Narendra Modi and India, we can see that the Prime Minister of the world’s largest democracy counts among his closest allies both Israel and Myanmar. That speaks volumes, and does nothing for his carefully nurtured uncle-ji image.

It cannot be lost on anyone that Israel and Myanmar have appalling records for riding roughshod over international human rights and UN sanctions whilst enforcing brutal occupations, committing war crimes and carrying out ethnic cleansing. That’s why the world should not be too surprised that India has delivered a dream scenario to the extremist Hindu nationalists in its ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) by stripping Indian-controlled Kashmir of its decades-old special status which gave the Muslim-majority state unique levels of autonomy.

However, the disputed land of Jammu and Kashmir appears to be in danger of being ethnically cleansed by Modi, who has repeatedly demonised the region and its people by labelling it as a hotbed of religious extremism and terrorism. That’s the well-worn terminology used by various tyrants around the world when they want to crush and oppress ordinary people.

Modi’s next move may well be to ethnically cleanse the Kashmiris from their land in a scorched earth policy like the one conducted successfully by the military in Myanmar in 2015 against the Rohingya people. Both may have taken their cue from the Nakba in 1947 when Palestinians were driven from their lands at gunpoint by Zionist terror gangs and the nascent Israel Defence Forces.

At the time of writing, 48 hours have passed and not one word has come out of Washington where Donald Trump, the so-called leader of the free world, remains uncharacteristically mute about what India has done. In Britain, home to the world’s largest diaspora Kashmiri community, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office has also remained silent, as has new Prime Minister Boris Johnson. Even the opposition Labour Party has been slow to condemn the unfolding drama. The extremely active pro-BJP political lobby has invested heavily in ways to infiltrate and influence political parties of all stripes on both sides of the Atlantic, and is clearly starting to reap the benefits.

It is quite clear that India spurred on by its close friends, will be emboldened to continue its military campaign. As Modi was putting the final touches to this treachery last weekend, he and his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu were playing footsie on Twitter in “honour of Friendship Day”.

“Happy #FriendshipDay2019 India!” tweeted the Israeli Embassy in India. “May our ever strengthening friendship & #growingpartnership touch greater heights.” Modi responded in Hebrew: “Thank you. I wish a happy Friendship Day to the wonderful citizens of Israel and to my friend [Benjamin Netanyahu].” India and Israel proved their friendship throughout the ages, he continued. “Our relationship is strong and everlasting. I wish that our countries’ friendship will grow and bloom even more in the future.” The love-in between Tel Aviv and New Delhi continued with another tweet from Netanyahu: “Thank you, my friend, India PM @narendramodi. I could not agree with you more. The deep connection between Israel and India is rooted in the strong friendships between Israelis and Indians. We cooperate in so many areas. I know our ties will only strengthen in the future!”

Netanyahu apparently intends to visit Modi next month, no doubt to offer more advice on how to make friends and influence people while crushing any resistance to occupation; in other words how to get away with murder in full view of the international community. Modi was probably given similar advice by Myanmar Commander-in-Chief Senior General Min Aung Hlaing who visited Delhi last month, when India and Myanmar signed a defence cooperation agreement. The Indian leader invited Hlaing to visit India right after the US announced a visa ban on him visiting America due to the Rohingya genocide.

The key players in this triumvirate of evil are all passionate about their brutal occupations of Kashmir, Palestine and Rakhine State, where most of the remaining Rohingya live. The three have spent billions supplying and exporting weapons to each other over the past decade and their police forces have also traded information and training on how to conduct “anti-terror” operations against Kashmiris, Palestinians and Rohingya.

The objective of self-determination held dear by millions of Kashmiris and Palestinians has been thwarted and diminished by the post-9/11 “war against terror”, a euphemism for attacks on “Islamist terrorism”, a term that has gained a lot of currency in Myanmar these days. Written off and demonised as so-called Islamist extremists, this toxic label has made the rest of the world less willing to challenge the cultural, physical and brutal ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, Rohingya and now, I have no doubt, Kashmiris.

As the UN once again proves to be a toothless organisation in the face of this latest act against the Kashmiris and their rights, it will be down to global solidarity movements to come together and demand justice. Sadly, there are few crumbs of comfort for the people of Kashmir; not for nothing are its people known as the forgotten Palestinians.

As Israel, Myanmar and India gloat in their solidarity, mutual support and friendship, one can only guess what will be the next stage in what could prove to be the final chapter of Kashmir’s bloody story since 1947 when India and Pakistan became locked in conflict over the Muslim-majority region in the northernmost part of India. It will not be lost on Narendra Modi that Myanmar has ethnically cleansed more than a million Rohingya in recent years without a single prosecution in the international courts. Thanks to Modi’s new best friend Benjamin Netanyahu and his ilk, the plight of Palestinian refugees has, if anything, worsened year by year over the past seven decades. In short, Modi knows that India is more than likely going to be able to get away with murder, as Myanmar has, and Israel has. This triumvirate of evil has innocent blood on its hands, and things are about to get worse.

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20...ts-on-kashmir/

Reply

سيف الله
08-07-2019, 07:11 PM
Salaam

More analysis.

How to combat nationalism

Indian Prime Minister Modi is attempting a bold political stroke intended to extinguish the spirit of Kashmir's independence and is utilizing some strategies that might strike the American observer as being more than a little familiar:

Internally, Modi’s bold re-designation of Kashmir as a union territory with a legislature is a dream fulfilled for Indian nationalistic sentiment which never accepted the compromise provisions in the Indian Constitution under Articles 370 and 35A, wherein Muslim-majority Kashmir had been allowed a parallel Constitution with a flag of its own. State governments in Kashmir had powers over law enforcement, residence and property rights. Central laws had no validity in Kashmir unless the local legislature approved them.

In effect, the autonomous status turned Kashmir into a ghetto with a mentality of uniqueness and distinctness from the rest of India. It strengthened the nearly seven million Kashmiri Muslims’ feeling that they are not Indians but a different nationality who deserve to keep Indians out of their paradisiacal enclave except as visiting tourists....

Over time, the halfway house existence of Kashmir as a state within India and yet a nation that does not emotionally belong to India failed to meet both India’s objectives and Kashmiri Muslims’ aspirations. Waves of anti-India uprisings and insurgencies, supported from across the border by Pakistan, kept Kashmir burning. Autonomy had become a slippery slope for separatism, jihadist extremism and alienation of Kashmiri Muslims from the rest of India.

Modi’s bet is that by corralling Kashmir under tighter central government control, he will marginalise the secessionist politicians there, open Kashmir up for the return of Hindu Kashmiri minorities who had been ethnically cleansed by jihadists in the late 1980s, and alter the demographic mix in Kashmir through settlement of Indians of all religious and ethnic backgrounds.

Since autonomy backfired, Modi is saying ‘enough with appeasement’ and aiming for assimilation and complete integration of Kashmir. Demographically, the idea is to dissolve Kashmiri separatism in a sea of Indian nationalism through the intermixing of populations, blunting the sharp edge of separatism that comes from lack of ethnic heterogeneity in the Kashmir Valley, where 97 percent of the population is Muslim.... Modi’s determined push for total absorption of Indian Kashmir into India proper presents an existential challenge to the long-entrenched Pakistani strategy of fanning alienation of Kashmiri Muslims against India. If Kashmiri Muslims are reorganised and no longer grouped together as an exclusive ethnic entity, Pakistan will find it a lot harder to foment the flame of self-determination.

Modi is redefining the very meaning and identity of ‘self’ in Kashmir, a process that will take years and decades, but whose endpoint will be dilution of pro-independence and pro-Pakistan affiliations in the reshuffled Kashmiri society of the future. Kashmiri Muslims may become further alienated from India as a result of this makeover, but Modi is calculating that, in years to come, they will no longer be numerically so dominant as to stymie Indian sovereignty.
Demographically dissolving a nation through the intermixing of populations and ethnic heterogeniety just sounds so very... 1965?

Anyhow, this strategy will almost certainly lead to war in Kashmir. And elsewhere.

http://voxday.blogspot.com/2019/08/h...tionalism.html
Reply

سيف الله
08-08-2019, 09:03 PM
Salaam

Another update.

Blurb

India revoked Articles 370 and 35A which granted Jammu and Kashmir special status. The significance of this move is little understood, Bilal Abdul Kareem explains it's dangerous implications in OGN Perspective.



Blurb

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi has promised a bright new future for the state of Kashmir that he's had in total lockdown for the past four days.

In a national address he pledged new jobs, new infrastructure and cultural development.

But with more than 500 people reportedly arrested in Indian controlled Kashmir and anger growing in neighbouring Pakistan, tension continues to rise.




A heated debate.

Blurb

Kashmir has long been a flashpoint between India and Pakistan. India has just made things worse, by revoking the Indian-administered region's autonomy. Although Islamabad says not to the point of it considering military action, for now.
Pakistan's government is looking to challenge Kashmir's disputed status politically and legally. It's downgraded diplomatic ties with New Delhi, suspended trade and shut down an express train service to its neighbour.

India has urged Pakistan to review what it's doing, in retaliation to what it says is an 'internal affair'. Despite the escalation, Pakistan says war is not an option.

But can an armed conflict be averted?




Before we forget.



Reply

سيف الله
08-09-2019, 10:36 PM
Salaam

More comment and analysis.

Reconquista: Jammu and Kashmir under direct Hindutva supremacist rule

The Hindutva “reconquest” of Jammu and Kashmir has begun, and the subcontinent’s Muslims now face a powerful and fascist India, writes Jahangir Mohammed.

On the 5th of August, the Indian Parliament repealed Article’s 370 and 35A of the Indian constitution, which granted Jammu and Kashmir (JK) a special status. These laws have been in place since 1949, confirming JK as an accession state, giving hope to the people of the region that they would one day be given the right to self-determination. JK had the ability to have its own flag, own constitution and assembly, and determine its own laws. Article 35A also prohibited those outside of Kashmir from purchasing property and taking residency in JK so the Muslim majority demographic could not be altered by a huge Hindu population in India.

Article 370 provided some smokescreen of autonomy to JK and allowed its politicians to nurture relationships with India. The belief was that through this arrangement JK would become a permanent part of India. The “special status” was a myth. The region has never been free of Indian military control, but it allowed India to claim JK was “Indian administered” rather than Indian occupied – the latter being the reality. With the repeal of these articles and the arrest of Kashmiri leaders, the notion of an “Indian administered” Kashmir is dead. India has made JK part of India by force. JK is now officially occupied by India, in violation of the Indian constitution, the JK constitution and UN resolutions.

Why has India acted now?

At partition of India, JK leaders and some Muslim leaders in India, had pro Indian nationalist sentiments, and a deeply held belief that it was better for Muslims to be part of a united India. They believed that a secular democracy would grant Muslims their rights and protection. The view of the two-state Pakistan Movement was that Hindu majority rule would ultimately lead to Hindu dominance and oppression, and that Muslims could only be safe in a separate Muslim majority state. When it came to Kashmir, an autonomous Princely State, a Muslim majority population were prevented from choosing to become part of India or Pakistan, or remaining independent, by its Hindu ruler, Maharaja Hari Singh, who was pro India and signed a treaty with India. After two wars between India and Pakistan, with Chinese involvement, Kashmir became partitioned. China took the Aksai Chin region and Pakistan controlled what became Azad (free) Kashmir whilst India maintained control of Jammu Kashmir including the Buddhist region of Ladakh.

India had always hoped that with economic success, the majority Kashmiri Muslims would become pro India at some point, a referendum could then be held (in accordance with United Nations resolutions) and India would be chosen. However, over time this has not happened and Kashmiri masses unlike many of its leaders have inclined towards Pakistan or increasingly independence.

Uprisings for freedom by Kashmiri’s in 1987 led to direct military occupation of the region by up to 500,000 Indian troops, now 32 years on. During this time, nearly 100,000 Kashmiri’s have been killed, thousands raped or tortured, and held without due process as political prisoners.

The latest uprising among Kashmiri youth started three years ago with the death of resistance leader Burhan Wani in July 2016. It has led to thousands of Kashmiris being blinded by Indian troops firing pellets. This makes a mockery of the notion that JK is being “administered” and not militarily occupied by India.

The spirit unleashed by a young Kashmiri population demonstrating for freedom from India, has showed no signs of ending. With a Hindutva fascist movement and government in India (with Muslims in India also being a target of anti-Muslim hatred), there was no prospect that the Kashmiri people would ever become part of India by choice. So, the BJP rulers decided to make Kashmir part of Hindutva rule by force and change its demographics, so it will no longer be a majority Muslim region.

The rise of Hindutva fascist India – A global challenge


At the heart of the problem for Muslims in India, Kashmir, Pakistan and the rest of the world is the rise of a virulent Hindutva (‘Hinduness’) supremacist political and religious ideology that now rules India. Its political wing, the BJP has been democratically elected twice and is becoming stronger every day. Its paramilitary wing, the RSS (Rastriya Svayamsevaka Saṅgha), of which Modi was a member, has permeated all facets of Indian society. The RSS has done this as leader of a large body of organisations called the Sangh Parivar (the “family of the RSS”). This includes the Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP, World Hindu Council) a militant organisation which promotes Hinduisation of India, the Hindu Sena (Army of Hindus) and Shiv Sena (Army of Shivaji). The BJP is now the largest political party in the world whilst the umbrella RSS is the largest social voluntary organisation in the world. The RSS was banned under British rule and by early independence Indian governments.

Hindutva supremacist ideology seeks to create a Hindu identity society by restore Hindu rule, by cleansing India of what it considers foreign alien elements; including Muslims and Christians, their culture, language, heritage, religious beliefs and places of worship. It seeks a return India to its pre-Muslim times, including the forced conversion of Muslims to their pre-Muslim Hindu beliefs. For the last decade at least, this propaganda has been pumped out at all levels of mainstream Indian society.

The problem for Muslims of Kashmir and Pakistan is that the re-conquest of land is also an integral part of the Hindutva vision. It views the historical Indus valley/river civilisation as part of Hindu India. The historical centres of this civilisation are claimed to be Mohen je daro and Harappa in Pakistan. Whilst in Kashmir, the priestly Kashmiri Hindu Pandit caste (or Kashmiri Brahmins) claim to have a pre-Muslim historical claim and pre-independence right as Hindu rulers with Muslim subjects.

In the context of the rise of this Hindu supremacist ideology, the forced integration of Kashmir into “Hindu rule” in India was inevitable. What happened a few days ago will be viewed by the Hindu supremacists through the lens of a ‘Hindu Reconquista’ of Kashmir.

Pakistan and Imran Khan’s miscalculations

Whilst the BJP government has made the current move for its own ideological reasons, the decision has been calculated at a time when Pakistan is politically and economically weak and dependent on debt finance. Not just from the IMF, but more importantly from Saudi Arabia and the UAE, who Modi has successfully courted. Any reaction from Pakistan will be curtailed by pro-Modi Gulf rulers whose economies are being managed mainly by Hindu Indian businessmen and workers.

It also comes at a time when Pakistan’s political leader, Prime Minister Imran Khan, has made a major plank of his government’s policy, anti-war, pro-peace, and political settlement of conflicts and disputes. Peace is a noble human goal, but you have to understand the psychology of the enemy you’re dealing with.

His constant talk of peace, to try and shed the image of Pakistan as a “terrorist supporting” state, was bound to be seen as a weakness by the militant Hindutva ideologues in India who are prepared to achieve their political goals militarily. As such it was short-sighted. His constant appeals to international diplomacy and settlement are also a miscalculation about the realities of achieving peace through international agencies and the US – another sign of undeniable weakness.

Practically, Pakistan will be unable to act, and may have to accept as a reality that Jammu Kashmir is part of India, which would mean that de facto Azad Kashmir would become part of Pakistan, unless India decides to take that too. Temporary lines of control have a habit of becoming permanent. This would be the very betrayal that Kashmiris have long predicted.

The people of both sides of Kashmir will be unhappy with such an arrangement, and the Kashmiri quest for self-determination and resistance will continue, regardless of what India or Pakistan do or don’t do.

Of all the conflicts affecting the Muslim Ummah, the Kashmiri cause has been the most neglected by Muslim activists and masses. What is now required for the rest of the Muslim masses is to stand with the Kashmiri people and against the rise of Hindutva fascist rule, if only in their own interests. The rise of Hindutva fascism will affect many Muslims around the world, and silence is no longer an option.

https://5pillarsuk.com/2019/08/07/re...remacist-rule/

Another random example fo the current ruling ideology in action.



Like to share, unexpected from the Sauds (though it is from a 'liberal' viewpoint).

Reply

سيف الله
08-10-2019, 01:45 PM
Salaam

The Zio influenced New York Times chimes in with their opinion. Probably privately happy that Pakistan has been manoeuvred into a tight spot.

Pakistan Runs Out of Options as India Tightens Grip on Kashmir

The dispute over Kashmir has long been a flash point between India and Pakistan, with each nuclear-armed country holding the threat of retaliation over the other. But when India stripped the Indian-controlled region of Kashmir of its autonomy this week, Pakistan’s reaction appeared to be limited to high-level hand-wringing.

As Pakistan marks its independence day next week, it increasingly feels like a nation with its back against the wall, with few options to protect its existential interests. Its economy is teetering on the brink of collapse, and its international allies have either stayed silent over Kashmir or defected in support of India.

A conventional military reaction is probably too costly as Pakistan seeks to shore up its finances. And one of the most effective strategies Pakistan has traditionally employed — using an array of militant groups as proxies to keep neighbors in check — has become a liability, amid the threat of international sanctions. (Pakistan has denied that it uses militant groups to achieve its foreign policy objectives.)

“The economy is hindering Pakistan’s options. As economic growth slows, can they really afford a war right now?” said Arif Rafiq, the president of Vizier Consulting, a consulting firm on South Asian political and security issues. “Their capacity to bear the cost of a full-fledged conflict with India over Kashmir, whether via insurgent networks or conventionally — there just are not a lot of options Pakistan has.”

Even Afghan Taliban leaders, who have long been sheltered in Pakistan, seem to have turned their backs on their ally of late.

Last year, in an effort to end its global isolation, Pakistan agreed to help the United States end its war in Afghanistan by delivering the Taliban leadership to the table for peace talks. In doing so, Pakistan employed one of its greatest sources of leverage with the United States. Those talks are now nearing a conclusion, with American negotiators sitting across the table from their Taliban counterparts and aiming to reach a settlement soon.

In recent days, several Pakistani government officials have demanded that their country end its cooperation in the peace talks to protest American silence over India’s elimination of Kashmir’s autonomy. But the Taliban on Thursday issued a forceful statement warning against any meddling.

“Linking the issue of Kashmir with that of Afghanistan by some parties will not aid in improving the crisis at hand because the issue of Afghanistan is not related, nor should Afghanistan be turned into the theater of competition between other countries,” the Taliban statement read.

The outcome of the peace talks and Pakistan’s role in them will likely influence whether the country finds itself blacklisted internationally over its continued support of terrorist organizations, a move that could save or break its faltering economy. The Paris-based group that monitors terrorism financing, the Financial Action Task Force, will vote in October on whether Pakistan has done enough to crack down on militant networks at home.

Pakistan hopes to make the case that it has moved against militant groups and should be taken off the gray list on which the watchdog placed it last year. Pakistan deeply fears it could be blacklisted and denied access to international financial markets at a time when it desperately needs loans to stay afloat. If Pakistan is blacklisted, that could tip its economy into recession.

Prime Minister Imran Khan of Pakistan seemed worried about the lack of options to force India to renounce its new Kashmir policy.

Meeting with Pakistani journalists on Thursday, Mr. Khan dismissed using “jihadi organizations” against India in Kashmir. “There are more disadvantages than advantages,” Mr. Khan said, according to Amber Rahim Shamsi, a reporter for Samaa TV who attended the meeting.

The possibility of international sanctions also seemed to weigh on Mr. Khan.

“Pakistan has taken every step to get itself out of the baggage of the past,’’ the prime minister told the group of journalists, according to a second account of the meeting.

He said the government had undertaken “a complete cleansing operation” against terrorist groups. “My government has ensured there is a complete and sincere effort to bring Pakistan out of FATF,” Mr. Khan added, referring to the Financial Action Task Force.

Pakistan’s foreign minister has said he would raise the issue of Kashmir to the United Nations Security Council for a vote. But so far, the country’s closest allies have remained silent on the matter.

Muslim nations have usually supported Pakistan’s claims on Kashmir. But with their own economic and political troubles at home, many have tilted toward India, looking to secure lucrative deals with the ascending economic power.

The biggest blow came from the influential United Arab Emirates, which stated that Kashmir was an internal matter for India, withdrawing any support to raise the issue internationally.

India has long maintained that Kashmir is an internal issue; the disputed territory chose to join India rather than Pakistan during partition in 1947, based on assurances that its autonomy would be maintained. Pakistani forces invaded part of Kashmir and now control that part of the territory.

When Pakistan agreed after the September 11, 2001 attacks to help the United States fight terrorist groups, it asked for a favor in return — American help mediating on Kashmir and pressing India to make concessions. When the United States refused, Pakistan felt betrayed.

Just last month Pakistanis felt more upbeat about their country’s prospects. Mr. Khan had returned from a visit to the White House where he met with Mr. Trump, who promised to intervene on Kashmir. But India’s swift action days later to strip Kashmir of its autonomy plunged Pakistan back into isolation.

“The U.S. has again let us down, and those who were starry-eyed about the American trip have got a wake-up call,” Senator Mushahid Hussain said in a speech this week.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/09/w...-pakistan.html

Reply

سيف الله
08-13-2019, 08:38 PM
Salaam

Another update

Missed this, Jeremy Corbyn speaks




Kashmir on the Edge of the Abyss


In an unsettled world, amid violent wars and imperial occupations, with all norms ruthlessly cast aside, did Kashmir really have a chance to be free? As unrest spreads, India, the vaunted “world’s largest democracy,” has imposed a total communications blackout. Kashmir is cut off from the world. With even the most conciliatory and collaborationist political leaders now under house arrest, one can only fear the worst for the rest of the region’s population.

For almost half a century, Kashmir has been ruled from Delhi with the utmost brutality. In 2009, the discovery of some 2,700 unmarked graves in three of the region’s twenty-two districts alone confirmed what had long been suspected: a decades-long history of disappearances and extrajudicial killings. Torture and rape of both women and men has been reported, but since the Indian Army is effectively above the law, its soldiers have impunity in perpetrating these atrocities and nobody can be charged with war crimes.

By way of contrast, in India’s far north-eastern state of Manipur, the local women constantly subjected to rape by Indian Army personnel reacted in 2004 with one of the most striking and memorable of public demonstrations—a group of twelve women and girls, aged from eight to eighty, stripped bare and paraded outside the local Indian Army headquarters carrying placards with the tauntingly sarcastic slogan “Come and Rape Us.” They were protesting the mutilation and execution, following her suspected gang rape, of thirty-two-year-old activist Thangjam Manorama by paramilitaries of the 17th Assam Rifles. Their Kashmiri peers, subjected to similar abuses and worse, have been too fearful to do the same.

Many women in Kashmir are scared to tell their own families of their ordeals at the hands of the Indian military, for fear of patriarchal reprisals at home in the name of “honor.” Angana Chatterji, then a professor of social and cultural anthropology at the California Institute of Integral Studies (and now a program co-chair at UC Berkeley), has described one appalling episode, uncovered by her fieldwork from 2006 to 2011 researching human rights abuses in Kashmir:

Rest of article here.

https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2019/0...-of-the-abyss/ Like to share.

Like to share.


Blurb


India removed a law that granted special status to Indian-administered Kashmir alongside enforcing a curfew, cutting off all means of communication and sending massive troop deployment to the region. Bilal Abdul Kareem interviews a Kashmiri activist about the topic. The activists identity had to be hidden in order to protect his and his family’s safety.




Blurb


India’s government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi has recently announced its decision to scrap the Article 370 of the Constitution, This move marks a major shift away from a decades-long policy and breaks a fragile equilibrium



Blurb

Stay tuned till the end of the video. My aim is not to leave your feeling sad and hopeless, rather it is to ignite a flame of healing within yourself and others.


Reply

سيف الله
08-15-2019, 07:59 PM
Salaam

Protests.











This is from Sikhs, some of them want to separate from India and create their own independent state.





Not just them either.



imsad



UN PC Comment.

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سيف الله
08-16-2019, 11:08 PM
Salaam

Another update



Armed forces in Kashmir are detaining children and molesting women and girls amid a state-wide blackout, report claims

  • Kashmir is in its 11th day of a state-wide curfews and a total internet and phone blackout.

  • A group of economists and activists published a report Wednesday saying that security forces in the region have abducted hundreds of boys in midnight raids and detained them.

  • Officials also molested women and girls during those raids, the report said. Forces have also been firing pellet guns at civilians, the researchers said.

  • The report was compiled using conversations with hundreds of people in and around Kashmir state, all of whom were too afraid to speak on camera for fear of Indian government persecution.

  • Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said Thursday that his government's actions in Kashmir are liberating women, girls, and marginalized communities.


Security forces in Kashmir have abducted hundreds of boys in midnight raids and molested women and girls amid the state's 11-day blackout, a group of Indian economists and activists said in a new report.

Regional police, army, and paramilitary forces have raided hundred of homes around the region and arbitrarily snatched "very young schoolboys and teenagers" from their beds from as early as August 5, the investigation — titled "Kashmir Caged" and published Wednesday— said.

Those officers also molested women and girls during these nighttime raids, the researchers said, without specifying exactly what their actions were.

The report doesn't explicitly say whether those officers were employed by the Kashmiri regional government or the Indian government. However, most police, paramilitary, and army officers in Jammu and Kashmir work under the Indian government.

Though the researchers spoke with hundreds of ordinary people — from students to shopkeepers to local journalists — around the state from August 9 and 13 for their report, nobody was willing to speak on camera for fear of persecution from the Indian government, the economists said.

Parents were afraid to tell them about their sons' abductions as they didn't want to arrested for disrupting state security. Some worried that their boys would be "disappeared" — killed in custody — because their family had spoken out, the report said.

There are no formal records of these arrests, one civilian said, so if someone was killed in custody the police could claim that they were never taken in the first place.

One 11-year-old boy in Pampore, a town in western Kashmir, told the researchers he was beaten up during his detention from August 5 to 11, and that there were boys even younger than him in custody.

The researchers also said that Kashmiri security forces have been indiscriminately firing pellet guns against civilians, leaving them hospitalized and bleeding internally.

The report comes as Kashmir remains under heavy lockdown and a communications blackout. Thursday marks the 11th day of phone and internet lines being cut.

Journalists in Kashmir have reported being prohibited from moving around the region, and local TV channels and news websites are unable to function.

Some local journalists have been able to continue file stories either with a satellite phone or giving USB sticks of their work to people flying out of the region, but they remain a minority.

People in the city of Srinagar have also been able to organize large-scale protests despite the communications ban.

https://www.businessinsider.com/kash...19-8?r=US&IR=T

Related article.



Hindutva ideology in action.

Reply

سيف الله
08-17-2019, 09:14 AM
Salaam

Like to share, the Kashmir segment starts at approx. 40 min.

Blurb

Join us this week on our Unscripted podcast with Adnan Rashid.

They give a much needed background to the current Kashmir crisis, Hindu extremism, the importance of learning our history and preparing Muslims to lead the world once again.





Hah!



Oh dear.

Reply

سيف الله
08-19-2019, 09:53 PM
Salaam

Another update.

Narendra Modi to visit UAE, Bahrain, UAE, Modi in UAE

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will pay his third visit to the UAE on August 23-24, and receive the Zayed Medal, India's Ministry of External Affairs has announced.

Modi is also scheduled to visit Bahrain from 24 to 25.

During his visit, the prime minister will meet His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, to discuss bilateral, regional and international matters of mutual interest, the ministry said in a statement on Sunday.

"Prime Minister Modi would receive the Order of Zayed, the highest civil decoration of the UAE which was conferred earlier in April 2019 in recognition of the distinguished leadership of Prime Minister Modi for giving a big boost to bilateral relations between the two countries. The award in the name of Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, the founding father of the UAE, acquires special significance as it was awarded to Prime Minister Modi in the year of the birth centenary of Sheikh Zayed," read the statement.

The ministry said India and the UAE enjoy warm, close and multi-faceted relations underpinned by cultural, religious and economic linkages which, during the prime minister's previous visit to the UAE during August, 2015, stood elevated to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.

In February 2018, Modi visited UAE as chief guest at the World Government Summit. Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed has visited India in February 2016 and again in January 2017 as the chief guest at the Republic Day celebrations.

"With robust flow of bilateral investments and an annual bilateral trade of about $60 billion, the UAE is our third-largest trade partner. Also, the UAE is the fourth-largest exporter of crude oil for India. A 3.3 million-strong vibrant Indian community in the UAE nourishes the vibrant people-to-people contacts between our two friendly countries. The visit would further strengthen our friendly bilateral ties with the UAE."

Visit to Bahrain

Modi's visit to Bahrain on August 24 and 25 will be the first ever by an Indian prime minister to the Gulf state.

During the visit, the prime minister will address the Indian community. The Indian embassy in Bahrain in a tweet on August 17 asked Indians to register to attend Modi's public address.

The prime minister would also be holding talks with Prince Sheikh Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa, Prime Minister of Bahrain, to discuss bilateral relations and also regional and international issues of mutual interest. His Majesty King Sheikh Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa of Bahrain will be hosting a banquet dinner in honour of the prime minister.

Modi would also launch the renovation of Shreenathji (Shree Krishna) temple in Manama.

India enjoys close and friendly relations with Bahrain, rooted in ancient trade and cultural links and people to people contacts and underpinned by regular exchange of high level visits. India-Bahrain bilateral trade has been on the rise for the last few years, reaching about $1.3 billion in 2018-19. Further about 3,50,000 Indian nationals, the largest expatriate community in Bahrain has been contributing to the development of Bahrain. The presence of over 3,000 Indian-owned/joint ventures in Bahrain indicates the intense economic engagement between the two countries. The visit will provide an opportunity to further cement our mutually beneficial bilateral ties with Bahrain.

https://www.khaleejtimes.com/uae/abu...e-on-august-23

Comment



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سيف الله
08-20-2019, 02:28 PM
Salaam

Another update.



Fear and uncertainty around Kashmir's future

Last week in a controversial move, India revoked the autonomous status of Jammu and Kashmir, allowing India greater authority over the state's affairs.

The announcement fanned tension with Pakistan, which also claims the region and has fought India over it for more than seven decades. At least 28000 Indian security forces have been deployed; in the capital city Srinagar, a lockdown has been implemented that suspended communication and internet links, and a strict curfew has been imposed. The militant presence raises serious concerns for the health, safety, and freedoms of the Kashmiri people.

Since the insurgency of Kashmir in 1989, the state has experienced bloody conflict from both sides, resulting in more than 50 000 deaths. According to a report by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, published last month, gross human rights violations by state security forces and armed groups have occurred, including cross-border firings, sexual violence, enforced disappearances, and acts of terrorism.

The report emphasises continued use of excessive force against civilians—for example, the use of pellet-firing shotguns has led to 1253 people being blinded between 2016 and 2018. Both India and Pakistan have largely dismissed the report's recommendations to end the abuse.

Despite decades of instability, developmental indicators suggest that Kashmir is doing well compared with the rest of India. In 2016, life expectancy was 68·3 years for men and 71·8 years for women, which are greater than the respective national averages.

However, the protracted exposure to violence has led to a formidable mental health crisis. A Médecins Sans Frontières study in two rural districts affected by conflict stated that nearly half of Kashmiris rarely felt safe and of those who had lost a family member to violence, one in five had witnessed the death firsthand. Therefore, it is unsurprising that people in the region have increased anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi vows that his decision to revoke autonomy will bring prosperity to Kashmir. But first, the people of Kashmir need healing from the deep wounds of this decades-old conflict, not subjugation to further violence and alienation.

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/l...el=tw-27013292



If you recall approximately a decade and a half ago the Lancet was attacked by the British govt for highlighting the excess deaths caused by the invasion of Iraq.
Reply

سيف الله
08-21-2019, 05:42 AM
Salaam

Another update. Hmmmmm.

Pakistanis angry over Twitter's Kashmir 'censorship'

Catholic officials, activists concerned about freedom of expression after critics of India have accounts suspended


Church officials, Pakistani activists and journalists have accused microblogging website Twitter of censorship and bias for shutting down accounts tweeting about India’s decision to strip Kashmir of its autonomy.

The Indian move on Aug. 5 sparked a war of words among netizens of Pakistan and India on social media platforms.

Both Pakistan and India claim the disputed Himalayan region in its entirety and have fought at least three wars since winning independence from British rule in 1947.

In recent days, there has been a spike in suspension of Pakistani accounts mentioning Kashmir or responding to the situation in the valley. Among them are some very prominent journalists, Pakistani officials and pro-government and pro-military accounts.

Imran Khan, the host of current affairs show Clash on satellite TV GNN, had his account suspended for tweeting about Indian-administered Kashmir.

“Twitter suspended my account. My crime? Responding to Indians on Kashmir issue. Pakistan has no representatives on Twitter. However, Twitter has one of its headquarters in India. Indians are getting Pakistanis suspended at will,” Khan wrote from his new Twitter handle.

Kamran Yousuf, a journalist who writes for Pakistani English daily newspaper Express Tribune, was forced to delete his tweet on the Indian defense minister’s statement about the country’s nuclear policy.

“It is totally incomprehensible that Twitter has suspended my account only because I commented on the Indian defense minister's statement on ‘no first use.’ It's a shame I had to delete a harmless tweet to be back on Twitter,” Yousuf said.



Australian journalist and Middle East Eye columnist C.J. Werleman has been very vocal about the suspension of accounts highlighting rights abuses in Kashmir and Palestine.

“Twitter, and particularly its CEO @Jack [Jack Dorsey], has demonstrated its sympathy towards India, Israel and white nationalists over Kashmir, Palestinians and anti-racists,” Werleman tweeted.

According to Pakistani officials, around 200 Pakistani accounts have been suspended by Twitter and most of these have been recent and come in the wake of complaints by India.

Pakistan Telecommunication Authority lodged an official complaint with Twitter’s regional office on Aug. 19, but Twitter has denied claims that it is biased against Pakistan.

Pakistani English daily Dawn quoted a Twitter representative as saying that it was enforcing policies judiciously and ensured the impartiality of all users regardless of their political beliefs and country of origin.

Catholic Church officials have condemned the curbs on freedom of expression.

Father Morris Jalal, executive director of Catholic TV, condemned all attacks on civil liberties, freedom of expression and media independence amid increasing tension between the nuclear-armed neighboring nations.

“This is a big violation by Twitter; people will ultimately find other platforms to voice their concern against the unilateral and illegal move by the Indian government. Social media is the lifeline of any society; people cannot be silenced whether in good or bad times,” he told ucanews.com.

Michelle Chaudhry, president of the Cecil & Iris Chaudhry Foundation, described Twitter’s actions as a cover to hide gross violations of human rights in Kashmir.

“Such censorship is not acceptable in today’s era. We demand resumption of nonpartisan media coverage both on social and electronic media. Kashmiris have a right to self-determination,” she said.

However, Father Nasir William, director of the Commission for Social Communications in Islamabad-Rawalpindi Diocese, said Kashmir cannot be won through Twitter feuds.

“The U.N. Security Council debated the Kashmir issue on August 16 for the first time in 50 years. A more responsible response should be to support such efforts,” he said.

https://www.ucanews.com/news/pakista...nsorship/85912
Reply

سيف الله
08-21-2019, 07:40 PM
Salaam

Interesting.



The parallels between Zionism and Hinduvata (as if it could be anymore obvious)

Reply

سيف الله
08-21-2019, 08:36 PM
Salaam

Another update

Teens swept up in night raids in Kashmir clampdown

Ali Mohammad Rah sat on the pavement outside a police station in Kashmir's main city of Srinagar on Tuesday, waiting to see his teenage sons, who were swept up in government raids overnight.

"Soldiers violently banged windows of our home while we were sleeping," Rah told AFP, saying his sons -- aged 14 and 16 -- were taken away before dawn in the Srinagar neighbourhood of Mehjoor Nagar.

"They just barged in and dragged my two sons away."

Government sources say at least 4,000 people have been detained in Kashmir since India revoked the restive Himalayan region's autonomy on August 5 and imposed a massive security lockdown on the restive region.

Protests have broken out frequently, prompting raids by police and paramilitary forces.

In Nowshera, in an old quarter of the city, residents said several young men were taken away and detained by police on Sunday night.
Locals from other neighbourhoods reported similar blitzes.

To try and stop the raids, residents in Srinagar's Soura area have erected barricades and dug trenches in roads that lead to their cluster of homes.

Sitting outside the police station alongside Rah on Tuesday were dozens of other locals who said their relatives were also in custody -- among them 21 boys from the most recent night raid.

They say soldiers used ladders to scale the walls of their compounds.

Widow Rozi, who only gave one name, said a gun was put to her head and she was told to "keep quiet" by soldiers as they led her 20-year-old son Suhail Mohiuddin from the house.

Another woman, Mubeena, said a soldier "sprayed something on my face" when her brother was seized.

"I fell down in pain and couldn't see for a while. When I gathered myself my brother had already been taken away," she told AFP.

Nearby, Ulfat cradled her one-month-old son as she waited to find out about her breadwinner husband Mushtaq Ahmad, who she said was taken away by police.

"I don't have money to buy medicines for myself and other things for my baby," she told AFP.

Officials at the station did not respond to a request for comment.

Authorities have declined to speak on the numbers of people behind bars. Those picked up include local politicians, activists, business leaders and lawyers.

https://news.yahoo.com/teens-swept-n...rcVGT1AbtRvpIJ
Reply

سيف الله
08-24-2019, 06:20 PM
Salaam

Like to share.

Blurb

Bollywood is in trouble.


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سيف الله
08-26-2019, 09:33 PM
Salaam

Like to share.









Looks like the clown prince is getting a new religion.




Blurb

Wherever Modi goes, comedy follows...



This wouldn't surprise me.





Right on cue, these 'elites' mealy mouthed rationalisations are beyond the pale (were going to help the Palestinians, how exactly?)





Mind you its becoming clearer, brother Zaid may have a point, is one of the reasons this crises have been manufactured is to force Pakistan to bend the knee?
Reply

سيف الله
08-27-2019, 07:03 PM
Salaam

Another update



On the general situation.



1) Total Shutdown: 3 weeks in, complete nonsense to suggest life is normal or that Kashmiris accept any of it. Valley remains in total paralysis; no shops, no internet, no schools, no phones. Nothing is open, nothing to do, nowhere to go. Large parts of Srinagar totally empty.

(2) Saturated Military Presence: I've visited many violence affected areas - but this is the most claustrophobic security force presence I've ever seen in a large urban area. It's absolutely maddeningly oppressive. Soldiers, paramilitaries and police are literally everywhere.

(3) Politically Transformative: There's absolute fury & anger everywhere, & it's not going away. This amounts to collective punishment, humiliation and imprisonment and that's the way it's seen. It is definitely a historic tipping point but not in the direction Amit Shah wants.


Let me add - locking up leadership hasn't stopped the bandh. The present shutdown in Kashmir is voluntarily observed, and total - not called by any party or leader (entire political leadership is anyway in custody, incommunicado). That's quite significant in itself.

Finally-absolutely critical Indians open their minds to what is going on & challenge disinformation & bigoted triumphalism. Switch off your TV, read a book & maybe go visit Kashmir & see what govt is doing in your name. People are as ever, exceptionally warm and hospitable.

Epilogue: yesterday I posted some personal observations from a trip to Srinagar. The angry responses from alumni of Watsapp university all come down to two types- (1) “what you say is not true”; (2) “so what, they deserve it” anyway”

https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1...763192832.html
Reply

سيف الله
08-30-2019, 12:30 AM
Salaam

Yes a noble gesture but no this wont convince anybody.



As much as I loathe them, he has a point.



This is perceptive.



Trump with his mask off.





The reality.

Reply

سيف الله
09-01-2019, 05:07 AM
Salaam

Another update.



On the general situation.





Similarities between the situation in Palestine and Kashmir.



Bernie Sanders speaks out.

Reply

سيف الله
09-03-2019, 12:55 AM
Salaam

Another update.

With meticulous planning then mass arrests and ‘torture’, Kashmir’s autonomy was lost

Residents say security forces have beaten and abused locals as they attempt to prevent a violent uprising. Warning: this article contains images which some readers may find distressing


When Jammu and Kashmir’s governor addressed the world in a press conference on 4 August, people in the Muslim-majority valley were worried.
After decades of bubbling unrest in the most highly militarised region on the planet, they knew the signs were there that something big was happening. But when the governor was asked, he told the media that it was simply “unnecessary panic” created by “rumour mongering”.

He had lied. The next day, the Modi administration announced that Kashmir’s constitutionally enshrined autonomy was being unilaterally withdrawn, and the state was being downgraded and split into two “union territories”.

The news sent shockwaves across India and the region – but in Kashmir itself, a carefully orchestrated communications and travel lockdown allowed the government to claim that the situation remained “normal”.

Now, as the first detailed allegations emerge of torture and abuse by the security forces maintaining the lockdown in the region, The Independent can trace the events that led to the end of Kashmir’s special status.
Rewind to 26 July, and the first sign of the groundwork being laid by the Indian government was a redeployment of an additional 100 companies – around 10,000 soldiers – to a region already saturated with security forces.

The move was issued under the pretence of countering the militancy in the region, even though the number of militant attacks had come down in recent months.

After a few days, another 180 companies were sent to the valley, but this time home secretary Shaleen Kabra gave the excuse that there was specific intelligence of an imminent terror attack around the annual Hindu pilgrimage to Amarnath Temple in the Himalayas.

The order was followed by another advisory notice, issued by the Modi government and again citing the terror threat, asking tourists and pilgrims to leave the valley immediately for their own safety.
Meanwhile, the influx of troops was creating panic and confusion on the streets of Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir’s summer capital.

Footage obtained by The Independent shows worried students turning up at their college buildings and accommodation only to discover that they had been commandeered by the army to house the security forces.
Part-time students who attend the Indira Gandhi National Open University on Sundays travelled for hours to reach college on 4 August only to find the gates shut.

Shabana Wani, a 28-year-old woman who travelled almost 70km to attend college that day, said she called her professor. “I asked him about shutting the college, he said they didn’t have any proper orders, they just received the call to close immediately as forces we supposed to take the college.”

At the same time, doctors say, the authorities ordered all major hospitals to conduct an immediate stock-taking exercise. Hospital employees told The Independent they were largely unable to give an accurate count of their supplies in the short span of time provided.

The preparations led to a climate of hostility towards non-locals. Videos show migrant workers from the rest of India flocking to taxi ranks leaving Srinagar with only the luggage they can carry, while non-local students at the National Institute of Electronics and Information and Technology were picked out and taken away from a hostel by forces – possibly for their own safety.

The communications lockdown, in force since 4 August, meant that the scale of the preparations was not appreciated at the time, and only official statements such as those from the governor, insisting everything was OK, were widely circulated.

The announcement on 5 August, that the government was reading down Article 370 of India’s constitution, meant the worst nightmare of many Kashmiris had come true.

An angry backlash was expected. But visiting the most restive districts of southern Kashmir, The Independent heard allegations from residents that security forces resorted to extreme brutality and public humiliation in order to snuff out any unrest at source.

People in Nadapora Parigam, an area of the Pulwama district where a deadly suicide bombing killed 40 paramilitary officers in February, said that local boys were tortured by the security forces on the night of 5 August, hours after the Article 370 announcement was made.

Mohammad Yasin Bhat, 22, said he was dragged out of his bed at midnight by soldiers and brought out of his home to the main road, where he was made to stand naked in line with 11 other civilians.

It became apparent that security forces passing through the neighbourhood had been pelted with stones earlier in the day, and the troops were rounding up youths – seemingly at random – to find the culprits.

The officer in charge began by asking Yasin about his views of the Article 370 decision, he said. “I could sense the tension around, so, for my own safety, I said ‘we are happy – it is a good decision’. But I knew he didn’t trust my words,” said Yasin.

Yasin said he and the others were asked to remove their clothes, and then beaten with canes, gun butts and kicks. He says there was no one to help them – the whole village was cordoned off, and troops were at every corner.
During the beating, “many of us fainted”, Yasin said. “They would give electric shocks in our private parts, and start the torture again.”

During the beating, one man who asked for water was made to drink muddy drain water from the side of the road, Yasin said. And the final indignity came when, at the end of the beating, the naked men were made to “lie face-down on top of each other in a pile”. “It was harassment, making us feel violated,” he said.

Neighbours gave similar accounts of the incident. One man in his eighties, who asked not to be named, said he watched the beatings from beginning to end and, when the security forces left, came out onto the street to help “rescue all of the victims”.

The family showed pictures of severe bruising on Yasin’s backside and thighs, while other families provided images of other youths who had suffered injuries.

Yasin’s is not the only allegation of torture by the security forces to have emerged since the current crisis in Kashmir began, and representatives for the Indian army have strongly denied the claims.

In a statement to the BBC, which reported on alleged beatings in Pulwama on Friday, a spokesperson said the Indian army was “a professional organisation that understands and respects human rights” and that all allegations “are investigated expeditiously”.

On the same night of 5 August, at around 2am, armed forces arrived at the residence of Mohammad Maqbool Khan in the New Colony area of south Kashmir’s Shopian district.
Soldiers started banging on the door. Maqbool’s daughter in-law, Shazada Bano, said she rushed to open it in a panic.

“They ordered all of us to come in the courtyard. All of us gathered and they started asking our names,” she said. As soon as they heard the name of Amir Khan, a 27-year-old man who runs an electronics shop, they dragged him outside.
“We tried to stop them, but they said they want him to guide them in locating a few houses for searches, and we believed them. But that wasn’t true at all,” said Shazada.

The next morning when they reached the nearest police station, they found Amir in lockup. Maqbool asked officials the reason for his detention and they replied simply that he “will be released after 15 August” (India’s Independence Day, when a spike in unrest was expected).

That never happened, and on 18 August when Maqbool went to see Amir, the commanding officer told him he had been moved to the central jail in Srinagar.

The family travelled to the city and asked after Amir. They were told he and three other men from their village had been booked under the Public Safety Act – an emergency law that allows the authorities to imprison a person for up to two years without charge or trial.

One of the other youths detained was Shahid Ahmad Bhat, a 25-year-old boy whose father Mushtaq Ahmad Bhat is a pharmacist who lives a few metres away from Maqbool.

But unlike Maqbool, Mushtaq doesn’t even know where his son is being held. “For some time he was in the police station, later they said he has been shifted to Srinagar. At central jail, officials said he is not there. I have no idea where my son is, or if he is dead or alive,” Mushtaq said.

Government officials would not comment on specific cases, but they were not shy about the scale of the arrests carried out since 5 August decision. An official told The Independent that more than 4,000 people have been detained since the announcement, though they could not give an exact number. Many, like Shahid and Amir, face the prospect of potentially years in jail without any recourse to justice.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...-a9086611.html



The issue was raised in the British parliament.

Reply

سيف الله
09-04-2019, 03:38 PM
Salaam

And who is operating in the shadows?





Reply

سيف الله
09-11-2019, 09:42 PM
Salaam

Another update



Muted Response to the Kashmir Issue: Reflection of Changing Priorities of Muslim Leadership?

India seized upon a reality about Kashmir when it announced that it had revoked the special status it conferred on, and its previous agreements with, the Muslim-majority territory. This reality was that Kashmir’s 8 million Muslims have become the world’s forgotten people. A people that the international community can no longer summon the will to stand up against its oppressors and violators of human rights and international law.

Indian security forces instantly moved into the region, as New Delhi proceeded to action its strategic aim of changing the region’s demographics and implement its new ethnic cleansing Hindu nationalist settler-colonial project.

This will systematically transform settlements into mini-cities, usurping land from the Kashmiris and giving it to Hindu Indians, while Muslim citizens of this besieged state will be denied the same rights that have been afforded to their colonisers. Does this plan sound familiar? It’s probably because our minds are drawn towards the Zionist oppression in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.

Decades of state-sponsored terror and militancy have ensured that a cycle of violence remains, one where the rights of Kashmiris have been repeatedly violated. The people of Kashmir have been victims of torture, threats, extortion, arrests, and killings. They have always been hostile to the presence of India’s troops on their soil and have shown strong determination in resisting the tens of thousands of killings and thousands of rapes, disappearances, and torture inflicted upon the population at the hands of these foreign occupiers. Long-standing agreements in place had afforded the Kashmiri people the right to determine their own destiny.

The dispute between India and Pakistan over Kashmir has been a searing wound for decades, with the roots of the conflict lying in their shared colonial past. Both nations fought three wars over the contested territory, whilst their previous colonisers Great Britain kept aloof from the explosive developments in the region. This conflict largely reflects a bitter and troubled legacy of British colonialism, and without a shadow of a doubt has been part of the leftovers from the decolonisation process.

In fact, drawing parallels with the Palestine crisis (another legacy of British colonialism), renowned author Arundhati Roy aptly captures this development: “How carelessly imperial power vivisected ancient civilizations. Palestine and Kashmir are imperial Britain’s festering, blood-drenched gifts to the modem world. Both are fault lines in the raging international conflicts of today.” [1]

The parallels between the two have never looked as ominous as they do now. Several reasons for the conflict over Kashmir have been argued, more often than not to serve globalist interests rather than the fundamental needs or desires of the Kashmiris themselves. There are many outside factors at play that have exacerbated the human rights situation in the Kashmir region.

Israel has been playing a big role in India’s escalation of the conflict with Pakistan. Modi appears to be taking a page straight out of the Israeli playbook. Critics have warned that metamorphosis in Kashmir could mirror Jewish settlements in the West. [2]

Many of the Indian ruling party BJP’s aspirations and policy proposals for Kashmir are imitations of extant Israeli practices in Palestine. Key among these is the desire to build Israeli-style Hindu-only settlements in Kashmir as a way of instigating demographic change.

For months, Israel has been assiduously lining itself up alongside India’s nationalist BJP government in an unspoken – and politically dangerous – ‘anti-Islamist’ coalition; an unofficial, unacknowledged alliance. India has now become the largest weapons market for the Israeli arms trade.[3] Several Indian commentators, however, have warned that right-wing nationalism under Modi and right-wing Zionism should not become the foundations of the relationship between the two countries, both of which – in rather different ways – fought the British Empire.[4]

It is pathetic that the international community is, yet again, responding to Kashmiri fears and suffering with callous indifference. Its concerns are confined to hoping that Pakistan and India do not end up nuking each other into oblivion.

The history of the international community’s involvement in the Kashmir dispute is one of repeated frustration and failure. The international community has recognised that the continuous refusal of the Indian government to countenance an international role in Kashmir makes it likely that any outside efforts will be as unsuccessful as others were in the past. However, India cannot get away from the fact that Kashmir is an ‘internationally recognised disputed territory’, thereby unilaterally changing the status quo of the state is unacceptable. It is clear that the spirit of the 1972 Simla Agreement between India and Pakistan, which states that the final status of Jammu and Kashmir is to be settled by peaceful means in accordance with the UN Charter, is in tatters.

It is doubtful to what extent the UN will consider using the UN doctrine of the principle of ‘Responsibility to Protect’ – the international community’s intervention to stop atrocities from taking place – in light of the many crimes against humanity committed against the Kashmiri people under cover of lockdowns and blackouts.

What is more troubling and concerning is the sheer indifference of the so-called Muslim world (Ummah), with some Arab leaders even rewarding the oppressors. Whereas the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) has expressed its “deep concerns” and condemned “illegal Indian actions” in Kashmir, the leaders of Muslim-majority countries have been conspicuously mute or worse. This is typified by Saudi Arabia refraining from taking a position on recent developments, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) praising New Delhi by arguing that India’s revocation of Article 370 will “improve social justice and security and confidence of the people in the local governance and will encourage further stability and peace.”

Shamefully, amidst these developments in Kashmir, the ruler of UAE, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, graced Modi with the ‘Order of Zayed’, the Kingdom’s highest civilian order. Similarly, the kings of both Saudi Arabia and Bahrain conferred their highest Orders on Modi on earlier occasions.

This shameful scenario of Arab leaders betraying Muslim causes is not entirely surprising. In fact, Palestinians today are torn between President Donald Trump’s arrogance and Arab indifference. Faarah Adan writes, “Arab leaders laid down the very foundations that led to the pitiful conditions in which the Palestinians exist today. The Palestinian road to peace and self-determination is hamstrung not only by Israeli aggression but also by decades of indecisiveness and the Arab leaders’ bumbling incompetency.” [5]

Like Trump, Arab regimes — particularly Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Egypt — find themselves more aligned than ever with Israel on regional priorities. Equally shameful is when 22 (mostly Western) ambassadors wrote to the UN Human Rights Council in July expressing concern about China’s mass detentions in East Turkestan (which it calls the “Xinjiang” region) and calling for “meaningful access” for “independent international observers”, another letter was delivered to the Council signed by 37 ambassadors, which included a dozen Muslim governments (including Pakistan) endorsing what China whitewashed as a “counter-terrorism and de-radicalization” operation and claimed that “the fundamental human rights of people of all ethnic groups there are safeguarded.” [6] It is not surprising that gross human rights violations have also been occurring in the Muslim world.

This trend is pointing towards a change of priorities by Muslim leaders in the modern context. What is clear is that Modi’s unilateral declaration on Kashmir fits the mould of Trump’s declaration on East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights. In this context, Modi riding roughshod over Kashmir is nothing surprising. In dealing with recent conflicts, Muslim leaders also appear to be joining the Trump/Netanyahu/Xi Jinping/Modi club in putting flesh on the skeleton of a new world order that enables civilisational leaders to violate international law with impunity. It also allows them to cast aside diplomacy and ignore national, ethnic, minority, religious, and human rights.

The Muslim world’s varied response to crises that target the rights of Muslims suggest not only impotence, but also a growing willingness to sacrifice causes on the altar of perceived national interest and economic advantage. The question is whether this is an approach that would be popularly endorsed if freedom of expression in many Muslim countries was not severely restricted. The risk is that the inability of leaders to gauge public opinion or willingness to ignore it will eventually come back to haunt them. [7]

https://www.islam21c.com/opinion/mut...im-leadership/
Reply

سيف الله
09-16-2019, 01:06 PM
Salaam

A surprise to no one.



ISLAMABAD: UAE Minister for Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Sheikh Abdullah Bin Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan had said that Pakistan and India should not make the Indian Held Kashmir (IHK) an issue of the Muslim Ummah as it was a dispute between the two countries.

Geo News anchorperson of ‘Capital Talk’ on Wednesday said that some officials of the federal government informed that UAE minister for foreign affairs is visiting Pakistan apparently to express solidarity with Pakistan on the IHK issue but his interaction with Pakistani leadership previously suggested that he had conveyed that Kashmir issue should not be made an issue of the Muslim Ummah rather, according to him, it is a bilateral issue and should be resolved through talks between Pakistan and India.

Hamid Mir said that Pakistan leadership must convey to the world in general and the Muslim countries in particular that Nerendra Modi’s atrocities are not limited to the IHK only rather he wants to unleash reign of terror across India to forcibly convert the Muslims into Hindus. In this context, Kashmir issue is not a dispute between India and Pakistan but it is an issue of the whole Muslim world.

https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/522...im-ummah-issue

We were warned about the rise of Modi.



More generally

Reply

سيف الله
09-20-2019, 06:04 PM
Salaam

Another update. They have their sights set on a bigger prize.





Blurb

New Delhi says Pakistan-controlled Kashmir should be considered as part of India: India's foreign minister also expressed hope that 'one day they would have physical jurisdiction over the region'.

New Delhi and Islamabad have been at loggerheads for more than 7 decades over Kashmir since they failed to agree on the borders drawn up during the British partition of India.




Modhi is currently in the USA.

Reply

سيف الله
09-23-2019, 10:29 PM
Salaam

Another update.



Diverging Gulf Responses to Kashmir and Xinjiang Reflect Deep Divisions

Very different responses were recently on display in Gulf reactions to India’s unilateral withdrawal of Kashmir’s autonomy and Qatar’s reversal of its support of China’s brutal clampdown on Turkic Muslims in its troubled northwestern province of Xinjiang.

The divergence says much about the almost decade-long, fundamentally different approaches taken by Qatar and its main detractors, the UAE and Saudi Arabia, toward an emerging, more illiberal new world order in which minority rights are trampled upon.

The UAE and Saudi Arabia are leading a more than two-year-long economic and diplomatic boycott of Qatar in a so far failed attempt to force the Gulf state to alter its policies.

The feud reflects the Gulf states’ different efforts to maneuver an environment in which the US has sent mixed signals about its commitment to Gulf security and China and Russia are seeking to muscle into US dominance of the region.

In what was perhaps the most surprising indication of differences in the Gulf, Qatar appeared to reverse its tacit acquiescence in China’s clampdown, involving the incarceration in reeducation camps of an estimated 1 million predominantly Turkic Uyghur Muslims.

Qatar did so by withdrawing from a letter it initially signed together with dozens of others countries expressing support for China’s human-rights record despite its clampdown in Xinjiang.

In a letter to the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC), Ali Al-Mansouri, Qatar’s ambassador to the UN in Geneva, advised the council that “taking into account our focus on compromise and mediation, we believe that co-authorizing the aforementioned letter would compromise our foreign policy key priorities. In this regard, we wish to maintain a neutral stance and we offer our mediation and facilitation services.”

Signatories of the letter included Qatar’s detractors – Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt – as well as Kuwait and Oman, which, together with the feuding Gulf states, are part of the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).

The withdrawal coincided with a US warning that kowtowing to China’s “desire to erode US military advantages” in the Middle East by using its “economic leverage and coercion” and “intellectual property theft and acquisition” could undermine defense cooperation with the US.

“Many investments are beneficial, but we’re concerned countries’ economic interests may blind them to the negative implications of some Chinese investments, including impact on joint defense cooperation with the United States,” said Michael Mulroy, the US Defense Department’s top official responsible for the Gulf.

The Qatari move also came against the backdrop of the Gulf state, which is home to the largest US base in the region, being the only country in the greater Middle East to host an expansion rather than a reduction of US facilities and forces. Qatar is believed to have funded the expansion to the tune of $1.8 billion.

The US has withdrawn some of its forces from Syria and is negotiating a US troop withdrawal from Afghanistan with the Taliban.

Nevertheless, Qatar, an enlightened autocracy that has yet to implement at home what it preaches abroad, is unlikely to reap the full soft power benefits in liberal Western democracies of its withdrawal from the pro-Chinese letter despite Uyghur and human rights activists welcoming the move.

It is unclear what prompted the Qatari change of heart, though it did follow an incident last month at Doha’s Hamad International Airport that drove home the limits of China’s ability to flex its financial, economic, and political muscles to control the fallout of its clampdown beyond its borders.

Those limits were evident when Ablikim Yusuf, a 53-year old Uyghur Muslim seeking protection from potential Chinese persecution, landed at the airport. After initially intending to deport Yusuf to Beijing at China’s request, Qatar reversed course.

But rather than grant Yusuf asylum under its newly adopted asylum law, the Gulf’s first, Qatar gave him time to seek refuge elsewhere. Even that was in sharp contrast to countries like Egypt and Turkey, which have either deported Uyghurs or entertained the possibility.

As a result, Qatar’s withdrawal drove one more wedge into the Muslim world’s almost wall-to-wall refusal to criticize China for what amounts to the most frontal assault on any faith in recent history.

Turkey, Qatar’s ally in its dispute with the Gulf states, as well as the Turkic republics of Central Asia, have been walking a tightrope as they attempt to balance relations with China and domestic public criticism of Chinese policy in Xinjiang.

Kazakhstan this month silenced a detained Kazakh rights activist of Uyghur descent by forcing him to plead guilty to a hate speech charge and abandon his activism and public criticism of China in exchange for securing his freedom.

The Qatari withdrawal complicates the Turkish and Central Asian balancing act and strengthens the position of the US, which is locked in multiple trade and other disputes with China.

The withdrawal and US criticism of Chinese policy in Xinjiang put Muslim states, increasingly selective about what Muslim causes they take up, in an awkward position.

The UAE, in sharp contrast to Qatar, has not only maintained its support of China but also, alongside Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, ignored requests for support on Kashmir by Pakistan, its longstanding regional Muslim ally.

Adding insult to injury, the three Gulf states are rewarding Indian PM Narendra Modi for his undermining of Kashmiri autonomy and imposition of unprecedented, repressive security measures.

Modi is scheduled to travel this week to the UAE to receive the country’s highest civilian honor and then go on to Bahrain for the first-ever visit to that country by a sitting Indian PM.

Meanwhile, Saudi national oil company Aramco announced a $15 billion investment in an Indian oil company as Modi was clamping down on Kashmir.

For its part, Qatar has remained largely silent about Kashmir, other than advising its nationals to leave the region.

If the policy divergences in the Gulf say anything, they suggest that differences among the region’s rivals as well as in in the greater Middle East are likely to deepen rather than subside.

A study last year by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace concluded that conflict in the region was fueled by a “dearth of regional communication channels, dispute resolution mechanisms, and norms for warfare as well as a surplus of arms imports.”

There is little on the horizon to suggest that this state of affairs is going to change any time soon.

https://besacenter.org/perspectives-...hmir-xinjiang/
Reply

سيف الله
09-27-2019, 08:47 PM
Salaam

Like to share.



Reply

سيف الله
10-01-2019, 03:50 PM
Salaam

Another update.

Blurb

So much awesomeness to fit into one clip. Love him or hate him, Prime minister of Pakistan Imran Khan, smashed it.





On certain Indian Muslim leaders cosy relationship with Modhi.

Reply

سيف الله
10-18-2019, 12:08 PM
Salaam

UK Royal family came to visit.

Reply

سيف الله
11-01-2019, 09:51 AM
Salaam

Another update.



Masters of war: architects of modern conflicts say cheese for the camera

If the horsemen of the apocalypse ever hung up their riding boots, this could be a photo of the retirement party. Five men and a woman of very different backgrounds and different continents, brought together by an investment bank and shared history of mayhem.

The smiles and hand-holding in the group photo at the JP Morgan International Council in New Delhi are redolent of fond memories and fellow feeling. They have nearly a half-millennium between them, and no end of war stories to share, tales of pressing the buttons and pulling the levers behind some of major conflicts of modern times.

The dean of the bunch is sitting low in his seat on the right: Henry Kissinger, the 96-year-old living embodiment of cold war realpolitik with a wealth of foreign policy knowledge and major wars to his name, including the undeclared, illegal mass bombing of Cambodia.

Standing in the rear are three of the leading minds behind the 2003 Iraq invasion. With his trademark tan and grin, the former British prime minister Tony Blair is at the left, next to Condoleezza Rice, who was George Bush’s national security adviser at the time. Over to their right is John Howard who, as Australian leader at the time, sent his country’s troops into the fray.

The latter-day crusade in pursuit of Saddam Hussein’s non-existent weapons of mass destruction was one of the most disastrous mistakes in history, unleashing a cascade of violence that killed well over half a million people and ushered in an era of extreme violence in the Middle East that continues today.

The fact they are still feted as foreign policy sages suggests that once you reach a certain level in global diplomacy, you can only fail upwards.

In among the trio is Robert Gates, former CIA director and defence secretary, who sat the Iraq war out but as deputy director of the CIA did advocate a bombing campaign against Nicaragua.



At the centre and focal point of the little group is its newest member, Narendra Modi. The Indian prime minister is the only one among them still doing the day job, but may be being inducted early for moving troops into Kashmir, revoking its autonomous status and rounding up Muslims, even at the risk of nuclear war with Pakistan.

In the photo, Modi is the benign host, grasping hands with Blair and Howard, while gazing amicably at Kissinger, apparently forgiving the elder statesman for his determined support for the Pakistani dictatorship even though its army killed at least 300,000 mostly Hindu Bengalis in what is now Bangladesh and forced 10 million to flee to India. On the notorious Nixon tapes, Kissinger can be heard referring the Indians as “such -------s” and calling Indira Gandhi a “-----”.

“If Modi wanted to get huffy, he would have material,” said Gary Bass, author of Blood Telegram, a book on the genocide and Nixon and Kissinger’s role in it.

There is no sign of huffiness at the JP Morgan bash. The fact that when Blair and Rice were in office, their governments imposed travel bans on Modi after anti-Muslim rioting killed a thousand people under his watch has also been consigned to the past.

It may be that once you rise to the top level of such grand strategy, it no longer matters what side you were on or who you killed. They all add to the mileage on your platinum card. To have taken part and come out the other side, prosperous and smiling, is enough.

https://www.theguardian.com/global/c...issinger-blair
Reply

سيف الله
11-09-2019, 01:14 PM
Salaam

Another update.

Hindu pilgrims celebrate in wake of India’s Ayodhya ruling

Temple judgment seen as providing a boost for Narendra Modi


A day after India’s Supreme Court ruled that a Hindu temple could be built on a holy site contested by Muslims, marking a victory for ruling Hindu nationalists after decades of religious tension, the historic city of Ayodhya was in lockdown amid fears of sectarian violence.

While the usually busy streets were deserted, some jubilant visitors braved tight security to get to the three-acre site, where a 16th century Moghul mosque was destroyed in 1992 by rightwing Hindus, sparking riots that killed more than 2,000 people. “We are so happy. I wanted the [ Hindu] temple built in my own lifetime, my dream has come true,” said Vijaymati Shukla, visiting from a nearby district.

For decades building a temple on the site — which Hindus claim is the birthplace of Ram, a revered god — has been a key objective of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, re-elected this year with a thumping majority. “It is only because of Modi that this has been made possible,” said Ms Shukla, beaming with joy. “Now Modi will keep on getting the support of the people because he will build this temple.”

The judgment also provides a boost for Mr Modi at a time when his government is struggling to counter an economic slowdown, which has seen growth slow to a six-year low. “The immediate issues — unemployment, GDP going down — these things will once more be sidelined,” said Heramb Chaturvedi, a professor at the University of Allahabad. “It would be these religious issues that would help bring them to power.”

Mr Modi has sought to play down fears of tensions and said the Ayodhya verdict “shouldn’t be seen as a win or loss for anybody”.

“The Supreme Court verdict has brought a new dawn. Now the next generation will build a new India,” he said. “There is no place for fear, bitterness and negativity.”

Under the Supreme court ruling, the government will, within three months, create a trust which would be responsible for the construction of a temple on the site. It ruled that Muslims will get a separate, five-acre plot of land elsewhere in Ayodhya to construct a new mosque, overturning a 2010 lower-court decision that divided the plot between the religious groups. In its ruling, the Supreme Court cited government-appointed archaeologists who had found evidence of a temple-like structure underneath the mosque as support for building a new temple.

Critics of the judgment highlighted the apparent inconsistency of a ruling that allowed the construction of a temple to go ahead while ruling that the destruction of the mosque in 1992 was illegal. Prosecution of the alleged perpetrators of its destruction has been stalled in the courts for years.

“This is a victory of faith over facts,” said Asaduddin Owaisi, an MP and president of the All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen party. “There is this atmosphere being created where the BJP wants to make Muslims second class.”

The Ayodhya verdict came after Mr Modi stripped India’s only Muslim-majority state Kashmir of its special status in August and imposed a lockdown on the region, where residents still do not have access to internet and several high-profile politicians are detained.

Building the Ram temple, abrogating Article 370 that defined Kashmir’s status and getting rid of separate laws for religious minorities have been the three core issues of the Hindu right, said Asim Ali, political researcher at the University of Delhi. “Having fulfilled two of these historical demands, Modi has fundamentally transformed the country,” said Mr Ali. “Modi would now unquestionably be the tallest leader in all of the historical pantheon of the Hindu right.”

“The fundamental question is whether this ruling will embolden the Hindu right or if it will satiate them because they have achieved their goals,” said political analyst Amitabh Dubey. “This is a triumphant moment, but the story has not yet played out.”

In the neighbouring city of Faizabad, Rahib Haider called the verdict “one-sided”. Speaking at a mosque, where boys played with kites in the courtyard, Mr Haider said that he hopes that the ruling would help India move beyond the painful past.

“But if this decision is used for furthering a political agenda, then it is dangerous for Muslims and the growth of India,” Mr Haider cautioned. But Mr Modi’s supporters in Ayodhya are focused on the construction of the temple — and an eventual celebration with their prime minister. “Now Mr Modi will come to inaugurate the temple,” said Hanuman Yadav, a security guard. “Nobody can stop Modi, he will have 20 more years in power.”

https://www.ft.com/content/8a4d4fa2-...a-d9e2401fa7ca









Reply

سيف الله
11-12-2019, 09:28 PM
Salaam

Who could they possibly be learning this from?

Reply

سيف الله
11-23-2019, 05:36 PM
Salaam

Another update. i post it here because Pakistan is used as an example.

Predator complains about imitator

It's jaw-droppingly astonishing to see a US diplomat complain about anyone else debt-trapping less-developed countries:

A senior US diplomat launched a verbal barrage at Beijing’s economic presence in Pakistan, claiming the massive investment brought nothing but corruption and a legacy of debt. China hit back saying IMF loans were a worse burden.

A senior American diplomat in South and Central Asia mounted harsh criticism of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) project, an ambitious plan to turn Pakistan into a major trade route connecting China directly with the Arabian Sea. Speaking at the Woodrow Wilson Center, Assistant Secretary of State Alice Wells said the multibillion-dollar project, which China touts as a model of cooperation with other nations in its ambitious Belt and Road Initiative, was riddled with corruption and only hurt the Pakistani people.

“Together with non-CPEC Chinese debt payment, China is going to take a growing toll on Pakistan’s economy, especially when the bulk of payment starts to come due in the next four to six years,” the US diplomat said. She added that a “lack of transparency” would boost the cost of the projects and result in an even heavier debt burden.
All China is doing is precisely what the USA, through the IMF, has been doing since 1945. Apparently it is bad to be in debt to Chinese bankers, but good to be in debt to US bankers.

http://voxday.blogspot.com/2019/11/g...-imitator.html
Reply

سيف الله
11-28-2019, 01:10 AM
Salaam

Another update. Who can doubt the Zios influence.



Reply

سيف الله
01-15-2020, 12:20 PM
Salaam

Another update.



The man who sold me to the USA is sentenced to death – Moazzam Begg

The man who sold me and hundreds of other prisoners into the hands of the US military to be tortured and detained without trial for years on end has been sentenced to death.

I can’t say I welcome the news of any death sentence but, it was under his leadership that Pakistan was used as a base by the CIA to kidnap people from their homes in the middle of the night, in front of their families. I will never forget the night Pakistani ISI and US CIA agents stormed into my house in the middle of the night and shut out my life for the next three years. Musharraf boasted in his book – published by the same people who published my book – that he received “millions of dollars in bounty money” for all those he handed over.

It was under Musharraf that Pakistani airspace was used to allow bombing missions into Afghanistan that killed thousands. It was under this man that war flared up in the KPK (NWFP) region and armed UAV (drones) began targeted assassinations and brutal internal conflict. It was under this military leader that Aafia Siddiqui and her children were disappeared for 5 years inexplicably which led to her imprisonment by the US and her subsequent abandonment by Pakistan. It was under this man that hundreds disappeared from their families, never to return, like the husband of Amina Masood Janjua who has fought ever since to find out what happened to him.

It is a sad indictment in itself that Musharraf has not been charged with any of the crimes listed above – most of which occurred before the period he has been convicted for. But that’s fine. Most of the people he handed over to the US without any legal process are now free. He on the other-hand is a convicted traitor.

In truth, this man has hidden in London in the past and is currently in the Emirates where I’m sure he’ll remain, fighting his case in absentia all the way to the Supreme Court. Even then I doubt he’s ever returning to Pakistan.

All I have to say, Mr Musharraf, is that I still remember the prayers brothers used to make against you in the middle of the night, when nothing stirred except the sounds of crickets and the soft Caribbean breeze rubbing the barbed wired against the razor wire.

The noble Prophet said:

“Fear the prayer of the oppressed for between it and Allah there is no barrier.”

Those prayers are being made – and answered – even now.

https://www.cage.ngo/the-man-who-sol...h-moazzam-begg
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سيف الله
01-20-2020, 03:28 PM
Salaam

Like to share

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سيف الله
02-02-2020, 12:01 PM
Salaam

Like to share.

Blurb

Adnan shares his thoughts on the recent assassination of top Iranian general Qassem Soleimani by the U.S. and its implications for the region.

He also discusses the current state of BJP-led India, with the rise of institutional Islamophobia and the introduction of various anti-Muslim laws like the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and National Register of Citizens (NRC).

Topics of discussion also include the formation of Pakistan, India's ongoing occupation of Kashmir, the history of the Subcontinent under Mughal rule, and how Islamic the Mughal Empire was in comparison to the Ottoman Empire.


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سيف الله
02-07-2020, 05:18 PM
Salaam

Another update.

More than 120 UK Muslim scholars issue open letter to PM Modi over Kashmir lockdown

More than 120 Muslim scholars from the UK have sent Prime Minister Narendra Modi an open letter calling for an immediate end to India’s lockdown of occupied Kashmir.

The letter which was sent to the Indian High Commission in London earlier this week began by stating:

“This is an Open Letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India, from the British Muslim Society of Scholars and Supporters. We are writing this letter so we can awaken human conscience to the suffering and plight of the Kashmiri people. The consequences of Mr Modi’s actions are grave indeed, and carry within them the possibility of huge loss of innocent lives, not just in the immediate theatre of conflict but far beyond. Great leaders have always been the ones who can find solutions to the most difficult situations, not those who create greater problems from situations they inherit, without doubt wisdom is the inheritance of the wise, and only the humble benefit from it. We advise you, dear reader, to read this letter with an open mind and heart, and evaluate the actions of the Indian state and their consequences for the wider human family, there’s no doubt that every soul shall return to his creator, and will be held accountable for what they sowed on earth.”

The letter went onto state:

“Dear Prime Minister Modi,

“We the undersigned, write to you following your unilateral revocation of articles 370 and 35A of the

“Indian Constitution, and the subsequent curfew banning phone, internet and free movement of the Kashmiri people and the arrest of all Kashmiri leadership. We are also cognisant of the Genocide alert issued by Dr. Gregory H. Stanton, Founder and President of Genocide Watch, on 15th August 2019, alerting the United Nations and its members that “Genocide Watch’s Ten Stages of the genocidal process are also far advanced”, in the case of Indian occupied Kashmir. We therefore demand that you:

Outline a timetable for an immediate implementation of the United Nations resolution no.47, adopted by the Security Council on April 21, 1948. The basic formula for settlement was incorporated in the later resolutions. The provisions for these were negotiated thoroughly, through discussions under the auspices of U.N. Commission on India and Pakistan (UNCIP), and only after the consent of India and Pakistan, were these adopted by the U.N. Security Council. We remind you that it was Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India in 1948 who had sought the involvement of the United Nations. He had subsequently acknowledged the right of the Kashmiri people to determine their own destiny by stating in a report to the All India Congress Committee on July 6, 1951, ‘Kashmir has been wrongly looked upon as a prize for India or Pakistan.

People seem to forget that Kashmir is not a commodity for sale or to be bartered. It has an individual existence and its people must be the final arbiters of their future.’

We ask you therefore to implement the promises made to the Kashmiri people for their right to determine their destiny through a plebiscite. We remind you to take heed of Mahatma Gandhi’s wise words, ‘the evolution of democracy is not possible if we are not prepared to hear the other side.’

Ensure the immediate lifting of the curfew imposed on the Kashmiri people on 5th August 2019, thereby allowing them the right to telecommunications, internet, transport and free movement.

Allow access to international media and allow Kashmiri leadership to travel freely within and outside Kashmir.

Establish an independent Human Rights tribunal to investigate crimes against humanity – the mass rape, torture, disappeared persons, mass graves and extrajudicial killings by Indian army and paramilitary forces in occupied Kashmir.

“We wish to remind you that the path of hatred, division and violence that you have chosen for

“India will not end well. Here we quote the inaugural holder of the seat you represent, Jawaharlal Nehru, who stated …’those who choose the path of violence have no faith in democracy. If their way were to prevail, there would be complete chaos in the country and the conditions of the people would deteriorate even more.’ His words are prescient in the light of your actions in Kashmir and your dealings with Indians of minority faiths.

“We remind you of the words of Mahatma Gandhi, ‘First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.’ It is as if the Kashmiri peoples struggle of over 70 years for justice, dignity and self-determination, is in their final stage leading to freedom.

“We stand for justice and dignity of all human beings and share with you words of the Holy Qur’an, which states:

“O Believers! Be steadfast in standing firm for Allah, witnesses in justice; and do not let the hatred of a people prevent you from being just. But be just – that is nearer to righteousness. And fear Allah; indeed, Allah is acquainted with what you do.” [Surah al Maa’idah: 8]

We pray that you will take heed and stop the injustice you are inflicting upon the Kashmiri people and other minorities within India.”

https://5pillarsuk.com/2020/02/07/mo...hmir-lockdown/
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سيف الله
02-11-2020, 05:37 PM
Salaam

Another update.



OPINION - Saudis follow Iran’s 1994 somersault on Kashmir at OIC

In a case of role reversal, after receiving Indian assurance, Iran withdrew support to OIC resolution on Kashmir in 1994


Is Saudi Arabia playing with Pakistan on the issue of Jammu and Kashmir, in a similar way as Iran acted previously in 1994?

Diplomatic sources in Pakistan say that Saudi Arabia has shown reluctance to accept Islamabad’s request for an immediate meeting of the foreign ministers of the 57-member Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC).

While speaking at a think-tank in Malaysia, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan voiced frustration over the OIC’s silence on Kashmir. He said: “The reason is that we have no voice and there is a total division amongst [us]. We can’t even come together as a whole on the OIC meeting on Kashmir.”

Cut to March 1994. On a winter morning, with the Alborz Mountains overlooking Tehran airport were still under snow, braving cold winds, a special Indian military plane touched down. Onboard was then ailing External Affairs Minister Dinesh Singh, along with three others. Barely able to walk, Singh had been dragged out of a hospital bed by then-Prime Minister Pamulaparthi Venkata Narasimha Rao to deliver a personal and a secret letter to Iranian President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.

Having mortgaged its gold reserves in 1992, India was on the economic brink and its old friend Russia was still licking its wounds after the break-up of the Soviet Union. The OIC was pushing a resolution at the Office of the UN Commissioner on Human Rights (OHCHR), later rechristened as Human Rights Council, to condemn India for human rights violations in Kashmir. The resolution, in case of approval, was to be referred to the UN Security Council for initiating economic sanctions and other punitive measures against India. The decisions in the OIC are adopted by consensus.

Recalling how India was saved from disgrace, former Indian career diplomat M K Bhadrakumar believes that Rao had shrewdly prevailed upon Iran to abstain from voting.

“Once there is no consensus in the OIC, the resolution was bound to fall through,” said Bhadrakumar, who has served as India’s envoy in Iran, Afghanistan, and Turkey.

The Iranians had no clue to the Indian minister’s mission. Casting aside protocol, Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Velayati was at the airport when Singh alighted. Velayati asked what on earth could be of such momentous importance for Singh to risk a perilous journey in his precarious condition. In reply, Dinesh Singh smilingly handed over a demarche.

In the day, he went through his “Kashmir brief” diligently in meetings with his Iranian interlocutors, namely, Velayati, President Hashemi Rafsanjani and Iranian Majlis Speaker Nateq Nouri. By evening, Singh returned to his hospital bed in New Delhi, but with an assurance from President Rafsanjani to Prime Minister Rao “that Iran will do all it can to ensure that no harm comes to India.”

Iran killed OIC resolution

Only after 72 anxious hours did New Delhi learn that Iran had killed the OIC move to table the resolution. This marked a new chapter in India-Iran relations with wider consequences. Iran distanced itself from Pakistan in the matter of Afghanistan; and, India joined hands with Iran to promote the Northern Alliance, which was inimical to Pakistani interests.

Pakistan was shocked by what it termed as “backstabbing”. What Iran gained is a mystery? But events show that Rao had promised to grant a kind of self-rule and to give Pakistan access in the affairs and progress of Jammu and Kashmir. A year later, Rao while attending the Non-Aligned Movement summit in the West African country of Burkina Faso declared that the sky is the limit concerning the quantum of autonomy to Jammu and Kashmir. He also envisaged a gas pipeline from Iran via Pakistan calling it a peace pipeline.

The Indian delegation to the OHCHR led by leader of the opposition Atal Behari Vajpayee comprised Minister of State for External Affairs Salman Khurshid and former Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir Farooq Abdullah, now detained under the stringent Public Safety Act. Basking in this diplomatic victory, Vajpayee and Abdullah were unaware that, three days ago, Dinesh Singh had laid the ground for it in Tehran. Rao also never tried to steal the credit from them. Abdullah later said he had joined Indian delegation, after receiving a promise from the prime minister that the pre-1953 constitutional status will be restored that envisaged greater self-rule and opening of Line of Control -- a de facto border that divides the Kashmir valley between Pakistan and India -- with Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

Much later, it came to be known that when the Pakistani ambassador supported by Saudi envoy sought to move the OIC resolution, the Iranian diplomat in Geneva, under orders from Tehran, backed out. He argued that as a close friend of both India and Pakistan, Iran was ready to sort out their problems and there was no need to raise these at an international forum. That was the last time Pakistan tried to get a resolution on the Kashmir issue tabled in a UN forum.

Full circle, roles reversed

Now, the wheel has come full circle. 26 years later, while Iran has returned to supporting Pakistan on Kashmir, backing from Riyadh has dried up. In a role reversal, over the past few days, reports said Saudi Arabia has made several proposals to Pakistan to avoid the meeting of foreign ministers including holding a parliamentary forum or speakers’ conference from Muslim countries. Islamabad’s position has been that speakers’ meeting is not commensurate with the seriousness of the situation in Kashmir. Pakistan also fears that parliamentary meeting will be used for Iran bashing as Speaker of Saudi Shura Abdullah bin Mohammed bin Ibrahim al Sheikh had undertaken to lobby in this regard.

According to Amir Rana, a Pakistani strategic expert, Pakistan’s geo-economic and strategic challenges make it difficult for the country to fully cooperate or annoy either of the two blocs. “Pakistan is caught in a dilemma where its heart is in the Malaysian-Turkish bloc, which has been openly supporting Pakistan’s Kashmir cause, but its mind is with the Saudi-led bloc, which has money and political influence that Pakistan needs for its struggling economy,” he said.

Kashmir remains a core Pakistani foreign policy objective and, thus, an easy way to win the country’s goodwill. But this is not enough for sustaining geo-economic and strategic interests. The diplomatic posture of a nation becomes more balanced and comprehensive when architects of its foreign policy have diverse economic, socio-cultural and political determinants insight. Indeed, there is a lot for Pakistan to ponder over when it sees some of its close friends not supporting it on Kashmir.

But the international community, in general, has shown its anxiety about gross human rights violations being committed in India-held Kashmir. Apart from human rights groups and international media, different forums have also been showing concern. It would increase pressure on India but this is not going to translate into support for the implementation of the UN resolutions on Kashmir. It is a real challenge for Pakistan’s diplomacy to cultivate such support within the divided blocs of the Muslim world.

https://www.aa.com.tr/en/analysis/op...at-oic/1730770
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سيف الله
03-21-2020, 10:51 AM
Salaam

Another update

Israel is playing a big role in India’s escalating conflict with Pakistan

Signing up to the ‘war on terror’ – especially ‘Islamist terror’ – may seem natural for two states built on colonial partition whose security is threatened by Muslim neighbours


When I heard the first news report, I assumed it was an Israeli air raid on Gaza. Or Syria. Airstrikes on a “terrorist camp” were the first words. A “command and control centre” destroyed, many “terrorists” killed. The military was retaliating for a “terrorist attack” on its troops, we were told.

An Islamist “jihadi” base had been eliminated. Then I heard the name Balakot and realised that it was neither in Gaza, nor in Syria – not even in Lebanon – but in Pakistan. Strange thing, that. How could anyone mix up Israel and India?

Well, don’t let the idea fade away. Two thousand five hundred miles separate the Israeli ministry of defence in Tel Aviv from the Indian ministry of defence in New Delhi, but there’s a reason why the usual cliche-stricken agency dispatches sound so similar.

For months, Israel has been assiduously lining itself up alongside India’s nationalist BJP government in an unspoken – and politically dangerous – “anti-Islamist” coalition, an unofficial, unacknowledged alliance, while India itself has now become the largest weapons market for the Israeli arms trade.

Not by chance, therefore, has the Indian press just trumpeted the fact that Israeli-made Rafael Spice-2000 “smart bombs” were used by the Indian air force in its strike against Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) “terrorists” inside Pakistan.

Like many Israeli boasts of hitting similar targets, the Indian adventure into Pakistan might owe more to the imagination than military success. The “300-400 terrorists” supposedly eliminated by the Israeli-manufactured and Israeli-supplied GPS-guided bombs may turn out to be little more than rocks and trees.

But there was nothing unreal about the savage ambush of Indian troops in Kashmir on 14 February which the JeM claimed, and which left 40 Indian soldiers dead. Nor the shooting down of at least one Indian jet this week.

India was Israel’s largest arms client in 2017, paying £530m for Israeli air defence, radar systems and ammunition, including air-to-ground missiles – most of them tested during Israel’s military offensives against Palestinians and targets in Syria.

Israel itself is trying to explain away its continued sales of tanks, weapons and boats to the Myanmar military dictatorship – while western nations impose sanctions on the government which has attempted to destroy its minority and largely Muslim Rohingya people. But Israel’s arms trade with India is legal, above-board and much advertised by both sides.

The Israelis have filmed joint exercises between their own “special commando” units and those sent by India to be trained in the Negev desert, again with all the expertise supposedly learned by Israel in Gaza and other civilian-thronged battlefronts.

At least 16 Indian “Garud” commandos – part of a 45-strong Indian military delegation – were for a time based at the Nevatim and Palmachim air bases in Israel. In his first visit to India last year – preceded by a trip to Israel by nationalist Indian prime minister Narendra Modi, Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu recalled the 2008 Islamist attacks on Mumbai in which almost 170 civilians were killed. “Indians and Israelis know too well the pain of terrorist attacks,” he told Modi. “We remember the horrific savagery of Mumbai. We grit our teeth, we fight back, we never give in.” This was also BJP-speak.

Several Indian commentators, however, have warned that right-wing Zionism and right-wing nationalism under Modi should not become the foundation stone of the relationship between the two countries, both of which – in rather different ways – fought the British empire.

Brussels researcher Shairee Malhotra, whose work has appeared in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, has pointed out that India has the world’s third largest Muslim population after Indonesia and Pakistan – upward of 180 million people. “The India-Israel relationship is also commonly being framed in terms of a natural convergence of ideas between their ruling BJP and Likud parties,” she wrote last year.

Hindu nationalists had constructed “a narrative of Hindus as historically victims at the hands of Muslims”, an attractive idea to those Hindus who recall partition and the continuing turbulent relationship with Pakistan.

In fact, as Malhotra pointed out in Haaretz, “Israel’s biggest fans in India appear to be the ‘internet Hindus’ who primarily love Israel for how it deals with Palestine and fights Muslims.”

Malhotra has condemned Carleton University professor Vivek Dehejia for demanding a “tripartite” alliance between India, Israel and the US – since they have all suffered “from the scourge of Islamic terrorism”.

In fact, by the end of 2016, only 23 men from India had left to fight for Isis in the Arab world, although Belgium, with a population of only half a million Muslims, produced nearly 500 fighters.

Malhotra’s argument is that the Indian-Israeli relationship should be pragmatic rather than ideological.

But it is difficult to see how Zionist nationalism will not leach into Hindu nationalism when Israel is supplying so many weapons to India – the latest of which India, which has enjoyed diplomatic relations with Israel since 1992, has already used against Islamists inside Pakistan.

Signing up to the “war on terror” – especially “Islamist terror” – may seem natural for two states built on colonial partition whose security is threatened by Muslim neighbours.

In both cases, their struggle is over the right to own or occupy territory. Israel, India and Pakistan all possess nuclear weapons. Another good reason not to let Palestine and Kashmir get tangled up together. And to leave India’s 180 million Muslims alone.

https://www.independent.co.uk/voices...-a8800076.html
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سيف الله
05-01-2020, 07:56 AM
Salaam

Another update

Keir Starmer moves Labour closer to India over Kashmir

Keir Starmer has moved Labour closer to India on the issue of the Kashmir after meeting with an India lobby group this morning.

Following his meeting with Labour Friends of India (LFIN) Starmer said the conflict was a “bilateral issue for India and Pakistan.”

At Labour’s 2019 conference, Labour delegates passed a motion criticising the actions of India in the Kashmiri conflict, and said Kashmiris should have self-determination.
The policy motion approved by the conference also called for international monitors to be admitted to the region.

Ex Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn had also made his views clear, tweeting in August 2019: “The situation in Kashmir is deeply disturbing. Human rights abuses taking place are unacceptable. The rights of the Kashmiri people must be respected and UN resolutions implemented.”

But following his meeting with Labour Friends of India, the new Labour leader said: “We must not allow issues of the sub-continent to divide communities here. Any constitutional issues in India are a matter for the Indian Parliament, and Kashmir is a bilateral issue for India and Pakistan to resolve peacefully. Labour is an internationalist party and stands for the defence of human rights everywhere.”

Pledging to promote UK-India ties, Starmer added: “A Labour government under my leadership will be determined to build even stronger business links with India and to co-operate on the global stage on issues such as climate change.

“I look forward to meeting the Indian High Commissioner in due course to open a renewed dialogue between the Labour Party and the people of India.”

Meanwhile, Rajesh Agrawal, LFIN co-chair, said: “I really welcome his commitment to rebuilding strong links between the Labour Party and the Indian community. This has been a great start and Keir has achieved a lot in the short span of couple of weeks. Labour Friends of India will work closely with him and will continue to promote UK-India ties as well as continuing to raise any issues from the community to the leadership.”

While pro-India groups had strained relations with Labour in the Corbyn era, they seem happy with the direction of the new Labour leadership.

However, Starmer’s comments on the Kashmiri conflict will be divisive among party members, and particularly controversial on the party’s Left. The Labour Party also has several MPs of Kashmiri heritage.

Kashmir has been placed under a security lockdown since last August when India’s Hindu nationalist government stripped the Muslim-majority Himalayan region’s limited autonomy. Low-speed internet was revived in March after more than six months of communication blackout.

India and Pakistan claim divided Kashmir in its entirety. Most Kashmiris support the rebel cause that the territory be united either under Pakistani rule or as an independent country while also participating in civilian street protests against Indian rule.

Rebels have been fighting Indian control since 1989. India accuses Pakistan of arming and training the rebels, a charge Pakistan denies. Nearly 70,000 people have been killed in the uprising and the ensuing Indian military crackdown.

https://5pillarsuk.com/2020/04/30/ke...-over-kashmir/
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سيف الله
08-14-2020, 09:26 AM
Salaam

Another update. One year on.

Blurb

Indian-administered Kashmir is in lockdown to prevent protesters from gathering to mark exactly a year since the region lost its special status.
A curfew has been imposed in the area.

Many local political leaders have been in detention for months.




Blurb

Pakistan has unveiled its new "political map." It includes India-administered Kashmir within its boundary as a "disputed territory."


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سيف الله
09-29-2020, 10:08 PM
Salaam

A little old but the situation has not changed in India.

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سيف الله
03-12-2021, 06:28 PM
Salaam

Im spotting a pattern here.



Study of Hindu epics to become mandatory in Indian madrassas

The Indian education ministry has said that the teaching of Hindu religious traditions such as the Veda, yoga, Sanskrit and Hindu epics such as Ramayana and Bhagavad Gita will soon become mandatory in Islamic educational institutions.

The National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS), an autonomous organisation under the Education Ministry, announced last week that it had prepared 15 courses on “Indian knowledge tradition.”

Education Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal presented the new curricula, lauding India as a “knowledge superpower.” According to the ministry, teachings on such topics will shortly be incorporated into madrasas.

The NIOS said it would initially launch the program with 100 madrasas, extending to 500 in the future.

But the program has drawn sharp criticism from senior Muslim clerics who feel that the courses are “unjustified” and “arbitrary.”

Some clerics even described the program as part of wider efforts of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s nationalist ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to “Hinduise” India.

“It is almost akin to asking medical colleges to teach the Quran and the Bible instead of what it was set out for,” Maulana Khalid Rasheed, of the Lucknow-based Darul Uloom Farangi Mahal Islamic seminary, told DW.

“The new education policy emphasises the creation of a sense of pride towards ‘Indianness’ within learners,” Rasheed said. “This goes against the directive of educational institutions,” he added.

Maulana Yasoob Abbas, a Muslim cleric, told DW that the program is “divisive” and “goes against the grain of constitutional principles.” He said the new mandatory teachings would “increase the fault lines” between India’s Hindu and Muslim communities.

“Would the current government accept the teaching of the Quran in the RSS-backed Sishu mandir schools?” he said, referring to the right-wing Hindu nationalist Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) group.

Sharp criticism of the announcement has forced the Education Ministry to issue a clarification.

“Various subjects are offered to learners under this provision without any hard-line boundaries of fixed subject combinations unlike that in the formal education system. It is totally the discretion of the learner to opt for subject combination from the bouquet of the subjects provided by NIOS,” it said.

The ministry, however, did not specify whether it would still introduce Hindu epics into madrasas.

https://5pillarsuk.com/2021/03/12/st...ian-madrassas/
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سيف الله
04-02-2021, 11:39 AM
Salaam

Another update.

Blurb

Modi's visit to Bangladesh has sparked protests.

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سيف الله
07-05-2021, 08:18 AM
Salaam

Another update



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سيف الله
08-05-2021, 06:38 AM
Salaam

Another update



Sajad Rasheed, an author and writer from Indian-occupied Kashmir, explains how in the last two years India has made all the necessary preparations for a complete takeover of Kashmir.

On August 5th 2019, India repealed all the local laws and extended its own laws to Indian-occupied Kashmir and stripped its semi-autonomous status.

The reason behind this move was to reorganise Kashmir along the lines of the Hindu nationalist RSS agenda which is precisely the reason why India named it the “Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act.”

But this begs the question: How would the reorganisation take place and what are its consequences?

Before August 2019, Kashmir had its own national flag and legislative assembly and its local laws prohibited any non-native to purchase land or apply for government jobs in Kashmir.

But since August 2019, the BJP Party has used every trick in the book to further its Hindutva agenda (a racist ideology with political expediency) and bring momentous changes with far-reaching implications for Kashmiri Muslims. This includes divisive communal rhetoric and legal manipulation.

Momentous changes

Firstly, Kashmir is under the Indian President’s rule because New Delhi dissolved Kashmir’s legislative assembly, which means a governor (parachuted from outside Kashmir) has been appointed by the Indian state to rule the Muslim subjects of the state. This effectively means the Indian Parliament can make laws on behalf of Kashmiris without their consent.

Secondly, after imposing the President’s rule in Kashmir, India embarked on an arresting spree and thousands of political activists were jailed under the Public Safety Act. Amnesty International has called it a draconian act, which is essentially an executive order in which people are locked up in jails for two years and subsequently the time period is extended if the Indian authorities feel the need.

Thirdly, India banned the largest socio-cultural organisation in Kashmir – the Jamaat e Islami Kashmir – on the fabricated pretext that it supported armed rebellion and most of its cadres are languishing in Indian jails. India also banned the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front, a non-violent resistance group, and arrested its leaders. Yasin Malik, the group’s leader, is still in India’s notorious Tihar Jail, India’s version of Guantanamo Bay.

Fourthly, and the most important aspect of the reorganisation which is underway on a massive scale, is the tampering with legal instruments. The Domicile Law, which determines the citizenship of the state, has been changed. Earlier, only natives of Kashmir were its citizens but after the law was changed, India has given domicile certificates to more than three million Indian citizens. This means an influx of millions of non-Muslims in the Muslim dominated region. Also, they can now buy local land and be an equal party to local government jobs which otherwise were reserved for native Kashmiris.

In the last two years, the Indian Parliament has changed land laws in favour of its armed forces, essentially putting all of Kashmir up for sale. In the 1950’s land law reforms took place in Kashmir because Hindu-Dogra rulers had oppressed Kashmiris for a long time. As discussed in the first part of this essay series, Muslims were forced to live a miserable life under Dogra rule. Now by changing these land laws, India has again brought back the ghosts of the Dogra past. Also, the industrial and agricultural laws have been repealed.

But the most important among the changes of dispossession and disempowerment is the amendment to employee service rules i.e. rules for government jobs in Kashmir. At least a million Kashmiris work in different capacities in the government sector and in the absence of the private sector, government jobs are most preferred.

India passed an arbitrary executive order 355, according to which the social media of the employees will be monitored. A terror monitoring group called “Cyber Volunteers” has been set up to monitor employee profiles. Another significant change is the termination of government employees by a “Special Task Force” with no recourse to judiciary. At least 20 employees have so far been terminated on flimsy grounds.

The barrage of orders has another important perspective to it which is when native Kashmiris are being terminated, who will fill up these vacancies? In a scenario when the entire Kashmiri population is considered as secessionists by the BJP, the vacuum created by the termination process will be filled by those people from India who have been given domicile certificates in the last two years.

Palestine and Kashmir

When it comes to Kashmir, there is a murderous similarity, in practice, between the Congress Party and the BJP. The Congress started the war on truth in Kashmir; the BJP merely fine-tuned the means by declaring the intent more nakedly.

What was supposedly an integration and assimilation project for Congress (even though a bloody one), is a communally-driven extermination agenda for the BJP. In fact, a piece in The Organizer on August 2, 2009 asked the Indian state to follow the policy which the Chinese had adopted in Xinjiang to conquer back Kashmir to demographically integrate it with India.

Hindu fascists harbour the dream of Hindu rulers in a Muslim Kashmir who regard Kashmiris as a race of slaves. It is not out of a vacuum that the RSS has long been demanding a reorganisation of the state on grounds of racial superiority. There have been almost a hundred years of hostile history behind it. In their scheme of things, reorganisation must favour Hindus. The academic, Idris Bhat, wrote in Foreign Policy, citing resolutions by the RSS and the VHP to make his point.

The BJP prides itself on flexing its muscles, so it persistently pursued the JK reorganisation bill. But the buck doesn’t stop here; the recent follow up orders make it more than a simply “shoot-em-up” policy. Kashmiris were quick to fathom that it will erase the concept of original inhabitants or state subjects.

There are no exact scales to measure the impact of this decision but in Kashmir’s lived experiences are the real barometers which find their space in public expression. The TRT journalist, Hilal Mir, wrote that this decision is an “earthquake of Grade 9 on a political Richter scale which will make Kashmir look like Palestine or Shangri la” It has the potential to bring massive violent disruptions since the state has a control on all the resources with military might to back up.

The BJP has already polarised the Jammu region and it sort of manages its mechanics, but the real incentive lies in Kashmir which the BJP is unable to penetrate. Therefore, a recent slew of orders under lockdown suggest, as Prof. Siddiq Wahid, former Vice-Chancellor of Islamic University recently told Al Jazeera, that this is not just an attempt to change the demographics, but to flood it.

In Kashmir, this particular decision of New Delhi is seen in the context of the advice given by former Israeli foreign minister Shimon Peres to BJP leader LK Advani, in which he told the latter to alter the demographic composition of the mutinous Kashmir valley by settling Hindus there.

Staying true to this advice, the roots of Delhi’s legislation could be found in a 1952 Israeli law that repealed the Palestine Citizenship Order of 1925, wrote Mirza Saaib Beg, a Kashmiri legal scholar at Oxford University. Going by the close relations these two countries have developed in matters of militarisation and racial hegemony over the last three decades, it’s not just the advice but the mechanics of change that will be imitated as well.

Therefore, for a faster demographic takeover in Kashmir, Swaminathan Aiyar, consulting editor of The Economic Times, wrote that the BJP will most likely mimic Israel’s Jewish settlements in Palestine and create fortified Hindu settlements with high walls and check-posts.

Even international observers are terrified by the chilling after-effects of following the Israeli play book and Kashmir’s new status could bring demographic change with comparisons to the West Bank wrote Claire Parker, foreign affairs columnist for The Washington Post.

The imagery of a displaced Palestine has always been a part of what may be called the linguistic nativism of Kashmir politics, wherein Palestine is organically embedded due to a host of reasons. In historical memory, it is constantly invoked. Therefore, when India first flirted with the concept of separate colonies for pandits in Kashmir, it immediately reminded people of the havoc that settlers have wreaked in Palestine and resistance leader SAS Geelani, in his press conference in 2012 said: ‘Pundits are welcome to come back but India with the help of Israeli Mossad was working on a dangerous plan to create settlement colonies (separate pundit colonies) in the state of Jammu and Kashmir, built in the same way like the settlement of Jews in Palestine.

Post August 5, experts the world over echoed what Geelani had said a decade back, i.e. a settler-colonial project mirroring Israel’s occupation of Palestinian lands, in the territory of Kashmir. Given what has transpired in last two years, it is increasingly becoming clear that Kashmir is under the heel of Indian colonialism.

https://5pillarsuk.com/2021/08/04/in...er-of-kashmir/

Indian occupation forces have benefitted a great deal by the media silence in Kashmir. Kashmir activist Muzzammil Thakur helps us understand why Kashmir matters.



Reply

سيف الله
08-11-2021, 08:29 PM
Salaam

Like to share.

In our new series, A Tale of Yvonne Ridley, we will take you on a journey of a British journalist; her time in captivity of the Taliban, conversion to Islam, investigation of Dr Aafia Siddiqui and challenges she faced in the world of journalism.



March 31 marks 18 years since Dr. Aafia Siddiqui's kidnapping and abduction. The mysterious case has become internationally known, symbolising the atrocities linked to the so-called ‘War on Terror.’ Her case also exposed collaboration between Pakistani and US authorities. She has been dubbed the 'Daughter of Pakistan’ by some and ‘Lady Al Qaeda’ by others. Dr. Siddiqui has been convicted of multiple felonies and is serving an 86-year sentence at the Federal Medical Center (FMC) Carswell in Texas. Here is her story.




Indepth interview

The Fight for Dr. Aafia Siddiqui

Dr. Aafia Siddiqui's case is still one of the most controversial since 9-11. OGN interviews Mauri Saalakhan, one of those heading a new campaign for her.

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سيف الله
08-19-2021, 11:12 PM
Salaam

Another update.



Aafia Siddiqui calls for public support after enduring serious assault in Texas prison

Pakistani neuroscientist Aafia Siddiqui is calling for public support after suffering a serious violent assault by an inmate at FMC Carswell in Fort Worth, Texas.

On July 30, 2021, CAGE received disturbing reports from her lawyers that Aafia Siddiqui was attacked in her cell by an inmate who had been harassing her for some time, and who smashed a coffee mug filled with scalding hot liquid into her face.

Shocked by the violent assault and in excruciating pain, Dr Siddiqui curled into a fetal position to protect herself. She was unable to get up after the assault and had to be taken out of the cell in a wheelchair.

Dr. Siddiqui has been placed in administrative solitary confinement for an unspecified period of time.

Dr. Siddiqui – also known as the “grey lady of Bagram” was sentenced to 86 years imprisonment for attempted murder after a controversial trial in 2010, during which she accused witnesses of lying.

Her case has been plagued by inconsistencies, contradictory allegations and evidence gathered from torture, to the point that she has been called “the most wronged woman in the world”.

Her lawyer, Marwa Elbially, has been meeting in person with Dr. Siddiqui since January 2021 after several years of silence from her and the US authorities, during which the public and her family questioned whether she was still alive.

Dr. Aafia Siddiqui said:

“The fact that I’m not blind is a miracle from Allah.”

Marwa Elbially of Elbially Law Office, PLLC told CAGE:

“During my last visit with Dr. Siddiqui I was shocked to see visible burns around her eyes, an approximately 3 inch scar near her left eye, a wound on her right cheek covered in toothpaste and a small piece of paper, and bruises on her right arm and legs. Moreover, she was in an orange jumpsuit as she had been placed in the administrative unit.

It is important that we receive reassurance that Dr. Siddiqui is not punished for being a victim of a vicious assault and is safe from future attacks.”

Yvonne Ridley, journalist who uncovered the story of Aafia Siddiqui, said:

“This is a serious case of injustice. The alleged crimes occurred in Afghanistan, the US had no jurisdiction to begin with. Aafia is the most wronged woman on the planet.”

Moazzam Begg, CAGE Outreach Director, said:

“Aafia Siddiqui’s case remains one of the most troubling in the sordid history of the “War on Terror.” As events in Afghanistan – where so much of Aafia’s case began – unfurl with such speed, we need to ask if Pakistani authorities will seek her repatriation while she’s still alive, or only after she’s in a body bag.

“It is time this chapter of Aafia Siddiqui’s life was closed. She needs to go home and be with the children she never saw grow up.”

https://www.cage.ngo/aafia-siddiqui-...n-texas-prison
Reply

سيف الله
11-18-2021, 11:20 PM
Salaam

More on the situation in Kashmir.

After a terrible human rights violation, questions need to be put to India, the occupying power. They have become belligerent in their treatment of Kashmiris.

Reply

سيف الله
02-19-2022, 10:36 PM
Salaam

Situation is going from bad to worse in India.

These are the most brazen, bold and hate filled speeches I've ever heard. Modi's India has now reached new lows.



Since the first such incident was reported from Udupi (India) on December 28, 2021, a total of five education institutes have denied entry to Muslim students wearing the hijab.




Manchester United star Paul Pogba has raised concerns over the ongoing harassment of Muslim students wearing hijab in several schools in India's southern state of Karnataka.

*The video at the end of splashing water is allegedly an old video from Sri Lanka. Allah knows best.




The gall of these people. Not only do they ban Muslim women from schools because of their dress code, now they're lecturing us about the Hijab. What a joke.



This was the incident that went viral.



Comment.



Lot of reaction, not expecting this from Kuwait.

Reply

سيف الله
03-17-2022, 03:59 PM
Salaam

Another update. It gets worse and worse.







Reply

سيف الله
04-02-2022, 12:28 PM
Salaam

Turmoil in Pakistan.



One perspective on why its come to this.

Reply

سيف الله
04-11-2022, 08:47 PM
Salaam

Another update.

Blurb


Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan has been ousted from power after losing a no-confidence vote in his leadership. He said there was a US-led conspiracy to remove him because of his refusal to stand with Washington on issues against Russia and China.



Did the U.S. take down Imran Khan?






A sceptical take on his premiership.







Reply

سيف الله
04-23-2022, 11:02 PM
Salaam

Like to share.



Reply

سيف الله
03-02-2023, 12:08 PM
Salaam

Like to share



General Qamar Bajwa and the Limitations of Pakistan’s Deep State

It would be an understatement to say that the six-year stint of Qamar Bajwa as Pakistan’s army General was eventful. Bajwa’s role as arguably Pakistan’s most powerful man included four prime ministers and several political crises, ending with the army’s carefully polished reputation over decades in tatters.

He was not the first army commander to wield a disproportionate political influence. Pakistan’s political economy is geared in such a way that even a self-effacing army commander has political clout. However, it was during Bajwa’s stint that the army’s prestige in Pakistani society hit a low perhaps only matched by the division of Pakistan over fifty years ago. More than anything else, Bajwa’s stint symbolizes the limitations of the army as a political actor.

It is something of a tired cliché by critics and rival states, that in Pakistan the military has a country rather than vice versa. Certainly, as defenders point out, the Pakistani military has usually abstained from the pattern of postcolonial counterparts in Arab and Muslim states of a totalitarian grip on political life.

Repression for the most part has been more selective than in other military-dominated countries. Indeed, the military is perhaps the only Pakistani state institution that functions more or less professionally. Periods of civilian rule, as in the 1950s, 1990s, and 2010s have often been marked by either factionalism, autocracy, or corruption. Finally, the very real threat posed by India particularly, though not exclusively, since the fascist Bharatiya Janatiya Party first came to power in the 1990s – means that a certain amount of military prerogative is almost unavoidable.

The problem for both its institutional integrity and for Pakistani political culture is that being “too big to fail” for Pakistan’s survival, the military has grown quite comfortable in its role as a political umpire. The very fact that the military is the only functioning national institution imposes upon it responsibilities for the remainder of the system. Rarely has the military been slow to accept those responsibilities, but it has been far more begrudging in accepting the consequences – particularly when these involve subjecting itself to the jurisdiction of civilian bodies.

The same civilian parties that officers regularly lambast as either feudalist or corrupt are usually the very same parties that the military itself buttressed at some point or other. Zulfikar Bhutto, whose People’s Party would become such a bane for Rawalpindi in future decades, cut his teeth under Pakistan’s first military regime. Nawaz Sharif’s Noon League (PML-N) was heavily bolstered as a counterweight to the People’s Party by another military regime, before biting the hand that fed it.

Other regional or ideological parties, such as the ethno-nationalist Muttahida Qaumi Movement and the Islamist Jamaat-i-Islami, have similarly oscillated between enmity and alliance.

Taken against this backdrop, Imran Khan’s Tehreek -e- Insaf Party ( PTI) might be seen as its critics have long alleged, as another backfired project of the military establishment.

Imran Khan himself hails from Pakistani aristocracy; his uncle, Wajid Burki, was a key lieutenant to Pakistan’s first military ruler Ayub Khan, whose grandson Umar was also a PTI minister. Asad Umar, Imran’s widely respected right-hand man, is the son of Ghulam Umar, who served as security advisor to Ayub’s successor Yahya Khan. PTI heavyweights Jahangir Tareen, a tycoon who served as an influential secretary-general, and Shaukat Tareen are nephews of Akhtar Abdul-Rahman, the top lieutenant of a third military dictator, Mohammad Ziaul-Haq, under whom Pakistan’s intelligence agencies cut their teeth. And much of Imran’s cabinet – including Mohammad Soomro, Abdul-Razak Dawood, Shaikh Rasheed, and Zubaida Jalal – served as ministers in the kitchen cabinet of the most recent military ruler Pervez Musharraf, who had unsuccessfully invited Imran to head that cabinet.

In retrospect it is now quite clear that Qamar Bajwa also viewed Imran, like the People’s Party and Noon League leaders, as a tool that could be manipulated and discarded; some PTI leaders such as Jahangir duly played along in turning on the party during its ouster from power in April 2022.

But it would be a mistake to view the PTI as another project of the “establishment”. The party came to power through mass appeal, which has been even clearer in the days since Imran’s ouster, particularly after his credible claim that the United States triggered his removal.

Enormous rallies in favour of the party and its call for an election have taken Pakistani streets by storm to an extent quite unthinkable a year ago when Imran’s popularity had taken a hit from economic troubles.

Repression and a considerable amount of media manipulation, not least by media heavyweights whose historical tensions with the military suddenly vanished in spring 2022, have failed to quell this surge in popularity, and few dispute that as of autumn 2022 PTI is the most popular party in the country – hence the rejected calls for an election.

How can we explain this PTI success? The fact is that PTI’s popularity, however much Bajwa and other establishment figures might have tried to coopt it, always rested on elements that were widely popular in Pakistani society. These included a broad appeal to Islam, and thus the repeated references to Prophetic Medina; rallying against corruption, opposition to India, particularly over its treatment of Kashmir and Muslims more broadly; and a wariness of foreign subservience which in the past two decades has mainly meant subservience to an intrusive and tactless Washington since it occupied Afghanistan.

Opposition to American airstrikes in Pakistan’s northwest frontier, and more general criticism of the pointless Afghan misadventure, was particularly important in launching Imran’s political appeal during the early 2010s; his party remains particularly strong in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwala, which bore the brunt of this policy. Except for the generally ineffective Islamists, Pakistan’s other parties largely played along with the same American misadventure, thus losing support that instead went to PTI.

Moreover, these are not only sentiments popular in Pakistani society, but also in the military that hails from the same society. The military has long portrayed itself as a guardian of Pakistan, Islam in at least a broad sense Muslims in the region.

It would be easy to write this off as opportunistic insincerity, which it no doubt was in many cases, but it was still taken seriously by a large amount of the officer corps since at least the 1980s and is eminently compatible with, if not outright traceable to the “Islamic nationalism” of the original Pakistan movement. Pakistan’s entrance into the nuclear club as its only Muslim member and the widespread influence of religious organizations, particularly the Tablighi Jamaat, in the officer corps helped to cement the idea, which survived Pakistan’s entrance into a war on terrorism that was widely seen as having been forced on it.

Yet side by side, and in increasing tension with this trend, was Islamabad’s longstanding links with a Washington that no longer needed Pakistan as a Cold War buffer, and increasingly veered toward India.

Washington’s benign indulgence of India’s nuclear buildup stood in stark contrast with its hostile reception to Pakistan’s response; New Delhi’s strategic and economic interests were almost always prioritized over Pakistan’s; when the war on terrorism began, this took on an ideological dimension as well, with Pakistan pathologized as a hotbed of nuclear risk and terrorism. Musharraf’s answer to this conundrum was to preempt India by ingratiating himself with Washington; ultimately, this failed and led to his ouster, with the People’s Party and Noon League returning to the political centre stage.

Contrary to the promises of democracy, the following decade of 2008-18 saw an initial return to the pre-Musharraf status quo, with the important qualifier of pressure by the United States, which played off the tensions between the civilian political parties, of which the People’s Party was especially favored in Washington, and the military, which fell in line because of its vulnerability to the insurgency in northwest Pakistan.

This insurgency had largely sprung from the same alliance with Washington, which had prompted Musharraf to send several performative but disruptive incursions in the region, and stoked the pot for the spread of genuine extremist influence; a cycle began that locked Pakistan into a dependence on the United States.

To this end the military increasingly looked the other way, if not outright making excuses, when the United States bombarded the northwest; civilian prime minister Yousuf Gilani was even more supportive, trying to obtain American support against the military establishment.

Much of this flew in the face of public sentiment in Pakistan and the military’s self-image; to bind itself to a United States that was increasingly blatant in support of emboldened India. Indeed, the American-encouraged détente with India, pursued by both military and civilian regimes, backfired miserably; by the 2010s an emboldened New Delhi was backing secessionist movements in Pakistan, cracking down anew in Kashmir, and engaging in a sustained misinformation campaign against its own Muslims, Islam generally, and the Pakistani state in particular.

When India annexed Kashmir in 2019, Pakistan could offer scant response except largely ignored appeals, largely delivered by the civilian government rather than a historically pro-Kashmir military, to the international community.

This was a far cry from the independent, however reckless, streak of the 1980s and 1990s, and thus it is no surprise that the fiercely independent streak displayed by Imran, whether in opposition to American campaigns in the region or to India’s in Kashmir, found clear sympathy in a military whose tasks were increasingly at odds with the institution’s long-polished self-image.

Nor is it a surprise, in such an environment, that military promotion increasingly favoured status-quo figures such as Bajwa who stuck loyally to the contrived, and very American-friendly, canard that terrorism was a bigger threat to Pakistan.

More worrying was the fact that as the military’s focus turned inward, the definition of terrorism expanded. The Pakistani establishment had been queasy about selective repression, but after the war on terror, this steadily expanded to include heavy-handed air bombing, forced disappearances, torture, and assassinations to an extent unseen since the 1971 Bangladesh war.

The fact that there was genuine propaganda – often by networks in league with India’s far-right regime or the United States’s plethora of non-governmental organizations – only added to this paranoia and served to valorize this repression as self-defense against “fifth-generational warfare”. Ironically, since Imran’s removal, this repression has been redoubled against PTI supporters, hitherto some of the fiercest defenders of Pakistan’s interests vis-à-vis India.

It should be noted that the removal of the economically incompetent Noon League on corruption grounds in 2017, which paved the way for PTI’s election win the next year, could not have occurred without the at least tacit acquiescence of Bajwa.

Easy though it is to forget now, the army commander’s relationship with Imran was initially positive, with both publicly stressing that the army and government were at last on the same page.

But what can be seen in retrospect is that whereas Imran wanted to comprehensively change the Pakistani political system, Bajwa sought to instrumentalize the prime minister’s popularity and use him as a figurehead to perpetuate the same system, which had been failing under the corruption and incompetence of his predecessors. Throughout 2018-21, it was the PTI’s opposition, foremost among them the Noon League, who lambasted the army for interference in politics.

The difference was that while PTI genuinely advocated reforms – and has been the target of a violent crackdown after losing power – its opposition, who were treated with comparative kid gloves, openly advocated a return to the pre-2018 status quo. It was this desire for the status quo, including continued vassalage to the United States, that eventually brought them back on the same page as Bajwa.

Much has been made of the geopolitical aspect of the 2022 tumult. Certainly, Imran was not blameless; his trip to Moscow in search of an alternate energy supplier came on the same day as a long-awaited Russian attack on Ukraine and may have been the straw that broke the camel’s back.

Six months earlier, the United States had been driven in ignominy from an Afghan occupation that Imran had long criticized, and there were rumours that the Prime Minister was planning to promote against Bajwa’s wishes the conspicuous spymaster Faiz Hameed, who had made a much-hyped visit to Kabul just as the Taliban emirate were consolidating their control.

Certainly, in the months after Imran’s ouster PTI supporters viewed Hameed as a sympathetic alternative to Bajwa. But taken together, this was no more than tactlessness, and certainly within the remit of an independent government whose constituency was Pakistan, not the United States.

Bajwa’s rush to publicly distance himself from the Prime Minister can only be described as craven and the military’s tacit support of a gerrymandered no-confidence vote after a nudge from the United States is much worse. In one sense, it was a continuity of the status quo that has plagued Pakistan for decades – the military navigating between different political groups, ruthlessly snipping one that threatens to get out of line. In another and more important sense, however, it is very different – a regime change that was not merely tolerated or approved, but actively instigated, by a foreign power.

“I reached the actual leader of Pakistan, General Bajwa, with whom I had engaged many times…” Mike Pompeo, Former US Secretary of State in “Never Give an Inch”.
Yet with this wilful abdication of Pakistan’s national interests – the economy has only spiralled into decline since Imran’s ouster. The military’s popularity has plummeted after it made common cause with the same networks that it once correctly derided as supportive of Indian misinformation in favour of short-term institutional interests; which is perhaps a natural result of longstanding military supremacy. A common pattern in military-dominated countries, such as Egypt and Sudan, is that while earlier generals might have manipulated politics to protect perceived state interests, the habit kicks in and their successors prioritize military interests, as an end rather than a means, over the state. In the process, the military transforms from being a protector of national interest into a new, eminently unpatriotic, corrupt oligarchy whose primary enemy is perceived as domestic rivals rather than foreign enemies.

This pattern, which saw the “Free Officers” of Cairo turn into a dictatorial oligarchy decades ago, is now a very real prospect in Pakistan. And once that happens, both Pakistan and its army stand to lose.

https://ayaaninstitute.com/expertise...ns-deep-state/
Reply

سيف الله
05-10-2023, 07:53 AM
Salaam

Situation is escalating.



A lot more to be said, Ill post this here in the meantime.

Blurb

#Pakistan is in hock to the #IMF, the World Bank, #China, and others. Meanwhile, the military watches events closely, with many fearing another #coup.


Reply

سيف الله
05-24-2023, 05:51 AM
Salaam

Another update, yes its the Guardian but its a decent enough take on whats happening in Pakistan at the moment, (minus the Americans didnt have a hand in removing him of course not!)

‘He’s fighting for our future’: Pakistan’s young voters rally behind Imran Khan

Attempts to jail and harass the cricketer turned politician have only strengthened his support among young people


In a recent video address to tens of thousands of viewers, Imran Khan waved a piece of paper at the camera bearing the result of a survey of voters. “You see, 70% of the population is now standing with our party,” the politician claimed.

The authenticity of the data was unclear – Khan is known for hyperbole – but it is widely acknowledged Khan and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party are enjoying a period of unparalleled popularity that has been building since April last year when he was toppled in a vote of no confidence, having served less than four years as prime minister. The last credible poll, back in March, put his popularity at 61%.

The loyalty felt to Khan among voters has been keenly on display over the past two weeks. After his dramatic arrest last week from an Islamabad courtroom by almost 100 paramilitary officers, the country erupted in violent unrest.

Though the events of the riots are now disputed – Khan alleges they were a conspiracy to discredit and crack down on his party members, the government says the violence was orchestrated by PTI’s leaders – the ability for Khan to mobilise large-scale protest on the streets was clear. As Khan returned to his home in Lahore after being released on court orders, he was accompanied by thousands of supporters.

“Leaders like Khan are born once in a century,” said Aftab Ahmed, 18, who left school to serve as a volunteer in Khan’s security force last year. “He is one of the few leaders in the world who wants to build a country based on equality and justice. I am sure Khan will win this fight.”

One of Khan’s greatest strengths has been his popularity among young voters, who exceed 125 million and account for 44.36% of registered voters. Over the years, he has utilised social media to build up a vast following of young people who see him as the face of “naya [new] Pakistan” and a change from the old dynasties who have ruled Pakistan for decades.

“The youth are following Khan; he is fighting for us and our future,” said Azra, 20, a student at the University of Karachi. “Khan might have done some corruption but not like the politicians who have done it for decades.”

She said recent attempts to jail and harass Khan had only strengthened his support among young voters. “Khan has put his life in danger because of us and our prosperity.”

Since his release from police custody, Khan has made almost daily addresses from his home, broadcast on YouTube and Twitter, calling for early elections and proclaiming himself as Pakistan’s anti-establishment saviour with increasingly critical tirades against the military and government. During every appearance there are tens of thousands of viewers.

Khan alleges his popularity among the masses is at the root of his legal troubles, with more than 100 cases against him. The former prime minister is calling for elections to take place on a provincial and national level. He alleges the attempts to detain him and a crackdown on his party are part of a plan by Pakistan’s powerful political establishment and the ruling coalition government, led by the prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, “to stop PTI forming the next government”. The military leadership and the Sharif government has hit back, accusing Khan of supporting violence and terrorism.

Yet Khan also faces an impending dilemma. While his anti-military rhetoric has galvanised popular support on the streets, it has also alienated many key members of his party who have faced harassment or have longstanding ties with the army establishment.

On Tuesday, Shireen Mazari, Khan’s former human rights minister, became the latest high-profile PTI leader to quit the party after being arrested twice, joining a dozen others who have left in the past week. Khan blamed the army for pressuring his party members into “forced divorces”.

When Khan, 70, entered Pakistani politics in 1996 as a retired celebrity cricket captain with a playboy reputation, he was shunned for his attempts to challenge the status quo. But over the years the charismatic populist who thrived on celebrity grew popular among the middle class, who approved of his drive against corruption and ambitious promises to strengthen democracy and the rule of law. Meanwhile, his embrace of radically conservative Islam and anti-western rhetoric, particularly against the US, garnered him support among influential religious conservatives.

Malik Farooq, 28, a software engineer in Lahore, said it was Khan’s “vision” for Pakistan that had drawn his support . “Khan does not come from a political dynasty and he does not want to build any dynasty. He is in politics to save us from these corrupt families.”

In 2018, Khan was elected after promising that he alone could fix Pakistan’s deep-rooted problems. But though he was personally popular, his majority was slim and it came amid allegations it had been rigged in his favour by the powerful military establishment, whose decades-long grip on power was seen as responsible for the rampant corruption and lack of accountability that Khan had vowed to stamp out. Several opposition politicians from the dynasties he had openly criticised had also jumped ship to join PTI and became Khan’s close aides, leading to allegations of hypocrisy.

Once in power, beholden to the military, most of Khan’s promised reforms never materialised. There was a clampdown on media freedom, extrajudicial abductions by military agencies continued and Pakistan fell further in the transparency index that measures corruption. The economy floundered and state spending soared, while his promises to shun the “lavish” lifestyles of former prime ministers did not become a reality, with Khan since accused of costing the country 1bn rupees for his helicopter rides alone.

Amid economic strife and allegations of dysfunction, Khan’s support went into decline and it was at historical lows by April 2022. But it was Khan’s removal from power, after dozens of his own MPs defected and he lost a parliamentary vote of no confidence, that would revitalise his popularity.

Khan swiftly and loudly blamed a US-backed conspiracy for his removal as prime minister. Though the claim was debunked and the US denied it, it played well to rampant anti-US sentiment and riled up support, while his fervent conservative Islamic rhetoric also strengthened his populist support base.

Khan’s decision to turn against his former ally – Pakistan’s military establishment, accusing them of colluding with the west to bring him down – has also galvanised support among many who are tired of the decades of the army interfering in politics. In recent months, his populist, firebrand speeches against military leadership have drawn thousands on to the streets in support, and sympathy for him only strengthened after he was shot in the leg in November while at a rally, with Khan accusing the military chief of being behind a plot to assassinate him.

The economic crisis in Pakistan in recent months, with inflation at 36% and people dying in ration queues for food, has also helped Khan politically. The ruling coalition removed subsidies and implemented hikes in the price of food, fuel and power to try to secure a bailout from the International Monetary Fund and avoid default, which has made them unpopular among the masses.

Taseer Ali, 26, an electrical engineer, was among those who said he believed the US government and the military were involved in toppling Khan. “Khan is trustworthy and visionary,” he said. “Yes, Khan has changed his stance towards the army but he has seen the military’s real face and he knows them well. He has given us hope that he will change this rotten system.”

https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...ter-politician

Worth a listen.



More comment.





More perspectives



















Reply

سيف الله
05-30-2023, 11:13 PM
Salaam

Another update.







The interviewer's question regarding how he treated his opponents using the same state machinery is a very valid point although I'll add the caveat that the notable among them are habitual lawbreakers & were throwing the kitchen sink in their efforts to avoid legal proceedings.

Where Imran Khan went wrong was nurturing an us vs them narrative despite the fact that there were many interests and elites in his own party that were guilty of the same. Ultimately he has become a slave to this narrative as it prevented much needed political reconciliation.

Instead of taking shortcuts and relying on compromised political powerbrokers with a history of flip flopping wherever the wind blows - Imran Khan should have prioritized and given opportunities to competent grassroots Pakistanis that shared his ideology & vision for Pakistan.

More importantly he should have tempered the emotions of his more fervent supporters, stayed the course to demanding elections and avoided the violent protests that gave the current establishment all the opportunity it needed to clamp down on him. Trusted the wrong people too.





Reply

سيف الله
06-01-2023, 07:32 AM
Salaam

Heartbreaking.



Dr Fawzia meets her sister Aafia Siddiqui after two decades

Fawzia was accompanied by Clive Stafford Smith

In a bittersweet reunion that transcended prison walls and spanned two decades, Dr Fawzia Siddiqui finally came face to face with her sister, Dr Aafia Siddiqui, at an undisclosed United States penitentiary.

Fawzia was accompanied by Clive Stafford Smith, a human rights lawyer who recently helped bring home two Pakistanis from Guantanamo Bay. Smith has already met Dr Siddiqui in prison once.

The emotionally charged encounter took place under strict security measures, with the sisters only being allowed to see each other through a glass window.

In a narration by Senator Mushtaq, he revealed that after a long span of 20 years, the meeting lasted over two and a half hours.

However, during the meeting, Dr Fawzia was not allowed to touch her sister or show her pictures of Dr Afia’s children.

The sisters were confined to a room separated by a thick glass wall. Dr. Fawzia described Dr Afia as wearing a beige jail dress and a white scarf.

Dr. Fawzia further shared her concerns about D Afia’s condition, stating that it took nearly an hour for her sister to recount the daily struggles she had been enduring. Afia expressed her longing to meet her mother and children, unaware of the fact that their mother had passed away almost a year ago.

Disturbingly, Fawzia disclosed that Dr Afia had lost her front teeth due to an alleged assassination attempt inside the prison and bore a scar on her head, which affected her hearing.

Reports suggest that Dr Afia had been subjected to various torturous techniques to coerce her into speaking about matters she had no knowledge of.

Who is Aafia Siddiqui?

Aafia Siddiqui is a Pakistani scientist who was found guilty of attempting to murder and assault American personnel in Afghanistan in 2010. She received a prison sentence of 86 years.

She consistently claimed her innocence, and the case sparked significant controversy.

Aafia Siddiqui was born in Karachi, Pakistan, in 1972.

She studied biochemistry at the University of Karachi and neuroscience at Brandeis University, earning her degrees in the early 1990s.

Later, she completed a Ph.D. in neuroscience at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in 2001.

After completing her studies, she returned to Pakistan and worked as a neuroscientist at Aga Khan University Hospital.

She also engaged in humanitarian efforts, collaborating with organisations like the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the United Nations Children’s Fund.

In 2003, Pakistani authorities arrested Siddiqui due to suspected links with al-Qaeda. Although she was released after a few months, she remained under house arrest.

Then, in 2008, she went missing from her home in Karachi.

Aafia Siddiqui reappeared in Afghanistan in 2009 and was subsequently apprehended by US forces in Ghazni province.

She faced charges of attempting to murder and assault American personnel. In August 2009, she was extradited to the United States.

The trial commenced in January 2010, and she was convicted two months later.

The court handed her an 86-year prison sentence.

Throughout the proceedings, Aafia Siddiqui maintained her innocence and appealed her conviction.

Currently, she is serving her sentence at the Federal Medical Centre in Carswell, Texas. She will be eligible for parole in 2033.

https://www.samaaenglish.tv/news/40037198



Another perspective.

Reply

سيف الله
07-16-2023, 10:16 AM
Salaam

Like to share.





Blurb

Although the war on terror is now a distant memory to many Americans, it’s horrible residue remains. The incarceration of Aafia Siddiqui, a brilliant academic and mother of three, has become a symbol of its excesses, of which there were many. She languishes in prison, serving an 86-year sentence for an offence that looks barely credible, the attempted murder of two US officials in Afghanistan in 2008. Her whereabouts before that date remain murky, and so does the welfare of her youngest son Suleman – who has not been seen since her detention in 2003.

To help us unpick the facts, we have invited Aafias lawyer Clive Stafford Smith to shed light on what happened to Aafia and her children. Clive has helped secure the release of 86 prisoners from Guantánamo Bay and still acts for the remaining numbers. Since the early days of the War on Terror, he has worked tirelessly to force the Americans and other Western powers to adhere to the rule of law. He has sought to uncover the secret prisons and ghost prisoners that stain the reputation of powerful states – who presented their wars in benevolent terms.




And more comment.



Reply

سيف الله
08-06-2023, 06:09 PM
Salaam

Another update.

Is Imran Khan going to suffer the same fate as Mohamed Morsi?



Blurb

Police arrested Mr Khan at his home this morning, taking him to a prison near the capital Islamabad. He's strongly denied the charges - which could see him barred from running for office in future.



More comment and analysis

Imran Khan jailed for 3 years over ‘corrupt practices’

Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan has been sentenced to three years in prison for “corrupt practices,” according to local media.

The jail term was announced in the “Toshakhana state gift case” by a trial court in the capital Islamabad this morning, without Khan being present.

Khan was accused of selling state gifts in a case filed by the country’s Election Commission in May.

The 70-year-old politician is said to have misused his premiership from 2018 to 2022 to buy and sell gifts in state possession that were received during visits abroad and worth more than 140 million Pakistani rupees ($635,000).

He has denied any wrongdoing, saying the charges are politically motivated.

Khan’s lawyer Intezar Panjotha said police have already arrested Khan from his residence. “We are filing a petition against the decision in High Court,” Panjotha added.

Legal experts say a conviction in the case could end his chances of participating in national elections that have to be held before early November.

In a recorded message to the nation in the event of his arrest, Imran Khan said: “I have one request, one appeal. You should not be sitting quietly in your homes. This effort and struggle that I’m pursuing, it’s not for myself. It’s for my nation, for you, for your children’s future. If you don’t stand up for your rights, you are going to be enslaved and live like slaves. And the life of a slave is not a life. Slaves are like ants on the ground which can’t fly.

“It was a big dream for Pakistan to have the slogan: ‘La illaha ilallah.’ And what does this mean for Pakistan? That we do not bow down to any humans. La illaha illallah frees us from enslavement to any humans. And our Prophet (pbuh) in Medinah, the first thing he did was to free everybody with justice. This is a war of justice, for your rights and for your freedom.

“And remember no one will hand you freedom on a plate. The chains don’t just fall off, you have to break them. You have to continue to protest to get your rights. Your fundamental right is to use your vote to select your government so no other group seizes control of this country like the present government has.”

Meanwhile, the International Human Rights Foundation (IHRF) said it “strongly condemns the unjust imprisonment of former Prime Minister Imran Khan, who has been sentenced to three years in prison following a grossly unfair trial.”

It added: “This case of lawfare has been orchestrated by the military establishment, working in tandem with its political proxies and allied media, who have silenced opposition by resorting to the arrest and even assassination of dissenting voices, as in the case of Arshad Sarif.

“The Pakistani deep state have consistently undermined Mr Imran Khan and the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, despite their considerable lead in the opinion polls. Indeed, Mr Khan has already been the subject of an assassination attempt, from which he narrowly escaped with injuries.

“We reiterate the need for the forthcoming elections in a few months’ time to take place unhindered. We call for peace and full respect for human rights. The military authority must bow to the command of the elected civilian power, without interference from outside sovereignties.”

https://5pillarsuk.com/2023/08/05/im...upt-practices/



Why Pakistanis are not protesting? (long tweet)

The very basic definition of the “state” cites its “monopoly on violence”. In most Western countries, this is constrained by civil rights won over many centuries.

In countries like Pakistan, the state uses violence unobstructed— as happened after 9th May. Blaming unarmed, defenceless citizens for “failing” to protest after facing unabashed state violence for months is unfair and ill informed. This also doesn’t mean there is no “reaction” or that people are “powerless”.

Two key factors have changed since the last dictatorship, but especially over the last year:

The first is the awakening of consciousness among ordinary people. The state’s use of propaganda and “soft” rhetoric now falls on deaf ears. Similarly, the “intellectual” class which so long dictated people’s thoughts now stand exposed and discredited. This is the always the first step towards emancipation.

The second is the development of “hidden resistance”. There is genuine discontent mixed with hopelessness in a large part of the population. They may not protest today, but they aren’t powerless. Armed with renewed consciousness, they will remember their enemies and their victories for ages.

Don’t blame the victims, call out the brutality of the state. This is a long struggle but the fight put up by PTI supporters over the last 16 months is unmatched in Pakistan’s history.




Protests in the UK

Reply

anatolian
08-06-2023, 06:15 PM
I hope Khan will not be the second Erdoğan
Reply

سيف الله
08-09-2023, 01:50 PM
Salaam

Situation is not looking good for him at all. The establishment was well prepared and most of the protests were smothered before they could even begin.

The only silver lining is that ordinary people are becoming far too aware of how the rigged the game is.



Imran Khan is exactly what the US hates in a Pakistani politician: principled

Lack of condemnation from the US over Khan's politically motivated imprisonment only confirms Washington's long history of preferring dictators pliable to its interests


Last week, the Russian dissident Alexei Navalny was sentenced to 19 years in a penal colony - accused of financing "extremism" and "rehabilitating the Nazi ideology".

Quite rightly, the United States and Britain instantly denounced the move, with the US State Department describing the conviction as "an unjust conclusion to an unjust trial".

Britain's Foreign Secretary James Cleverly claimed the outcome "shows Russia's complete disregard for even the most basic of human rights", piously adding: "Dissent cannot be silenced."

Three days later, Imran Khan - until last year, the democratically elected prime minister of Pakistan - was sentenced to three years' imprisonment, courtesy of what looked like a kangaroo court, under murky circumstances.

These two cases are eerily similar. Few believe the charges laid against Navalny. Yet it is vital for President Vladimir Putin to remove him from the political stage - especially with Russian presidential elections scheduled to be held in March 2024.

Likewise, few believe the corruption charges laid against Khan carry any plausibility. Yet it is vital to get him out of the way ahead of Pakistan's general election, scheduled for this autumn.

There are dark forces which want both men out of the way. Navalny was subject to an attempted poisoning three years ago, while Khan was wounded in an assassination attempt late last year.

Let's spit out the ugly truth. Alexei Navalny and Imran Khan are both political prisoners, held on trumped-up charges by the Russian and Pakistan authorities.

Yet the West is only concerned about the fate of one of them.

Double standards

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken was swift to condemn the additional jail sentence imposed on Navalny, condemning "Russia's conviction of opposition leader Alexei Navalny on politically motivated charges. The Kremlin cannot silence the truth. Navalny should be released".

No US condemnation of Khan's politically motivated trial.

British Foreign Secretary Cleverly was guilty of the same double standard.

Both Britain and America will be well aware that the charges against Khan - profiteering from official gifts - are flimsy.

In fact, when Khan was in office, he changed the law so that it would be more difficult for politicians to profit from gifts received on foreign visits.

Previously, if an official wanted to retain an item, they were able to purchase it at 20 percent of the value set by the Toshakhana evaluation committee. During his premiership, Khan raised the fee to 50 percent.

Khan is probably the least corrupt politician - admittedly not a high bar - in Pakistan's modern history. He represents a reversion to the early school of post-independence politicians, from the Qaid-i-Azam, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, to the country's first president, Iskandar Mirza, whose integrity was absolute.

None of this matters to the US and Britain, which have always preferred to deal with dictators who are pliable to their interests: Mohammad Ayub Khan, installed in a military coup in 1958; General Mohammad Zia-ul-Haq, who ruled with an iron fist during the 1970s and 80s; and more recently General Pervez Musharraf, who came to power in a bloodless coup in 1999 and served as Pakistan's president from 2001 to 2008.

History proves that the US is structurally hostile to any Pakistani political leader with a democratic mandate.

Lonely battle

Khan, to his enormous credit, had set out to challenge the deeply corrupt, dynastic two-party system that has dominated Pakistani politics, through the Bhutto family's Pakistan People's Party (PPP) and the Sharif family's Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N), for more than half a century.

In doing so, he sought to end the country's status as a client state of the US.

Almost unheard of among recent generations of Pakistani leaders, he stuck to his principles - falling afoul of the US in the process.



Throughout his long period in opposition, he fought a lonely battle against the US's brutal war on terror, condemning drone strikes and standing up for the rule of law.

To his credit, Khan remained a thorn in the flesh of the US once in power. But he has paid the price.

I trace his demise to the fall of Kabul in August 2021, when Khan clashed with Washington over the freezing of Afghan state assets, as well as the American desire for access to Pakistani airspace.

From that moment, his card was marked. Khan had the impertinence to defy the US: the Biden administration's refusal to denounce his imprisonment amounts to complicity.

I love Pakistan, have travelled to this beautiful country many times, and have respect for the Pakistan army and its role in maintaining stability after independence 75 years ago. But it is widely reported to be the architect of Khan's downfall.

Not for the first time, it is allowing itself to be dragged into national politics.

Deceitful claims

Imran Khan is today the most popular politician in the country. Polls indicate that he would sweep to victory in any free and fair election.

Holding an election in Pakistan without Khan would be like putting on Shakespeare's Hamlet without the prince.

Whoever wins an election without Khan would carry zero political legitimacy, and be despised as the local client ruler, ruling on behalf of the United States.

As for Khan, he has joined the long list of democratically legitimate national leaders who had the temerity to affect the US by striking out with an independent foreign policy.

Mohamed Morsi, Egypt's first democratically elected civilian president, spent his final years in jail before dying in court.

Salvador Allende of Chile dared to win an election that the US wanted him to lose - and was dislodged from office in the most brutal of circumstances.

Ali Bhutto, Pakistan's first democratically elected leader, who challenged the US by building an alliance of non-aligned nations, ended up in a prison where he was judicially murdered.

Mohammad Mosaddegh of Iran. Too many others.

The silence of the US and Britain, both countries which deceitfully claim to believe in democracy, says it all.

https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinio...ian-principled

More discussions on the problems Pakistan faces.

Reply

سيف الله
08-09-2023, 05:04 PM
Salaam

As always, proof is in the pudding. Americans are at it again *sigh*



SECRET PAKISTAN CABLE DOCUMENTS U.S. PRESSURE TO REMOVE IMRAN KHAN

“All will be forgiven,” said a U.S. diplomat, if the no-confidence vote against Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan succeeds.

THE U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT encouraged the Pakistani government in a March 7, 2022, meeting to remove Imran Khan as prime minister over his neutrality on the Russian invasion of Ukraine, according to a classified Pakistani government document obtained by The Intercept.

The meeting, between the Pakistani ambassador to the United States and two State Department officials, has been the subject of intense scrutiny, controversy, and speculation in Pakistan over the past year and a half, as supporters of Khan and his military and civilian opponents jockeyed for power. The political struggle escalated on August 5 when Khan was sentenced to three years in prison on corruption charges and taken into custody for the second time since his ouster. Khan’s defenders dismiss the charges as baseless. The sentence also blocks Khan, Pakistan’s most popular politician, from contesting elections expected in Pakistan later this year.

One month after the meeting with U.S. officials documented in the leaked Pakistani government document, a no-confidence vote was held in Parliament, leading to Khan’s removal from power. The vote is believed to have been organized with the backing of Pakistan’s powerful military. Since that time, Khan and his supporters have been engaged in a struggle with the military and its civilian allies, whom Khan claims engineered his removal from power at the request of the U.S.

The text of the Pakistani cable, produced from the meeting by the ambassador and transmitted to Pakistan, has not previously been published. The cable, known internally as a “cypher,” reveals both the carrots and the sticks that the State Department deployed in its push against Khan, promising warmer relations if Khan was removed, and isolation if he was not.

The document, labeled “Secret,” includes an account of the meeting between State Department officials, including Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs Donald Lu, and Asad Majeed Khan, who at the time was Pakistan’s ambassador to the U.S.

The document was provided to The Intercept by an anonymous source in the Pakistani military who said that they had no ties to Imran Khan or Khan’s party. The Intercept is publishing the body of the cable below, correcting minor typos in the text because such details can be used to watermark documents and track their dissemination.

The contents of the document obtained by The Intercept are consistent with reporting in the Pakistani newspaper Dawn and elsewhere describing the circumstances of the meeting and details in the cable itself, including in the classification markings omitted from The Intercept’s presentation. The dynamics of the relationship between Pakistan and the U.S. described in the cable were subsequently borne out by events. In the cable, the U.S. objects to Khan’s foreign policy on the Ukraine war. Those positions were quickly reversed after his removal, which was followed, as promised in the meeting, by a warming between the U.S. and Pakistan.

The diplomatic meeting came two weeks after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which launched as Khan was en route to Moscow, a visit that infuriated Washington.

On March 2, just days before the meeting, Lu had been questioned at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing over the neutrality of India, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan in the Ukraine conflict. In response to a question from Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., about a recent decision by Pakistan to abstain from a United Nations resolution condemning Russia’s role in the conflict, Lu said, “Prime Minister Khan has recently visited Moscow, and so I think we are trying to figure out how to engage specifically with the Prime Minister following that decision.” Van Hollen appeared to be indignant that officials from the State Department were not in communication with Khan about the issue.

The day before the meeting, Khan addressed a rally and responded directly to European calls that Pakistan rally behind Ukraine. “Are we your slaves?” Khan thundered to the crowd. “What do you think of us? That we are your slaves and that we will do whatever you ask of us?” he asked. “We are friends of Russia, and we are also friends of the United States. We are friends of China and Europe. We are not part of any alliance.”

In the meeting, according to the document, Lu spoke in forthright terms about Washington’s displeasure with Pakistan’s stance in the conflict. The document quotes Lu saying that “people here and in Europe are quite concerned about why Pakistan is taking such an aggressively neutral position (on Ukraine), if such a position is even possible. It does not seem such a neutral stand to us.” Lu added that he had held internal discussions with the U.S. National Security Council and that “it seems quite clear that this is the Prime Minister’s policy.”

Lu then bluntly raises the issue of a no-confidence vote: “I think if the no-confidence vote against the Prime Minister succeeds, all will be forgiven in Washington because the Russia visit is being looked at as a decision by the Prime Minister,” Lu said, according to the document. “Otherwise,” he continued, “I think it will be tough going ahead.”

Lu warned that if the situation wasn’t resolved, Pakistan would be marginalized by its Western allies. “I cannot tell how this will be seen by Europe but I suspect their reaction will be similar,” Lu said, adding that Khan could face “isolation” by Europe and the U.S. should he remain in office.

Asked about quotes from Lu in the Pakistani cable, State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said, “Nothing in these purported comments shows the United States taking a position on who the leader of Pakistan should be.” Miller said he would not comment on private diplomatic discussions.

The Pakistani ambassador responded by expressing frustration with the lack of engagement from U.S. leadership: “This reluctance had created a perception in Pakistan that we were being ignored or even taken for granted. There was also a feeling that while the U.S. expected Pakistan’s support on all issues that were important to the U.S., it did not reciprocate.”

The discussion concluded, according to the document, with the Pakistani ambassador expressing his hope that the issue of the Russia-Ukraine war would not “impact our bilateral ties.” Lu told him that the damage was real but not fatal, and with Khan gone, the relationship could go back to normal. “I would argue that it has already created a dent in the relationship from our perspective,” Lu said, again raising the “political situation” in Pakistan. “Let us wait for a few days to see whether the political situation changes, which would mean that we would not have a big disagreement about this issue and the dent would go away very quickly. Otherwise, we will have to confront this issue head on and decide how to manage it.”

The day after the meeting, on March 8, Khan’s opponents in Parliament moved forward with a key procedural step toward the no-confidence vote.

“Khan’s fate wasn’t sealed at the time that this meeting took place, but it was tenuous,” said Arif Rafiq, a non-resident scholar at the Middle East Institute and specialist on Pakistan. “What you have here is the Biden administration sending a message to the people that they saw as Pakistan’s real rulers, signaling to them that things will better if he is removed from power.”

The Intercept has made extensive efforts to authenticate the document. Given the security climate in Pakistan, independent confirmation from sources in the Pakistani government was not possible. The Pakistan Embassy in Washington, D.C., did not respond to a request for comment.

Miller, the State Department spokesperson, said, “We had expressed concern about the visit of then-PM Khan to Moscow on the day of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and have communicated that opposition both publicly and privately.” He added that “allegations that the United States interfered in internal decisions about the leadership of Pakistan are false. They have always been false, and they continue to be.”

American Denials

The State Department has previously and on repeated occasions denied that Lu urged the Pakistani government to oust the prime minister. On April 8, 2022, after Khan alleged there was a cable proving his claim of U.S. interference, State Department spokesperson Jalina Porter was asked about its veracity. “Let me just say very bluntly there is absolutely no truth to these allegations,” Porter said.

In early June 2023, Khan sat for an interview with The Intercept and again repeated the allegation. The State Department at the time referred to previous denials in response to a request for comment.

Khan has not backed off, and the State Department again denied the charge throughout June and July, at least three times in press conferences and again in a speech by a deputy assistant secretary of state for Pakistan, who referred to the claims as “propaganda, misinformation, and disinformation.” On the latest occasion, Miller, the State Department spokesperson, ridiculed the question. “I feel like I need to bring just a sign that I can hold up in response to this question and say that that allegation is not true,” Miller said, laughing and drawing cackles from the press. “I don’t know how many times I can say it. … The United States does not have a position on one political candidate or party versus another in Pakistan or any other country.”

While the drama over the cable has played out in public and in the press, the Pakistani military has launched an unprecedented assault on Pakistani civil society to silence whatever dissent and free expression had previously existed in the country.

In recent months, the military-led government cracked down not just on dissidents but also on suspected leakers inside its own institutions, passing a law last week that authorizes warrantless searches and lengthy jail terms for whistleblowers. Shaken by the public display of support for Khan — expressed in a series of mass protests and riots this May — the military has also enshrined authoritarian powers for itself that drastically reduce civil liberties, criminalize criticism of the military, expand the institution’s already expansive role in the country’s economy, and give military leaders a permanent veto over political and civil affairs.

These sweeping attacks on democracy passed largely unremarked upon by U.S. officials. In late July, the head of U.S. Central Command, Gen. Michael Kurilla, visited Pakistan, then issued a statement saying his visit had been focused on “strengthening the military-to-military relations,” while making no mention of the political situation in the country. This summer, Rep. Greg Casar, D-Texas, attempted to add a measure to the National Defense Authorization Act directing the State Department to examine democratic backsliding in Pakistan, but it was denied a vote on the House floor.

In a press briefing on Monday, in response to a question about whether Khan received a fair trial, Miller, the State Department spokesperson, said, “We believe that is an internal matter for Pakistan.”

Political Chaos

Khan’s removal from power after falling out with the Pakistani military, the same institution believed to have engineered his political rise, has thrown the nation of 230 million into political and economic turmoil. Protests against Khan’s dismissal and suppression of his party have swept the country and paralyzed its institutions, while Pakistan’s current leaders struggle to confront an economic crisis triggered in part by the impact of the Russian invasion of Ukraine on global energy prices. The present chaos has resulted in staggering rates of inflation and capital flight from the country.

In addition to the worsening situation for ordinary citizens, a regime of extreme censorship has also been put in place at the direction of the Pakistani military, with news outlets effectively barred from even mentioning Khan’s name, as The Intercept previously reported. Thousands of members of civil society, mostly supporters of Khan, have been detained by the military, a crackdown that intensified after Khan was arrested earlier this year and held in custody for four days, sparking nationwide protests. Credible reports have emerged of torture by security forces, with reports of several deaths in custody.

The crackdown on Pakistan’s once-rambunctious press has taken a particularly dark turn. Arshad Sharif, a prominent Pakistani journalist who fled the country, was shot to death in Nairobi last October under circumstances that remain disputed. Another well-known journalist, Imran Riaz Khan, was detained by security forces at an airport this May and has not been seen since. Both had been reporting on the secret cable, which has taken on nearly mythical status in Pakistan, and had been among a handful of journalists briefed on its contents before Khan’s ouster. These attacks on the press have created a climate of fear that has made reporting on the document by reporters and institutions inside Pakistan effectively impossible.

Last November, Khan himself was subject to an attempted assassination when he was shot at a political rally, in an attack that wounded him and killed one of his supporters. His imprisonment has been widely viewed within Pakistan, including among many critics of his government, as an attempt by the military to stop his party from contesting upcoming elections. Polls show that were he allowed to participate in the vote, Khan would likely win.

“Khan was convicted on flimsy charges following a trial where his defense was not even allowed to produce witnesses. He had previously survived an assassination attempt, had a journalist aligned with him murdered, and has seen thousands of his supporters imprisoned. While the Biden administration has said that human rights will be at the forefront of their foreign policy, they are now looking away as Pakistan moves toward becoming a full-fledged military dictatorship,” said Rafiq, the Middle East Institute scholar. “This is ultimately about the Pakistani military using outside forces as a means to preserve their hegemony over the country. Every time there is a grand geopolitical rivalry, whether it is the Cold War, or the war on terror, they know how to manipulate the U.S. in their favor.”

Khan’s repeated references to the cable itself have contributed to his legal troubles, with prosecutors launching a separate investigation into whether he violated state secrets laws by discussing it.

Democracy and the Military

For years, the U.S. government’s patronage relationship with the Pakistani military, which has long acted as the real powerbroker in the country’s politics, has been seen by many Pakistanis as an impenetrable obstacle to the country’s ability to grow its economy, combat endemic corruption, and pursue a constructive foreign policy. The sense that Pakistan has lacked meaningful independence because of this relationship — which, despite trappings of democracy, has made the military an untouchable force in domestic politics — makes the charge of U.S. involvement in the removal of a popular prime minister even more incendiary.

The Intercept’s source, who had access to the document as a member of the military, spoke of their growing disillusionment with the country’s military leadership, the impact on the military’s morale following its involvement in the political fight against Khan, the exploitation of the memory of dead service members for political purposes in recent military propaganda, and widespread public disenchantment with the armed forces amid the crackdown. They believe the military is pushing Pakistan toward a crisis similar to the one in 1971 that led to the secession of Bangladesh.

The source added that they hoped the leaked document would finally confirm what ordinary people, as well as the rank and file of the armed forces, had long suspected about the Pakistani military and force a reckoning within the institution.

This June, amid the crackdown by the military on Khan’s political party, Khan’s former top bureaucrat, Principal Secretary Azam Khan, was arrested and detained for a month. While in detention, Azam Khan reportedly issued a statement recorded in front of a member of the judiciary saying that the cable was indeed real, but that the former prime minister had exaggerated its contents for political gain.

A month after the meeting described in the cable, and just days before Khan was removed from office, then-Pakistan army chief Qamar Bajwa publicly broke with Khan’s neutrality and gave a speech calling the Russian invasion a “huge tragedy” and criticizing Russia. The remarks aligned the public picture with Lu’s private observation, recorded in the cable, that Pakistan’s neutrality was the policy of Khan, but not of the military.

Pakistan’s foreign policy has changed significantly since Khan’s removal, with Pakistan tilting more clearly toward the U.S. and European side in the Ukraine conflict. Abandoning its posture of neutrality, Pakistan has now emerged as a supplier of arms to the Ukrainian military; images of Pakistan-produced shells and ammunition regularly turn up on battlefield footage. In an interview earlier this year, a European Union official confirmed Pakistani military backing to Ukraine. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s foreign minister traveled to Pakistan this July in a visit widely presumed to be about military cooperation, but publicly described as focusing on trade, education, and environmental issues.

This realignment toward the U.S. has appeared to provide dividends to the Pakistani military. On August 3, a Pakistani newspaper reported that Parliament had approved the signing of a defense pact with the U.S. covering “joint exercises, operations, training, basing and equipment.” The agreement was intended to replace a previous 15-year deal between the two countries that expired in 2020.

rest here

https://theintercept.com/2023/08/09/...n=theintercept

Just one example of why Imran Khan was removed.

Reply

سيف الله
08-17-2023, 02:00 PM
Salaam

Another update. Just one example of how Imran Khan is being airbrushed from history.

‘The shock of my life’ – Wasim Akram criticises Pakistan Cricket Board for omission of Imran Khan from social media video

Wasim Akram has joined those to criticise the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) for creating and posting a tribute video to several influential figures in Pakistani cricket that included almost no reference to Imran Khan, one of their greatest captains.

Khan, who served as Pakistan’s Prime Minister from 2018 until April 2022, has recently been sentenced to a three-year jail term on corruption charges, though Khan maintains that the charges are politically motivated.

In a video posted on Twitter, the PCB told the history of Pakistani cricket from 1952 through to the present day, including highlighting Pakistan’s World Cup victories in 2010 and 1992. However, Khan, who captained Pakistan in their 1992 World Cup triumph, is shown for less than a second in the video as that section ends.

Thousands of accounts have criticised the apparent snub, with Akram, one of the country’s greatest fast bowlers, among the most high-profile.

“After long flights and hours of transit before reaching Sri Lanka, I got the shock of my life when I watched PCB’s short clip on the history of Pakistan cricket minus the great Imran Khan…” he tweeted. “Political differences apart but Imran Khan is an icon of world cricket and developed Pakistan into a strong unit in his time and gave us a pathway… PCB should delete the video and apologise.”

Khan is recognised as perhaps Pakistan’s greatest ever captain, and one of the finest all-rounders in cricket history. He averaged 38 with the bat and 23 with the ball in 88 Tests, including averaging 52 and 20 respectively as captain.

His leadership at the 1992 World Cup is famed, with Pakistan winning just one of their first five games but all of their next five as the ‘Cornered Tigers’ – a moniker coined by Khan – surged to the title.

https://wisden.com/stories/news-stor...al-media-video







having said that the social media backlash has had an effect

After backlash, Pakistan Cricket Board includes Imran Khan in video, says omitted earlier due to ‘time constraints’

The updated version has added four parts to the video including Khan’s contributions and lifting the coveted trophy as captain in 1992, Misbah-ul-Haq’s Test mace victory, the Women’s teams victory at the Asia Cup and Nida Dar’s achievement of 100 wickets

https://indianexpress.com/article/sp...aints-8896216/

More comment on Imran Khans tenure.

















Towards a darker future?



Reply

سيف الله
09-12-2023, 05:52 PM
Salaam

Interesting take on the situation.



The insistence of many "experts" that the PakMil establishment must concede this below mentioned trope, as if CT/COIN success against TTP/ISKP in 2023 is impossible without this concession, is ideological nonsense, & misreads what PakMil wanted in Afghanistan all along

PakMil never wanted US to abruptly exit Afghanistan like it did in Aug 2021, neither did they want Afghan Taliban to gain exclusive power on the Afghan state. But that is what happened, and PakMil's leverage on Afg Taliban was somewhat reduced.

PakMil particularly hoped US drones would keep firing at TTP/ISKP as frequently as before, but Imran Khan(IK) wouldn't accept basing of US drones on Pakistani soil(which is necessary for a sustained drone campaign like the 2001-2021 one). So IK had to go.

Now PakMil is trying to convince CENTCOM to return to the region, bankroll their Deep State as before, and be the air force for their campaign against TTP/ISKP etc. Ever since the 1980s(with a short hiatus in the 90s),

PakMil has become fundamentally dependent on continuous unaudited flows of US money. They can't live without it. They can't sustain their chokehold on Pakistan's civilian political class without it.

The recent CENTCOM visit to PakMil assured the latter of support in CT operations in the two provinces bordering Afghanistan, as well as against militant bases in Afghanistan. US will be involved, directly and indirectly twitter.com/Natsecjeff/sta…

The US CENTCOM will return to the region, but it won't happen unless there is a very public security failure in Pakistan, maybe collapse of a major population center to militants, like Swat district in 2009? The Chitral raids by TTP might be a precursor to that.
With friends like these.

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سيف الله
01-30-2024, 09:41 PM
Salaam

Another update. Imran Khan has been jailed.

Blurb

Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan has been sentenced to another 10 years in jail after he was accused of exposing state secrets.

Journalists and some of Mr Khan's lawyers were denied access to the court - held inside the prison where he's been serving a three year sentence on corruption charges.

Mr Khan, who's denied all the allegations against him, has been barred from standing in next week's general elections



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SoldierAmatUllah
02-21-2024, 07:11 AM
______ImranKhan is Leader________

French ambassador was not expelled when French ppl wronged our Prophet Mohammed PBUH.
Asiya massi was given to kuffar who had disrespected the Prophet PBUH
Chhota sa tabqa ( see Shujauddin Shaykh vdo on youtube)
Theft of watch of sign of Islam
Many frauds caught & told by his ex close guys.
Nikah before iddah
Making temples of non Muslims (without knowledge )
Enjoying fanboyism
Same narrative ,mun mia mithu
Free mixing
Dances/songs in Ramadan
Not Shariah priority
Shirkia slogans to unite muslims shia sunni
Lying media ( Shujauddin Shaykh)
Pet dogs
Wife into peers& mazaars
Pathetic humiliating media & it's lies
No Shariah plans
Democracy shirk system
Continues to talk his achievements -
Illegitimate child ( will provide proofs from his interview on dunya news)
Haram relationships caught in leaks
The members can't stand tortures & left - couldnt sacrifice
Now kuffar praising IK - shows his real self

This is our LEADER



The only good ,he exposed Taghout of todays times & awakened ppl otherwise TRASH as he seems wanting praise.So many lies by his media humiliating content. Good revolutionaries are RESPONSIBLE & RESPECTFUL.

Don't know what to say to this qom that badly wants unban on hindu festival holi & schools celebrate halloween,with ppl enjoying christmas in Pakistan & giving words of condemnation to US while fulltime striving to get greencard.


These ones....

https://lnkd.in/daR57Rvr


https://lnkd.in/dwpUnsFx

https://lnkd.in/dD5Y7UCr

https://lnkd.in/d4S2khgx

https://lnkd.in/d2nFWBCb

DM me for detail discussion if you feel like.

P.S:Out NOT Qaaid , just a layman who got popular with self centredness.

#imrankhanpti #ptiofficial #muslims #islam #fitan #nawazshareef & #shabash brothers.

All khubasas.

Our leader will be only Imam Mahdi InshaAllah & his coming signs nearby! InshaAllah

Regards,
Eusra Khan (Well-Being Consultant & CEO at my rare start-up wellbeing Consultancy EarlyEar)
Reply

سيف الله
03-14-2024, 09:56 PM
Salaam

All those accusations seems a lot like tabloid slander so I'm not going to comment.

And a lot of his 'liberal' policies were endorsed by the ruling generals. whoever the generals install are likely to continue these 'liberal' policies.

Many can see the flaws of Imran Khan personal and policywise (eg. His response to the Uighur's plight is utterly appalling and shameful) but he represented something different for Pakistan.

A chance to take an independent course.

Blurb

Sami Hamdi, Imran Khan, Pakistan, state secrets, cipher case, Saudi Arabia, corruption, prison sentence, election, conspiracy




And judging by how well Imran Khans party did (they ran as indys) its clear people of Pakistan dont want to live in a tinpot dicatorship.

They want something better.
Reply

سيف الله
04-06-2024, 10:50 PM
Salaam

Another update

Blurb

The case of Aafia Siddiqui remains an open wound for us all. It symbolises the inhumanity and barbarism of US foreign policy. The incarceration of this brilliant academic and mother of three, has become a marker of its excesses, of which there were many. She languishes in prison, serving an 86-year sentence for an offence that looks barely credible, the attempted murder of two US officials in Afghanistan in 2008. Her whereabouts before that date has been hotly contested, but her lawyers and activists have patched together the conspiracy surrounding Dr Aafias ordeal. Sadly the welfare of her youngest son Suleman – who has not been seen since her detention in 2003 remains unknown. Presumed dead.

The last time I spoke with Dr Aafias lawyer Clive Stafford Smith he had returned from her prison in Forth Worth Texas – where she had been reunited with her sister Fozia for the first time in 20 years. If you haven’t watched that programme, I would highly recommend you do to give you the backstory to this horrific case. Clive has just returned from a factfinsding mission to Afghanistan, and he has some considerable updates on Aafias case.

Clive has helped secure the release of 86 prisoners from Guantánamo Bay and still acts for the remaining numbers. Since the early days of the War on Terror, he has worked tirelessly to force the Americans and other Western powers to adhere to the rule of law. He has sought to uncover the secret prisons and ghost prisoners that stain the reputation of powerful states – who presented their wars in benevolent terms.


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