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It’s just a cricket match! Why the violence and court cases?

cricket4all

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It’s been reported by Western Media such as Sky (quite credible) about Kashmiris being charged with terrorism for just celebrating Pakistan’s win against India. Now isn’t that obviously going to far? Where’s the democracy and freedom of speech? Imagine expats in Uk, US or any other western country being beaten or charged with terrorism if they say celebrated an Indian or Pakistani win in sport? It’s crazy! People should be free to support and cheer for who they want.


…..,
Article below source: (Sky News)

T20 Cricket World Cup: Kashmir anti-terror investigation into students celebrating India's loss to Pakistan

Officers in Indian-controlled Kashmir said students and staff at two government-run medical colleges cheered and shouted pro-Pakistan slogans during Sunday's match.

Police in Indian-controlled Kashmir have launched an anti-terror investigation into college students and staff celebrating India's loss to arch-rivals Pakistan in a T20 World Cup cricket game, officials say.

Officers said people at two government-run medical colleges cheered and shouted pro-Pakistan slogans during the match on Sunday.

The T20 World Cup game took place in Dubai
It comes after Pakistan defeated India by 10 wickets for its first-ever victory against the country in a T20 World Cup game in Dubai.

Minutes after Pakistan won the match, hundreds of people in Kashmir danced in the streets, lit firecrackers and chanted "long live Pakistan".

Police called the celebrations "anti-national" activity as tensions continue in the disputed region.

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A police spokesman said authorities on Monday registered preliminary investigations at two police stations in the city of Srinagar under the anti-terror law, the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act.

Police said the suspects were yet to be identified and officers were using videos of the celebrations on social media in an attempt to name them.


The anti-terror law was amended in 2019 to allow the government to designate individuals as terrorists, allowing police to detain people for six months without producing any evidence.

The accused can subsequently be imprisoned for up to seven years but rights activists have called the law draconian.

Meanwhile, over a dozen Kashmiri students were attacked in India's northern Punjab state for celebrating Pakistan's victory, news reports said.

The celebrations also coincided with India's home minister, Amit Shah, visiting the region for the first time since New Delhi in 2019 stripped Kashmir of its semi-autonomy.

Cricket, a legacy of Britain's long colonial role of South Asia, is one of the few things that unites Pakistan and India despite their long history of animosity that has fuelled three wars since the subcontinent's partition in 1947.

Pakistani cricket fans watch the first match between India and Pakistan in Twenty20 World Cup Super 12 stage in Dubai, at a park on a big screen in Karachi, Pakistan October 24, 2021.REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro
Pakistani cricket fans watch the match on a big screen at a park in Karachi, Pakistan
The region of Kashmir is divided between the two nations with anti-Indian sentiment running deep.

Rebels have been fighting for Kashmir's independence or its merger with Pakistan since 1989.

India describes the armed rebellion in the portion of Kashmir it controls as a Pakistan proxy war and state-sponsored terrorism but most Muslim Kashmiris consider it a legitimate freedom struggle.

Tens of thousands of civilians, rebels and government forces have been killed in the conflict.
(Sky News)
 
I know, yet such a big deal made out about Waqar Younis's wrong comments, which he very quickly apologised. Unlike the venemous stuff and war mongering hate stuff the like of Gambhir and Sehwag have said in the past against Pakistani people especially.
 
Regarding students and Kashmiris celebrating a cricket match, why is it Indian media and politicans in particular play the terrorism card for everything? They just use anything that happens with a bog standard link to terrorism when its absoloutley not. Soon it will be like the boy crying wolf. Celebrating winning a cricket match is terrorism, how ludicrous and stupid that is. It shows the hate and prejudice against Kashmiris to quash their complete freedom and rights.
 
A lot of Indians don't realise the simple reality that an overwhelming majority of Kashmiri muslims support the Pakistani cricket team and have been doing so for ages.

Politically, the Kashmiri muslims are a divided lot. A significant majority don't feel Indian but don't take up arms, they would rather go along their daily lives. A small minority of youth take up arms against the Indian state to fight their cause through militancy. And then there's a decent section of people who remain ambivalent and don't actually support secession but want their autonomy back (article 35A, sec 370, etc.), and finally there's a tiny minority that feel Indian. Even among the ones who want to secede, the opinion is divided as a section wants an independent Kashmir state like Nepal or Bangladesh while another section wants to join Pakistan. I'm just talking about the Kashmiri muslims from the valley.

There's not a popular support for secession amongst the muslims in Jammu (who are ethnic wise more Punjab related) and the shia muslims in Kargil (who ethnically are related more to the Balti people across the LoC). The Gujjar and Bakarwal tribes are nomadic and a bit lagging in economic development, and in fact, a decent section of them regularly join the Indian army when there are recruitment camps. It's why the insurgency in Kashmir is always hot in the valley and not so much in Jammu while it's practically non existent in Kargil.

Regardless of all this, a good majority of them support Pakistan in cricket because they're culturally similar, Pakistanis being muslims as well. It's a fact our people have to simply accept. Even with a lot of infrastructure and economic development, the insurgency might quieten down a bit (as China has done in Tibet and Xinjiang) but people will still support Pakistan mainly in cricket. If Indians can move to England or South Africa and still support India in cricket after 2-3 generations, I don't see what's the huge problem with Kashmiris supporting the Pakistani cricket team. Not all Kashmiri muslims support secession, but almost all support Pakistan in cricket and that might be due to a variety of reasons ranging from cultural affiliation to something as simple as sports tribalism to even just showing dissent. Speaking even from an Indian nationalist pov, I think Indians should be happy as long as there's peace in the region and less people take up guns. Things like slapping treason charges on people for supporting Pakistan in a sports game is just silly insecurity and pettiness that we should grow out of.
 
A lot of Indians don't realise the simple reality that an overwhelming majority of Kashmiri muslims support the Pakistani cricket team and have been doing so for ages.

Politically, the Kashmiri muslims are a divided lot. A significant majority don't feel Indian but don't take up arms, they would rather go along their daily lives. A small minority of youth take up arms against the Indian state to fight their cause through militancy. And then there's a decent section of people who remain ambivalent and don't actually support secession but want their autonomy back (article 35A, sec 370, etc.), and finally there's a tiny minority that feel Indian. Even among the ones who want to secede, the opinion is divided as a section wants an independent Kashmir state like Nepal or Bangladesh while another section wants to join Pakistan. I'm just talking about the Kashmiri muslims from the valley.

There's not a popular support for secession amongst the muslims in Jammu (who are ethnic wise more Punjab related) and the shia muslims in Kargil (who ethnically are related more to the Balti people across the LoC). The Gujjar and Bakarwal tribes are nomadic and a bit lagging in economic development, and in fact, a decent section of them regularly join the Indian army when there are recruitment camps. It's why the insurgency in Kashmir is always hot in the valley and not so much in Jammu while it's practically non existent in Kargil.

Regardless of all this, a good majority of them support Pakistan in cricket because they're culturally similar, Pakistanis being muslims as well. It's a fact our people have to simply accept. Even with a lot of infrastructure and economic development, the insurgency might quieten down a bit (as China has done in Tibet and Xinjiang) but people will still support Pakistan mainly in cricket. If Indians can move to England or South Africa and still support India in cricket after 2-3 generations, I don't see what's the huge problem with Kashmiris supporting the Pakistani cricket team. Not all Kashmiri muslims support secession, but almost all support Pakistan in cricket and that might be due to a variety of reasons ranging from cultural affiliation to something as simple as sports tribalism to even just showing dissent. Speaking even from an Indian nationalist pov, I think Indians should be happy as long as there's peace in the region and less people take up guns. Things like slapping treason charges on people for supporting Pakistan in a sports game is just silly insecurity and pettiness that we should grow out of.



You say not all Kashmiris support succession but does the majority support it?
If Kashmiris of all various groups you have describe were allowed to cast a vote to stay with India or Vote for Accession to Pakistan or Independence how would they vote?
 
You say not all Kashmiris support succession but does the majority support it?
If Kashmiris of all various groups you have describe were allowed to cast a vote to stay with India or Vote for Accession to Pakistan or Independence how would they vote?

See I don't live in Kashmir and only a Kashmiri living in Kashmir can give you a perfect answer, but even that I suspect would be not exactly perfect because from what I've observed, the political opinion in J&K is very divided with each group having its own aspirations and even within a single group, you have divided opinions, and it's probably one of the reasons why the insurgency in Kashmir isn't as strong as in say Palestine or other places because you have all these groups pulling in each direction while in Palestine, everyone wants the same objective.

I cannot give you the exact percentages of people I've observed and that would not be correct either, given I don't live in Kashmir. I'm just basing these on the type of Kashmiris I come across online and the many sources I've read up on the issue. These are just the broad groups of people I've come across.

I'm not sure you're asking about just the Kashmiris specifically or all muslims in J&K. Because in the entire state of J&K, including the one that's administered by Pakistan, only those who live/have their origin in the valley of Kashmir are ethnic Kashmiris by definition - the Kashmiri muslims and the Kashmiri Pandits/Sikhs. The muslims and hindus of Jammu are related to Punjabis while the shia muslims of Kargil are not ethnic Kashmiris, they are related to Balti culture in GB. And the appetite for secession in Jammu is very little while it's non existent in the Kargil region of Ladakh union territory.

Talking purely about the Kashmiri muslims of the valley - I have observed two broad types of people.

1. The ones who support secession from India and they are again of two types - one who support an independent Kashmir state like Nepal or Bhutan or Bangladesh, and the other who are pro union with Pakistan and these are truly Pakistani in heart and soul. The latter is generally Jamaat supporters which was formerly headed by Syed Ali Geelani who passed away recently and their ideology is centred around islamic/religious nationalism and militancy derives its support generally from this section (the Hizbul Mujahideen is the group's militant wing).

Whereas the former is more of supporters of JKLF founded by pro independence activist Maqbool Bhat and its associated parties and their ideology is one of Kashmiri nationalism, which is not popular with the Pakistani state either - Maqbool Bhat and his partners were jailed in Pakistan for instigating Kashmiri nationalism, the current head of an associated party was jailed for 7 years in a Pakistani jail for the same reason.

2. Then there is the other group that just wants autonomy restored, demilitarisation and peace to happen in Kashmir. It's somewhat similar to the stance of Hong Kong nationalists, who won't call themselves Chinese but rather as 'Hong Kongers', but even they don't necessarily support secession from China, they just want autonomy in Hong Kong and support the one country, two system rule. This view is more common across youngsters who study in universities in Kashmir and other parts of India. They would still support Pakistan in cricket and things like that, but you have to understand accession to Pakistan is a different issue. You have to consider the changes that would happen with accession to Pakistan which would affect the day to day lives of the Kashmiri people - the currency would immediately become weaker and there's the situation of inflation in Pakistan due to the poor state of its economy. If Pakistan had a better and stronger economy than India, it would have lured more of this section to the pro Pakistani stance but the Pakistani economy has been struggling for years now and one also has to consider the realities of every day life.

Both Indians and Pakistanis tend to have simplistic black and white notions of understanding of Kashmir - like they're either pro Pakistani or pro Indian when the situation is a lot more complex and there are a lot of factors you have to take into account.

If you ask my overall opinion on how the result of a hypothetical plebiscite would be, Jammu and Leh would be overwhelmingly pro India, Kargil is not as cut out but a majority would still vote to remain with India, there's the shia-sunni factor that I haven't gone deep into. For example, more shias have died in terrorist attacks in GB at the hands of Sunni groups in the past than ever in Kargil which is a largely peaceful region, it's why there is hardly any appetite for militancy in Kargil. There is also a sentiment amongst Kargil people that the Ladakh province (of which Kargil is a part of) always tends to get forgotten and Kashmir valley historically got the majority of funds and attention, before the bifurcation of the state into Kashmir (containing Kashmir valley and Jammu) and Ladakh (Kargil and Leh) union territories.

As for the Kashmir valley, I'm not really sure who would be the majority because there is the pro independence faction, pro Pakistan faction and then some might even vote to remain with India provided autonomy is provided. And the support for these factions might change with time if the state of the economy of Pakistan improves or remains stagnant or further deteriorates. Because even for those from Pakistan living outside, even if their heart is with Pakistan, they wouldn't want to return to live in Pakistan if the economy is struggling or the security situation is poor. While if the economy of Pakistan becomes strong and burgeoning, they wouldn't mind returning to Pakistan. It's the same case with Kashmiris to a lesser extent. It's the same case with the Indian economy. If it suddenly tanks and crashes, the unrest will increase and calls for secession will gain more and more support. However if the Indian economy grows big and strong, you might have a situation like Tibet where insurgency might quieten and even if they at heart don't feel Indian enough and identify more as Kashmiris, more people would start to feel it isn't worth it to take up arms against the state because of the economic advantages it confers being the part of a huge and fast developing economy and the other alternatives being worse. The dissent will of course never really totally die down, but it could become more manageable like say Catalonia for Spain or Hong Kong for China in the future if the Indian economy follows the path that China took, even if not to the same scale.

That is how China basically killed insurgency in Tibet and to a lesser extent in Xinjiang, where the Tibetans in India are very anti China and pro independence, while in China even under the authoritarian govt, attacks in Xinjiang and self immolations in Tibet used to happen in the 90s and 2000s but have now largely stopped. Doesn't mean the Tibetans in China truly feel Chinese, but just that they wouldn't mind being the part of China given the prosperity they enjoy and the development the region has undergone in comparison to the Tibetans living in India in Dharmasala, Leh, Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh. The Kashmir situation also is, I suspect, tied to the future of the economies of two countries. This is just my understanding and personal opinion of the situation. Sorry for the long post.
 
I would take a more unfavourable stance in this thread, even though I support Kashmir independence.

Those who are supporting Pakistan in Kashmir is alright, but why do the students and the other Kashmiris who are living or went to other states of India show their open support for Pakistan, when they know that they may be thrashed for just supporting.

This is a bit insensitive on their part.
 
I would take a more unfavourable stance in this thread, even though I support Kashmir independence.

Those who are supporting Pakistan in Kashmir is alright, but why do the students and the other Kashmiris who are living or went to other states of India show their open support for Pakistan, when they know that they may be thrashed for just supporting.

This is a bit insensitive on their part.

Bharat claims to be a democracy, a secular one to boot, and these students are just expressing their right to an opinion that isn't even harmful or seditious in nature. What's wrong with that?
 
Bharat claims to be a democracy, a secular one to boot, and these students are just expressing their right to an opinion that isn't even harmful or seditious in nature. What's wrong with that?

Nothing's wrong. But why put yourself in such dangerous situation in a hostile place. Not to mention celebrating openly against the very country to you are residing now is a bit insensitive as well.
 
Bharat claims to be a democracy, a secular one to boot, and these students are just expressing their right to an opinion that isn't even harmful or seditious in nature. What's wrong with that?

I'm someone who is vehemently against the government arresting people who celebrated Pakistan's victory, but your point is naive.

The terms secular, democracy are all things that have to do with the government. People don't have these laws and you know how people are emotionally charged after a cricket match, particularly involving India and Pakistan. Forget about India and Pakistan, I've seen people getting into fistfights over a game between CSK and MI in my hostel, that's how emotionally charged young students are in college hostels. In such a case, I don't think celebrating in the face of Indian fans while studying in various Indian cities is the most prudent thing to do. If I was studying in Kashmir, I wouldn't go around about Jai Hind or Hindustan Zindabad after an Indian victory against Pakistan either, when I know all the people there are hardcore Pakistan fans.
 
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No it is not just a Cricket match to many in both countries. If you saw the Indian TV channels prior to the match they advertised it as nothing short of a war. Firstly they got spanked then on top seeing Kashmiris celebrate Pak's win only infuriated them further. It is and was too much fo many Indian people to handle:stokes
 
See I don't live in Kashmir and only a Kashmiri living in Kashmir can give you a perfect answer, but even that I suspect would be not exactly perfect because from what I've observed, the political opinion in J&K is very divided with each group having its own aspirations and even within a single group, you have divided opinions, and it's probably one of the reasons why the insurgency in Kashmir isn't as strong as in say Palestine or other places because you have all these groups pulling in each direction while in Palestine, everyone wants the same objective.

I cannot give you the exact percentages of people I've observed and that would not be correct either, given I don't live in Kashmir. I'm just basing these on the type of Kashmiris I come across online and the many sources I've read up on the issue. These are just the broad groups of people I've come across.

I'm not sure you're asking about just the Kashmiris specifically or all muslims in J&K. Because in the entire state of J&K, including the one that's administered by Pakistan, only those who live/have their origin in the valley of Kashmir are ethnic Kashmiris by definition - the Kashmiri muslims and the Kashmiri Pandits/Sikhs. The muslims and hindus of Jammu are related to Punjabis while the shia muslims of Kargil are not ethnic Kashmiris, they are related to Balti culture in GB. And the appetite for secession in Jammu is very little while it's non existent in the Kargil region of Ladakh union territory.

Talking purely about the Kashmiri muslims of the valley - I have observed two broad types of people.

1. The ones who support secession from India and they are again of two types - one who support an independent Kashmir state like Nepal or Bhutan or Bangladesh, and the other who are pro union with Pakistan and these are truly Pakistani in heart and soul. The latter is generally Jamaat supporters which was formerly headed by Syed Ali Geelani who passed away recently and their ideology is centred around islamic/religious nationalism and militancy derives its support generally from this section (the Hizbul Mujahideen is the group's militant wing).

Whereas the former is more of supporters of JKLF founded by pro independence activist Maqbool Bhat and its associated parties and their ideology is one of Kashmiri nationalism, which is not popular with the Pakistani state either - Maqbool Bhat and his partners were jailed in Pakistan for instigating Kashmiri nationalism, the current head of an associated party was jailed for 7 years in a Pakistani jail for the same reason.

2. Then there is the other group that just wants autonomy restored, demilitarisation and peace to happen in Kashmir. It's somewhat similar to the stance of Hong Kong nationalists, who won't call themselves Chinese but rather as 'Hong Kongers', but even they don't necessarily support secession from China, they just want autonomy in Hong Kong and support the one country, two system rule. This view is more common across youngsters who study in universities in Kashmir and other parts of India. They would still support Pakistan in cricket and things like that, but you have to understand accession to Pakistan is a different issue. You have to consider the changes that would happen with accession to Pakistan which would affect the day to day lives of the Kashmiri people - the currency would immediately become weaker and there's the situation of inflation in Pakistan due to the poor state of its economy. If Pakistan had a better and stronger economy than India, it would have lured more of this section to the pro Pakistani stance but the Pakistani economy has been struggling for years now and one also has to consider the realities of every day life.

Both Indians and Pakistanis tend to have simplistic black and white notions of understanding of Kashmir - like they're either pro Pakistani or pro Indian when the situation is a lot more complex and there are a lot of factors you have to take into account.

If you ask my overall opinion on how the result of a hypothetical plebiscite would be, Jammu and Leh would be overwhelmingly pro India, Kargil is not as cut out but a majority would still vote to remain with India, there's the shia-sunni factor that I haven't gone deep into. For example, more shias have died in terrorist attacks in GB at the hands of Sunni groups in the past than ever in Kargil which is a largely peaceful region, it's why there is hardly any appetite for militancy in Kargil. There is also a sentiment amongst Kargil people that the Ladakh province (of which Kargil is a part of) always tends to get forgotten and Kashmir valley historically got the majority of funds and attention, before the bifurcation of the state into Kashmir (containing Kashmir valley and Jammu) and Ladakh (Kargil and Leh) union territories.

As for the Kashmir valley, I'm not really sure who would be the majority because there is the pro independence faction, pro Pakistan faction and then some might even vote to remain with India provided autonomy is provided. And the support for these factions might change with time if the state of the economy of Pakistan improves or remains stagnant or further deteriorates. Because even for those from Pakistan living outside, even if their heart is with Pakistan, they wouldn't want to return to live in Pakistan if the economy is struggling or the security situation is poor. While if the economy of Pakistan becomes strong and burgeoning, they wouldn't mind returning to Pakistan. It's the same case with Kashmiris to a lesser extent. It's the same case with the Indian economy. If it suddenly tanks and crashes, the unrest will increase and calls for secession will gain more and more support. However if the Indian economy grows big and strong, you might have a situation like Tibet where insurgency might quieten and even if they at heart don't feel Indian enough and identify more as Kashmiris, more people would start to feel it isn't worth it to take up arms against the state because of the economic advantages it confers being the part of a huge and fast developing economy and the other alternatives being worse. The dissent will of course never really totally die down, but it could become more manageable like say Catalonia for Spain or Hong Kong for China in the future if the Indian economy follows the path that China took, even if not to the same scale.

That is how China basically killed insurgency in Tibet and to a lesser extent in Xinjiang, where the Tibetans in India are very anti China and pro independence, while in China even under the authoritarian govt, attacks in Xinjiang and self immolations in Tibet used to happen in the 90s and 2000s but have now largely stopped. Doesn't mean the Tibetans in China truly feel Chinese, but just that they wouldn't mind being the part of China given the prosperity they enjoy and the development the region has undergone in comparison to the Tibetans living in India in Dharmasala, Leh, Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh. The Kashmir situation also is, I suspect, tied to the future of the economies of two countries. This is just my understanding and personal opinion of the situation. Sorry for the long post.

So you your initial post was all about having intimate knowledge about composition of the Valley, of Shias of Kargil, about Jammu and now you say you don't live so can't answer. You sure can write long treatises on the subject and not answer directly. Must be a consultant IRL :)

70000 dead, thousands incarcerated , thousands raped. Over 700000 Indian occupation forces in the region. What does that tell you.
 
No it is not just a Cricket match to many in both countries. If you saw the Indian TV channels prior to the match they advertised it as nothing short of a war. Firstly they got spanked then on top seeing Kashmiris celebrate Pak's win only infuriated them further. It is and was too much fo many Indian people to handle:stokes
Your right it’s not just a cricket match in many sense but certainly does not justify beatings or Kashmiris being charged for terrorism for celebrating pak win. In that context only it’s just a cricket match and does not justify alll that. I am sure you agree with that.
 
So you your initial post was all about having intimate knowledge about composition of the Valley, of Shias of Kargil, about Jammu and now you say you don't live so can't answer. You sure can write long treatises on the subject and not answer directly. Must be a consultant IRL :)

70000 dead, thousands incarcerated , thousands raped. Over 700000 Indian occupation forces in the region. What does that tell you.

You're acting silly now, I thought we were having a reasonable and genuine conversation. If I had known you were going to go all jingoistic at me, I wouldn't have wasted my time typing a long a** post lol. One can have a decent knowledge about the different ethnic and sub ethnic groups of the state of J&K but your follow up question was what will be the result of the plebiscite. Of course I cannot give the perfect answer because if a plebiscite ever happens, it's not going to be about what Indians like me or Pakistanis like you think or want, it will be about what Kashmiris think and want. And that's something only the Kashmiris can give a perfect answer, not me or you.
 
This will always be the difference between North and South, I personally know Tamizh Muslims that support PCT and yes it’s disappointing but it’s their right ..of course South has its own issues but North Indians and Pakistanis have similar mindset which is based on intolerance w.r.t religion. Probably take another 50 years.

When PCT was good in 90s areas in Royapettah used to openly support PCT ofcourse their children and new ones don’t as much.
 
Your right it’s not just a cricket match in many sense but certainly does not justify beatings or Kashmiris being charged for terrorism for celebrating pak win. In that context only it’s just a cricket match and does not justify alll that. I am sure you agree with that.

They would beat up Kashmiris even if India had won the match. That is the thing here that no matter what these RSS thugs just need any reason to fight at all. Had India won they would beat up Indian Muslim's for defeating a country where most are their coreligionists.

We also have many fools like Sheikh Rashid telling the world it was Muslim's defeating Hindu's!!
 
(CNN)Indian police have arrested three Kashmiri Muslims for allegedly celebrating Pakistan's win over India in the T20 World Cup on Sunday.

Police superintendent Vikash Kumar in Agra -- a city in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh -- told reporters on Tuesday evening that a complaint was filed at the Jagdishpura police station after "anti-national" messages were sent by students at Raja Balwant Singh (RBS) engineering college following the match between the two cricketing rivals.

On Wednesday, Uttar Pradesh Police tweeted that five people had been arrested in incidents throughout the state after "anti-national elements used disrespectful words against the Indian cricket team and made anti-India comments which disrupted peace."

Police told CNN on Thursday that three students from RBS engineering college had been arrested on Wednesday "for committing an offense with intent to cause, or which is likely to cause, fear or alarm to the public, or to any section of the public whereby any person may be induced to commit an offense against the State or against the public tranquility."

The three were also arrested for committing an offense of cyber terrorism under India's information technology act, while the charge of sedition was added before they appeared in court on Thursday, Saurabh Singh, a deputy superintendent of police in Agra, said.

The sedition law is a colonial era law which prohibits "words either spoken or written, or by signs or visible representation" that attempts to cause "hatred or contempt, or excites or attempts to excite disaffection," toward the government.

Nasir Khuehami, national spokesperson for the Jammu and Kashmir Students Association, told CNN on Thursday evening that the three students who were arrested are Muslim students from Indian-administered Kashmir.

"This is absolutely targeting Kashmiri Muslims, I spoke to other local students today, the non-Kashmiri students at the college, they all said that yes, they cheered (in favor of Pakistan) and posted something on social media which could have hurt sentiments but what the complaint claims is that they shouted anti-India slogans and pro-partisan slogans," Khuehami told CNN.

"That is not true, that is absolutely baseless, I've been told this by local students, so deliberately they are being used as scapegoats ahead of Uttar Pradesh elections."

Uttar Pradesh, the largest state in India, is scheduled to hold legislative elections in the first quarter of 2022.

"Minutes ago, they were roughed up by right-wing activists in the presence of police after they were produced in court," Khuehami said.
"Cricket unnecessarily has been mixed with politics and nationalism which is wrong ... it is an individual's right to cheer or support any team he or she likes the most," Nasir Khuehami, national spokesman for the Jammu and Kashmir Students Association told CNN.

"Cricket unnecessarily has been mixed with politics and nationalism which is wrong ... it is an individual's right to cheer or support any team he or she likes the most," Nasir Khuehami, national spokesman for the Jammu and Kashmir Students Association told CNN.
Kashmir is a territory that is administered in part by India and in part by Pakistan.

It has been a point of conflict between the two neighboring countries ever since the time of independence, and in 2019, the Indian central government took greater control over the region it controls, following which various freedoms were suspended, including a five-month-long internet shutdown. Recently, conflict in the heavily militarized region has been on the rise.

"We don't feel there is anything wrong in cheering on a cricketer or a sportsperson, but slapping them with an FIR (First Information Report), with sedition, we feel it is a serious punishment and harsh punishment and we should not mix cricket with politics," Khuehami continued.

"Cricket unnecessarily has been mixed with politics and nationalism which is wrong, I feel. There is nothing wrong with cheering or yelling for some team, it is an individual's right to cheer or support any team he or she likes the most, and this is an arbitrary action by the college authorities and Uttar Pradesh Government," Khuehami said, adding that the three students had also been suspended by the college administration at RBS engineering college.

The Jammu and Kashmir Students Association has written to the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh to revoke the FIR against the three Kashmiri students.

Following India's heavy defeat to Pakistan -- which Pakistan won by 10 wickets -- Indian bowler Mohammad Shami faced online abuse being the only Muslim player on the Indian team. Several Indian cricketers came out in Shami's support.

India cricket legend Sachin Tendulkar said: "When we support Team India, we support every person who represents Team India. (Shami) is a committed, world-class bowler. He had an off day like any other sportsperson can have. I stand behind Shami & Team India."

"Mohammad Shami being made a target of yesterday's cricket match loss shows how radicalization and hate against Muslims has risen significantly. A team has 11 players, among them one is Muslim, so now he is being targeted," Asaduddin Owaisi, president of political party All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen told reporters on Monday.

CNN
 
The UT administration on Thursday terminated the services of an OT (Operation Theatre) technician Safiya Majeed for allegedly putting up her WhatsApp status celebrating Pakistan cricket team’s win against India in the recently held T20 World Cup in Dubai.

Describing her action as “disloyalty towards nation’’, the termination order issued by Dr Brij Mohan, Principal Government Medical College, Rajouri, referred to the receipt of a viral video from different media platforms and also from DySP (HQ) Rajouri in which she seems to have posted her WhatsApp status showing “celebration of defeat of Indian cricket team against Pakistan in T-20 World Cup, 2021’’.

“Whereas no employee of this institution shall be allowed to be disloyal to the nation and whereas, as reported by the Head of Department of Gynae & Obst., she had proceeded on five days leave with effect from October 21 and she failed to join duty after the expiry of leave period,’’ the order pointed out.

Pointing out that Safiya Majeed was engaged as OT Technician in GMC and Associated Hospital, Rajouri, on the basis of academic arrangement under SRO-24 (now S.O 364 dated November 27, 2020), it said that “no prior notice is required to be given to such employee for gross indiscipline in her duties’’. Her “services stand terminated with immediate effect’’, the order read.

In Jammu division’s Samba district, police have already detained eight people for allegedly raising pro-Pak slogans following a T20 World Cup match between India and Pakistan. These apprehensions followed registration of an FIR when a video showing some people celebrating Pak win and raising objectionable slogans went viral on social media, triggering protests by various social organisations in Samba district.

Videos purportedly showing medical students at female and male hostels in Srinagar raising pro-Pakistan slogans have also surfaced.

https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/jammu/jammu-woman-india-pakistan-match-win-7595660/
 
LUCKNOW, India (Reuters) - People in India’s most populous state who praise arch rival Pakistan’s victory in a recent cricket match could face sedition charges, authorities said on Thursday, a day after arresting three college students over jubilant social media posts.

Similar celebrations have roused the ire of Indian politicians in the past, as the nuclear-armed neighbours are at loggerheads over the Himalayan territory of Kashmir, which both claim in its entirety, although each controls only a part.

Pakistan resoundingly beat India here at the Twenty20 World Cup on Sunday, for its first cricket win against its bigger neighbour in such a match, triggering celebrations at home and in Muslim-majority Kashmir.

"Those celebrating Pakistan's victory will face sedition," the office of Yogi Adityanath, the chief minister of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh, said on Twitter here, with an accompanying screenshot of a news report.

The offence, if proved, carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.

Adityanath’s office had ordered state police to take action depending on the circumstances of each case, said state information official Navneet Sehgal, adding that police would decide on the charges based on their investigations.

Posts on social media hailing Sunday’s victory by Pakistan were made by three Kashmiri students at a college in the state’s city of Agra, according to a police complaint on Tuesday that was reviewed by Reuters.

The three were arrested late on Wednesday, said city police official Saurabh Singh, on charges of promoting enmity between different groups and causing public alarms.

In the restive Kashmir valley, where some resident chafe at Indian control, authorities said police had received complaints over celebrations at two medical colleges after Pakistan’s victory.

Authorities said six people had been detained in adjoining Jammu, where social media posts showed more than two dozen people celebrating after India’s loss.

“The investigation is going on,” said local official Anuradha Gupta.
 
Imagine UK Police arresting people of Indian origin who were born in UK for celebrating India's win against England in a cricket match lol. :inti
 
Bharat claims to be a democracy, a secular one to boot, and these students are just expressing their right to an opinion that isn't even harmful or seditious in nature. What's wrong with that?

Supporting pakistan is not allowed in India. Pakistan supports a separatist terrorist movement in India and we are in a state of constant conflict with pakistan.

And no comparison with what happens in XYZ country doesn't matter because we are not in the copy paste business.
 
No they can't.

Newsflash:

A former Supreme Court judge has said that celebrating a Pakistan cricket victory over India is “definitely not sedition and it’s ridiculous to think it is”.

Justice Deepak Gupta said the tweet from the Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister’s office stating that Kashmiri students in Agra who celebrated Pakistan’s World Cup victory over India would be charged with sedition is “a tweet against the law of the land”. More importantly, he added, the tweet “is not a responsible statement, it is an irresponsible statement”.

In a 18-minute interview to Karan Thapar for The Wire, Justice Gupta went further to say that celebrating a Pakistani victory over India may be offensive or unwise “but it is not a crime, it is not illegal”. As he explained: “A thing may be good or bad but that does not make it a crime or illegal”.

He added: “All legal actions are not necessarily good or moral” and then pointed out, “we are governed by a rule of law not a rule of morals”.

In The Wire interview, Justice Gupta also made clear that none of the other three charges brought against the Kashmiri students in Agra apply. They have also been charged with Section 153A, promoting enmity on grounds of religion, Section 505(1)(b), making statements which may induce others to commit an offence against the state or public tranquillity, and Section 66F of the IT Act which is punishment for cyber-terrorism.

Speaking in detail about the sedition charge, Justice Gupta said if the Chief Minister or his office had gone through the earlier Supreme Court judgements on sedition they would have known that what the Kashmiri students in Agra did is definitely not sedition. Therefore, the tweet from the Chief Minister’s office stating that these students will be charged with sedition is based upon ignorance of the law.

Justice Gupta said: “Sedition has no place in a civilised democracy”. He said his preference – which he also expressed in an interview to The Wire in March 2021 – is for the sedition law to be immediately abolished. However, if that does not happen he added: “The time has come for the Supreme Court to step-in and in no uncertain terms lay down if the law is valid or not and if it’s valid to specify what are its limitations and what guidelines must be followed.

Justice Gupta added that he hopes the Supreme Court does this “as early as possible”. He also said: “I would expect the Court will do this as soon as possible”.

Speaking about each of the other three charges the Kashmiri students in Agra face, Justice Gupta explained why they do not apply. First, with regard to Section 153A, which is about promoting enmity on grounds of religion, he said: “How does it (their alleged celebration) promote enmity?…Just because they belong to a particular religion? Have they said anything against Hinduism?”

Responding to the fact the Agra students are also charged under Section 505(1)(b), which is about making statements that may induce others to commit an offence against the state or public tranquillity, Justice Gupta said: “They were celebrating not inciting anyone to commit an offence.” He added that if someone is provoked it’s that person’s responsibility and it cannot be blamed on the students.

Finally, referring to the third charge the Agra students face, Section 66F of the IT Act, which is punishment for cyber-terrorism, Justice Gupta said: “How does cyber-terrorism come into it?” He pointed out that the students were celebrating. They did not tweet or use social media. In fact, Justice Gupta also pointed out the college authorities have said no slogans at all were raised.

It is important to note that Justice Gupta was speaking specifically about the Kashmiri students in Agra about whom the UP Chief Minister’s office tweeted. He made clear that he was not talking about any celebrations of Pakistan’s victory that may have happened in Jammu and Kashmir.
 
Supporting pakistan is not allowed in India. Pakistan supports a separatist terrorist movement in India and we are in a state of constant conflict with pakistan.

And no comparison with what happens in XYZ country doesn't matter because we are not in the copy paste business.

Almost every cricketer in India celebrated Pakistan's victory by praising them, congratulating them and by any other means they could have.

So if a common men were to congratulate or be happy about Pakistan's victory in India that person might get arrested?

Don't you think it is waste of time, resource, make India look petty and (this is one is probably should be the cause of concern for every Indian) only will target Muslims of India?
 
Newsflash:

A former Supreme Court judge has said that celebrating a Pakistan cricket victory over India is “definitely not sedition and it’s ridiculous to think it is”.

Justice Deepak Gupta said the tweet from the Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister’s office stating that Kashmiri students in Agra who celebrated Pakistan’s World Cup victory over India would be charged with sedition is “a tweet against the law of the land”. More importantly, he added, the tweet “is not a responsible statement, it is an irresponsible statement”.

In a 18-minute interview to Karan Thapar for The Wire, Justice Gupta went further to say that celebrating a Pakistani victory over India may be offensive or unwise “but it is not a crime, it is not illegal”. As he explained: “A thing may be good or bad but that does not make it a crime or illegal”.

He added: “All legal actions are not necessarily good or moral” and then pointed out, “we are governed by a rule of law not a rule of morals”.

In The Wire interview, Justice Gupta also made clear that none of the other three charges brought against the Kashmiri students in Agra apply. They have also been charged with Section 153A, promoting enmity on grounds of religion, Section 505(1)(b), making statements which may induce others to commit an offence against the state or public tranquillity, and Section 66F of the IT Act which is punishment for cyber-terrorism.

Speaking in detail about the sedition charge, Justice Gupta said if the Chief Minister or his office had gone through the earlier Supreme Court judgements on sedition they would have known that what the Kashmiri students in Agra did is definitely not sedition. Therefore, the tweet from the Chief Minister’s office stating that these students will be charged with sedition is based upon ignorance of the law.

Justice Gupta said: “Sedition has no place in a civilised democracy”. He said his preference – which he also expressed in an interview to The Wire in March 2021 – is for the sedition law to be immediately abolished. However, if that does not happen he added: “The time has come for the Supreme Court to step-in and in no uncertain terms lay down if the law is valid or not and if it’s valid to specify what are its limitations and what guidelines must be followed.

Justice Gupta added that he hopes the Supreme Court does this “as early as possible”. He also said: “I would expect the Court will do this as soon as possible”.

Speaking about each of the other three charges the Kashmiri students in Agra face, Justice Gupta explained why they do not apply. First, with regard to Section 153A, which is about promoting enmity on grounds of religion, he said: “How does it (their alleged celebration) promote enmity?…Just because they belong to a particular religion? Have they said anything against Hinduism?”

Responding to the fact the Agra students are also charged under Section 505(1)(b), which is about making statements that may induce others to commit an offence against the state or public tranquillity, Justice Gupta said: “They were celebrating not inciting anyone to commit an offence.” He added that if someone is provoked it’s that person’s responsibility and it cannot be blamed on the students.

Finally, referring to the third charge the Agra students face, Section 66F of the IT Act, which is punishment for cyber-terrorism, Justice Gupta said: “How does cyber-terrorism come into it?” He pointed out that the students were celebrating. They did not tweet or use social media. In fact, Justice Gupta also pointed out the college authorities have said no slogans at all were raised.

It is important to note that Justice Gupta was speaking specifically about the Kashmiri students in Agra about whom the UP Chief Minister’s office tweeted. He made clear that he was not talking about any celebrations of Pakistan’s victory that may have happened in Jammu and Kashmir.

"Former" Judge. Not a sitting one. His opinion holds no legal power.

It needs to come from a sitting bench of the supreme court to have any legal significance.
 
You're right. Every sensible person in India appreciated and congratulated Pakistan for a stupendous performance on 24th. Anyone who objects to this gesture (and we have plenty of those fools in India) is just that: a fool.

The contention is when a few people celebrated Pakistan victory (which is just a claim btw, no proof found yet) and India's loss, it is obvious that it will rile up those who are already hurt by the loss. Hence the strong reaction. Not a justification, but an explanation.

But you're right, it just shows India in a poor light. This was the time the government should have preempted any awkward incidents and taken steps to not let matters become worse, but unfortunately that has not happened.

At the end of the day, leave it to desis to spoil the aftertaste of a beautiful game.





Almost every cricketer in India celebrated Pakistan's victory by praising them, congratulating them and by any other means they could have.

So if a common men were to congratulate or be happy about Pakistan's victory in India that person might get arrested?

Don't you think it is waste of time, resource, make India look petty and (this is one is probably should be the cause of concern for every Indian) only will target Muslims of India?
 
Supporting pakistan is not allowed in India. Pakistan supports a separatist terrorist movement in India and we are in a state of constant conflict with pakistan.

And no comparison with what happens in XYZ country doesn't matter because we are not in the copy paste business.
Lol absolute pathetic and like the boy who cried wolf with all this ‘terrorism’ excuses for injustices to ordinary Kashmiris. Wanting independence and freedom is not terrorism and certainly celebrating a win of a cricket match isn’t terrorism. The biggest terrorism is done by Modi and his cronies and your forces that target and oppress Kashmiris and our basic rights. Shame on you, your government and that butcher of gujrat: modi.
 
This is really petty stuff from the 'world's biggest democracy.' It just reinforces what we all know: India treat Kashmiris like trash.
 
Capture 2.JPG

Can't disagree with him.
 
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Afghan University students in Islamabad were celebrating midway the pak vs Afghanistan match .
No one threatened them

The government in india is so fascist.
 
Afghan University students in Islamabad were celebrating midway the pak vs Afghanistan match .
No one threatened them

The government in india is so fascist.

You know the comparison is stupid. The two situations aren nearly the same. Not talking about the government reaction, but the public response.
 
Mehbooba Mufti urges PM Modi to intervene as Kashmiri students held for sedition in UP

Three Kashmiri students were arrested in Uttar Pradesh's Agra on Wednesday for celebrating Pakistan's win against India in the T20 World Cup match on October 24. The three engineering students have been booked under the Sedition law.

Srinagar, J&K: PDP chief and former Jammu and Kashmir CM Mehbooba Mufti on Saturday wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi over the arrest of three Kashmiri students in Uttar Pradesh's Agra for allegedly celebrating Pakistan's win over India in a T20 World Cup cricket match.

In her letter, Mehbooba Mufti sought PM Modi's intervention in the matter. "I request you to intervene so that future of these youngsters is not destroyed," she said.

"I write to you with a deep sense of disappointment and concern about the alarming situation in Jammu and Kashmir. Not too long ago when you presided over an all-party meeting in Delhi you expressed your intention to remove "dill ke doori "between Delhi and J&K," the letter reads.

The former Jammu and Kashmir CM further said that in her capacity as the President of PDP she suggested a few Confidence Building Measures that would have provided a sense of relief and breathing space to the people of J&K.

"We had been waiting for the rollout of a policy to address the hearts and minds of people, especially youth. While the spree of raids, arrests, killings continue unabated the level of repression and state intolerance has touched a new low," the letter reads.

The letter comes after three students belonging to Jammu and Kashmir were arrested in Uttar Pradesh's Agra on Wednesday for celebrating Pakistan's win against India in the T20 World Cup match on October 24.

The three engineering students have been booked under the Sedition law. They were held after a BJP youth wing leader Gaurav Rajawat lodged a complaint against them for shouting pro-Pakistan slogans after the match.

Via : https://www.timesnownews.com/india/...hmiri-students-held-for-sedition-in-up/827932
 
You know the comparison is stupid. The two situations aren nearly the same. Not talking about the government reaction, but the public response.

Indian police arresting teachers for celebrating pak and the government supporting right wing groups means the government is complicit.
 
The UP chief minister himself called for arrests of those celebrating Pakistans win.
He isn't part of the government?
 
Supporting pakistan is not allowed in India. Pakistan supports a separatist terrorist movement in India and we are in a state of constant conflict with pakistan.

And no comparison with what happens in XYZ country doesn't matter because we are not in the copy paste business.

Your posts used to really confuse and frustrate me- supporting India in every single situation even when it was very clearly in the wrong, but now I just feel sorry for you.

A lot of the Pakistanis voicing their concern here can admit Pakistan is not a perfect country or a country of angels. Yet you can’t do the same even in a situation like this, admit your country isn’t perfect and has dark sides. Do some self reflection and realize how badly you’ve been brainwashed that you’re willing to argue and debate the arrest for innocent people supporting a different team in a cricket match.
 
And more ...


<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Surprised and shocked to see that an Indian company based in Tamilnadu is openly supporting Pakistan.<br><br>This company earn money from India, and then promote the ad of India's loss in India.<a href="https://twitter.com/chennaipolice_?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@chennaipolice_</a> Please see to it <a href="https://t.co/DyFbdG1LCw">pic.twitter.com/DyFbdG1LCw</a></p>— Shashank Shekhar Jha (@shashank_ssj) <a href="https://twitter.com/shashank_ssj/status/1453226335925645315?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 27, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
^
:))) This Shashank guy must've done some serious digging to find that post because the company or app or whatever it is, has a massive following on Twitter of 8 (Eight).
 
Students of Sher E Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences (SKIMS) Soura, one of the two institutions under fire for allegedly celebrating Pakistan’s victory against India last Sunday, were not part of the celebration, nor was their property used, a fact-finding panel compiled by SKIMS has revealed in its report.

The report is based on a detailed study and analysis of the video that appeared on social media platforms shortly after Pakistan won the T20 match against India in the ongoing championship in Dubai. It concluded that neither her property was used nor students of the institute had attended the celebrations.

SKIMS Director Dr AG Ahangar had assembled a team of five members, drawn from senior faculty, to investigate whether students actually flirted with Pakistan. The rehearsal panel was instructed to verify the truth of the video and whether the SKIMS was linked to the controversy.

“Yes, we have launched a probe and the commission will submit its report to the government within 48 hours,” Ahangar told News 18 on Tuesday

Police had registered two separate cases on Monday under anti-terrorism charges against the staff and students of SKIMS and Government Medical College, Srinagar after two different videos surfaced on social media where students were seen cheering Pakistan on winning against the Indian cricket team.

Many places in Srinagar had crackers and fireworks burst to celebrate Pakistan’s victory over India. Police had registered FIR under section 13 ULPA, 105 A, and 505 IPC for the alleged video assigned to SKIMS in the Soura police station.

Another video where some girl students were seen “shouting and slogans in favor of Pakistan” is reportedly linked to Government Medical College, Srinagar. A separate FIR under section 13 ULPA has been registered in Karan Nagar police station.

In their report, the SKIMS security team claimed that the central hall as the recreation clutter in the unmarried hostel, as shown in the viral video, did not look “even remotely” similar to those in SKIMS premises.

The team analyzing the video points out that there is no central pillar in the hall of SKIMS hostel unlike the one shown in the video. Likewise, the color of the wall in the hall at SKIMS is green compared to the white shown in the video

The report concluded that the appearance of none of the students in the video resembled those who studied in SKIMS. “The difference in location in the video with the hostel’s spot analysis made us conclude that such celebrations did not take place in SKIMS,” sources told News18.

The fact-finding team completed the investigation within the allotted time and handed it over to the director who in turn forwarded it to the LG administration. Neither Ahangar nor a panel member was available for comment. One official at SKIMS declined to disclose details, saying the report had been submitted to higher-ups.

While the probe is expected to reduce the pressure on SKIMS, it is not clear whether the police will include the investigation report in their investigations. As for the GMC case, the police are investigating it separately according to the FIR registered in Karan Nagar police station

https://www.news18.com/news/educati...or-pakistan-during-cricket-match-4385885.html
 
Several lawyers’ associations of Agra have decided to deny legal help to the three Kashmiri students of an engineering college here, who were charged with sedition.

The students were booked under the Act that dates back to the British era allegedly for posting a WhatsApp status praising Pakistan players after the team’s victory against India in a T20 cricket match on October 24.

“We will not provide any legal help to those who are involved in anti national activity or anti social activity,” Nitin Verma, President of the Young Lawyers’ Association, Agra, told PTI.

“It will send a message to the country that the lawyers of Agra have decided not to provide legal help to anyone who is involved in anti-national activity,” he said.

Verma argued that freedom of speech doesn’t allow engaging in “anti-national” activities and that he condemns the students’ praising of the Pakistan cricket team.

“We will also oppose any lawyer who agrees to provide legal help to these students whenever he comes to Agra,” he added.

Sunil Sharma, President of the Agra Advocates’ Association, echoed the same sentiment.

“No organisation has the right to involve in anti-India activity. The decision of lawyers’ to not provide legal help would send the message to everyone in the country that no one should help those involved in anti-national activity,” Sharma said.

Besides these two, Janpad Bar Association, Adhivakta Sehyog Samiti, and other similar bodies, too have issued similar dicta against the three Kashmiri students.

Nasir Khuehami, national spokesperson of the Jammu and Kashmir Students’ Association, said the body will extend legal help to the students.

“This is true that lawyers associations in Agra have refused to provide help to Kashmiri students and have said they won’t plead the case.

“But the J&K Students Association has decided to support and extend them a helping hand as far as legal support is concerned,” he said.

“We have got a lawyer now through our Delhi team and friends there. Advocate Madhuvan Dutt Chaturvedi will defend the students on behalf of the Association,” he added.

Khuehami also expressed worry that sedition will ruin careers of these students.

On Thursday, when the students were exiting the court, few right wing activists raised slogans against Pakistan in the court’s premises and chased the students.

The Agra police escorted the students back into the police van. PTI

https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/n...-kashmiri-students-booked-for-sedition-332013
 
Several lawyers’ associations of Agra have decided to deny legal help to the three Kashmiri students of an engineering college here, who were charged with sedition.

The students were booked under the Act that dates back to the British era allegedly for posting a WhatsApp status praising Pakistan players after the team’s victory against India in a T20 cricket match on October 24.

“We will not provide any legal help to those who are involved in anti national activity or anti social activity,” Nitin Verma, President of the Young Lawyers’ Association, Agra, told PTI.

“It will send a message to the country that the lawyers of Agra have decided not to provide legal help to anyone who is involved in anti-national activity,” he said.

Verma argued that freedom of speech doesn’t allow engaging in “anti-national” activities and that he condemns the students’ praising of the Pakistan cricket team.

“We will also oppose any lawyer who agrees to provide legal help to these students whenever he comes to Agra,” he added.

Sunil Sharma, President of the Agra Advocates’ Association, echoed the same sentiment.

“No organisation has the right to involve in anti-India activity. The decision of lawyers’ to not provide legal help would send the message to everyone in the country that no one should help those involved in anti-national activity,” Sharma said.

Besides these two, Janpad Bar Association, Adhivakta Sehyog Samiti, and other similar bodies, too have issued similar dicta against the three Kashmiri students.

Nasir Khuehami, national spokesperson of the Jammu and Kashmir Students’ Association, said the body will extend legal help to the students.

“This is true that lawyers associations in Agra have refused to provide help to Kashmiri students and have said they won’t plead the case.

“But the J&K Students Association has decided to support and extend them a helping hand as far as legal support is concerned,” he said.

“We have got a lawyer now through our Delhi team and friends there. Advocate Madhuvan Dutt Chaturvedi will defend the students on behalf of the Association,” he added.

Khuehami also expressed worry that sedition will ruin careers of these students.

On Thursday, when the students were exiting the court, few right wing activists raised slogans against Pakistan in the court’s premises and chased the students.

The Agra police escorted the students back into the police van. PTI

https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/n...-kashmiri-students-booked-for-sedition-332013

What an pathetic bunch of lawyers.
 
Hope these idiots don’t beat Kiwi expats for today’s loss. Sanghis have polarised India to the point of no return.
 
Four students of the Baba Farid Group of Institutions in Bathinda were shunted out from the college hostel after they allegedly tried to assault Kashmiri students on Saturday night, a day after the World Cup T20 match between Pakistan and Afghanistan. The two groups had fought over the match result.

Orders to vacate the four from the hostel were issued on Saturday itself by hostel warden Lakhbir Singh. The students have been identified as Kumar Kartikey Ojha, a seventh semester BSc Hons Agriculture student, two first semester BCA students, and Aayush Kumar Jaiswal, a third semester BCA student.

An inquiry conducted by the institution found that, “After Pak vs Afg Match, 4 students from Bihar tried to harass Kashmiri students and tried to assault. Hostel warden even saw the CCTV footage to ascertain the facts, revealed information. Later they were shunted out from the hostel.”

The two groups were reportedly at loggerheads with each other since the India-Pakistan cricket match on October 24. Nothing untoward happened after that match, but the simmering tensions flared up after Pakistan’s match with Afghanistan.

Sources said the students against whom disciplinary action has been taken used to harass the Kashmiri students alleging that they raised anti-India slogans. Despite being removed from the hostel, the four students and their supporters have launched a social media campaign tagging the Prime Minister’s Office, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister, Captain Amarinder Singh and Giriraj Singh, among others. One student said the four were suspended from the hostel for opposing the anti-India slogans raised by the Kashmiri students.

Yet another wrote on social media, “Kashmir ke students ne desh virodhi nare lagaye fir humne unka virodh kiya (The students from Kashmir raised anti-India slogans, so we opposed them).”

However, the hostel warden’s notice states, “All four students were told to leave hostel for harassing Kashmiri students. They were found indulged in indisciplinary activities in the hostel in the night of 30/10/2021. It was supported by CCTV footage. It is serious violation of rules of hostel and campus.”

Meanwhile, The Indian Express tried to contact chairman of Baba Farid Group of Institutions, Gurmeet Singh Dhaliwal, but he was not available for comment despite repeated attempts.

Clashes were also reported on October 24 between groups of students at colleges in Sangrur and Mohali after the India-Pakistan cricket match.

https://indianexpress.com/article/c...i-pakistan-afghanistan-cricket-match-7600288/
 
It’s been reported by Western Media such as Sky (quite credible) about Kashmiris being charged with terrorism for just celebrating Pakistan’s win against India. Now isn’t that obviously going to far? Where’s the democracy and freedom of speech? Imagine expats in Uk, US or any other western country being beaten or charged with terrorism if they say celebrated an Indian or Pakistani win in sport? It’s crazy! People should be free to support and cheer for who they want.


…..,
Article below source: (Sky News)

T20 Cricket World Cup: Kashmir anti-terror investigation into students celebrating India's loss to Pakistan

Officers in Indian-controlled Kashmir said students and staff at two government-run medical colleges cheered and shouted pro-Pakistan slogans during Sunday's match.

Police in Indian-controlled Kashmir have launched an anti-terror investigation into college students and staff celebrating India's loss to arch-rivals Pakistan in a T20 World Cup cricket game, officials say.

Officers said people at two government-run medical colleges cheered and shouted pro-Pakistan slogans during the match on Sunday.

The T20 World Cup game took place in Dubai
It comes after Pakistan defeated India by 10 wickets for its first-ever victory against the country in a T20 World Cup game in Dubai.

Minutes after Pakistan won the match, hundreds of people in Kashmir danced in the streets, lit firecrackers and chanted "long live Pakistan".

Police called the celebrations "anti-national" activity as tensions continue in the disputed region.

A police spokesman said authorities on Monday registered preliminary investigations at two police stations in the city of Srinagar under the anti-terror law, the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act.

Police said the suspects were yet to be identified and officers were using videos of the celebrations on social media in an attempt to name them.

The anti-terror law was amended in 2019 to allow the government to designate individuals as terrorists, allowing police to detain people for six months without producing any evidence.

The accused can subsequently be imprisoned for up to seven years but rights activists have called the law draconian.

Meanwhile, over a dozen Kashmiri students were attacked in India's northern Punjab state for celebrating Pakistan's victory, news reports said.

The celebrations also coincided with India's home minister, Amit Shah, visiting the region for the first time since New Delhi in 2019 stripped Kashmir of its semi-autonomy.

Cricket, a legacy of Britain's long colonial role of South Asia, is one of the few things that unites Pakistan and India despite their long history of animosity that has fuelled three wars since the subcontinent's partition in 1947.

The region of Kashmir is divided between the two nations with anti-Indian sentiment running deep.

Rebels have been fighting for Kashmir's independence or its merger with Pakistan since 1989.

India describes the armed rebellion in the portion of Kashmir it controls as a Pakistan proxy war and state-sponsored terrorism but most Muslim Kashmiris consider it a legitimate freedom struggle.

Tens of thousands of civilians, rebels and government forces have been killed in the conflict.
(Sky News)

If Pakistani team cares about Kashmiris, they should stop winning against India.
 
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Srinagar: The Jammu and Kashmir police have booked a senior Bhartiya Janta Party (BJP) leader for hate speech after he was caught on camera using racist slurs to call for violence against Kashmiri Muslims who cheered for Pakistan in their recent T20 World Cup match against Team India.

Vikram Randhawa, a former BJP lawmaker from Jammu region who was recently appointed as state secretary of the party, was seen in a video exhorting his supporters to beat up Kashmiri Muslims and “skin them alive”. The video was first posted on Twitter by Peoples Democratic Party leader Naeem Akhtar.

Akhtar’s post on Randhawa was quote-tweeted by his party president Mehbooba Mufti who highlighted the fact that no action was taken against Randhawa’s open call to violence, but J&K students are charged with sedition for cheering Pakistan.



Sources said the remarks were made by Randhawa during a public meeting in Jammu last week, days after celebrations were reported in parts of Kashmir over Pakistan’s cricket victory.

The police have booked Randhawa for “hurting religious sentiments” and “promoting enmity between religious groups” and filed an FIR (number 357/2021) under sections 295-A and 505 (2) of India Penal Code against him at Bahu police station in Jammu.


Although non-bailable sections of IPC have been invoked against Randhawa, he has not been arrested by the police so far. Repeated calls and text messages to Randhawa did not elicit any response.

In the undated video, Randhawa, who is based in Jammu, the Hindu belt of the Muslim majority state, was seen inciting his supporters to use violence against “Kashmiri Muslims” who celebrated India’s defeat by arch rival Pakistan.

“Those who are involved in these activities should be treated in a way that their coming generations too remember the result of raising anti-India slogans or pro-Pakistan slogans on Indian soil. Not only them, their parents should also realise what kind of ungrateful children they have given birth to,” he says.



“I think the agencies are doing a good job. They are not taking it (celebrations in Kashmir over India’s defeat) casually. Since the beginning, we have been demanding that not just their (academic) degrees be cancelled, their citizenship too must be revoked. They should be beaten up and skinned alive,” Randhawa is heard saying in the video.

Referring to Pakistan’s second consecutive victory – over New Zealand – in the T20 World Cup, Randhawa says in the video: “Kahan margaye they kal ye Kashmiri katmullay. Kyun Pakistan ka jashan nahin manaya? (‘Have all of these Kashmiri Muslims died now. Why aren’t they celebrating?’).”

Then, he he is heard saying:

“Ye mobile pay phone karke talaaq dete thay. To baya, namaz bhi WhatsApp pay pad liya karo na, sadkun pay kyun tede ho jate ho.” (‘They used to divorce their women over phone, so why aren’t they offering prayers on WhatsApp also. Why are they occupying roads?’)

The inflammatory remarks by the ruling party leader circulated widely on social media, prompting a massive uproar with political leaders in Kashmir as well as ordinary people ̈demanding his immediate arrest.

“So good to see this man making friends with Kashmiri people! He should be made an example out of and the law should deal with him firmly to dissuade others from being as abusive as this man has been,” former J&K chief minister Omar Abdullah said on Twitter.

“What a shame. There seems to be race to abuse muslims.Wannabes, non-entities all pitch in their bit for some publicity. Will this ever end?” asked Peoples Conference general secretary Imran Reza Ansari.

The neighbouring country’s first victory over Team India in a World Cup clash had triggered celebrations in parts of the country, including in Kashmir where youngsters in the capital Srinagar and elsewhere hit the streets, despite a winter chill, and burst firecrackers.

The J&K police had registered two cases invoking the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act in connection with the celebrations at two medical colleges of Srinagar. However, an internal inquiry by Sher-e-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences, which runs one of the colleges in Srinagar, on Monday, found that the students had not celebrated India’s defeat.

The Uttar Pradesh Police have also arrested three Kashmiri students for allegedly posting “objectionable comments” on their social media profiles after India’s defeat.

BJP show causes leader

Meanwhile, according to reports, the BJP’s disciplinary committee has issued show-cause notice against Randhawa for making “disrespectful remarks” against the Kashmiri Muslims.

“A video has gone viral in social media in which you are seen making absolutely reckless and hatred promoting remarks against a particular community. This is unacceptable to the party and has brought disrepute and embarrassment to the party,” news agency PTI reported, quoting the notice.

Randhawa has been asked to explain his remarks within the next 48 hours with the J&K BJP chief Ravinder Raina, who heads the disciplinary committee, warning of “strict action if an apology did not come soon”. Raina, according to the notice, has disowned Randhawa’s statement, saying that it had “nothing to do” with the saffron party.

This is not the first time that Randhawa, who is also the president of All Jammu Stone Crushers’ Association president, has landed himself in a controversy. In May this year, he had accused the Union minister in PMO, Jitendra Singh, district mineral officer Ankur Sachdeva, Jammu divisional commissioner Raghav Langer and SSP Jammu Chandan Kohli of facilitating illegal mining in the Tawi riverbed.

The minister had threatened to file a defamation case against Randhawa, following which he tendered a public apology.

The action against Randhawa comes days after the Ladakh police summoned a senior activist from Kargil, Sajjad Hussain, who has a vocal critique of BJP’s policies in the arid Ladakh region, for a tweet on the violence against Muslims in Tripura.

https://thewire.in/communalism/vikram-randhawa-hate-speech-muslims-jammu-police-bjp
 
Like millions of others around the world, Nafeesa Attari was glued to her screen as India played Pakistan in the opening match of the T20 World Cup.

The schoolteacher from the northern Indian city of Udaipur watched as Pakistan won the match by 10 wickets in what was a clinical and emphatic win.

Days later she was arrested and held in a police cell. Her apparent crime: her WhatsApp status celebrating Pakistan's victory.

She is among several Muslims in India who have been arrested or detained for supporting Pakistan in the recent match - raising fresh concerns about freedom of speech in the world's largest democracy. Observers argue that these arrests are the latest weapon in the governing Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party's (BJP) agenda to target Muslim minorities, a charge the government strongly refutes.

"Jeeeet gayeeee… We wonnn," Ms Attari wrote, over an image of some of the team's players in her WhatsApp status.

Her post was spotted by one of her students' parents, who sent it to others before it went viral on the messaging service.

Ms Attari was fired from her teaching job, and arrested under a section of the Indian Penal Code, which criminalises "assertions prejudicial to national integration".

In an interview with a local TV channel, she appeared visibly distressed as she apologised for causing offence.

"Someone messaged me [replying to my status] and asked if I was supporting Pakistan. As the message had emojis and there was a playful atmosphere, I said yes", she said.

"This doesn't mean I support Pakistan. I am an Indian, I love India."

Having secured bail, she is back home with her husband and young child, and is fighting the charges.

"What the police have done is absolutely wrong. If someone makes a mistake or if you don't agree with someone, that's not a crime or anti-national", her lawyer Rajesh Singhvi said. "This is against the constitution and our laws."

Rajendra Parmar, a member of the hardline Hindu nationalist group Bajrang Dal, had reported Ms Attari to the police.

"These people should go to Pakistan. You're living in India, earning here but you're celebrating their win," he told the BBC.

Mr Parmar said he had no regrets about making the complaint. "This should be a [lesson] for her. She's a teacher in a school. What kind of education will she give those children?"

His comments cut deep into the visceral hostility many in India and Pakistan feel towards each other, ever since the two nations were created after the partition of British India in 1947.

And relations are particularly tense in Indian-administered Kashmir, where an insurgency against Indian rule has been under way since the late 1980s.

A group of medical students in Kashmir have also been charged - under a strict anti-terror law - for allegedly rooting for the Pakistani cricket team.

In a video which has surfaced online, a man, allegedly former BJP lawmaker Vikram Randhawa, can be heard saying the students should be "skinned alive" and have their degrees and citizenship cancelled for raising pro-Pakistan slogans on Indian soil.

Mr Randhawa has been charged by police for hate speech, and has been reprimanded by the BJP, which has asked him to apologise within 48 hours for these remarks.

While the party is distancing itself from the use of such severe language, other senior members of the BJP have condemned those supporting Pakistan, with some saying it should be considered a crime.

Former Indian cricketer turned BJP politician Gautam Gambhir said anyone who celebrated Pakistan's win was "shameful".

"Those bursting crackers on Pak winning can't be Indian! We stand by our boys," he wrote on Twitter.

Yogi Adityanath, a close ally of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and chief minister of the country's largest state, Uttar Pradesh, told a newspaper that Indians who cheered the victory should be charged with sedition.

India's colonial era sedition law criminalises criticism of the government. Many say it's increasingly being used to stifle free speech.

"What we're seeing here is part of a political process of the BJP consolidating the Hindu vote by 'otherising' Muslims," said Amit Varma, host of the podcast The Seen and the Unseen.

"They've weaponised issues that have been dormant in our politics for decades: cow slaughter, Hindu-Muslim marriages, and even Indians supporting Pakistan."

"None of these have any substance to them. They are just issues to whip up anti-Muslim passions which, sadly seem to be widespread," he argued.

But a senior Indian government spokesperson said it was "preposterous" for anyone to say that taking action against a very small number of Muslims amounted to penalising the millions of people who belong to the faith in the country.

"They [those arrested] were celebrating India's defeat… every such act has the potential of setting into motion a 'law and order situation', so that has to be prevented by all means," Kanchan Gupta, senior adviser to the ministry of information and broadcasting, told the BBC as he defended the arrests.

"If two students here, five students there, or a teacher somewhere decides to do something which is provocative and has the potential to instigate further problems, that needs to be checked… and investigated" he added.

The families of many who are being held believe the actions are wholly disproportionate.

Seven people in Uttar Pradesh were also accused of celebrating Pakistan's win.

Police said they had used disrespectful words and anti-national comments against the Indian cricket team to disturb the peace.

Three of them - Arshad Yousef, Inayat Altaf and Shaukat Ahmad, all engineering students at a college in Agra - are in jail. The men, who have been suspended from their college, struggled to find a lawyer.

"We are not going to provide any legal assistance to these students as they were celebrating Pakistan's victory while living in India," said Nitin Verma, president of the Young Lawyers' Association in the city.

"This is against our country and anti-national. It is our duty to oppose them, so such acts are not encouraged in the future."

Indian cricket fans watch the first match between India and Pakistan International Cricket T20 World Cup Super 12 stage in Dubai, live on a television

This isn't the first time a cricket match has provoked such a strong response.

In 2014, 60 Kashmiri students in Uttar Pradesh were charged with sedition for cheering Pakistan against India. But the charges were later dropped following legal advice from the law ministry.

Cricket has always been a big part of the Indian psyche, but a recent survey from the Pew Research Center found that a slim majority of adults in the country (56%) felt it was important to support India's cricket team to be truly Indian.

"When in the law is it a crime to support an opposition cricket team?" asks Sharda Ugra, a cricket journalist and social commentator.

"Should people of Indian origin in the UK or Australia be arrested for supporting India? It's obviously a deliberate religious divide that's being provoked on both sides."

There are also examples of similar incidents on the other side of the border.

In 2016, a Pakistani fan of India's cricket captain, Virat Kohli, was arrested after hoisting the Indian flag as a tribute to him.

When it comes to cricket, passions run high in both nations, but these latest arrests in India have come as a shock to many who feel that the space for freedom of expression is shrinking fast.

With additional reporting by Kunal Sehgal

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-59130556
 
Meerut
On the victory of Pakistan in Rampur district of UP, wife Rabia Shamsi burst firecrackers and made fun of Indian players. Hurt by this, husband Ishaan Mian lodged an FIR against his wife. On the complaint given on October 29, the police filed the report on November 5. 153A (provocative statement) and section 67 of the IT Act have been invoked in the FIR.

The incident is of Ganj police station area. Ishan Mian, a resident of village Segankheda, said in an application to SP Rampur on October 29 that there was a match between India and Pakistan in the T20 World Cup on October 24. Indian team lost this match to Pakistan. Ishan Mian wrote in the complaint that his wife Rabia Shamsi had set off fireworks on Pakistan’s victory. By making fun of Indian cricketers, he had put status on his WhatsApp. Ishan Mian also submitted the screenshot of the WhatsApp status of his wife to the SP Rampur along with the complaint.

After investigating the complaint, on Friday (November 5) on the orders of the SP, the police have registered an FIR against Rabia and her family members. In his Tahrir, Ishan Mian says that his wife Rabia Shamsi’s maternal uncle is in Rampur. Rabia’s sister-in-law Urooj Shamsi is a resident of Pakistan. Bibi Rabia, her sister-in-law and other family members celebrated Pakistan’s defeat. The way his wife and in-laws have fired fireworks on Pakistan’s victory, it seems that they have hatred for India in their hearts.

Meanwhile, Rabia has clarified to the media that some child must have put the status on her phone. Husband is creating controversy by taking unnecessary screen shots. According to Rabia, she and Ishaan Miyan got married four months ago. Ishaan works in Delhi. Husband bothers. I have been kicked out of the house after beating, so I live in the maternal house.

https://www.mcezone.com/pak-victory...istan-cricket-team-victory-in-t-20-world-cup/
 
Prayagraj: Three Kashmiri students, studying engineering in an Agra college and arrested on sedition and cyber-terrorism charges, have moved the Allahabad high court directly for bail, saying that lawyers in the Taj city have refused to take up their case for bail in the sessions court.

The three students were arrested in October this year for allegedly cheering Pakistan following the neighbouring country’s victory in a T20 Cricket World Cup match against India.

In their bail pleas to the high court, the three students have also sought transfer of their trials to Mathura, saying that the entire bar of Agra is not ready to appear on behalf of the applicants before the court and defend the case.

A bail plea is first made to a magisterial court in the district and then to a sessions court and subsequently to the high court following its rejection by the lower courts.

The three Kashmiri students – Arsheed Yusuf, Inayat Altaf Sheikh and Showkat Ahmed Ganai – are students of an engineering college in Agra and were arrested on October 27 this year by the Agra police.

They were booked under sections 124 A (sedition), 153-A (promoting enmity between different groups) and 505 (1) (B) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and 66-F (cyber-terrorism) of the Information Technology Act for allegedly sending WhatsApp messages “against the country” after the match.

The matter will come for hearing in the high court in a few days.

(PTI)

https://thewire.in/law/three-kashmi...for-bail-say-agra-lawyers-wont-represent-them
 
New Delhi: Former Jammu & Kashmir Chief Minister and People's Democratic Party (PDP) Chief Mehbooba Mufti on Saturday slammed the Modi government and said that she feels Gandhi's India is turning into Godse's India.

Mufti's remarks were in connection to the arrest of three Kashmiri youths for allegedly sharing pro-Pakistan posts on WhatsApp after India lost the T-20 World Cup match against Pakistan in October.

Speaking about the incident during an event in New Delhi, the PDP chief said: "I remember a cricket match between India and Pakistan during Vajpayee ji's era, where citizens of Pakistan were cheering for India and citizens of India were cheering for Pakistan. And former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf also praised the then Indian captain MS Dhoni."

"But some days ago in Agra, when some youngsters cheered for the Pak cricket team during a match with India, not a single lawyer is ready to take their case....so it feels like Gandhi's India is turning into Godse's India," news agency ANI quoted Mufti as saying.

According to reports, the three students were booked by UP Poilce in Agra under Sections 153A (promoting enmity between different groups) and 505(1)(B) (intent to cause, or which is likely to cause, fear or alarm to public) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and also charged them under Section 66F of the Information Technology Act.

Soon after their arrest, Mufti had written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and sought his intervention into the matter so that "the future of these young briliant minds is not destroyed."

"I write to you with a deep sense of disappointment and concern about the alarming situation in Jammu and Kashmir. Not too long ago when you presided over an all party meeting in Delhi you expressed your intention to remove "dill ke doori "between Delhi and J&K," the letter read.

She further wrote in the letter that patriotism and sense of loyalty has to be cultivated with compassion and can't be forced by wielding the baton or by the barrel of a gun.

https://news.abplive.com/news/india...ounter-godse-s-india-vs-gadhi-s-india-1498235
 
Kashmir men spend over 100 days in jail for cheering Pakistan win

Three Kashmiri students languish in jail for celebrating Pakistan’s win against India at the T20 cricket World Cup in October.

Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir – The families of three Kashmiri students, who have spent more than three months in jail for celebrating the Pakistan cricket team’s win over India, have appealed for their release.

Arsheed Yousuf, Inayat Altaf and Showkat Ahmad Ganai – all in their early 20s – were arrested last October on sedition charges in the northern city of Agra for sending WhatsApp messages “against the country” days after Pakistan thrashed India in the T20 World Cup cricket match in the United Arab Emirates.

Their families, immersed in extreme poverty, are struggling to bail them out.

“My son only loved cricket. He was never interested in anything else like politics. He was always concerned with his studies and his game,” said Inayat’s mother, Waheeda, from Indian-administered Kashmir’s Budgam district.

“We came to know from the social media on October 27 last year about his arrest over the cricket match post. We do not know what to do. We have made hundreds of pleas to the government to consider them yours and forgive them,” Waheeda said at her home in Doniwara village.

Waheeda says her husband is disabled and works as a carpenter to ensure the education of her children.

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath — known for anti-Muslim bigotry — had warned sedition law would be slapped against people who celebrated the Pakistan cricket team’s victory against India.

The three students were enrolled at Raja Balwant Singh Engineering College in Agra in Uttar Pradesh state under a special scholarship programme meant for students from the conflict-torn region.

They have been charged with “cyber terrorism, sedition, promoting enmity between different groups, and making statements likely to cause alarm to the public”.

They faced a hostile crowd outside the court in Agra where they were heckled, and lawyers in the city refused to represent them. Finally, a lawyer from the neighbouring district of Mathura took their cases.

Their bail hearings have been postponed at least eight times, their families said, adding that they have appealed to the Uttar Pradesh government to drop the cases against them and “forgive them for their mistake”.

‘My son was my hope’
In Checkpora village in central Kashmir’s Budgam district, Haneefa has been waiting for the release of her son Arsheed.

Haneefa’s husband, a labourer, died in an accident two decades ago when her children were very young. As a single parent, she did odd jobs — washing dishes for other people, clearing cow dung, and working in their kitchen gardens and orchards — to educate her three children, particularly her son, a bright student.

With no source of income and her son’s arrest miles away from her home in an alien city, Haneefa, who lives in a one-room house with her two daughters, feels helpless.

“All these years I have lived in extreme poverty. I can’t explain,” Haneefa, a frail woman in her 40s, told Al Jazeera.

“Some nights I slept on an empty stomach. My older daughter had to drop out of school last year because I could not afford it. My son was my hope. I thought he would finish his studies and land a good job and share my burden,” she added.

Jailed far away from her means an extra burden for the family to hire a lawyer and afford a visit to the jail.

“I work as domestic help and it’s impossible for me to afford that. It was the neighbours who collected money and my brother-in-law was able to go and meet my son. We just appeal to the government to pardon our children and free them,” she said.

At the home of the third student, Showkat Ahmad Ganai, in Shahgund village of north Kashmir’s Bandipora district, his aged parents and two sisters are desperate, too.

Muhammad Shaban Ganai, 60, is a casual labourer. The family had to sell their cow and took credit from people to afford the money to fight the case.

“It is as if a mountain has fallen on us. We seem to be losing hope of our son’s bail,” Ganai said.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022...ested-kashmiri-students-struggle-to-free-them
 
Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir – The families of three Kashmiri students, who have spent more than three months in jail for celebrating the Pakistan cricket team’s win over India, have appealed for their release.

Arsheed Yousuf, Inayat Altaf and Showkat Ahmad Ganai – all in their early 20s – were arrested last October on sedition charges in the northern city of Agra for sending WhatsApp messages “against the country” days after Pakistan thrashed India in the T20 World Cup cricket match in the United Arab Emirates.

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A crackdown on press in Kashmir
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Indian forces kill five suspected rebels in Kashmir
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‘Systematic fear’: How India battered press freedom in Kashmir
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UK asked to probe Indian officials over Kashmir ‘war crimes’
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Their families, immersed in extreme poverty, are struggling to bail them out.

“My son only loved cricket. He was never interested in anything else like politics. He was always concerned with his studies and his game,” said Inayat’s mother, Waheeda, from Indian-administered Kashmir’s Budgam district.

“We came to know from the social media on October 27 last year about his arrest over the cricket match post. We do not know what to do. We have made hundreds of pleas to the government to consider them yours and forgive them,” Waheeda said at her home in Doniwara village.

Waheeda says her husband is disabled and works as a carpenter to ensure the education of her children.

India’s loss had also triggered attacks against dozens of Kashmiri students in western Punjab state.

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath — known for anti-Muslim bigotry — had warned sedition law would be slapped against people who celebrated the Pakistan cricket team’s victory against India.

The three students were enrolled at Raja Balwant Singh Engineering College in Agra in Uttar Pradesh state under a special scholarship programme meant for students from the conflict-torn region.

They have been charged with “cyber terrorism, sedition, promoting enmity between different groups, and making statements likely to cause alarm to the public”.

They faced a hostile crowd outside the court in Agra where they were heckled, and lawyers in the city refused to represent them. Finally, a lawyer from the neighbouring district of Mathura took their cases.

Their bail hearings have been postponed at least eight times, their families said, adding that they have appealed to the Uttar Pradesh government to drop the cases against them and “forgive them for their mistake”.

‘My son was my hope’

In Checkpora village in central Kashmir’s Budgam district, Haneefa has been waiting for the release of her son Arsheed.

Haneefa’s husband, a labourer, died in an accident two decades ago when her children were very young. As a single parent, she did odd jobs — washing dishes for other people, clearing cow dung, and working in their kitchen gardens and orchards — to educate her three children, particularly her son, a bright student.

With no source of income and her son’s arrest miles away from her home in an alien city, Haneefa, who lives in a one-room house with her two daughters, feels helpless.

“All these years I have lived in extreme poverty. I can’t explain,” Haneefa, a frail woman in her 40s, told Al Jazeera.

“Some nights I slept on an empty stomach. My older daughter had to drop out of school last year because I could not afford it. My son was my hope. I thought he would finish his studies and land a good job and share my burden,” she added.

Jailed far away from her means an extra burden for the family to hire a lawyer and afford a visit to the jail.

“I work as domestic help and it’s impossible for me to afford that. It was the neighbours who collected money and my brother-in-law was able to go and meet my son. We just appeal to the government to pardon our children and free them,” she said.

Muhammad Shaban GanaiMuhammad Shaban Ganai, a casual labourer, say: “We seem to be losing hope of our son’s bail” [Al Jazeera]
At the home of the third student, Showkat Ahmad Ganai, in Shahgund village of north Kashmir’s Bandipora district, his aged parents and two sisters are desperate, too.

Muhammad Shaban Ganai, 60, is a casual labourer. The family had to sell their cow and took credit from people to afford the money to fight the case.

“It is as if a mountain has fallen on us. We seem to be losing hope of our son’s bail,” Ganai said.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022...ested-kashmiri-students-struggle-to-free-them
 
The three Kashmiri students who spent more than five months in Agra jail for cheering for Pakistan in a cricket match against India, have been granted bail and would be released after completion of formalities.

The Allahabad High Court today granted bail to the trio, arrested on sedition charges for allegedly raising pro-Pakistan slogans following Pakistan’s victory in the T20 cricket World Cup match against India last year.

National Spokesperson, J&K Students Association, Nasir Khuihami said the court decided to set them free after hearing their case.

The three, Arshad Yusuf, Inayat Altaf and Showkat Ahmed Ganai from Budgam and Bandipore studied in an engineering college in Agra, were given bail. They were arrested on October 28, 2021, by Agra police after locals alleged they had raised slogans in favour of the Pakistan cricket team.

A case under Sections 124 A (sedition), 153-A (promoting enmity between different groups) and 505 (1)(B) (with intent to cause, or which is likely to cause, fear or alarm to the public, or to any section of the public) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and Section 66-F of the Information Technology Act was slapped against him.

The bail application of the trio was secured by Ramesh Chand Yadav, a senior advocate who was assisted by Santosh Kumar Singh.

Nasir said the students were from poor families and they had to arrange legal aid for the trio. He said the students would be released in a couple of days after completing the formalities.

https://www.news18.com/news/india/k...kistan-in-cricket-match-get-bail-4925249.html
 
Jailed Kashmiri students struggle to arrange surety for release

Srinagar April 1

The family of Arshad Yousuf, one of the three Kashmiri students granted bail by the Allahabad High Court in a sedition case for allegedly celebrating the Pakistan cricket team’s win, is now struggling to put forth financial backing to their promise to appear in future court hearings.

The 21-year-old continues to be in jail even after the Allahabad High Court on March 30 granted bail to him and two other Kashmiri students, who were arrested after they allegedly put a Whatsapp status, celebrating Pakistan’s win over an Indian T20 cricket team.

“My nephew will be home and there can’t be a bigger joy for us,” Muhammad Younus Paul told The Tribune.

Paul says the family is now struggling to find six persons with each having Rs 1 lakh in their bank accounts to furnish surety bonds to secure his release.

“We have been told to arrange six sureties, so that our son doesn’t jump the bail. Until the final verdict of the case, the money will be withheld in the accounts of these six people. It’s really difficult to find six persons who can come to my nephew’s rescue,” he said.

Under a surety bond, a witness agrees to pay the fine if the defendant doesn’t appear before the court or breaks bond conditions.

“This is too harsh. Usually, court asks for one witness,” said Mir Urfi, a well-known human rights lawyer in Kashmir.

Arshad lost his father in a road accident when he was one-year-old. He is good at studies and gives hope to his mother and two siblings to bring them out of the cycle of abject poverty.

Along with Arshad, two other Kashmiri students, Inayat Altaf Sheikh and Showkat Ahmad Ganaie were also arrested for their Whatsapp posts. They have been in Agra jail since October 27.

While granting them bail, Justice Ajay Bhanot said: “The unity of India is not made of bamboo reeds which will bend to the passing winds of empty slogans.”

Justice Bhanot said that “students travelling freely to different parts of the country in the quest for knowledge is the true celebration of India’s diversity and a vivid manifestation of India’s unity.”

“It is the duty of the people of the hosting State to create enabling conditions for visiting scholars to learn and live the constitutional values of our nation,” the court observed.

The trio were studying at an Agra engineering college under the Prime Minister’s Special Scholarship Scheme. Under the scholarship, the government selects colleges for the students after they apply and qualify for the scholarship. The scholarship was started by Dr Manmohan Singh-led Congress Government and thousands of Kashmiri students have got themselves enrolled in different colleges across the country over the years.

They were arrested after some students protested outside their college over their purported Whatsapp status. The college authorities rusticated them.

A Mathura-based lawyer Madhuvan Dutt is representing them after advocates in Agra refused to represent them.

https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/j...struggle-to-arrange-surety-for-release-382699
 
At Bandipora’s Shahgund village, Mohammad Shaban Ganai has taken money from relatives and friends, and even crowdsourcing; a total of Rs 2.50 lakh to release his 22-year-old son Showkat Ahmad imprisoned at Agra jail. Shaban has sold off all his valuables, including his cow who he'd call “companion”; then his goat and recently his meagre patch of land to get his son back home. He is still short of Rs 1.5 lakh.

Showkat is among the three Kashmiri students arrested by the Uttar Pradesh Police following a complaint from a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) youth wing leader for their "celebrating Pakistan’s victory" against India in a T-20 World Cup cricket match. Like Showkat's father, the families of the other two students—Inayat Altaf Sheikh and Arshid Yousuf—are running helter-skelter to bring their sons home.

Hanifa lives along with her two daughters in a small ramshackle dingy room at Checkpora village of Budgam district, Central Kashmir. Her husband is dead. Hanifa does household chores in nearby homes to sustain the family. Her son Arshid Yousuf is her only hope to bring the family out of penury.

To free her son, Hanifa has taken credit from relatives and does not know how she will be able to pay them back.

Cadres Keep Kashmir's National Conference Relevant

“The family's condition is pathetic. You cannot imagine how his (Arshid’s) family has managed to collect the money for his bail,” says Arshid’s uncle Latief Ahmad Dar.

Likewise, Mohammad Altaf Sheikh from Budgam’s Dooniwari village has halted his carpentry work to frantically organise funds to get his son Inayat out of jail.

The case and the consequences

After the India-Pakistan match in a T-20 World Cup at Dubai International Cricket Stadium in UAE, scenes of Pakistani and Indian cricketers exchanging light moments had overwhelmed hearts in both countries; many of them saying ‘friendship is the real spirit of the game’.

However, in India, a 'joyous' WhatsApp status about Pakistan's victory landed three Kashmiri boys—Showkat Ahmed Ganai, Inayat Altaf Sheikh and Arshid Yousuf in jail.

All the three civil engineering students at Agra’s Raja Balwant Singh Engineering Technical College were suspended by the college authorities for posting “objectionable content” as their status on WhatsApp, a day after the match. Members of BJP’s Yuva Morcha also held protests and accused the trio of raising anti-national slogans.

The trio was arrested under Sections 153-A (promoting enmity between different groups on grounds of religion, race, place of birth, residence, language, etc.) and 505 (1)(B)(with intent to cause, or which is likely to cause, fear or alarm to the public) of the Indian Penal Code. They were also been booked for “cyber terrorism” under Section 66F of the Information Technology Act.

After six months of languishing in jail, the Allahabad High Court granted them bail. In March 2022, the court while granting them bail had said: “The unity of India is not made on bamboo reeds which will bend to the passing winds of empty slogans. The foundations of our nation are enduring. Eternal ideals bind the indestructible unity of India. Constitutional values create an indissoluble union of India. Every citizen of the country is the custodian, and the State is the sentinel of the unity of India and the constitutional values of the nation.…”

The statement added it is the duty of the State "to create enabling conditions for visiting scholars to learn and to live constitutional values of our nation…”.

No help from any quarter
After the trio's arrest in October 2021, several bar associations in Agra refused to fight their case, informs J&K Students Association UP Coordinator Manzoor Ahmad Wani.

"On one occasion, the lawyers beat them up within the Agra court premises. It was horrific. That's when he decided to plead the case in other court,” says Wani.

Moreover, when the court ordered bail in March 2022, no one from Agra came forward for their surety.

“We understand everyone is frightened considering the situation in the country. First, you are a Muslim, and then Kashmiri. No one wants to face the brunt later,” says Wani.

Wani said he presented the trio's financial conditions to various Kashmiri politicians, but has only received false assurances.

“I even approached National Conference MP from Anantnag constituency. He did nothing.”

Wani says help finally came from former Punjab CM Captain Amarinder Singh, who personally met Home Minister Amit Shah on the matter.

Jammu and Kashmir Students Association, national spokesperson Nasir Khuehami says the trio faced immense problems in view of the financial constraints and kind of “vitiated political atmosphere” in Agra.

“We tried raising money through crowdfunding but received pressure from different quarters. Later, we asked people to help the families individually,” says Khuehami, who adds that he expects the trio will be released in some days after a hectic legal battle.

In October 2022, India and Pakistan will once again lock horns at Melbourne Cricket Ground, Australia. This time Showkat, Arshid and Inayat will not be enthusiastic. After the kind of trauma they have faced, their families say the ‘game is over’ for them.

https://www.outlookindia.com/nation...their-jubilant-cricket-match-post-news-192751
 
Three Kashmiri students, who were arrested in Agra last October for allegedly celebrating the Pakistan cricket team’s victory over India in a T20 cricket match, were released from jail on Monday.

Nasir Khuehami, a spokesperson for the Jammu and Kashmir Students Association, who has been tracking the matter, said the three students were released from the district jail in Agra after six months.

Last month, the Allahabad High Court had granted bail to the Arsheed Yousuf, Inayat Altaf Sheikh and Showkat Ahmed Ganai – enrolled in Agra’s Raja Balwant Singh Engineering College under the PM’s special scholarship for J&K students – but they were not released as they could not secure a guarantor for their surety.

“The unity of India is not made of bamboo reeds which will bend to the passing winds of empty slogans,” said the Allahabad High Court while granting bail to the three Kashmiri students.

An FIR was lodged against them for allegedly posting a WhatsApp status praising the Pakistan players after they defeated India in the T20 World Cup cricket match. They had been in jail since October 27, 2021.

While granting them bail on March 30, Justice Ajay Bhanot said: “The foundations of our nation are more enduring. Eternal ideals bind the indestructible unity of India. Constitutional values create an indissoluble Union of India. Every citizen of the country is the custodian, and the state is the sentinel of the unity of India and the constitutional values of the nation.”

Justice Bhanot also stated that “students travelling freely to different parts of the country in the quest for knowledge is the true celebration of India’s diversity and a vivid manifestation of India’s unity.”

https://www.thehindu.com/news/natio...s-released-from-agra-jail/article65354764.ece
 
Same nonsense again in India....

==

Srinagar, Aug 27 (PTI) The National Institute of Technology (NIT) here has asked its students not to watch Sunday’s India-Pakistan Asia Cup cricket clash in groups or post anything related to the match on social media platforms.

In a notice issued by the dean of students’ welfare, the institute administration has asked the students to remain in their allotted rooms during the match.

“Students are aware that a cricket series involving various nations is going on in the Dubai International Stadium. Students are hereby directed to take sports as a game and do not create any kind of indiscipline in the institute/hostel,” the notice read.

During Sunday’s match, the students have been directed to remain in their allotted rooms and not allow other students to enter their rooms and watch the match in groups, it said.

“If there is a group of students watching the match in a particular room, then the students to whom that particular room is allotted will be debarred from the institute hostel accommodation and a fine of at least Rs 5,000 will be imposed on all the students involved,” the NIT said.

The students have also been directed to avoid posting any material related to the match on social media platforms. Furthermore, they have been instructed not to step out of the hostel rooms during or after the match.

In 2016, clashes broke out at the institute between outstation and local students following India’s defeat to the West Indies in the T-20 World Cup semi-final, leading to a closure of the NIT for days. PTI SSB RC

https://theprint.in/india/nit-srina...dia-pakistan-cricket-match-in-groups/1103892/
 
Jaiswal's family is getting threats from right-wing activists after a picture of his was misunderstood over social media.

An Indian fan named Sanyam Jaiswal received death threats back home in UP's Bareilly for a funny prank inside the Dubai stadium during the India-Pakistan clash for the Asia Cup 2022 on Sunday (August 28).

Jaiswal, who had travelled to UAE to catch the glimpse of the mouth-watering neighbours' clash, has had threats made against him after wearing the Pakistan jersey as part of a prank during the match.

A picture of him with the caption "an Indian man supporting Pakistan" went viral over social media, with people of his hometown taking offence to Jaiswal wearing the Pakistani jersey. His family started receiving threats and warnings, with some suggesting the government and police authorities in UP to file an FIR against him.

In stress over those threats, Jaiswal's family members began calling him and informing him of the reactions to his actions, also asking him to clarify his stance immediately.

Speaking to the Times of India, Sanyam Jaiswal clarified why he ended up wearing the Pakistan jersey inside the stadium in Dubai despite being an Indian fan. Jaiswal said he was on the lookout for an Indian jersey once he entered the ground but they were all sold out. He then decided to buy one Pakistan jersey and play a prank on the Pakistani section of the jam-packed crowd.

"Like many others, I am, of course, a supporter of the Indian cricket team," Jaiswal stood firm. "I had planned to watch the match from the stadium with my friend, who came to Dubai all the way from the US. After I failed to get an Indian jersey at the store outside the stadium, I picked up a Pakistan jersey, which was available."

"I thought I would tease Pakistani fans by shouting 'Hindustan zindabad' while wearing their national colours. I didn't know such a harmless thing would result in misery for me," he added.

"It was all innocent. Though I was wearing the Pakistan jersey, I also had the Indian flag in my hand. My father is a heart patient and he says he will get an attack from all the tension. Everyone is calling me a traitor."

Also Read - 'Would he survive after saying something like that to me' - Shoaib Akhtar miffed at Virender Sehwag’s 'baap baap hota hai' remark

A family member of Jaiswal reacted to the incident with the condition to anonymity and said: "Sanyam even has a video in which a Pakistani fan is asking him why he's supporting India. What does he need to do to prove that he is not anti-India? This is so sad."

Mindful of the extreme nature of the reactions that have come in, Jaiswal feels dismayed and let down by his own countrymen for misunderstanding where he came from and giving him and his family nightmares after threatening to file an FIR.

"I feel so let down. I had shared the pictures with a few friends. I don’t know who shared it publicly. I am under immense tension while my father, wife, and children are restless at home," he said.

"I am really disappointed with the people who are sharing my images on social media without my consent and without knowing my side of the story."

The calls for FIR against the travelling Indian fan were first made by a right-wing activist Himanshu Patel, who tweeted a picture of Jaiswal, cropping the Indian flag he held in his hand. Jaiswal's father, aged 72, said he is deeply "hurt" over question marks against his son and the family, with some calling Sanyam "anti-national".

No FIR can be filed against Jaiswal since the incident took place in Dubai in UAE.

https://cricxtasy.com/news/indian-fan-receive-threats-for-wearing-pakistan-jersey/cid8407809.htm
 
The second match of Asia Cup 2022 garnered plenty of eye balls all across the globe as arch-rivals India and Pakistan once again locked horns on the cricket field. Fans from both countries turned up in big numbers in UAE as India and Pakistan now occasionally play each other on 22 yards.

While Rohit Sharma-led India bounced back to winning ways after losing to the Men in Green in the ICC Men's T20 World Cup last year, a controversy triggered off the field where an Indian fan received death threats after he was seen wearing Pakistan team's jersey.
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42-year-old Sanyam Jaiswal, who had travelled to UAE to watch the much-awaited contest, could not find a jersey of the Indian men's cricket team. In order to tease the Pakistani fans, he decided to wear their jersey - a move that backfired as he received death threats after an image of him wearing the Pakistan jersey surfaced online.

Several images of 'an Indian man wearing Pakistan jersey' surfaced online after which Sanyam's family started getting death threat and several politicians were also tagged in the posts.

In his clarification, Sanyam explained how he was a fan of the Indian team and had only worn Pakistan jersey to tease the fans.
"I am the supporter of the Indian cricket team and was vouching for Men in Blue throughout the match. I travelled from India just to extend my support to our boys but by the time I reached the stadium, Indian jersey was sold out. I thought of wearing Pakistan jersey and tease Pakistan cricket fans," he told local media.

Meanwhile, Bareilly SSP Satyartha Aniruddha Pankaj said that since the matter took place outside the country, a FIR would not be lodged in the matter.

Rohit Sharma and his men once again got back to winning ways against Pakistan as they defeated Babar Azam & Co. by 5 wickets in the contest.

https://www.timesnownews.com/sports...-pakistan-jersey-in-asia-cup-article-93905765
 
Some people really need to get a life. Death threats for this issue? Just silly. If I'm not mistaken, he was waiving the Indian flag while wearing the Pakistani jersey. He was just trying to annoy Pakistani fans.
 
Some people really need to get a life. Death threats for this issue? Just silly. If I'm not mistaken, he was waiving the Indian flag while wearing the Pakistani jersey. He was just trying to annoy Pakistani fans.
Some lumpen elements are providing fodder to such insanity which is not good for the society. These things get escalated very quickly before we even realize.
 
Hate crime probe into Leicester violence following India-Pak ..

LONDON: A police investigation is underway into hate crimes after violence and racist chanting in a predominantly Indian area of Leicester following India’s victory over Pakistan in the Asia Cup cricket match.

India beat arch-rivals Pakistan in Dubai on Sunday, following which hundreds of India cricket fans poured into the streets of the Belgrave area of Leicester — which is predominantly Indian-origin — waving the Indian flag, honking car horns and dancing to dhols.

A video, which has gone viral, shows one group of India fans, one wearing a Team Indian jersey, walking towards the corner of Shaftesbury Avenue and Melton Road, shouting “Pakistan Murdabad” at the other side of the road. A police officer can be seen arresting one person on the ground and then the video shows a group beating up a man and ripping off his shirt.

British Sikh journalist Sunny Hundal tweeted: “In Leicester extremist Hindutva groups go on the rampage in Leicester. Shocking stuff (sic)”, whilst an anonymous Twitter account tweeted: “As if it wasn’t enough in India, now we’ve got these Nazi lovers in the UK disrupting the harmony between different communities.”

However Dharmesh Lakhani, owner of Bobby’s Restaurant on Belgrave Road, told TOI: “The majority of the celebrations were positive and people were having a good evening celebrating India’s win. I am told that someone anti-India stamped on an Indian flag and the Indian fans thought that person was Pakistani and that infuriated the India supporters. This was an isolated incident in a celebration by thousands of people on Sunday night. It is absolute rubbish to say this was mob violence by Hindus.”

A member of the public and an officer were assaulted during the disorder, Leicestershire police said. A 28-year-old man was arrested at the scene on suspicion of assault and assaulting an emergency worker. He has since been released under investigation.

“We know there are concerns in the community and we are working to identify those responsible for the disorder and racist remarks after the cricket match,” an East Leicester police force spokesperson told TOI. “We are aware of the videos circulating on social media of racist and hateful chanting. We are taking these reports seriously and an investigation is underway to identify those responsible. We are treating this chanting as a hate crime.”

Uday Dholakia, former vice chairman of the Leicestershire police authority, said the violence was unprecedented but it had not damaged community cohesion. “These were young people who had no doubt been at the pubs. There are always tensions at football matches. This is part of being British,” he said, adding there were newer Indian communities in Belgrave from Daman and Diu and Portugal who were “more passionate” about football and cricket than those who had lived there for generations.

Councillor Hemant Bhatia said the violence had created anxiety within communities but the leaders of the Hindu and Muslim communities were keen to bring peace and calm to the city.

Claudia Webbe, MP for Leicester East, Keith Vaz's former constituency, told TOI: "Like many Leicester East residents, I am concerned by reports of hate-filled clashes between India and Pakistan cricket fans in Leicester. It is vital that we work together to share the message of tolerance so that we can bring our communities together. Leicester is a shining example of how people from different cultures can live together side by side. Our diversity is what makes Leicester special. Above all else, we must recognise that there is more in common than that which divides us."


Read more at:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...ofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst
 
A police officer and member of the public were assaulted as crowds gathered in Leicester following a cricket match between India and Pakistan.

Police said officers were called to the Belgrave area on Sunday.

While there, it was reported the pair had been assaulted, with a 28-year-old man arrested at the scene.

Police are also investigating after videos, circulating on social media, showed "racist and hateful chanting".

After being called, Leicestershire Police said officers attended the area of Melton Road, Shaftesbury Avenue and Belgrave Road following the conclusion of the Asia Cup match, which India won.

The detained man, held on suspicion of assault and assaulting an emergency worker, has been released under investigation.

Since the match, the force said it had been made aware of a number of videos of "racist and hateful chanting" circulating on social media.

In a tweet, the East Leicester Police team said: "An investigation is under way to identify those responsible.

"We are treating this chanting as a hate crime and anyone found to have been taking part will be dealt with accordingly."

Insp Yakub Ismail, commander for the East Leicester neighbourhood policing area, added: "Local officers are continuing to engage with young people, community leaders and stakeholders in the area.

"We want to ensure that any future celebrations are organised in a planned, safe and considerate manner."

BBC
 
An office-bearer of a right-wing group has filed a police complaint against a businessman from Bareilly whose pictures showing him wearing the jersey of the Pakistani cricket team during a recent India-Pakistan match in Dubai has gone viral on the social media.

The family members of the businessman have, however, claimed that the act of wearing the Pakistani team's jersey was merely a prank.

"The matter has been brought to our notice but since the incident occurred outside the country, further action will be taken in accordance with directions from the government," Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP), Bareilly Satyarth Aniruddha Pankaj told PTI on Wednesday.

Pictures of Sanyam Jaiswal, a resident of Civil Lines in Bareilly, standing outside the stadium in Dubai wearing the jersey of the Pakistani team have gone viral on social media platforms. The pictures have angered a section of people back home.

Jaiswal's family members said the he arrived late at the stadium on Sunday and could not find a jersey of the Indian team. He then decided to buy the Pakistani jersey instead. They said Jaiswal had a plan to shout "Hindustan zindabad" donning the Pakistani jersey during the match.

Meanwhile, Himanshu Patel, an office-bearer of the Bareilly Gaurakhsa Prakosth, has sent a complaint to the Bareilly SSP, the inspector general of police and the additional director general of police, Bareilly zone, seeking action against Jaiswal.

In a video statement released from his native place in Pilibhit, the father of the businessman, Satish Jaiswal, said, "We are a family of patriots. I do not know what has my son done and under what conditions but if his actions have hurt anyone, I seek an apology with folded hands. His intentions were not to hurt anyone."

https://www.theweek.in/news/sports/...wearing-pak-jersey-during-cricket-match-.html
 
This is the shocking moment a huge brawl breaks out after a cricket match - leading to one man being arrested for assaulting a police officer.

Cricket fans spilled out onto the streets following India vs Pakistan's match in Leicester on Sunday 28 August.

Unsavoury footage shows a number of young men on Leicester’s Golden Mile throwing punches at each other - with an officer appearing to be assaulted by a member of the crowd.

In the clip an officer is managing to pin the attacker down and call for assistance.

The incident took place in the Belgrave area of the city with the frantic and violent scenes filmed and shared on Twitter.

According to local reports, a 28-year-old man was arrested at the scene on suspicion of assault and assaulting an emergency worker.

He has since been released under investigation.

In addition to the brawl, offensive chants could also be heard coming from the crowd.

Officers had previously issued warnings online to the public about gathering on Belgrave Road ahead of the Asia Cup, an event which would usually be a joyous celebration.

In a statement, Leicester Police told Jam Press: "On Sunday evening, police were called to the Belgrave area of Leicester following a report of crowds gathering after the conclusion of the India versus Pakistan cricket match.

"Officers attended the area of Melton Road, Shaftesbury Avenue and Belgrave Road. While there, it was reported both a member of the public and an officer had been assaulted.

"A 28-year-old man was arrested at the scene on suspicion of assault and assaulting an emergency worker. He has since been released under investigation.

"Since the incident, police have been made aware of a number of videos of the incident circulating on social media.

"Officers are carrying out further enquiries and anyone with information is asked to get in touch, quoting incident 401 of 28 August."

Inspector Yakub Ismail, commander for the East Leicester Neighbourhood Policing Area (NPA), said: “Our officers are there to protect our communities and we take a zero-tolerance approach to them being assaulted in their line of duty.

“Following the events of Sunday evening, local officers are continuing to engage with young people, community leaders and stakeholders in the area.

“We want to ensure any future celebrations are organised in a planned, safe and considerate manner.”

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/huge-brawl-breaks-out-uk-27886799
 
A man in Assam’s Sivasagar district died of cardiac arrest while watching the India-Pakistan T20 cricket match.

The incident took place on Sunday evening and the man was identified as Bitu Gogoi, 34.

A police officer said that Gogoi along with a few of his friends went to a local cinema hall on Sunday evening where the match was being broadcast live.

But, during the match, Gogoi suddenly went unconscious and fell down. His friends immediately rushed him to the nearby hospital where the doctors declared him brought dead.

According to doctors, Gogoi suffered a cardiac arrest due to the extreme level of noise pollution that was created in the cinema hall during the cricket match.

The body has been sent for an autopsy.

Meanwhile, a team of Sivsagar police has started an investigation to look into the incident.

As per his family, Gogoi was healthy and did not suffer from any health issues.

https://thekashmirwalla.com/man-dies-of-heart-attack-during-indo-pak-t20-cricket-match/
 
6 Years After 17 Muslim Men Were Accused Of Celebrating Pakistani Cricket Victory, MP Courts Find Police Case To Be False

The residents of Mohad village in Madhya Pradesh, 30 km south of the state capital, Bhopal, no longer watch cricket matches between India and Pakistan because they are still traumatised by the arrest and trial of 17 Muslim men and two minors accused of cheering for Pakistan.

After India lost the Champion Trophy final at the Oval Stadium in London on 18 June 2017, a rumour spread about the villagers raising slogans supporting Pakistan, distributing sweets and burning celebratory crackers. The accused were booked for sedition and criminal conspiracy under the Indian Penal Code, 1860. When the police found it impossible to make a case, they dropped sedition and added promoting enmity between different groups. They persisted with the case even though the Hindu complainant was publicly saying that he made no such allegations against the Muslim men from his village.

At the time, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had been in power for three years at the centre, Hindu nationalism was rising, and the term “anti-national” was freely used against critics, especially Muslims. The mainstream media was reinforcing the government narrative and spreading Islamophobia.

In this case, news channels called the accused men “traitors.”

“The impact of that incident is so deep that neither the villagers play cricket nor watch it on TV when India and Pakistan are playing,” said Rafiq Tadvi, the village headman.

More than six years after they were arrested, jailed, allegedly beaten, kicked, and verbally abused, and made to fight a court case that indebted them, first-class magistrate Devander Sharma acquitted 16 Muslim men (one died in 2019) after the Hindu complainant and government witnesses told the court they were forced to make false allegations against them.

“After going through all the evidence, arguments and eyewitnesses, there was no proof that the accused raised slogans and burnt firecrackers,” Sharma wrote in the judgement delivered on 9 October 2023.

“Besides, the police also failed to provide evidence to prosecute them under section 153 - A of the IPC (promoting enmity between different groups). Thus, the court reached the verdict that all accused were exculpated.”

While the media widely covered the incident in June 2017, the October judgment acquitting them went unreported.

“We just presented our side before the court,” Shoeb Ahmad, the defence lawyer, said. “The complainant and eyewitness testimony did the rest. Although they were pressured to testify against them, they stood with the truth.”

Apart from the 17 Muslim men, two minors, Mubarik Tadvi and Zubair Tadvi, who were 16 at the time of arrest, were acquitted by the juvenile justice court in June 2022. Neither returned to school.

Zubair, a shrine caretaker in Indore, said, “I used to dream of being a police inspector, but now I have quit my education.”

Two lives were lost before the acquittal in October 2023.

Rubab Nawab, 40, killed himself in February 2019 because he could no longer bear the humiliation of being branded a “traitor.” Villagers said that Mukaddar Tadvi, 60, could not recover from the shock of his son Sikander Tadvi’s arrest, and he died in November 2021.

The judgement did not hold the MP police accountable for registering and prosecuting a false case.

‘It’s An Open Secret That We Were Tortured’

Mohad village, located on the Madhya Pradesh-Maharashtra border, is home to 4,000 residents, mostly marginalised Dalits, Bhil tribals, and Tadvi Bhil Muslims, a subcaste of the Bhils who converted to Islam. Almost everyone is a small farmer or daily wage worker, and they survive primarily on monthly government rations.

When Article 14 visited the village in February 2024, nine men between the ages of 25 and 60 said they were kicked, beaten and verbally abused by the town inspector Sanjay Pathak and other police personnel when they were locked up at the Shahpur police station for two days in June 2017.

They alleged the police pulled their beards, threatened to set them on fire if they protested and locked them up without food for two days.

“Even the man who came to the police station to serve tea used to kick us, calling us terrorists,” said Imam Tadvi, a 32-year-old daily wager.

“When they started assaulting me, I requested them not to hit my right leg. It's already broken,” said Sarfaraz Tadvi, a 35-year-old daily wager. “Still, they hit 12 canes on that spot. I was unable to walk for almost a year, and the treatment drained all my savings.”

Pathak told Article 14 that the allegations of physical violence were not true, nothing was reported in the mandatory medical examination before the accused were moved to jail, no one complained when produced before the magistrate, and their lawyer made no allegations in court.

Imam said they were never taken for a medical examination.

“It’s an open secret that we were tortured. The whole village saw when we were beaten before they took us to the police station,” he said. “We were shattered and could not speak before the magistrate.”

Ahmad, the lawyer, said he briefly spoke of the violence before the magistrate but did not pursue the matter because his clients were poor, in debt, and just wanted to be acquitted.

The men said they were called “terrorists” and made to clean the toilets and mop the floor every day when they were incarcerated in

Khandwa central jail, 90 km from Mohad village.

“We were made to sleep in such a way that one could not even change his side,” said Irfan. “We spent Eid on an empty stomach while our families outside ate dry bread.”

When they went for their hearings at the Burhanpur district courts, they said that lawyers would shout, “Desh ke gaddaron ko, goli maro salon ko” (Shoot the traitors) and “Atankwadiyon ko phansi do” (Hang the terrorists).

The verbal abuse continued at the police station, where they were called “traitors” or “terrorists” when they went to mark their weekly attendance after getting bail until the acquittal.

Pathak hung up the phone when Article 14 asked him about the allegation of verbal abuse over the years.

Article 14 has also sent an email to the director general of police, the additional director general of police (law and order), the public relations officer and the superintendent of police Burhanpur about the police personnel at the Shahpur police station fabricating a case against the Muslim villagers of Mohad village and the allegations of physical violence and verbal abuse.

We will update the copy if they respond.

Masood Ahmed Khan, secretary of the Coordination Committee for Indian Muslims in MP, said that the attitude of the police in MP towards Muslims and tribals in the state had always been “unconstitutional” and there was little the courts had done to change it.

“In the case of Mohad village, the court should have taken stern action against the police,” said Khan. “Not only the police but also lawyers and media persons should be held accountable for their misdeeds.”

Why The Court Acquitted Them

Days after the incident, the complainant, Subhash Koli, told the media that he had made no complaint; the police had come up with it after the arrests had already been made.

Koli said that he went to Shahpur police station at around 11 pm on 18 June 2017 after the police detained his Muslim neighbour Anees Mansuri, a 25-year-old, one of most educated Muslims in the village who was preparing for competitive examinations and working as a tailor to fund his education. Koli was silent when the police arrested Mansuri, but then he went to the police station to get him released.

“They asked me, ‘A Hindu has become friends with a Muslim?’ and hit me twice on the back of my head,” Koli said at the time.

Koli said he was summoned to the police station on 19 June and saw the investigating officer, RA Yadav, writing the FIR based on events that did not occur.

Three months before the verdict, Koli, an electrician, succumbed to cancer. His mother and sister live on the rations they get from the public distribution system.

“He was the promoter of Hindu-Muslim unity in the village,” said Rafiq, the headman.

Twelve government witnesses refuted the police.

“I knew the accused because we live in the same village. But as far as my testimony to the case is concerned, I didn’t know anything. I’m on the witness list although I was never consulted," Pintu Jadhav, 30, told the magistrate on 15 March 2023.

Another witness, Sunil, 28, testified before the court on 24 January 2023 and said, “I didn’t identify the accused. I saw them for the first time at the police station.”

“I was in the village, but it’s wrong to allege that crackers were burnt at the bus stand, sweets were distributed in the village, and slogans were raised in support of Pakistan,” said Sunil. “It’s wrong to say they were hatching a conspiracy against India.”

A Question Of Justice

Criminal lawyer and Article 14 editorial board member Nikita Sonavane said that it had become routine for the police to make an ordinary man a complainant forcibly. The accused are eventually acquitted after they have spent time in jail, and they and their families have endured years of suffering, she said.

Sonavane, the founder of the Criminal Justice and Police Accountability Project in Bhopal, said that the Supreme Court in 2022 and the Madhya Pradesh High Court in 2018 ruled that those falsely implicated by the police should be compensated.

“But this happens in very few cases, and the victims are not even able to fight. In such a situation, it becomes difficult for common people to get justice,” she said.

“Acquittal is not justice if the allegations are not proven,” said Sonawane. “What about what the accused have to face in fake cases? This ranges from mental stress to financial loss. What about that? Real justice will be done only when there is a provision for compensation after acquittal.”

Ahmad, the lawyer, said his clients did not want to pursue litigation for compensation or for holding the police accountable.

“The reason is penury,” he said. “They don't want justice. They want to get rid of this case and live a normal life.”

Deploying Islamophobia

Ahmad, the lawyer, explained the political objective behind the case. He said that before every state election, the BJP-led government used stray incidents and controversial issues to polarise voters on religious lines.

The Muslims of Mohad village became a target before the 2018 state assembly election.

A year before the 2023 Assembly elections, there was a communal riot in Burhanpur’s neighbouring district, Khargone, on the Hindu festival of Ram Navami on April 10, 2022. One Muslim man was killed, and over 40 Hindus and Muslims were injured.

The BJP government gave orders for the properties of “rioters” or “stone pelters” to be bulldozed. Almost 50 properties belonging to Muslims were razed over the next few days.

The authorities said the homes and shops, including houses built under a central government scheme, either encroached on government lands or were built without permission. They also demolished Mohd Shaikh's shop even though he did not have hands and could not have pelted stones.

According to the 2011 census, 6.7% of the 72 million people in Madhya Pradesh are Muslims.

Burhanpur district, where the Muslim men were accused of raising pro-Pakistan slogans, is 51% Muslim and has a rich history dating back to the Mughal era. Still, the BJP, which famously does not seek Muslim votes or field Muslim candidates, won both the state assembly seats—Burhanpur and Nepanagar—from 2008 to 2018. But they lost the 2023 election from here.

Incidents where Muslims were accused of raising slogans in favour of Pakistan surfaced in Ujjain, Shajapur, Katni, Chhatarpur, and Mandsaur. At least three cases registered against them appeared to be baseless.

Rafiq Tadvi, the headman of Mohad village, said the acquitted men received no compensation from the government even though the police made up a case against them.

Villagers said that a year before the incident, the Bajrang Dal—the Vishwa Hindu Parishad youth wings—had opened a unit in the village one year before the incident. Since then, there have been attempts to spoil the peace between Hindus and Muslims.

Raided & Arrested

Karan Singh, a 36-year-old witness who turned hostile, told Article 14 that after the rumour spread on 18 June, the police came to the village and started picking people up and taking them to the police station.

For three days, the police detained anyone who had a television in their homes, said Singh. Muslims were made accused, and Hindus were made eyewitnesses.

“When police vehicles approached, people started running to their houses like in retro movies (80s and 90s) when dacoits attacked the villages,” he said. “Many Muslims hid on the hillock for over a week to evade police arrest.”

Imam Tadvi, the 32-year-old daily wager, had returned from a day of hard labour and two hundred rupees and was playing with his infant daughter when the police picked him up.

Imam has neither a smartphone nor a television in his house, which has a tin roof.

“The moment they heard my name, they snatched Zaiban and threw her away. Her nose was bleeding when I went to pick her up. They pounced on me. They pushed me through the wall with my neck, saying, ‘saale iss desh ka namak kha kar gaddari karta hai,’” (You live in India but are a traitor).

“We don't have money for food. Who can afford to burst crackers and distribute sweets after watching a match on TV?” he said.

After speaking of the incident, Imam showed a scar on his daughter’s face, now eight years old.

“I was clueless as to why the police arrested me,” he said. “It was in police custody that I learned something had happened during the India—Pakistan cricket match.”

Imam incurred a debt of over two lakh to fight the case. It will take him two or three years to repay it.

Sarfaraz Tadvi, 35, said he took a Rs 2 lakh loan, which he would repay in five years.

“Police often barged inside Muslim homes to harass women,” he said, recalling the raid. “One day, when I objected to this harassment, they abused me and left me. But the next day, they arrested me and put my name in the FIR.”

Deaths

Rubab Nawab, 40, killed himself by consuming pesticide in February 2019, leaving behind a widow, two children and a debt of two lakh rupees. His father died a week later.

His oldest son, now 18 years old, quit school and started earning as a daily wage labourer.

His widow, Zubaida Bai, 40, recalled the day he was arrested.

“Two policemen entered the house and assaulted him after hearing his name. When both the children started crying, they abused them, saying, ‘Chup ho atankwadi ke aulad warna yahi khatam kar dunga.’” (Shut up, you son of a terrorist, or else you will be killed.)

“He was devastated with day-to-day humiliation and the tag of traitor,” she said. “He used to cry after returning from the police station and the court.”

Sikander Tadvi, whose 60-year-old father Mukaddar killed himself in 2021, was anguished that he did not live to see him acquitted.

“He didn’t want to live with that tag of terrorist and traitor,” he said. “At least he would have died in peace.”

SOURCE: https://article-14.com/post/6-years...ts-find-police-case-to-be-false-65fa4ed58daa7
 

Police investigate break-in and vandalism at Brampton cricket club​


POLICE are investigating a break-in and subsequent vandalism at Irthing Vale Cricket Club in Brampton.

The unknown suspects have reportedly forced entry to a portacabin and have caused damage to the property within between April 8 and 10.

A spokesperson from Cumbria Police said: "Police are seeking any persons who have witnessed or have information relating to this incident.

 
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