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[VIDEOS] Violence at Asian weddings

TSA321

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https://metro.co.uk/2019/10/14/gues...ht-breaks-out-on-wedding-dancefloor-10915416/

This is the shocking moment guests were left covered in blood as a fight broke out at a lavish wedding party in Wolverhampton. Mobile phone footage shows several apparent guests throwing punches and wrestling on the dancefloor. One man is seen with his shirt drenched in blood while screams can be heard in the background. Police and paramedics rushed to the Ramada Park Hall Hotel after the violence erupted on Saturday night.

Furious guests are seen fighting in the middle of a packed hall while some are filmed waving chairs.

At one point the bloodied man charges at another guest who appears to be holding a glass and they both end up in a crumbled heap near a speaker. Amid the screams and sounds of smashing glass, a man is heard pleading into the microphone: ‘Everyone calm down now, calm down. ‘The police are outside, calm down. ‘Everyone just keep stepping away, if you are not involved, please move away.’ Aman Singh, who was at the wedding, said the ‘chaos’ left a number of people hurt as the families clashed.

Mr Singh said: ‘There were punches flying all over the place and we saw someone being taken into an ambulance – I hope he is ok. ‘This is not how you want a wedding to end.’ Another guest, who did not wish to be named, said: ‘It was disgusting. ‘This poor bloke was left with blood literally pouring down his face. ‘This isn’t how a wedding should be conducted.’

Police said they were called to the hotel where three men were seen to have facial injuries. No arrests have been made at this stage as the men did not report that they had been assaulted, according to police. West Midlands Ambulance Service said it sent a ‘major response team’ which treated four people at the hotel. A spokesperson said a teenage girl working at the event was treated at the scene for a medical condition and injuries before being taken to hospital.

Two men aged in their 20s were taken to hospital with injuries while another injured man in his 40s chose not to go hospital despite advice from paramedics. A DJ from Kudos Music later took to Instagram to deny his music played any part in the violence erupting. A spokesperson for Ramada Park Hall Hotel said: ‘Having hosted hundreds of weddings we have never seen scenes like this. ‘We do not accept this behaviour and would like to praise the quick thinking of our team who immediately contacted the emergency services. ‘We’re in close liaison with all staff members who were present on the night and are ensuring that they get all the support they need.’ The father of the bride contacted the hotel to offer a formal apology, according to the spokesman.

 
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Puts Royal Rumble to shame!!!

Woulda been hilarious if there was a tune still blaring in the background.

"Mundayan to bach ke rahi"
 
I knew which community the fight would be Between based on the poster that posted lol.

This isnt rare at Sikh weddings in the UK. Too much whiskey and groups who dont like each other in the same building. Ive seen it in Pakistani weddings too but not as common and nothing like what we have seen here.

I feel sorry for the white chap, got caught up and hurt for no reason.
 
This is really sad. This is why I don't like lavish and big wedding. If something goes wrong, it is money going down the drain.
 
Is it pro-Khalistanis versus anti Khalistanis:D I much prefer simple weddings then all this over the top stuff. Anything going wrong in simple weddings won't cause that much damage financially or otherwise.
 
Khalistanis are the most hardcore Sikhs. They even beat up women. They have no etiquettes or respect for law and order.

I lived among Sikhs in India for years. They are nothing like these hate filled Neanderthals. Indian Sikhs are very progressive and happy people.
 
Khalistanis are the most hardcore Sikhs. They even beat up women. They have no etiquettes or respect for law and order.

I lived among Sikhs in India for years. They are nothing like these hate filled Neanderthals. Indian Sikhs are very progressive and happy people.

Stop pushing your Indian narrative at people and generalizing.
 
Khalistanis are the most hardcore Sikhs. They even beat up women. They have no etiquettes or respect for law and order.

I lived among Sikhs in India for years. They are nothing like these hate filled Neanderthals. Indian Sikhs are very progressive and happy people.

Not true khalistani Sikhs are very nice and welcoming people just because they stand up for their rights does not make them hardcore

Infact the most hardcore and people filled with hate I have seen I am sorry to say are Indian Hindus regardless of which state or city thier from they have hate in them but funny thing is other Hindus I have met who are not from India were warm and friendly
 
Khalistanis are the most hardcore Sikhs. They even beat up women. They have no etiquettes or respect for law and order.

I lived among Sikhs in India for years. They are nothing like these hate filled Neanderthals. Indian Sikhs are very progressive and happy people.

Nothing to do with hardcore or softcore, Sikhs in the UK like to brag about their big drinking exploits, I would guess this fuelled with the gangsta wannabe culture which is rife in the Punjabi community has a fair bit to do with it.
 
I have a feeling it may have started as a result of someone touching a woman inappropriately
 
The trouble was between mostly White local guest males from Wolverhampton and 'Pahtra' Sikhs from Glasgow.All started by a drunken sexual encounter witnessed by many.
I feel sorry for the Bride and Groom.
 
The trouble was between mostly White local guest males from Wolverhampton and 'Pahtra' Sikhs from Glasgow.All started by a drunken sexual encounter witnessed by many.
I feel sorry for the Bride and Groom.

Why do people get drunk at wedding ceremonies? People need to have more self-control.
 
It is why Islamic weddings are better. No alcohol. Nobody gets drunk and no fight happens.

Folks who caused troubles should be charged and fined.
 
It is why Islamic weddings are better. No alcohol. Nobody gets drunk and no fight happens.

Religious conflicts are much dangerous and are on a different scale than 3-4 people hitting each other in a wedding due to getting drunk. If it was conflict of religious ideology, much of these people would have dead or end up at the hospital in best case scenario.
 
Stop pushing your Indian narrative at people and generalizing.

i think he has the right to voice his opinion. And it is your own decision to whether you agree or not. Writing opinion about something doesn't mean pushing.
 
It is why Islamic weddings are better. No alcohol. Nobody gets drunk and no fight happens.

Folks who caused troubles should be charged and fined.

Agreed.

Islamic wedding is a great way to wed.

Qabool hae
 
It is why Islamic weddings are better. No alcohol. Nobody gets drunk and no fight happens.

Folks who caused troubles should be charged and fined.

We cant generalize - millions of Hindu/sikh weddings are happening around the world without trouble
 
Religious conflicts are much dangerous and are on a different scale than 3-4 people hitting each other in a wedding due to getting drunk. If it was conflict of religious ideology, much of these people would have dead or end up at the hospital in best case scenario.

He was talking specifically about weddings not wider conflicts. You even highlighted that part yourself in red font.
 
Feel sorry for the bride and groom.

Ended up forking out to cover costs for the damage too.
 
Pretty common thing in Punjabi Indian wedding these days. These bunch of sharaabis with fake egos can go to any length at any wedding. :inti
 
Meanwhile in Pakistan....

====

A groom has been chased from his own wedding by an angry crowd - after his first wife arrived to let his new bride know he was already married to not one, but two other women.

Asif Rafiq Siddiqi, described as a bearded, hefty man in his mid-30s, was pushed and slapped by the crowd, his shirt torn and his pants ripped in the violence that followed the revelation.

The groom, who ended up cowering under a bus, was saved by unknown people.

Polygamy is legal in Pakistan.

However, while a man can have as many as four wives, he must get the consent of his previous wives before he marries again.

It appears that Mr Siddiqi failed to fulfill this critical step, and the first his new wife and her family knew of his previous marriages was when an enraged woman marched into the banqueting hall in the coastal city of Karachi, where celebrations were taking place.

"What's the matter sister?" one of the bride's relatives is heard asking on a video of the event.

The woman, Madiha Siddiqi, wasted no time in getting to the point.

"He is my husband, and he is the father of this child. He told me he was going to Hyderabad for three days," she alleged. She was with a little boy she said was their son.

The family then tried to usher her into a side room, which gave her the opportunity to point out more of the people she claims are her relatives.

"That is my mother-in-law and that is my jethani [sister-in-law], who said her mother had been sick for three days and was on IV drips," Mrs Siddqi continued, before confronting the newlywed bride directly.

"Didn't you know that he was my husband? He didn't even think about this innocent child."

However, it did not stop there: Ms Siddiqi said she had married the groom in 2016, after meeting him at Karachi's Federal Urdu University, where Mr Siddiqi is understood to work.

Then she revealed he had secretly married his second wife, named as Zehra Ashraf, a teacher at Jinnah Women's University in Karachi, in 2018. The first Mrs Siddiqi knew of that marriage was a text message from her husband's new wife.

Mrs Siddiqi said Mr Siddiqi initially denied that wife's existence, but later admitted he had wed for a second time.

It was Ms Ashraf who also informed Mrs Siddiqi of the latest wedding, sending her in a rage to the celebrations.

It is not clear what exactly happened next. However, police called to the scene told BBC that relatives of the bride pounced on Asif, tore up his clothes and beat him black and blue.

Officers rescued Mr Siddiqi, taking him a a nearby police station - but the bride's relatives followed and waited for him to emerge.

They pounced the moment Mr Siddiqi reappeared - sending him scuttling under a bus. In a video of the scene, voices can be heard threatening him to "come out or we'll put the bus on fire".

Scared, he shouts back, "one minute, one minute", as he prepares to crawl out. As he moves, some people intervene to prevent further violence.

BBC tried to contact Mr Siddiqi and his latest bride's relatives for comments, but they were not available.

Rao Nazim, head of Taimuriha police station, told the BBC no formal complaint had been registered as yet.

"It is a family matter, and the complainants need to go the family court to settle their issues," he said.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-51490594

<div style="width: 100%; height: 0px; position: relative; padding-bottom: 181.818%;"><iframe src="https://streamable.com/s/n1az5/bvwqjr" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="100%" allowfullscreen style="width: 100%; height: 100%; position: absolute;"></iframe></div>
 
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Meanwhile in Pakistan....

====

A groom has been chased from his own wedding by an angry crowd - after his first wife arrived to let his new bride know he was already married to not one, but two other women.

Asif Rafiq Siddiqi, described as a bearded, hefty man in his mid-30s, was pushed and slapped by the crowd, his shirt torn and his pants ripped in the violence that followed the revelation.

The groom, who ended up cowering under a bus, was saved by unknown people.

Polygamy is legal in Pakistan.

However, while a man can have as many as four wives, he must get the consent of his previous wives before he marries again.

It appears that Mr Siddiqi failed to fulfill this critical step, and the first his new wife and her family knew of his previous marriages was when an enraged woman marched into the banqueting hall in the coastal city of Karachi, where celebrations were taking place.

"What's the matter sister?" one of the bride's relatives is heard asking on a video of the event.

The woman, Madiha Siddiqi, wasted no time in getting to the point.

"He is my husband, and he is the father of this child. He told me he was going to Hyderabad for three days," she alleged. She was with a little boy she said was their son.

The family then tried to usher her into a side room, which gave her the opportunity to point out more of the people she claims are her relatives.

"That is my mother-in-law and that is my jethani [sister-in-law], who said her mother had been sick for three days and was on IV drips," Mrs Siddqi continued, before confronting the newlywed bride directly.

"Didn't you know that he was my husband? He didn't even think about this innocent child."

However, it did not stop there: Ms Siddiqi said she had married the groom in 2016, after meeting him at Karachi's Federal Urdu University, where Mr Siddiqi is understood to work.

Then she revealed he had secretly married his second wife, named as Zehra Ashraf, a teacher at Jinnah Women's University in Karachi, in 2018. The first Mrs Siddiqi knew of that marriage was a text message from her husband's new wife.

Mrs Siddiqi said Mr Siddiqi initially denied that wife's existence, but later admitted he had wed for a second time.

It was Ms Ashraf who also informed Mrs Siddiqi of the latest wedding, sending her in a rage to the celebrations.

It is not clear what exactly happened next. However, police called to the scene told BBC that relatives of the bride pounced on Asif, tore up his clothes and beat him black and blue.

Officers rescued Mr Siddiqi, taking him a a nearby police station - but the bride's relatives followed and waited for him to emerge.

They pounced the moment Mr Siddiqi reappeared - sending him scuttling under a bus. In a video of the scene, voices can be heard threatening him to "come out or we'll put the bus on fire".

Scared, he shouts back, "one minute, one minute", as he prepares to crawl out. As he moves, some people intervene to prevent further violence.

BBC tried to contact Mr Siddiqi and his latest bride's relatives for comments, but they were not available.

Rao Nazim, head of Taimuriha police station, told the BBC no formal complaint had been registered as yet.

"It is a family matter, and the complainants need to go the family court to settle their issues," he said.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-51490594

<div style="width: 100%; height: 0px; position: relative; padding-bottom: 181.818%;"><iframe src="https://streamable.com/s/n1az5/bvwqjr" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="100%" allowfullscreen style="width: 100%; height: 100%; position: absolute;"></iframe></div>

Some people dont learn!
 
Never been a fan of polygamy however that crowd is digusting, mob violence is somehow socially acceptable in the subcontinent if you believe your target deserves it. I think they should all be locked up including his first wife if she planned this.
 
Never been a fan of polygamy however that crowd is digusting, mob violence is somehow socially acceptable in the subcontinent if you believe your target deserves it. I think they should all be locked up including his first wife if she planned this.

If someone was going to defraud your daughter/sister like that, how would you have reacted?

By the sound of it he is a serial offender and was going to marry for the 3rd time. For him it may just be good fun but in a society like Pakistan, the girl’s life would ve been ruined by this.
 
If someone was going to defraud your daughter/sister like that, how would you have reacted?

By the sound of it he is a serial offender and was going to marry for the 3rd time. For him it may just be good fun but in a society like Pakistan, the girl’s life would ve been ruined by this.

The guy had no shame - when confronted, he did what all fraudsters do - run for cover
 
If someone was going to defraud your daughter/sister like that, how would you have reacted?

By the sound of it he is a serial offender and was going to marry for the 3rd time. For him it may just be good fun but in a society like Pakistan, the girl’s life would ve been ruined by this.

In a court of law emotions don't matter, you have to do things in the most civilized way.
 
The guy had no shame - when confronted, he did what all fraudsters do - run for cover

How are you supposed react when a violent mob confronts you and that too at a private event? Pakistanis disregard the law if they feel it's morally justified and that is how you will never have rule of law and a civilized society. Beating him up wasn't going to undo the damage he did or his infidelity. The legal route would've been the right way to go about this.
 
How are you supposed react when a violent mob confronts you and that too at a private event? Pakistanis disregard the law if they feel it's morally justified and that is how you will never have rule of law and a civilized society. Beating him up wasn't going to undo the damage he did or his infidelity. The legal route would've been the right way to go about this.

In a country like Pakistan, there is no guarantee that a court of law would produce a harsh enough sentence for someone like him. After all Nawaz Sharif was released by the court after the hue and cry during PTI selection campaign.
 
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