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When is the curfew in Indian-occupied Kashmir going to end?

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Here's what the restoration of Internet access in Kashmir looks like after almost six months: only 301 websites permitted, social media off-limits, slowest possible mobile data speed, no broadband in homes. With <a href="https://twitter.com/ShamsIrfan27?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@shamsirfan27</a><a href="https://t.co/em6EJ8rPOs">https://t.co/em6EJ8rPOs</a></p>— Joanna Slater (@jslaternyc) <a href="https://twitter.com/jslaternyc/status/1221715403031736320?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 27, 2020</a></blockquote>
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Building concentration camps, internet blockade, curfews, violence against anyone who doesn't toe the line of the puppet master; a "secular democracy" indeed.
 
Stumbled upon this, to warm the cockles of your hearts this frigid January day.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="ur" dir="rtl">کشمیر: ’عسکریت پسند‘ نوجوانوں کے جنازے میں عمران خان کے نعرے <a href="https://t.co/IaxyAy8p36">pic.twitter.com/IaxyAy8p36</a></p>— Independent Urdu (@indyurdu) <a href="https://twitter.com/indyurdu/status/1222553769176596488?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 29, 2020</a></blockquote>
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‘Nothing is Normal in Kashmir’

SRINAGAR: “This delegation is just for show. We all know it. They want to show the world everything is normal in Kashmir. But they won't interact with the people,” said the receptionist of a hotel at Lal Chowk in Srinagar. He was referring to a delegation of foreign envoys who had arrived in Jammu and Kashmir early January, as New Delhi claimed everything was ‘normal’ in the state.

The delegation sat in cozy drawing rooms and spoke of ‘normalcy’, while people in the Valley were struggling with rampant unemployment and a dead end economy. There was no interaction with the people of the valley, who have been cut off from the world for almost six months as internet restrictions remain.

“Nothing is normal in Kashmir. This is a fact. We are struggling mentally, physically, financially, politically, basically from all realms,” said a shopkeeper at Lal Chowk. The market at Lal Chowk used to be teeming with people, but now, CRPF personnel are stationed at every corner.

As a few people sit hurdled at a small shop at Lal Chowk area, discussing the current scenario in full swing. The discussion goes thus: The foreign delegation is here and people think this is another fake group sold at the behest of the government, who wants to show the world “everything is normal”.

“We knew this team is sold to the government, so there was no point even demonstrating. They should have talked to us and ask us what happened with us. However instead they talk to the authorities and the army,” said Ahmed (name changed).

The people said that in winter, the shops will remain open, but will be shut again in March. Almost everyone this correspondent spoke to said they were distressed and are “not happy”.

Even the businessmen in the Valley have stopped counting the amount of loss they have incurred post the August-5 decision to abrogate Article 370.

“Earlier we used to have a sale of Rs. 10,000 to 15,000 per day, now it doesn’t even reach Rs. 1000. The condition is so bad; we don’t know what to do,” said Bilal, who owns a fabric shop near Jamia Masjid in Srinagar’s downtown.

The son and father duo, who own this modest shop in the area, spoke over tea about how people have stopped speaking despite still struggling to survive. “They have jailed children. And if any of us raise our voices, we will be slapped with the Public Safety Act, which is a minimum of five years jail. We are just disturbed,” said Bilal’s father’s Sheikh Mohammed.

The Public Safety Act (PSA), 1978, of Jammu & Kashmir is an administrative detention law that allows detention of any individual for up to two years without a trial or charge. The Public Safety Act allows for the arrest and detention of people without a warrant or the framing of specific charges, and often for an unspecified period of time.

Father and son both said that people are in fear as anyone who raises their voice can be jailed. “So many protests used to take place once, now people are afraid to even speak out loud. There is so much pressure from the government that no one is protesting. People can’t raise their voices for something that is wrong here. If we need water and are protesting for it, then also we will be jailed. It doesn’t matter that the protest are just peaceful,” said Mohammed.

A Kashmiri student studying peace and conflict calls this the “fear psychosis”. “They don’t want people to have any hope or will. They are breaking us from within. From detention to snatching away our rights, all this has made the people in the valley skeptical about everything,” he said, requesting anonymity.

Nearby, at Dal Lake -- one of the most popular tourist destinations in Srinagar -- shops were open, but there were no customers.

At the gates there, shikara walas sit, waiting in anticipation for a tourist. “This government has ruined our lives. They have snatched away our rights and taken away our business. Is this how they want to make us a part of them?” said Gulzar (name changed).

Gulzar is a 40-year-old man with five daughters. “We hardly are able to manage food two times a day,” he said visibly distressed. “Tourism was the only way for us to sustain ourselves. This is peak season for tourists, but there is no one here,” he added. According to the people familiar with the tourism industry, this year there have been only 5 percent of the regular number of tourists visiting the valley in its peak season.

The shikaras are rowed either by the canoe-owners themselves or rented out to rowers for around Rs. 30,000 a season. A person can expect to make Rs. 2 lakhs to Rs. 2.5 lakhs over the six-month tourism season. After rent and other costs, he is left with around Rs. 180,000. However, that income has to be spread across 12 months. In off-season, the shikarawalas have no work, or they do odd jobs. This year, they haven’t managed to make a fraction of the expected income on which they rely year round. “What are we to do? What is our future? What is the future of our kids?” he asked no one in particular.

In Kashmir’s south district of Pulwama, two businessmen are trying to figure out how to pay their loans and survive with no sales at all this. Requesting anonymity, the two businessmen speak of how business is low and people are scared. “I am scared to talk to the media. I can be picked up if they see us talking to you,” said the 30-year-old who owns a fabric shop near Pulwama’s district office.

“This is a seasonal shop. During Eid and marriage we sell most of the stuff. Now, all our summer stuff is sitting as it is. We couldn’t sell it and it is just withering away in a corner. Now winter is here, but when summer comes new fashion will come, and all this stuff will be wasted,” said the young shopkeeper. He said that all the fabric comes from Punjab and he has to pay his dealer every month. “Even though we haven’t done sales in five months, as there was a bandh for about three months, I still had to pay him,” he said.

Speaking about the current situation, the other shopkeeper who owns a furniture shop in the area, said, “The shops were shut in resistance to show the government how we have rejected their decision. We are hopeful people and this was our way of protesting, but we had to open shops to survive.”

“We are hurt, but due to fear no one has come out. I feel as if there will be only one spark that will ignite the people, because they have taken down so much frustration,” he added.

They asked us a question that almost every person in the Valley has asked before them – “If the situation is normal, why hasn’t the internet been restored?”

Back in Srinagar, outside Jamia Masjid, which just opens for jummah ki namaz and is then shut, two young girls talk to us about the situation of students in the Valley. Mariam is a PhD student, who hasn’t been able to do any research due to the internet shutdown. “Will you tell the world the truth about us? How we are suffering and it feels as if nothing is left for us?” she asks.

“I am pursuing my PhD from Kashmir University, but for more than five months, I am in a distressed condition. We can’t get access to journals or the internet, it is so important today. I missed a deadline for filling forms for some examinations I wanted to take,” said Mariam.

A masters student, who had come to attend the prayers, looked perplexed. “We had to go to Kargil to access the internet. I had to fill forms for an important exam and had no other choice,” she said.

“Was this the development they were talking about in Kashmir?” asked Mariam. The young woman added that everyone is distressed and no one is happy with the government’s decision. “The communication blockage is another humiliation that comes on top of Article 370,” she said.

Students in Kashmir University made similar points. In a country where students are heading a political movement against Citizenship Amendment Act and National Register of Citizens (NRC), students in Kashmir are barred from protesting or raising a voice. An engineering student at the university said they somehow managed to give their entrance exams. “I had to apply for a masters course I am interested in and had to fill the forms, for that I visited Kargil. I recently had my exam, and to be frank, books are not enough. We need extra material to study and we could not access it,” she said. Most of the students were not comfortable discussing the situation.

In Kashmir’s northern district of Bandipora, a masters student of political science is concerned about what the future holds for them. “There are PhD scholars here, who are driving rickshaws or just sitting at home, because there are no jobs,” she said.

She said that Bandipora has some of the brightest minds, which is why many of them move out of the Valley to pursue their career. “There is nothing left, especially for students here. No jobs, no opportunities. This government has taken away everything and to sustain ourselves and make our future better, we have to move out of our homes.”

Unemployment is a major issue in the Valley at the moment. “I don’t want to stay in Kashmir and study, there is no future here,” said a student of Kashmir University.

2G internet facilities have been restored in Jammu and Kashmir as of now. However, people can only access limited websites, while social media is still not accessible. The decision was taken a day before January 26.

Meanwhile, thousands are still detained, including almost all mainstream political leaders. Such is ‘normalcy’ in the valley.

https://www.thecitizen.in//index.php/en/newsdetail/index/9/18235/nothing-is-normal-in-kashmir
 
[MENTION=76058]cricketjoshila[/MENTION]

2 year detention without trial? How do you justify this?
 
The National Assembly on Tuesday unanimously passed a resolution calling for India to reverse the annexation of Jammu and Kashmir.

Chairman of Special Committee on Kashmir Syed Fakhar Imam tabled the resolution in the assembly.

The resolution "demands that India immediately reverse and rescind its illegal action August 5 and October 31, 2019". It further says that India should also allow the media, international governments and rights organisations and observers to access the occupied region so that they are "able to assess and report the human rights situation there".

The Indian government had on August 5, 2019 repealed Article 370 of its constitution, stripping occupied Kashmir of its special status. It also divided up occupied Jammu and Kashmir into two union territories; one Jammu and Kashmir, and the other the Buddhist-dominated high altitude region of Ladakh. The bifurcation of the territory came into effect on October 31 last year.

The resolution passed by the parliament today also called upon the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation to "immediately convene" a special summit on the Kashmir issue.

It condemned the atrocities committed by the Indian forces in the occupied territory, including the detention of Kashmiri leadership and youth, usage of pellet guns against innocent civilians.

The resolution also denounced violence against women by the Indian forces, "especially the use of rape as a weapon of war" as well as the "deliberate targetting of civilian population" in ceasefire violations. It also noted with concern the continuing lockdown of occupied Kashmir and deployment of troops in the territory and India's "strongarm tactics" to change the ethnic demography of the region.

The parliament welcomed the consultations of the United Nations Security Council held last month and lauded the role played by human rights organisations, statesmen and stateswomen, international media and the governments of China, Turkey, Malaysia and Iran.

Before the resolution was passed in the National Assembly today, a debate was held on the Kashmir issue where Minister for Human Rights Shireen Mazari said that for the first time in history, the world had accepted Pakistan’s narrative on the Kashmir dispute, “due to effective diplomacy by this government under Prime Minister Imran Khan’s leadership”.

She said that the prime minister had exposed “the Nazi-inspired ideology of RSS”.

"United Nations Security Council discussed the Kashmir issue in two different meetings. The European Union also discussed the matter. Pakistan's stance on Kashmir is being heard and being corroborated internationally," she said.

Responding to criticism levelled against the government from opposition benches, the minister said: "To say that this government had not done anything on the Kashmir issue is incorrect. The foreign ministry had raised the issue with multiple countries.

"The idea to send parliamentarians around the world to raise awareness regarding the Kashmir issue is a good one as the foreign ministry does not have the capacity to do this alone.

"However, these parliamentarians should first be equipped with facts about the matter," Mazari said, adding that without facts, these visits will have "zero impact".

She also elaborated on various letters her own ministry had written to the United Nations regarding the Kashmir issue.

Minister for Science and Technology Fawad Chaudhry also spoke on the issue and said: "We don't only stand with the people of Kashmir, we also have solidarity with the Muslims of India.

"Today, the Indian government had proved Quiad-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah's point of view. He had foreseen at the time what a country with a Hindu majority will look like," the minister said.

According to Radio Pakistan, Minister for Aviation Ghulam Sarwar Khan said the Muslim countries around the world need to support Pakistan in the quest for a peaceful resolution of the Kashmir dispute.

Speaker National Assembly Asad Qaiser said that the lower house of Parliament had “effectively raised the plight of oppressed Kashmiri people at different forums abroad”.

Mufti Abdul Shakoor regretted international human rights organisations’ silence on the situation in occupied Kashmir.

“These blatant human rights violations are not tolerable to us. The entire nation is united on the issue of Kashmir,” Shakoor was quoted as saying.

PTI’s Sardar Nasrullah Khan Dreshek said, “Kashmir is Pakistan’s jugular vein. Time warrants that unity in our ranks is key for effectively and forcefully raising the Kashmir issue at the international level.

A delegation from Azad Kashmir also witnessed the National Assembly session.

Yesterday, while the treasury and opposition members unanimously condemned India for committing atrocities in occupied Kashmir, they also continued political bickering, accusing each other of doing little for the Kashmir cause.

Most of the speakers stressed the need for taking practical steps to help the oppressed Kashmiris, saying mere speeches and resolutions would serve no purpose.

Senate reaffirms support for Kashmiri people
Also on Tuesday, the Senate unanimously adopted a resolution assuring its support to the people of occupied Kashmir in the struggle for their right to self-determination.

The resolution was moved by Leader of the House in the Senate Shibli Faraz on behalf of all the parties in the upper house.

According to the resolution, the Senate saluted "the heroism and valour of the people of Indian-occupied Kashmir on this day of solidarity with the Kashmiri people. Their perseverance, steadfastness and determination to seek freedom from the Indian colonial yoke is marked in letters of gold in the annals of freedom struggle."

It said the upper house resolutely rejected India's illegal attempts to annex occupied Kashmir and urged the international community to uphold the United Nations resolutions that guarantee the Kashmiri people's right of self-determination.

“The Senate of Pakistan demands that Indian Prime Minister [Narendra] Modi and his RSS cohort who have unleashed a reign of terror on the unarmed and defenceless people, children, women and men of Indian-occupied Kashmir be tried for crimes against humanity," the resolution read.

It said the people of Pakistan would always stand firm with the people of Kashmir in their just cause until the resolution of this conflict according to the wishes of the Kashmiri people.

"India's belligerence is a grave threat to both regional peace and global stability. The international community must take note as well as action against this open repudiation of UN resolutions," the resolution added.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1532430/n...india-reverse-annexation-of-jammu-and-kashmir
 
India turns Occupied Kashmir into ‘an open-air prison’

Since the Modi government scrapped Article 307 in August last year turning Indian Occupied Kashmir (IOK) into an open-air prison, the region — famous for producing delicious apples suffered loss for almost $2.5 billion, said Jammu and Kashmir Salvation Movement President Altaf Ahmad Bhat on Tuesday.

While highlighting the miserable situation in the disputed territory, Bhat said that during the clampdown that has lasted for over six months, both internet and telecommunication suffer blockade penalising Kashmiris who want their basic and political rights in accordance with the United Nations resolutions.

Speaking at the seminar held in Birmingham, UK titled ‘Occupation in Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir: What is going on?’, the president said that the abrogation of Article 370 was a heinous step to crush the economy of IOK. “Due to the spun-out internet shutdown, students are unable to complete their research projects on time… students of Birmingham can be the voice of besieged students of Occupied Kashmir.”

Referring to New Delhi’s false claims of democratic rights in the disputed valley, Bhat said that in 1987 the Indian government rigged their assembly elections and genuine winning candidates were not declared victorious.

“Our elections in 1987 were rigged by India to favour their handpicked and New Delhi backed political candidates against the winners,” he said, adding that India has been violating human rights since long.

The Jammu and Kashmir Salvation Movement’s president went on to say that genocide of Kashmiris started on November 6 1947 when India killed nearly 3 million Kashmiris and the massacre continues, with rape bids still being used as weapon of war to crush the genuine political struggle permeating in the Himalayan valley.

“From Maqbool Bhat to Afzal Guru all are extra judicial killings to satisfy the collective conscience of India,” he added.

Pointing out at the endless atrocities on the besieged people of Kashmir, Altaf Ahmad Bhat regretted that women in the disputed region have suffered the most as their husbands were arrested by Indian occupational forces, however, nobody knows whether they are dead or still alive.

“These thousands of women who are waiting for their missing husbands are already called half-widows.”

Highlighting that Kashmir is a flash point that may put the peace and security of South Asia at stake, Bhat warned that the nuclear clock between New Delhi and Islamabad is continuously ticking, leading the world towards an inevitable war — only if the world doesn’t resort to a common consensus on immediate basis.

“India is not only targeting civilians along the Line of Control (LoC) but does not even allow the United Nations Military Observers Group for India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP) to meet Kashmiris in order to hear their ordeal,” he said, adding that 180,000 people have been killed by India since 1990s only because they were demanding their right to self-determination.

Earlier, the organiser and Kashmir Society Birmingham University President Hassan Khan welcomed the guests to the session — also attended by Tehreek-e-Kashmir UK President Raja Fahim Kayani and other journalists.

“Kashmir runs in their blood and young British Kashmiris want to know more about Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir following the lockdown and siege laid by Indian army in the occupied territory”, Khan said.
https://tribune.com.pk/story/2150156/1-india-turns-occupied-kashmir-open-air-prison/
 
Indian government trying to erase Kashmir's history: Khalida Shah

Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir - Khalida Shah speaks poignantly about her late father Sheikh Muhammad Abdullah, the most influential leader of modern Kashmir, whose disputed legacy makes him a hero to some and a villain to others.

For decades, Sheikh Abdullah's birthday on December 5 was a state holiday in Indian-administered Kashmir. But it has now been erased from the calendar by New Delhi, which stripped the Muslim-majority region of its limited autonomy six months ago.

"It is definitely hurtful," Shah, 84, told Al Jazeera at her home in the main city of Srinagar, where she has been under house arrest since August last year as part of a government crackdown against Kashmiri politicians.

Her brother Farooq Abdullah and nephew Omar Abdullah, both former chief ministers, have been in detention since August.

"Indian government is trying to erase the history of Kashmir by doing this," she said referring to the removal of Abdullah's anniversary celebration by India's governing Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

On August 5 last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who had campaigned against special status for Kashmir, decided to abrogate Articles 370 and 35A of the constitution, the constitutional provisions secured by Abdullah 70 years ago.

Article 370 allowed Kashmir to have its own flag, a separate constitution and the freedom to make laws.

Changing demographics and erasing history
Kashmiri activists fear the removal of the special status will likely open the door for demographic changes in the Muslim-majority region, as outsiders can now buy land and settle in the Himalayan region.

Many were also angered by the Modi government's decision to cancel the Martyrs Day holiday observed on July 13 in remembrance of 22 people killed during protests against Kashmir's Hindu monarch in 1931.

Angry at India's recent actions in Kashmir, Shah said her family "became enemies with people for siding with India". Three generations of the Abdullah family ruled the region for most of the last seven decades.

Sheikh Abdullah's rise began in 1931 when he led the people of Kashmir in resistance of the Dogra monarch at the time, Hari Singh, making him an instant hero.

The Kashmir leader, who fought for self-rule, later backed Hari Singh's decision to join the Indian union on the condition a plebiscite would decide the future of the Muslim-majority region.

While Abdullah had been close to India's powerful political leaders, including its first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, he remained an ardent critic of Pakistan's founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah.

In the years after his death in 1982, as armed rebellion against Indian rule started to take roots and pro-Pakistan voices became emboldened, many considered him a villainous figure and saw his politics as a betrayal of the Kashmiri cause.

Erasing the Kashmiri people's history
India and Pakistan, who claim Kashmir in full but govern only parts of it, gained independence from British rule in August 1947.

Hari Singh signed the Instrument of Accession, by which he agreed that the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir would accede to the Indian Union, in October 1947. Under the Instrument, New Delhi only controlled the region's foreign affairs, defence and communications. Over time, however, New Delhi diluted Kashmir's autonomous status.

Experts say the Indian government is working to impose their version of history in Kashmir.

The government has declared October 26 as Accession Day to commemorate the signing of the Instrument in 1947.

"Hindu right-wing in India lays territorial claims on Kashmir by systematically erasing historical experiences of Kashmiri people," Muhammad Junaid, a Kashmiri academic based in the US, told Al Jazeera.

"They want to deny the existence of long history of Kashmiri struggle against the Hindu Dogra feudal state as well as [for] freedom from Indian control," he said.

He also said the events that reaffirm the existence of Kashmiris and their struggles for emancipation are seen as "affronts to Hindu nationalism" by New Delhi.

"They want to forcibly suppress people's memories, especially those that hold the centre of Kashmiri identity and impose their own version," Junaid told Al Jazeera.

BJP defends Kashmir move
But Ashok Koul, chief spokesman of the BJP in Jammu and Kashmir, defended the Modi government's Kashmir move, insisting these steps "won't harm anyone".

"History should be put in the right perspective for the new generations. The government knows what are the right things for this society," he said referring to the abrogation of Article 370.

Shah, the daughter of Sheikh Abdullah, termed the events in 1931 as "the base of Kashmir's struggle".

"The flag of Kashmir, which no more exists, is the sign of their blood, [those] who were killed on that day on July 13."

Idris Kant, a Kashmiri historian, said July 13 has an immense "symbolic value" to it, reminding Kashmiris that they continue to be "occupied people".

On January 26, celebrated as Republic Day, authorities in Kashmir announced a change in the language on police medal for meritorious service, removing the words "Sher-e-Kashmir" or "Lion of Kashmir" - a reference to Sheikh Abdullah - from it.

"I want to tell India they cannot erase the legacy of my father from Kashmir as everyone remembers him here," she said. "History can never be erased."
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...mir-history-khalida-shah-200203061940274.html
 
Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir - Authorities in Indian-administered Kashmir have filed police cases against social media users under "anti-terror" laws for defying social media ban using proxy servers.

The move has triggered panic among the people of Kashmir, which has been under a security and communication lockdown since August 5, when the Muslim-majority region was stripped of its limited autonomy.

Several first information reports (FIRs or police complaints) have been filed against unnamed users under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA). A person booked under the UAPA can be jailed for months without bail.

The police said the action came against those who misused social media sites for propagating "secessionist ideology and promoting unlawful activities".

"Taking a serious note of misuse of social media, there have been continuous reports of misuse of social media sites by the miscreants to propagate the secessionist ideology and to promote unlawful activities," read a statement issued by the region's police, which directly comes under India's interior affairs ministry.

Authorities restored low-speed 2G internet on January 14 - six months after the internet was cut off from the region - but the ban on social media continued. Kashmiris have been using virtual private networks (VPNs) to access blacklisted sites, particularly social media.

Many users had started posting updates on Twitter and Facebook, but the open FIRs have now created a panic among many of them.

"I did not use the social media to post any political update but I am really panicked and have now deleted the VPN and deactivated my social media accounts. It means they can now arrest anyone now," said 25-year-old university student Sehba Mir.

Some users also alleged that their phones are being checked by the security forces at the checkpoints to delete the proxy servers from their phones.

"I was stopped outside a tertiary care hospital in Srinagar two days ago. The soldiers checked my phone and deleted VPN from it," a management student in his early twenties, who did not want to be named, told Al Jazeera.

An official of a private telecom company told Al Jazeera that the operators have been asked by the authorities to install the firewalls and block the blacklisted sites and VPNs.

"It has become difficult to control it completely," the official said on condition of anonymity.

Kashmir, which is the longest pending dispute between India and Pakistan, has been on an edge for the past six months after India revoked Article 370 that gave the region special status.

Under the government crackdown, strict communication and military curbs were imposed in the region to prevent protests. While the restrictions have gradually been eased, there continues to be a blanket ban on the use of social media sites.

A senior police official told Al Jazeera that they are "examining various accounts and screenshot after which action will be initiated".

"Anyone found using social media and posting any anti-national material can be called for questioning," the official said, adding that "the action is aimed to find the characters spreading the rumours and take action against them through proper legal procedure".

'Fearful and panicky'
The FIRs have been registered under the UAPA and Section 66-A (b) of the Indian Information Technology (IT) Act - misleading people with electronic communication - but the experts have termed it illegal saying the section was struck down by India's top court in March 2015 as it violated free speech.

Geeta Seesu, a Mumbai-based co-founder of FreeSpeech Collective, an advocacy group that works for promoting free speech in India, termed the FIR as a "sweeping generalisation to intimidate and criminalise everyone".

"Applying UAPA is an attempt to make people - none of whom are named and identified - fearful and panicky," Seesu said.

The Internet Freedom Foundation, an organisation based in India that advocates for digital rights and net neutrality, has also criticised the filing of the FIRs.

Srinivas Kodali, an independent researcher based in Hyderabad who studies data and internet in India, termed the move as "unconstitutional".

"This is a clear violation of digital rights of people. Today it is being implemented in Kashmir and tomorrow it can become a general practice in India," he told Al Jazeera.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...filed-social-media-users-200218114417864.html
 
This is the latest vlog in Feb month




So vloggers, indian tourists, foreign tourists have started visiting kashmir and things are back to normal ! You can find plenty of such vlog videos on youtube ! The above vlogger travelled solo and one can see except 3G internet curfew has gone negligible ! So ya officially there is no curfew now as you can see life back to normal over there ! People are using VPN too.


So IK's prediction of a genocide when curfew is lifted has proven to be wrong !
 
This is the latest vlog in Feb month




So vloggers, indian tourists, foreign tourists have started visiting kashmir and things are back to normal ! You can find plenty of such vlog videos on youtube ! The above vlogger travelled solo and one can see except 3G internet curfew has gone negligible ! So ya officially there is no curfew now as you can see life back to normal over there ! People are using VPN too.


So IK's prediction of a genocide when curfew is lifted has proven to be wrong !

So [MENTION=131678]Madplayer[/MENTION] was lying to us? Huh.
 
So [MENTION=131678]Madplayer[/MENTION] was lying to us? Huh.

What I have given to you is undeniable proof in the form of a video ! As I said you can find plenty of vlogs of srinagar & kashmir since early 2020 on youtube. What you have is someone's words to believe.

As it is said in bhagavad gita , truth will never have cessation, falsehood will not much duration !

At the end of the day it's your choice ! But at some point in future you will have no choice but to accept reality !

BTW the indian flag @ 0:15 at srinagar airport is more fantastic than the tea served to abhinandhan lol..
 
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This is the latest vlog in Feb month




So vloggers, indian tourists, foreign tourists have started visiting kashmir and things are back to normal ! You can find plenty of such vlog videos on youtube ! The above vlogger travelled solo and one can see except 3G internet curfew has gone negligible ! So ya officially there is no curfew now as you can see life back to normal over there ! People are using VPN too.


So IK's prediction of a genocide when curfew is lifted has proven to be wrong !

How about, you know, the actual people living in Kashmir?

Last I heard, their livelihoods have been destroyed, the economy has tanked, internet is still heavily restricted and people who used VPNs to access non-governmental websites were being threatened.

I wonder what's abnormal if this is considered normal.
 
How about, you know, the actual people living in Kashmir?

Last I heard, their livelihoods have been destroyed, the economy has tanked, internet is still heavily restricted and people who used VPNs to access non-governmental websites were being threatened.

I wonder what's abnormal if this is considered normal.


I don't deny on what you said , even in the video posted the girl said the same as their business suffered a lot due to curfew but things are improving slowly but surely as we are not in aug 2019 any more.


Here another video of vlogger couple (1.5 months old video) where you can't see any curfew on the streets of srinagar (as that's what my point was) as people were roaming normally



It will slowly improve even more in the next 2 to 3 months but hey people are not doing protests or strikes etc., against police or against army as predicted by Mr. Imran Khan in his UN speech !

This is the reason members of UN didn't take his speech seriously when he was delivering it lol..
 
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What I have given to you is undeniable proof in the form of a video ! As I said you can find plenty of vlogs of srinagar & kashmir since early 2020 on youtube. What you have is someone's words to believe.

As it is said in bhagavad gita , truth will never have cessation, falsehood will not much duration !

At the end of the day it's your choice ! But at some point in future you will have no choice but to accept reality !

BTW the indian flag @ 0:15 at srinagar airport is more fantastic than the tea served to abhinandhan lol..

Wish Mr. Jinnah was alive to see Aug 5th 2019 ! Modi haai tho munkin hai !

You thought Iam Pakistani?, Salute to your brain🙋
 
Brothers salam,
Hope all are doing well.
The Indian telecom companies are cracking down on VPNs and almost all vpns have been blocked somehow. They have upgraded new firewalls to stop us in Kashmir from using internet. Only some useless government websites have been whitelisted which are accessible. We in Kashmir really need access to internet for running businesses and for education Purposes.

Are there any suggestions what we can do to breach the firewall? I am not a tech buff so please explain in simple words. We are in a desperate situation and need immediate help if anything can be done about it.
 
Brothers salam,
Hope all are doing well.
The Indian telecom companies are cracking down on VPNs and almost all vpns have been blocked somehow. They have upgraded new firewalls to stop us in Kashmir from using internet. Only some useless government websites have been whitelisted which are accessible. We in Kashmir really need access to internet for running businesses and for education Purposes.

Are there any suggestions what we can do to breach the firewall? I am not a tech buff so please explain in simple words. We are in a desperate situation and need immediate help if anything can be done about it.

Please help before i lose this internet connection as well.
 
What I have given to you is undeniable proof in the form of a video ! As I said you can find plenty of vlogs of srinagar & kashmir since early 2020 on youtube. What you have is someone's words to believe.

As it is said in bhagavad gita , truth will never have cessation, falsehood will not much duration !

At the end of the day it's your choice ! But at some point in future you will have no choice but to accept reality !

BTW the indian flag @ 0:15 at srinagar airport is more fantastic than the tea served to abhinandhan lol..

There are a lot of recent vlogs on YouTube which show foreigners and tourists safely roaming around Syria/Iraq and even North Korea . Would you consider that undeniable proof that those countries are safe to visit?
 
So [MENTION=131678]Madplayer[/MENTION] was lying to us? Huh.

Sure and this video below is proof that the entire world is lying about Syria and there is actually no war/conflict at all going on in Syria

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/zmK35KMPZhM" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
So [MENTION=131678]Madplayer[/MENTION] was lying to us? Huh.

Whatever i told you was 100% truth with not even an ounce of lie. For the earlier few months, we couldnt even move out of our homes without having a threat to life. Sure, right now there is "no curfew" but try and understand what they mean by "no curfew". There are army men standing on every street in Kashmir, army check posts in every nook and corner. Outside my mohalla there is an army party standing 24/7.

Can i move around? yes surely i can.

Can i utter a word of disagreement with the government? If i want to die or disappear, maybe. Army personnel are checking phones of young guys to see if they are using VPNs to access internet. Imagine living like this.

Is there a curfew announced officially? No.

But you get the picture of how it is. It is the biggest drama of "normalcy" in the world.

The talks of tourists coming to Kashmir is a manipulated lie. I know it because guess what? I own a tour and travel agency which hasn't had any business since august 5th. Sure some tourists are coming to isolated places like gulmarg which is a niche destination for skiing and a few pro skiers come there and stay only there without venturing out. but the tourists are barely 0.5% of the numbers that normally come.

These videos which are being shared are actually an attempt at marketing to lure in more tourists. obviously the locals wont harm the tourists but its stupidity to present these videos as a proof to normalcy. Use common sense. Tourism industry is sensitive and the tourist doesnt take the word of the local government over safety issues. He reads that internet is banned, there were political upheavals in past 6 months, and he decides against visiting. It is madness, irrational and cruel if people try to present these small videos to show that everything is normal and businesses are booming in Kashmir. It is an attempt at undermining the economic and political suffering of the people of Kashmir. Dont fall for it. Its easy for these Indians to say all of these things. They say, "Oh see everything is normal, see they can move out of their houses now". Shame on them and shame on their existence. I pray they and their families get to live through this "normalcy" which they speak of.
 
Whatever i told you was 100% truth with not even an ounce of lie. For the earlier few months, we couldnt even move out of our homes without having a threat to life. Sure, right now there is "no curfew" but try and understand what they mean by "no curfew". There are army men standing on every street in Kashmir, army check posts in every nook and corner. Outside my mohalla there is an army party standing 24/7.

Can i move around? yes surely i can.

Can i utter a word of disagreement with the government? If i want to die or disappear, maybe. Army personnel are checking phones of young guys to see if they are using VPNs to access internet. Imagine living like this.

Is there a curfew announced officially? No.

But you get the picture of how it is. It is the biggest drama of "normalcy" in the world.

The talks of tourists coming to Kashmir is a manipulated lie. I know it because guess what? I own a tour and travel agency which hasn't had any business since august 5th. Sure some tourists are coming to isolated places like gulmarg which is a niche destination for skiing and a few pro skiers come there and stay only there without venturing out. but the tourists are barely 0.5% of the numbers that normally come.

These videos which are being shared are actually an attempt at marketing to lure in more tourists. obviously the locals wont harm the tourists but its stupidity to present these videos as a proof to normalcy. Use common sense. Tourism industry is sensitive and the tourist doesnt take the word of the local government over safety issues. He reads that internet is banned, there were political upheavals in past 6 months, and he decides against visiting. It is madness, irrational and cruel if people try to present these small videos to show that everything is normal and businesses are booming in Kashmir. It is an attempt at undermining the economic and political suffering of the people of Kashmir. Dont fall for it. Its easy for these Indians to say all of these things. They say, "Oh see everything is normal, see they can move out of their houses now". Shame on them and shame on their existence. I pray they and their families get to live through this "normalcy" which they speak of.

I know that,he was a BJP supporter and has an history of writing like this kind of things.
 

What do you propose then? Should internet and other communication lines have been restored from Day 1 and all army removed from the streets? Can we guarantee no violence and bloodshed on the streets then?

I understand your frustration. But if you look at the Aug 5 decision as sunk cost, gradual relaxing of the security constraints is the only way out of that given reality. I hope eventually your business recovers. I've been to Kashmir before and it is beautiful.
 
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What do you propose then? Should internet and other communication lines have been restored from Day 1 and all army removed from the streets? Can we guarantee no violence and bloodshed on the streets then?

I understand your frustration. But if you look at the Aug 5 decision as sunk cost, gradual relaxing of the security constraints is the only way out of that given reality. I hope eventually your business recovers. I've been to Kashmir before and it is beautiful.

As an Indian you wouldn't like my proposal. And to be honest it is unbelievable that you need to be told what the right thing to do is, what the ethical thing to do is. Its like murdering a person and then proceeding to not hand over his body to his family just because of the fear that they will mourn loudly and expose the murder.

I am sorry but I think Indians are now so drenched in fascist propaganda that they are incapable of telling between the OBVIOUS right and wrong. It includes educated Indians as well. Otherwise you wouldnt be asking this question of what my proposal is. Its obvious, your government put Kashmir into this situation by murdering your constitution in broad daylight. This, when there was relative calm in Kashmir. And now they are working day and night to ensure that no voices come out of Kashmir.

Thanks for your kind wishes that "eventually" my business should recover. Bari meharbani. And you're welcome in Kashmir anytime.
 
There are a lot of recent vlogs on YouTube which show foreigners and tourists safely roaming around Syria/Iraq and even North Korea . Would you consider that undeniable proof that those countries are safe to visit?


The topic of this thread is about curfew not safety ! Please stick to the topic!

If u talk abt safety there are many areas in delhi right now which r not safe (for both muslims & hindus) , there r few areas in karachi which r not deemed to be safe for outsiders etc,.

So technically curfew has been lifted officially but ppl are NOT coming on roads doing violent protests or something as predicted by Imran khan when curfew gets lifted !
 
As an Indian you wouldn't like my proposal. And to be honest it is unbelievable that you need to be told what the right thing to do is, what the ethical thing to do is. Its like murdering a person and then proceeding to not hand over his body to his family just because of the fear that they will mourn loudly and expose the murder.

I am sorry but I think Indians are now so drenched in fascist propaganda that they are incapable of telling between the OBVIOUS right and wrong. It includes educated Indians as well. Otherwise you wouldnt be asking this question of what my proposal is. Its obvious, your government put Kashmir into this situation by murdering your constitution in broad daylight. This, when there was relative calm in Kashmir. And now they are working day and night to ensure that no voices come out of Kashmir.

Thanks for your kind wishes that "eventually" my business should recover. Bari meharbani. And you're welcome in Kashmir anytime.


I have only one question: is there are any kind of mass genocide or blood bath happening right now on streets of kashmir as you say "curfew" has been officially lifted ??

The reason I ask this question is Mr. IK imagined some kind of blood bath in his UN speech in his own words :

"what is going to happen when curfew gets lifted is a blood bath, the people will come out , there are 9,00,000 troops there, these 9,00,000 troops what are they going to do ? when they come out ? there will be a blood bath...."

So may I ask if his prediction about curfew came true or proven wrong ! As far as I & many others know there is no such thing happening

Yes there is no internet & ppl use VPN but as I said this too shall pass & indian flag 🇮🇳 will be waving !

Also pls do realize that ppl of ladakh don't want to part of J & K
ppl of jammu (with hindus) want to be part of india !
 
Whatever i told you was 100% truth with not even an ounce of lie. For the earlier few months, we couldnt even move out of our homes without having a threat to life. Sure, right now there is "no curfew" but try and understand what they mean by "no curfew". There are army men standing on every street in Kashmir, army check posts in every nook and corner. Outside my mohalla there is an army party standing 24/7.

Can i move around? yes surely i can.

Can i utter a word of disagreement with the government? If i want to die or disappear, maybe. Army personnel are checking phones of young guys to see if they are using VPNs to access internet. Imagine living like this.

Is there a curfew announced officially? No.

But you get the picture of how it is. It is the biggest drama of "normalcy" in the world.

The talks of tourists coming to Kashmir is a manipulated lie. I know it because guess what? I own a tour and travel agency which hasn't had any business since august 5th. Sure some tourists are coming to isolated places like gulmarg which is a niche destination for skiing and a few pro skiers come there and stay only there without venturing out. but the tourists are barely 0.5% of the numbers that normally come.

These videos which are being shared are actually an attempt at marketing to lure in more tourists. obviously the locals wont harm the tourists but its stupidity to present these videos as a proof to normalcy. Use common sense. Tourism industry is sensitive and the tourist doesnt take the word of the local government over safety issues. He reads that internet is banned, there were political upheavals in past 6 months, and he decides against visiting. It is madness, irrational and cruel if people try to present these small videos to show that everything is normal and businesses are booming in Kashmir. It is an attempt at undermining the economic and political suffering of the people of Kashmir. Dont fall for it. Its easy for these Indians to say all of these things. They say, "Oh see everything is normal, see they can move out of their houses now". Shame on them and shame on their existence. I pray they and their families get to live through this "normalcy" which they speak of.



Sorry I had to ask one more question... how would you want to utter a word against government ? By going on streets doing violent protests & damaging properties ? So if authorities allow people like you to violently protest on streets then u will say 'yes we are free' but if they stop u then there is curfew ! wow what a logic !

As per ur logic it's clear that there is curfew in north east delhi right now as police r not allowing ppl for violent protests


So from ur post its clear that if u want to lead a normal life & roam around then there is no problem but if u want create some problem by doing protests etc. u can b in trouble ! This happens anywhere in the world !

In KSA if u publicly criticise the king u will disappear ! In india there r millions who openly criticise modi
 
Srinagar: Residents of Jammu & Kashmir can now access social media websites on 2G mobile internet, sources said. But there is no mention of whitelisting of websites as per the new government order issued on Wednesday. The order is applicable till March 17.

The J&K government has extended the ban on high-speed internet across the Union Territory till March 17. An order in this regard was issued by the Principal Secretary J&K Home Shaleen Kabra.

The order said the move is being taken in the interest of the sovereignty and integrity of India, security of the state and for maintaining public order.

"About mobile data services, the internet speed shall be restricted to 2G only. While the postpaid sim card holders shall continue to be provided access to the internet, these services shall not be made available on prepaid sim cards unless verified as per the norms applicable for post paid connections", the order said.

About six line internet connectivity, it said internet connectivity shall continue to be made available with Mac-binding.

It further directs that the access/communication facilities provided by the government viz e-terminals/internet kiosks apart from special arrangements for tourists, students, traders , etc shall continue.

The IGP Kashmir/Jammu shall ensure communication of these directions to the service providers forthwith and also ensure implementation of the direction with immediate effect.

The internet was suspended across J&K ahead of the abrogation of Article 370 on August 5. It was restored in a phased manner across J&K.


https://www.news18.com/news/india/a...ia-blockade-lifted-till-march-17-2525363.html


So there you go guyz by march 17th hopefully high speed internet would be ON with social media as well.
 
As an Indian you wouldn't like my proposal. And to be honest it is unbelievable that you need to be told what the right thing to do is, what the ethical thing to do is. Its like murdering a person and then proceeding to not hand over his body to his family just because of the fear that they will mourn loudly and expose the murder.

I am sorry but I think Indians are now so drenched in fascist propaganda that they are incapable of telling between the OBVIOUS right and wrong. It includes educated Indians as well. Otherwise you wouldnt be asking this question of what my proposal is. Its obvious, your government put Kashmir into this situation by murdering your constitution in broad daylight. This, when there was relative calm in Kashmir. And now they are working day and night to ensure that no voices come out of Kashmir.

Thanks for your kind wishes that "eventually" my business should recover. Bari meharbani. And you're welcome in Kashmir anytime.

Yeah the moralistic Muslim Kashmiri speaks, You had it all under article 370 but you manage to screw it up spectacularly, all that was needed was to live in peace. Should've thought about the consequences before the Pandits were raped killed and driven away by your elders and participating in all that wahabi extremism. India is not letting go of Kashmir, there are no more negotiations to be made as Pakistan has swapped/given part of Kashmir to China also lol Pakistanis have screwed you as it is a disputed land and they had no right to do deals with China on that land . If you start using what's in your skull aka Brain you can make the situation better for yourselves otherwise keep digging your grave.. All your Pakistani friends on here that tell you to keep throwing rocks or whatever else will land you into a grave, while they sit at the comfort of their own homes, no matter how many times your Pakistani friends here tell you one day everything will work in your favour, it is nothing but a fool's fantasy...

I am expecting some very intelligent replies from you and some of the Pakistanis to my post, similar to; 'Oh Oh you are a Hindutva, you hate Muslims, you are this, you are that.' Honestly speaking I don't give a damn, if you think that is what I am so be it, however I don't hate any race, religion, I say it like I see it, I am as blunt and straight forward as they come....
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="und" dir="ltr"><a href="https://t.co/nCN6FZUUOH">pic.twitter.com/nCN6FZUUOH</a></p>— Shoaib Akhtar (@shoaib100mph) <a href="https://twitter.com/shoaib100mph/status/1239459646701797376?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 16, 2020</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Central government defines domicile for J&K; those who have lived in UT for 15 yrs, registered migrants & students

The central government in its latest gazette notification stated that any person who has resided in the Union Territory of J&K for the period of fifteen years or has studied for the period of seven years and appeared in secondary and higher secondary board examination would be considered as domicile of J&K and appointed in the services there.

The new gazette notification issued on March 31st states that a migrant registered by the Relief and Rehabilitation Commissioner (Migrants) in the newly formed Union Territory would also be considered as domicile. The children of parents who have stayed in J&K for 15 years or are registered as migrants would also be considered as domicile.

“The children of those central government officials, All India service officials, Officials of Public sector undertaking, autonomous body of central government, public sector banks, officials of statuary bodies officials of central universities and recognized research institutes of central government who have served in J&K for a period of ten years,” the notification reads would also be considered as domicile for purpose of appointment to any service in J&K.

Read more at:

https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...ofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst
 
In simple words, any one who stayed for 15 years will be considered domicile or local resident of J & K. The kids of such automatically become J & K local residents too thru which they can get J & K govt. jobs & other benefits.
 
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Pakistan rejects India's move to change demography of IoK

Pakistan on Thursday condemned and rejected the introduction of "Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Order 2020” which it termed as an attempt to illegally change the demographic structure of Indian occupied Kashmir (IoK).

The Foreign Office, in a press release, said that the order was another illegal step by India to settle non-Kashmiris in the occupied territory by changing the domicile laws.

"This is a clear violation of international law, including the 4th Geneva Convention," said the FO spokesperson. The official added that the Indian action was a continuation of India’s illegal and unilateral steps since August 5, 2019.

The spokesperson said that the Kashmiris in the occupied territory "have outrightly rejected the new law as unacceptable.”

"Indeed, the Kashmiris will never accept such blatant usurpation of their fundamental rights and attempts to change their demography and distinct identity," said the spokesperson.

The FO noted that the latest Indian action was particularly reprehensible as New Delhi was taking advantage of the international community’s focus on the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and advance with BJP’s "sinister" Hindutva agenda.

The FO urged the United Nations and the international community to take "immediate cognizance" of the Indian action. It added that India should be prevented from changing the demography of the occupied territory, and hold New Delhi accountable for its persistent violations of international law.

"On its part, Pakistan will continue to highlight India’s state terrorism in IoK and its denial of the fundamental freedoms and inalienable right to self-determination of the Kashmiri people," said the FO

The FO added that no matter what tactics India deploys it will never be able to break the will of the Kashmiri people.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/280521-pakistan-rejects-indias-law-to-change-demography-of-iok
 
Pakistan rejects India's move to change demography of IoK

Pakistan on Thursday condemned and rejected the introduction of "Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Order 2020” which it termed as an attempt to illegally change the demographic structure of Indian occupied Kashmir (IoK).

The Foreign Office, in a press release, said that the order was another illegal step by India to settle non-Kashmiris in the occupied territory by changing the domicile laws.

"This is a clear violation of international law, including the 4th Geneva Convention," said the FO spokesperson. The official added that the Indian action was a continuation of India’s illegal and unilateral steps since August 5, 2019.

The spokesperson said that the Kashmiris in the occupied territory "have outrightly rejected the new law as unacceptable.”

"Indeed, the Kashmiris will never accept such blatant usurpation of their fundamental rights and attempts to change their demography and distinct identity," said the spokesperson.

The FO noted that the latest Indian action was particularly reprehensible as New Delhi was taking advantage of the international community’s focus on the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and advance with BJP’s "sinister" Hindutva agenda.

The FO urged the United Nations and the international community to take "immediate cognizance" of the Indian action. It added that India should be prevented from changing the demography of the occupied territory, and hold New Delhi accountable for its persistent violations of international law.

"On its part, Pakistan will continue to highlight India’s state terrorism in IoK and its denial of the fundamental freedoms and inalienable right to self-determination of the Kashmiri people," said the FO

The FO added that no matter what tactics India deploys it will never be able to break the will of the Kashmiri people.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/280521-pakistan-rejects-indias-law-to-change-demography-of-iok

Pakistan: Yap Yap Yap, Talk, Talk, Talk, but Action ? = a big whooping ZERO while India does whatever they want with their side of Kashmir.

The real tragedy in all this:

A lot of Kashmiri's actually believe that Pakistan will come to liberate them lol :asif
 
Pakistan: Yap Yap Yap, Talk, Talk, Talk, but Action ? = a big whooping ZERO while India does whatever they want with their side of Kashmir.

The real tragedy in all this:

A lot of Kashmiri's actually believe that Pakistan will come to liberate them lol :asif

India and people who laugh at others sufferings are the big tragedies in this world.
 
India and people who laugh at others sufferings are the big tragedies in this world.

Yeah I wonder if you would feel the same way had you seen the way their elders raped, killed and mutilated the Pandits... Its not a one way street, this is the after affect for the evil committed by their elders...
 
Yeah I wonder if you would feel the same way had you seen the way their elders raped, killed and mutilated the Pandits... Its not a one way street, this is the after affect for the evil committed by their elders...

I wonder how you would feel being punished by someone for the actions of your ancestors.

This is some sad mentality.

I don't hold the present generation responsible for what their ancestor did.

The world is moving forward. I suggest that India does the same.
 
I wonder how you would feel being punished by someone for the actions of your ancestors.

This is some sad mentality.

I don't hold the present generation responsible for what their ancestor did.

The world is moving forward. I suggest that India does the same.

The fact that this new generation barely ever admit the atrocities done by their elders tells me had the Pandits been in their rightful home Kashmir currently they would have again met the same fate...

Some of the pathetic excuses I have heard from the supposed Kashmiris on this forum:

- How many Pandits were killed ? in other words saying no such thing happened
- Pandit killing is all made up by hindu fundamentalists,

I feel nothing for them, their crocodile tears are nothing to me.. Why don't Pakistanis just liberate them instead of creating endless useless threads over and over year after year about the poor Kashmiris..
 
ISLAMABAD: In Indian Occupied Kashmir, in total disregard to the demands by the international community for restoration of Internet service, India has extended the ban on 4G Internet despite surge in COVID-19 cases in the territory.

An order issued by Home Department in Srinagar said the ban will continue till May 11. The decision was taken on the pretext of baseless “well-founded" apprehensions of the “field agencies" regarding “potential violent activities" in the territory, Kashmir Media Service reported.

“Such restrictions have been placed in order to curb uploading, downloading, circulation of provocative videos, guard against rumor-mongering, fake news, prevent the use of encrypted messaging and VOIP services for infiltration and coordinating activities…," the order said.

“Misuse of data services, according to the order, by ‘anti-national elements' has the potential to scale up violent activities and disturb public order", says the text of the order.

India took the decision to extend the ban on broadband internet despite repeated calls by the by the international community including the United Nations to restore the service in the occupied territory in view of the spread of deadly coronavirus.

https://www.brecorder.com/2020/04/2...xtended-in-iok-despite-surge-in-corona-cases/
 
Quiet and desolate Ramadan in Kashmir amid back-to-back lockdowns

Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir - After living through two back-to-back lockdowns that have devastated the local economy, people in Indian-administered Kashmir have settled for a quiet Ramadan.

The threat of the spread of the highly contagious coronavirus has emptied the usually overcrowded mosques in the picturesque, Muslim-majority Himalayan valley.

For many, the sight of deserted mosques in the current lockdown is a never-before experience.

"Our neighbourhood mosque is completely sealed. Everything is so heartbreaking but it is also a matter of life," said Ghulam Ahmad, a 63-year-old retired government employee.

Ahmad lives in Gund Kaisar, a village in the northern district of Bandipora, which remains one of the most affected parts of Kashmir with more than 100 cases of COVID-19 disease.

Not a usual Ramadan
Gund Kaisar, like many villages of Bandipora, is under a strict lockdown to contain the spread of the infection that has brought the world to an unprecedented standstill.

Ahmad said his family made no usual preparations for Ramadan, which involves hectic shopping in the run-up to the fasting month.

"We could not even buy dates to break our fasts as the markets here are completely closed and not allowed to open," he said. "The entry and exit to the village are also sealed."

In the neighbouring village of Gund Jahangir, which has been declared a highly volatile "red zone" by the region's administration, Ahmad said at least 35 families have been placed under quarantine.

"It is really painful how suddenly everything has happened," he said. "Earlier, the village would be like a family and we would go around after iftar and have a chat and visit each other."

The lockdown during Ramadan, Ahmad said, has subjected the families to immense difficulties.

Triggered by the spread of the novel coronavirus that originated in China and has infected more than three million people across the globe, the lockdown in Kashmir came as the disputed region still had not come to terms with a crippling earlier shutdown, which lasted nearly seven months.

The previous lockdown was imposed in August last year when the Indian government abrogated the region's semi-autonomous status and divided the state into two federally-administered territories.

Kashmir's economy suffers
The two lockdowns have brought Kashmir's economy to a halt, with large scale employment-generating businesses, such as tourism, suspended for nine months now.

The current lockdown was imposed in mid-March when the first coronavirus case was detected in the region.

Since then, the number of positive cases has increased to 500 as more than 60,000 people remain under various levels of observation, including home and hospital quarantine.

Half of the neighbourhoods in the main city of Srinagar, home to more than a million people, remain sealed. Only pharmacies have been exempted from the shutdown.

Coils of razor wire block the city's main roads as hundreds of police and paramilitary troops stand guard at various checkpoints - a common sight in a region where an armed insurgency has raged for the last three decades.

In the area around 14th-century Jama Masjid, one of the oldest and largest mosques in Srinagar, residents say Ramadan feels incomplete without visiting their mosque.

"It feels like something is incomplete this month," said Sajad Khan, who runs a shop outside the mosque where residents from nearby neighbourhoods would spend long hours during the holy month.

"There is no hustle and bustle to give you a feel of this month and make you forget for the time being all the troubles we go through," he told Al Jazeera.

'Testing time for people globally'
The two lockdowns have also taken a toll on the poorer sections of society, who have lost work in the last nine months.

Abdul Majid Mir, a daily wage earner from Payir village in south Kashmir's Pulwama, says the latest lockdown has doubled his hardships.

"I continue to struggle to find any work and have to feed a family of six," he told Al Jazeera. "Sometimes, I get work and have to settle for less money."

Mir said the usual festivities were missing this year. "We manage with whatever is available at home. We are under tremendous stress."

In the Muslim-majority region, the authorities broadcast video messages from religious scholars to sensitise people about staying in and praying at home.

"There is a hadith [Prophet Muhammad's sayings] that when a plague hits any place, people should stay wherever they are," said Mufti Khateeb, who leads prayers at the grand mosque in north Kashmir's Sopore.

Khateeb said people should offer prayers with their families and they will get the same reward. "Muslims everywhere should act with caution and stay in their homes," he told Al Jazeera.

Saleem Khan, who teaches social and preventive medicine at a government medical college, told Al Jazeera, "This is an unprecedented lockdown but the believers have a responsibility towards people and God."

"This is a testing time for people globally," he said.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/04/quiet-desolate-ramadan-kashmir-lockdowns-200429080157028.html
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Have been receiving calls from my Kashmiri Friends, they are tensed as 2G internet has also been barred in the valley. <br>Can Kashmiris even breath?</p>— Afreen Fatima (@AfreenFatima136) <a href="https://twitter.com/AfreenFatima136/status/1259523551167516672?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 10, 2020</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
One sodden evening in April 2010, an Indian army major from the 4 Rajputana Rifles arrived at a remote police post where the mountains gather in a half-hitch around Kashmir, India's northernmost state. Major Opinder Singh "seemed in a hurry", a duty policeman recalled. Up in the heights of the Pir Panjal range, down through which the major had descended, it was snowing and his boots let in water. "The officer reported that the previous night his men had killed three Pakistani terrorists who had crossed over into our Machil sector," the policeman recalled. "Where are the bodies?" the policeman had asked, filling in a First Information Report that started a criminal enquiry. "They were buried where they were shot," the major retorted, before taking off in his jeep.

"It was not unusual," the policeman later told investigators, when questioned as to why he had not insisted on viewing the corpses or checking the identities. Kashmir had been in turmoil since Partition in 1947 and on a virtual war footing for the past two decades, with some estimates placing the dead at 70,000. Strung with razor wire and anti-missile netting, the state had been transformed into one of the most militarised places on earth, with one Indian paramilitary or soldier stationed for every 17 residents. The Pakistani intelligence services and military trained and funded a legion of irregulars, who infiltrated over the mountains to kick-start a full-blown insurgency in 1989, keeping the Indian-ruled portion of the Muslim-majority state permanently alight.

Once picture-perfect, a place of pilgrimage for backpackers and mystics of all religions, Kashmir had become one of the most beautiful and dangerous frontlines in the world. Machil, the sector in which Singh had sprung his operation, was especially treacherous, consisting of a clutch of isolated villages strung along the Line of Control (LoC), a high-altitude ceasefire line that had split Kashmir in 1972. Up here in the thin air, India had created a fearsome barrier, made lethal with the help of Israeli technology, a partially electrified series of fences connected to motion detectors, surrounded by a heavily mined no-man's land.

On 30 April, 2010, an armed forces spokesman in Srinagar, Kashmir's summer capital, confirmed Singh's story. "Three militants have been killed in a shootout," said Lieutenant Colonel JS Brar, detailing how three AK-47s, one Pakistani pistol, ammunition, cigarettes, chocolates, dates, two water bottles, a Kenwood radio and 1,000 Pakistani rupees had been recovered. The standard-issue infiltration kit. The corpseless triple-death inquiry was an open and shut case.

However, a few days later, at Panzalla police station, 30 miles from Machil, a simple missing case was causing everyone problems. Three Kashmiri families from nearby Nadihal village had turned up to report the disappearance of their sons: Mohammad, 19, Riyaz, 20, and Shahzad, 27, an apple farmer, a herder and a labourer. They had not seen them since 28 April and would not be calmed by detectives. Soon, their appeals drew the attention of Kashmir's most dogged human rights lawyer, Parvez Imroz, whose response to what would become known as the "Machil Encounter" was about to create a watershed in Kashmir.

Dressed in the uniform of the Kashmiri bar, a crisp white shirt and sombre morning suit, over the past two decades Imroz had become a fixture at the high court in Srinagar, filing thousands of habeas corpus actions (which literally translates as "produce the bodies") on behalf of families who claimed their relatives had vanished while in the custody of the Indian security forces.

These actions rarely succeeded, the Indian army insisting that the missing had flitted over the LoC to Pakistan, recalling historic scenes at the start of the insurgency that terrified New Delhi, when tens of thousands of young Kashmiris jumped aboard buses manned by youthful conductors shouting: "Pakistan, Pakistan here we come." But what the writs did achieve was to create a paper trail from which Imroz was able to estimate that 8,000 Kashmiri non-combatants had vanished from army custody in a state the size of Ireland – four times more than disappeared under Pinochet in Chile. "The military grip has been suffocating," he told the Guardian, "and making someone vanish sows far more fear than spilling their blood".

Imroz had spent much of his career facing down security forces protected by specially drafted laws. Under the Armed Forces Special Powers Act, soldiers and paramilitaries enjoy total immunity from prosecution, unless the ministry of defence sanction their trial. Using new Right to Information (RTI) laws, Imroz obtained confirmation that despite the fact that hundreds of soldiers stood accused of murder, rape and torture, not a single case had proceeded. In contrast, Kashmiri citizens are dealt with using the Jammu & Kashmir Public Safety Act, under which they can be jailed, preventively, for two years, if deemed likely to commit subversive acts in the future, with an estimated 20,000 detained, according to Human Rights Watch.

Imroz's campaigning achieved other things. He caught the attention of the UN, and this year Christof Heyns, a special rapporteur on extrajudicial executions, warned India that all of these draconian laws had no place in a functioning democracy and should be scrapped. The price for confronting the security forces and the militants they faced down was severe. In 1992, Imroz mourned the loss of his Hindu mentor, an activist who was gunned down by Muslim insurgents. Three years later, Imroz was driving home from court when he felt a cold draught grip his chest. "I slumped over the wheel, inexplicably," he recalled. Bystanders who came to his rescue told him he had been shot. A militant group later claimed it was a case of mistaken identity. In 1996, the Indian army abducted Imroz's friend and fellow lawyer, Jalil Andrabi, whose mutilated body was found after three weeks. Imroz shut himself off. For years he refused to marry or have children, worried they would be targeted. In 2002, his accomplished protégé, Khurram Parvez, a young Kashmiri graduate, was badly injured in an IED attack that killed his driver and a female colleague, Asiya Jeelani. Two years after that, a gunman posing as a client, shot dead another of Imroz's legal allies. In 2005, when Imroz was awarded the Ludovic-Trarieux International Human Rights Prize, first given to Nelson Mandela, he was unable to accept it in person as India declined to issue him a passport.

But Imroz's reputation began to build in the countryside, from where terrified villagers travelled to besiege his rickety chambers on the Bund, in central Srinagar, carrying with them stories. In 2008, these accounts enabled the lawyer to make his greatest discovery. While surveying disappearance cases in villages across two of Kashmir's 23 districts, including Baramulla, from where the three Nadihal men would vanish in 2010, villagers showed him a hitherto unknown network of unmarked and mass graves: muddy pits and mossy mounds, pock-marking pine forests and orchards. According to eyewitnesses, all had been dug under the gaze of the Indian security forces and all contained the bodies of local men. Some were fresh, others decayed, hinting at a covert slaughter that went back many years.

Imroz widened his search, mapping almost 1,000 locations. He was shocked by the implications. Indian law requires that the police probe every violent death and that corpses be identified. But in the village of Bimyar, white-haired Atta Muhammad Khan came forward to describe how he had been forced to inter 203 unidentified bodies under cover of the night – men whose identities and crimes were unstated. "Some corpses were disfigured. Others were burnt. We did not ask questions." It was a similar story in Kichama village, where the lawyer mapped 235 unmarked graves and in Bijhama, where 200 more unidentified corpses had been interred. In Srinagar, Imroz's team alerted the government's State Human Rights Commission (SHRC). "We suspected the missing of Kashmir were buried at these secret sites," he said, publishing a report, Facts Under Ground.

An official response came two months later, just after 10pm on 30 June, 2008. Imroz had at last married Rukhsana, a business woman, and they now had two children, his daughter Zeenish, 12, and a boy, Tauqir, aged seven. The family lived in Kralpora, a tree-lined suburb eight miles from Srinagar city centre. No one called round on the offchance. Rukhsana heard a rap at the door and glanced outside to see that their security lights had been smashed. "I knew what this meant," she said, the door knock immediately conjuring memories of murdered friends. Imroz ran to the back of the house and shouted for his brother, Sheikh Mushtaq Ahmad, who lived next door.

As Ahmad emerged with a torch, a shot was fired, narrowly missing his son. A stranger screamed: "Put that light out." Then, a grenade exploded, shrapnel pitting the front door. Tear gas shells followed, waking neighbours who unlocked the village mosque. The imam mobilised residents to surround Imroz's house, as an armoured vehicle and two jeeps from the paramilitary Central Reserve Police Force and police Special Task Force, took off. "They had come to kill us," Rukhsana recalled. "We need protection," she said. Who do you need protection from, I asked her. "From our own government of course. It's jungle law."

After the attack, Human Rights Watch called on India to "protect Parvez Imroz, an award-winning human rights lawyer" and his case was raised in the European parliament. His family pleaded for him to quit. "I was terrified," the lawyer conceded. "I was starting to have horrible dreams. But being silent is a crime."

Imroz and his team redoubled their efforts, spreading their net across 55 villages in three districts, Bandipora, Baramulla and Kupwara. An ad-hoc inquiry run by volunteers and funded by donations saw the number of unmarked and mass graves mapped rise to 2,700. Inside them were 2,943 bodies; 80% of them unidentified. "These were hellish images from a war that no one has ever reported," said Imroz. "We suspected this to be prima-facie evidence of war crimes," he added. "Who are the dead, how did they die, in whose hands and who interred them?"

The SHRC finally agreed to an inquiry. Soon, it had its work cut out. Using RTI laws, the police were forced to concede that they had lodged 2,683 cases for the covertly interred in just three districts. And a new deposition submitted by Imroz's field workers covering two more districts, Rajoori and Poonch, mapped 3,844 more unmarked and mass graves, taking the total number to more than 6,000. There are still another 16 districts yet to be surveyed, leaving Imroz to wonder how many violent deaths and surreptitious burials have been concealed across Kashmir. Finally, last September, the SHRC made an announcement, stating that Imroz's discovery was correct: "There is every possibility that unidentified dead bodies buried in various unmarked graves … may contain the victims of enforced disappearances." The UN weighed in this year, a report to the Human Rights Council warning India of its obligations under human rights treaties and laws. Kashmiri families had a "right to know the truth" and that "when the disappeared person is found to be dead, the right … to have the remains of their loved one returned to them, and to dispose of those remains according to their own tradition, religion or culture".

After the Nadihal men disappeared, Imroz's field worker, Parvaiz Matta, travelled to the village. He found an eyewitness, Fayaz Wani, a close friend of the missing men. Wani finally revealed the Indian army had offered the men jobs, in a deal brokered by a Special Police Officer (SPO), who had given them a sum equivalent to £7 each, "as a show of good will", before taking them to a remote army camp in Machil.

The families of the missing men filed a complaint against the SPO, Bashir Lone. "This man broke down, admitting his role, claiming that nine soldiers at a remote army camp had shot the three men, so they could claim reward money," Matta said. (The army routinely gives financial rewards to soldiers who kill militants.) On 28 May, 2010, three bodies were exhumed from unmarked graves close to the camp, some of those already mapped by Imroz, and in which the government said were foreign fighters. Their families identified Shahzad, Riyaz and Mohammad by their clothes.

The Nadihal cash-for-killing story and news of a legion of unidentified dead lying in unmarked graves, sent hundreds of thousands of demonstrators on to the streets in the summer of 2010. Sensing the building anger, the army and central government in New Delhi promised an inquiry, offering, without irony, talks to anyone in Kashmir "who renounced violence". However, when no answers came, Kashmir went into convulsions, as crowds of youths armed with stones ambushed soldiers, police and paramilitaries who returned fire with live rounds. I arrived in Kashmir shortly after. More than 100 demonstrators had been killed, many of them children. International news channels briefly took an interest, asking if Kashmir was experiencing its own Arab Spring. But the cameras left quickly, as a vicious crackdown began clearing the streets: the government's own statistics showing that more than 5,300 Kashmiri youths, many of them children, were arrested.

In 2011, Imroz went to work again, investigating how India had restored the peace, and I shadowed him. He took statements from those who had been released and the families of those still incarcerated. "The affidavits made for chilling reading," he said. The majority of youths alleged torture, with independent medical examinations confirming that many had their fingernails pulled and bones crushed. One teenage prisoner told the Guardian: "The police started on our hands and fingers, breaking them with gun butts, and by the end when tears were streaming down our faces, we were hung by our ankles and had chilli rubbed in our wounds." Others claimed to have petrol funnelled into their rectums. One group alleged in court that they were forced to sodomise each other, while a police cameraman filmed.

This year, Imroz and his field workers widened the research to commence the first state-wide inquiry into the use of torture. Their findings will go to the UN and to Human Rights Watch later this summer but a draft seen by the Guardian suggests that not only is torture endemic, it is systemic. In one cluster of 50 villages, more than 2,000 extreme cases of torture were documented, any of which would kick-start an SHRC inquiry, and all of which left victims maimed and psychologically scarred. Methods included branding, electric shocks, simulated drowning, striping flesh with razor blades and piping petrol into anuses.

This work suggests that the statewide ratio for Kashmiris who have experienced torture is one in six. "For the 50 villages, in this small snapshot, we located 50 centres run by the army and paramilitaries in which torture had been practised," Imroz said. The methods, language and even the architecture of the torture chambers are identical. "What we are looking at is not a few errant officers." Files released under RTI laws show how these practises go back to 1989. These documents, seen by the Guardian, also reveal horrific practises, including one sizeable cluster, confidentially probed by the government itself, where men from the Border Security Force (BSF) lopped off the limbs of suspects and fed prisoners with their own flesh.

The Guardian traced one of the victims, a shepherd Qalandar Khatana, 45. Hobbling on crutches, bandages covering his ankles, both feet having been sawn off, he recalled: "I was held down, a BSF trooper produced a knife and then I passed out as the blood gushed from me." His file says a government investigator confirmed the story and produced eyewitnesses.

Another villager, Nasir Sheikh, a carpenter, who lost both legs below the knee and one hand, added: "The smell was of death – urine, ****, sweat. You knew you were about to be slowly murdered. It was like being thrown down a well where no one can hear you scream." His file confirms the story and suggests that compensation be paid. The UN special rapporteur on torture has been refused entry to Kashmir since 1993. Domestic legislation to outlaw torture has stalled. "When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?" Imroz asked. "Or are we Kashmiris invisible?"

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/jul/09/mass-graves-of-kashmir
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Have been receiving calls from my Kashmiri Friends, they are tensed as 2G internet has also been barred in the valley. <br>Can Kashmiris even breath?</p>— Afreen Fatima (@AfreenFatima136) <a href="https://twitter.com/AfreenFatima136/status/1259523551167516672?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 10, 2020</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

This is pathetic. On one hand our govt wants everyone to start adopting work from home and on the other hand they are not even giving 4G services to Kashmiris. How will they work from home without internet?
 
Kashmir internet blackouts hinder health services, contact tracing

SRINAGAR, India (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - For three days without internet or phone service this month, Rouf Ahmad found himself cut off from his family in Indian-administered Kashmir while his mother was receiving treatment for the deadly coronavirus.

The 23-year-old sociology student is under quarantine in a hospital in Srinagar, Kashmir’s main city, and could not contact the rest of his family to tell them about his mother’s condition as she was treated in the same hospital.

“I used to update my sisters and father many times a day about my mother’s status,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation over the phone. “My frustration knew no bounds when I couldn’t do so for three days.”

Communications blackouts imposed by India’s government as part of an effort to quell political turmoil and armed conflict in Kashmir are hampering the fight against the novel coronavirus, warn health experts and residents.

Weeks of slow or no internet are a regular occurrence in the disputed region. The latest restriction on high-speed internet access has been in place since August last year, when India revoked the special status of its only Muslim-majority state.

The Indian government reinstated low-speed 2G internet services in January, but a blackout earlier this month massively set back health services and contact tracing efforts to curb the new coronavirus, health experts said.

“The shutting down of the internet is not new to Kashmir,” said one Srinagar-based hospital doctor, who asked not to be named.

“But, this time around, we were shocked that we had to work without the internet even during the pandemic for a week,” he said, noting that the government had told health professionals not to talk to the press.

“We are pushed into the primitive world when the internet is shut down abruptly.”

When contacted for comment, police officials directed the Thomson Reuters Foundation to an official order posted on the police website.

It said the shutdown on May 6, implemented the day after security forces killed militant commander Riyaz Niakoo in south Kashmir’s Pulwama district, was necessary due to the “likelihood of misuse of data services by anti-national elements”.

Knowing Kashmir’s history of communication restrictions, Ahmad anticipates further shutdowns - mobile internet was again halted on Tuesday - but hopes he and his mother can get out of the hospital before then.

“I can’t bring myself to deal with another blackout. Our family is already facing an awful situation as my mother is battling COVID-19,” he said.

CONTACT TRACING
Kashmir is among the Indian regions worst hit by COVID-19, with confirmed cases increasing sharply from four in mid-March to more than 1,200 by mid-May and about 16 deaths, according to official figures.

Health professionals at two major hospitals in Srinagar told the Thomson Reuters Foundation that during the recent communications blackout they were unable to consult with colleagues about coronavirus cases.

A health department official, who requested anonymity as he is not authorised to speak to the press, said the three days without mobile phone service put added strain on the country’s already stressed health system.

The blackout affected all but phones on pay monthly contracts, which are mainly used by government officials.

Doctors normally use messaging services like WhatsApp to send each other information about cases and communicate with patients, the official explained, adding that relying on phone calls in the shutdown was often inconvenient and time-consuming.

He noted that there was no way for health workers to carry out contact tracing, which involves tracking down infected people and finding everyone who has been near them, so they can get tested too.

“It was impossible to trace the contacts of COVID-positive cases in those three days as there was no way of reaching out to people,” said the official.

It was also impossible for Kashmiris to install the government’s contact-tracing app that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said everyone in the country should download onto their phones in a televised address last month.

Health experts say contact tracing is key to keeping the virus in check.

Even a single day’s delay in contact tracing could be the difference between getting the virus under control and suffering a resurgence, according to researchers from the University of Oxford in Britain.

Owais Ahmad, the Officer on Special Duty at Kashmir’s COVID Control Room, where he helps monitor the spread of the virus in the region, confirmed that the three-day blackout had impacted the rate of installation of the app.

About 100,000 people in the region have so far downloaded the app, he estimated.

But he added that he thinks it will pick up now that internet and mobile phone services have been restored.

“This is an extremely important app in the fight against COVID,” Ahmad said during an interview in his office.

RISE IN INTERNET SHUTDOWNS
India has said it cuts communications to prevent unrest in Kashmir, where a separatist insurgency has killed more than 40,000 people since 1989.

Kashmir is claimed in full by both India and Pakistan, which have gone to war twice over it. Each rules parts of the scenic Himalayan region.

The internet blackout in Kashmir which started in August and lasted 175 days, was among the world’s longest internet shutdowns implemented last year, according to digital rights group Access Now.

Last year, India experienced 121 shutdowns, out of a global total of 196, the group said in a recent report.

International rights groups have decried the rise in the use of communications shutdowns in recent years as governments from the Philippines to Yemen said they were necessary for public safety and national security.

The United Nations has said such measures cannot be justified as the world is trying to tackle a pandemic.

“Internet access is critical at a time of crisis,” David Kaye, United Nations special rapporteur on the right to freedom of expression, said in a statement in March.

“Human health depends not only on readily accessible health care. It also depends on access to accurate information about the nature of the threats and the means to protect oneself, one’s family, and one’s community.”

Ahmad at the COVID Control Room rejected the claim that shutting down internet and mobile services had impacted healthcare in the region.

He said the communication blackout had been “managed by health workers”, without specifying further.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...health-services-contact-tracing-idUSKBN22W052
 
India must allow UN, OIC to witness IOJ&K situation: FM

A day after briefing the United Nations chief about Indian brutalities in Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IOJ&K), Pakistan foreign minister held a conversation with the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) chief about the humanitarian crisis created by New Delhi in the disputed valley.

According to an official statement, Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi on Saturday called the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Secretary General Dr Yousef A Al-Othaimeen to update him on the aggravating situation in the IOJ&K and the Indian attempt to alter the territory’s demography.

The foreign minister told Dr Yousef that the recently introduced domicile law in IOJ&K aimed at changing the demographic makeup of the Muslim dominated state and it is in clear violation of relevant UN and OIC resolutions and international law, including the 4th Geneva Convention.

He said under the cover of Covid-19 crisis New Delhi is imposing even more stringent lockdown in the occupied territory and enhanced repression of the Kashmiri population through fake encounters, extrajudicial killings and other repressive measures.

“The occupation forces are inflicting collective punishment on entire communities through actions like torching houses of local residents or razing them to the ground.”

He said India – in order to divert the world’s attention from its unacceptable actions in IOJ&K – might resort to a false flag operation inside the Azad Kashmir – a misadventure which could imperil regional peace and security.

Qureshi appreciated the OIC’s consistent support to Pakistan on the Jammu and Kashmir dispute. He welcomed the statements issued by the OIC and its human rights body, Independent Permanent Human Rights Commission (IPHRC), rejecting the new domicile law and India’s other illegal actions in IOJ&K.

He also briefed the OIC chief about his recent telephonic interaction with United Nations General Secretary Antonio Guterres and the letter addressed to the United Nations Security Council (UNSC).

The foreign minister urged the international community to ask India to implement the relevant UN resolutions; restore fundamental freedoms and repeal discriminatory laws.

He also said India must allow full and free access to the OIC, IPHRC and the UN to investigate the situation on the ground; and allow Kashmiris to exercise their inalienable right to self-determination.

The foreign minister also apprised the secretary general of the rising wave of Islamophobia as well as demonization of Muslims in India since start of Covid-19 pandemic.

Secretary General Al-Othaimeen reiterated OIC’s steadfast support to Pakistan on the Jammu and Kashmir dispute and assured that the OIC would continue to follow-up on the issue.

Highlighting that Covid-19 posed a grave threat to the entire humanity, the foreign minister appreciated the secretary general’s role in spearheading the OIC’s collective response to combat the pandemic while briefing him about the steps taken by Pakistan to contain the virus. The secretary general also expressed his deep condolences over the tragic plane crash and loss of precious lives in Karachi on Friday.
https://tribune.com.pk/story/2227916/1-india-must-allow-un-oic-witness-iojk-situation-fm/
 
Pakistan condemns extrajudicial killing of 13 Kashmiris in IoK

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Tuesday strongly condemned the extrajudicial killing of 13 Kashmiris in a single day by Indian occupation forces in the disputed territory, ramping up tensions between Islamabad and New Delhi.

A statement by the Foreign Office said Pakistan was deeply concerned over unabated extrajudicial killings of Kashmiri youth in fake encounters and so-called “anti-infiltration” operations.

“While the international community is preoccupied with fighting the COVID-19 pandemic, India is busy intensifying its brutalisation of the Kashmiri people,” it said, adding that the killing of the Kashmiris speaks volumes about Indian government’s continuing crimes against humanity.

“To hide these crimes, the Indian authorities use the oft-repeated, unsubstantiated allegations of “training” and “infiltration” of Kashmiri resistance fighters,” the Foreign Office said. “India must realize that its malicious propaganda carries no credibility with the international community. The RSS-BJP combine stands exposed before the world for its illegal and inhuman actions and extremist ‘Hindutva’ agenda.”

The Foreign Office added, “India must realize that neither can its brutalisation break the will of the Kashmiri people nor can its anti-Pakistan propaganda divert attention from India’s state-terrorism and egregious violations of human rights in occupied Kashmir.”

It added the martyrdom of each Kashmiri will further fortify people’s resolve for freedom from Indian occupation. “Kashmiris will never give up their inalienable right to self-determination as enshrined in the UNSC resolutions and the leadership and people of Pakistan will never flinch in their commitment of full support for the Kashmiris towards that end.”

The Foreign Office further urged the international community to take immediate steps to stop India from committing serious crimes against the Kashmiri people and hold it accountable under international law and relevant human rights Conventions.
https://www.geo.tv/latest/291092-pa...icial-killing-of-13-kashmiris-in-a-single-day
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Another victim of pellet shotgun in Kashmir. Fayaz who is a class three student was shot in eyes by the security forces on May 22. <br><br>Via <a href="https://twitter.com/tkwmag?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@tkwmag</a> <a href="https://t.co/BDLNLg8ROT">https://t.co/BDLNLg8ROT</a></p>— Raqib Hameed Naik (@raqib_naik) <a href="https://twitter.com/raqib_naik/status/1267807186261954565?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 2, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Pakistan urges world leaders to act as India completes 10-month lockdown in IOJ&K

As the Modi government has completed 10 months of inhuman lockdown in Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IOJ&K), Pakistan on Friday urged the international community, including the United Nations, to take immediate cognisance of the gravity of human rights situation in the disputed region and hold New Delhi accountable for its crimes against the innocent Kashmiri people.

A statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFa) said that the world community must also play its due role in preventing the situation from escalating further and in preserving peace and security in South Asia.

“For its part, Pakistan reaffirms full support to the Kashmiri people in their just struggle till the realisation of their right to self-determination as enshrined in the relevant United Nations Security Council (UNSC) resolutions,” the communique read.

It added that during the past 10 months, Indian forces have violated every single right of the Kashmiris and tried every possible tool of oppression to perpetuate India’s illegal occupation of IOJ&K.

“While the international community is pre-occupied with fighting the Covid-19 pandemic, India has been busy trying to illegally change the demographic structure of the occupied territory and intensifying its brutalisation of the Kashmiri people with extra-judicial killings of Kashmiri youth in fake encounters and so-called ‘anti-infiltration’ operations.”

The Foreign Office also said that the persecution of Kashmiri people and minorities elsewhere in India is a direct result of the BJP government’s RSS-inspired extremist Hindutva mindset, which stands exposed before the international community for its crimes against humanity.

“India must realise that its brutalisation of Kashmiris for the past seven decades has failed to subjugate them and will not succeed in future. The more India oppresses the innocent Kashmiris, the more their resolve to secure their legitimate rights will be fortified.”

The day marked the completion of 10 months of continuous inhuman lockdown, military siege, communications blockade and unprecedented restrictions in IOJ&K imposed by the Indian forces, following New Delhi’s illegal and unilateral actions of 5 August 2019.
https://tribune.com.pk/story/223636...s-act-india-completes-10-month-lockdown-iojk/
 
Kashmir children facing COVID-19 mental health issues

SRINAGAR, Jammu and Kashmir

Battered by unending violence and in the grip of a deadly pandemic, children in Indian-administered Kashmir are facing growing mental health problems.

Sahil, whose name was changed for this story, is a 14-year-old from the southern Anantnag district who suffers from obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), but his condition has been aggravated since the outbreak of COVID-19, which has so far claimed 59 lives while infecting more than 4,500 in the region.

“He had distressing thoughts of getting contaminated with the coronavirus infection which are leading to anxiety,” said clinical psychologist Farhana Yaseen.

“Due to the fear of pandemic, he was washing his hands excessively and compulsively checking news on the pandemic,” Yaseen told Anadolu Agency.

Felt he had COVID-19

When the first case was detected in the region in mid-March, Sahil was distressed by the news.

In addition to hand washing and obsessing over the news, he “started to stay in isolation and the worst was when he started to have panic attacks – he felt like he had the COVID-19 infection,” a family member told Anadolu Agency.

For now, Sahil is on medication and receives counseling, but mental health professionals are concerned about the growing number of child mental health issues.

Limit COVID-19 news consumptions

As the region copes with a 10-month lockdown by the Indian government, the pandemic has worsened the mental health situation.

Hundreds of mental cases have been reported at the child guidance and well-being center run by UNICEF at the Shri Maharaja Hari Hospital (SMHS) since the outbreak.

“We have provided psychiatric help and counseling sessions to almost 300 cases since the COVID-19 outbreak – 90% of cases through telephone and 10% face-to-face sessions,” said Yaseen.

She said in all of the cases, the children developed high risk anxieties and depression due to the crisis and most were depressed when they watched COVID-19 news, particularly the deaths and infection taking place globally.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has urged especially children to minimize consuming news about COVID-19 that causes anxiety or distress. The UN agency stressed giving children more attention and love by being honest.

“First of all we need to limit the COVID-19 news for children, especially to those who have underlying mental health problems,” Yasir Rather, a psychiatrist at the Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences in the capital Srinagar, told Anadolu Agency.

He said children who already suffer mental problems have developed a fear of catching the infection.

“In 50%-60% of child mental health cases which we have seen during the current pandemic crisis, high levels of anxiety, distress, panic attacks and suicidal thoughts are prominent,” he said.

Violence and pandemic

The deadly infection has spread its tentacles across more than 188 countries and has infected nearly 8 million people worldwide, while claiming some 430,000 lives, but the Indian-administered Kashmir region is stuck with a daily dose of violence and COVID-19.

Despite multiple calls for a cease-fire by the UN, since the beginning of 2020 amid the pandemic 40 deadly gunfights have taken place in the region in which 90 militants and 25 government personnel have been killed while some one dozen civilians have also lost their lives.

More than 30 structures have also been damaged.

“These events are going to have a prolonged psychological effect on the whole population of this region, particularly the children,” Mutaqeem Altaf, a psychology scholar, told Anadolu Agency.

He said that, despite the pandemic, violence has not been subdued in the disputed region, and children, caught in the middle, are suffering heavily.

The Indian government last August ended the special status of the region by imposing a strict military and communication blockade.

Children have not been to school since, and high-speed internet has also remained suspended.

“Amid the pandemic in other parts of the world, children are taking online classes, but it has been very difficult for the children of the disputed region to take online classes on a limited internet facility, which is badly affecting them psychologically,” Altaf said.

Kashmir is held by India and Pakistan in parts and claimed by both in full. A small sliver of Kashmir is also held by China.

Since they were partitioned in 1947, the two countries have fought three wars – in 1948, 1965 and 1971 – including two over Kashmir.

Some Kashmiri groups in Jammu and Kashmir have been fighting against Indian rule for independence or unification with neighboring Pakistan.

According to several human rights groups, thousands of people have been killed in the conflict in the region since 1989.
https://www.aa.com.tr/en/asia-pacific/kashmir-children-facing-covid-19-mental-health-issues/1876498
 
India continuously violating human rights in occupied Kashmir: Foreign Office

ISLAMABAD: The Foreign Office on Thursday said that India was continuously violating human rights in occupied Kashmir which had been under lockdown since August last year.

Foreign Office spokesperson Aisha Farooqui, during her weekly press briefing, said India had turned occupied Kashmir into a jail. “India stands in violation of several resolutions of the Security Council that prescribed an UN-supervised plebiscite to enable the people of occupied Kashmir to exercise their fundamental right to self-determination,” she said.

“New Delhi’s actions are aimed at illegally altering the demographic structure of occupied Kashmir are a violation of multiple UNSC resolutions and international laws," Farooqui said.

The Indian leadership has perpetuated massive violations of human rights against its minorities, in particular Muslims, threatening them with statelessness, she added.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/293758-in...man-rights-in-occupied-kashmir-foreign-office
 
Islamabad, Pakistan - At least four civilians have been killed by Indian shelling inside Pakistan-administered Kashmir, Pakistan's military and local officials said.

Three people were killed in the Nakyal region, while a fourth person died after a shell hit her home in the Baghsar area, the military said in a statement released late on Wednesday.

India-China border dispute 'killing thousands of pashmina goats'

In the village of Dadot, about 200m (655 feet) from the highly militarised but not always clearly demarcated Line of Control (LoC), two teenagers and a man were killed by a single shell, hospital officials told Al Jazeera.

"Three people died at the spot, and they have just been buried," Nasrullah Khan told Al Jazeera by telephone. "There was a single shell, and the three boys, who were cousins, were all standing together."

The woman, a resident of the Baghsar area located about 120km southeast of the Pakistani capital Islamabad, died when a shell hit her home, local media quoted senior police official Mir Muhammad Abid as saying.

On Wednesday, Pakistan's Foreign Office summoned Gaurav Ahluwalia, the Charge d'Affaires at the Indian High Commission in Islamabad, to register its "strong protest" at the violence.

Brink of war

Pakistan and India have fought two of their three wars over the mountainous territory of Kashmir, which both claim in full but administer separate portions of, divided by the LoC.

A 2003 ceasefire is in place but is frequently violated by both sides, with a large number of military personnel and artillery units posted along most of the roughly 650km de facto border.

This year, at least 12 people have been killed and more than 102 wounded in Pakistan-administered Kashmir from Indian firing across the LoC, according to Pakistani government data.

Data on casualties in Indian-administered Kashmir has not been released, but earlier this year Indian Minister of State for Defence Shripad Naik told parliament that Pakistan had violated the ceasefire at least 646 times between January 1 and February 23.

Tensions between the South Asian neighbours remain high since last year, when the nuclear-armed countries came to the brink of war following Indian airstrikes on Pakistani territory and an aerial skirmish that saw an Indian fighter jet pilot shot down.

Earlier this week, India engaged in military skirmishes with China on the de facto border between Indian-administered Kashmir and the Chinese territory of Aksai Chin in the Galwan Valley.

At least 20 Indian soldiers were killed, with an unspecified number of casualties incurred by China.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...lled-indian-shelling-loc-200618072318096.html
 
Not until the Muslim Killer Modi is in power.

This is the only way he can keep his bloodthirsty followers happy.

Now that Chinese have whooped them aur ghar me ghus ke mara hai so I'm afraid the only for Indians to feel superior is to oppress further our Kashmiri brothers.

Tough times for IOK. May Allah grant them strength and courage to endure this lockdown.
 
OIC Kashmir group urges India to 'end siege of IOJ&K immediately'

The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Contact Group has urged New Delhi to immediately end siege of Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IOJ&K), said Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi on Monday.

He was briefing the media on emergency virtual meeting of the OIC Contact Group on IOJ&K, which was held earlier in the day.

Foreign ministers of member countries of the Contact Group – Azerbaijan, Niger, Saudi Arabia and Turkey among others – attended the meeting. Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) President Sardar Masood Khan also participated in the meeting.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/224813...-india-end-siege-iojk-immediately-fm-qureshi/
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Today on International Day in Support of Victims of Torture, I call on the international community to hold India accountable for its human rights abuses in IOJK where women, men & children have faced pellet guns, sexual assault, electrocution, & physical & mental torture.</p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/1276395161640144896?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 26, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Today on International Day in Support of Victims of Torture, I call on the international community to hold India accountable for its human rights abuses in IOJK where women, men & children have faced pellet guns, sexual assault, electrocution, & physical & mental torture.</p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/1276395161640144896?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 26, 2020</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Veteran Kashmir leader SAS Geelani quits pro-freedom alliance

A veteran politician in Indian-administered Kashmir has quit his faction within an umbrella alliance of pro-freedom groups, saying it had failed to counter New Delhi's efforts to tighten its grip on the disputed region.

The decision of Syed Ali Shah Geelani, 90, could further weaken the region's movement after India last August scrapped a decades-old constitutional provision giving the Jammu and Kashmir state special rights.

Geelani, who has been under house arrest in the region's largest city, Srinagar, for several years, accused the faction he led within the umbrella Hurriyat Conference of inaction over New Delhi's move in a two-page letter and short audio message on Monday.

"Keeping in view the present situation in Hurriyat Conference, I announce my decision to part ways with it," he said, accusing members of the grouping of conspiring against him and saying it lacked discipline and accountability.

In the run-up to the abrogation of the Muslim-majority region's autonomy, hundreds of pro-freedom leaders and activists were arrested and flown out of Indian-administered Kashmir to jails in several Indian cities.

A few, however, were put under house arrest in the region or were not detained at all.

Addressing those leaders, Geelani said in the letter: "After August 5, the leaders who were not arrested were expected to lead the people, give them hope. Despite my house detention and government's curbs, I searched hard for you, but you were not available. I couldn't do much because of my health and detention."

On August 5 last year, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government stripped the disputed region of its special rights and split it into two federally-administered territories.

Both India and archrival Pakistan claim the Himalayan region in full, but administer parts of it.

Hurriyat Conference was formed in 1993 by various pro-freedom groups in Kashmir to provide a political platform for independence or merger with Pakistan in the wake of an armed revolt against New Delhi.

But the group split in 2003 when a faction headed by Geelani, who advocated Kashmir's merger with Pakistan, walked out after another group decided to hold talks with New Delhi and formed their own faction.

With the split, Geelani was elected chairman for life for his faction of the Hurriyat, made up of more than 24 constituent parties, some of which have only a handful of members.

The other faction is led by Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, who has been under house arrest since August last year. Both Hurriyats used to regularly issue statements and protest programmes.

But after India's clampdown last year, the activities of both factions have come to a standstill.

Hurriyat leaders from Geelani's faction were not immediately available for comment.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...nat-security-law-reports-200630013307873.html
 
Kashmir bans Muslim gatherings but OKs Hindu pilgrimage

SRINAGAR: The regional administration in Indian-occupied Jammu and Kashmir is set to allow a Hindu pilgrimage despite rising coronavirus infections and deaths.

Under a government order effective the weekend of July 4, the regional administration has prohibited all social and religious gatherings but at the same time is allowing a Hindu pilgrimage to a shrine in Amarnath cave at an elevation of 3,888 meters (12,775 feet) in the Phalgam area of south Kashmir.

Inside the cave is a Shiva Lingam, a holy symbol for Hindus worldwide.

Authorities in the region said the pilgrimage will be undertaken in a “restricted manner” beginning at the end of this month, with 500 Hindu pilgrims allowed per day.

Chairing a meeting of a sub-committee in the Indian Supreme Court, the region’s Chief Secretary BVR Subrahmanyam said that during the pilgrimage, all measures to stem the virus’ spread will be strictly adhered to while all entrants to the region will be sampled, tested and quarantined.

Though the pilgrimage period has been cut short from 42 days to 15, critics and health experts in the region warn that people coming from other Indian states hard hit by the virus will carry infections to the region as well.

“Already we have more than 8,000 cases here, and from the last three days, more than 20 deaths have taken place,” a resident doctor dealing with Covid-19 cases told Anadolu Agency. “I ask the government if we can afford this crisis more.”

Majority-Muslim Jammu and Kashmir has been under a lockdown for 11 months, with human rights groups saying the Indian forces have been oppressing the people of the disputed region, especially since taking away its special status under the Constitution last August.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2253571/kashmir-bans-muslim-gatherings-but-oks-hindu-pilgrimage
 
Pakistan urges UNSC to reign in India’s fascist ambitions

UNITED NATIONS: Pakistan has urged the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) to end the “open aggression and atrocities” against the Kashmiri people by India, which had “callously exploited” the coronavirus crisis to further advance its occupation of the disputed territory.

Addressing a virtual high-level meeting of the UNSC to discuss the effect of the pandemic on peace and security, Pakistan Permanent Representative Munir Akram said that the people in Indian-occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IOJ&K) has now been condemned to a “double lockdown”.

“The council must denounce India’s illegal actions in occupied Jammu and Kashmir and take urgent actions to reign in its fascist ambitions that are putting enormous strain on peace and security of our region and beyond,” Ambassador Akram told the 15-member body.

The high-level debate, convened by Germany as president of the council for July, followed last week’s passage of resolution 2532 (2020), which demands a general and immediate cessation of hostilities in all situations on its agenda.

Noting that while there has been no real reduction in violence in many of world’s conflict zones, Ambassador Akram said some states had taken advantage of this situation to consolidate their illegal occupations of foreign and disputed territories.

“For over 10 months,”, he said, “the Kashmiris have faced crippling restrictions on civil liberties and unrelenting human rights abuses” at the hands of Indian forces. “The coronavirus has now condemned them to a ‘double lockdown’ bringing them to the precipice of a vast human tragedy,” he added.

The prolonged Kashmir lockdown had already depleted essential medical supplies in hospitals, turning them into graveyards and rendering Indian authorities incapable of meeting the public health crisis, the Pakistani envoy said.

“While the world’s attention is focused on the virus, India has taken advantage by implementing additional steps to consolidate its occupation. Besides the extended lockdown and communications blackout, India has introduced new ‘domicile rules’ to engineer a demographic change in Kashmir, to transform it from a Muslim majority State into a Hindu majority territory,” he said.

“These measures are in direct contravention of the relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions and international law, in particular the Fourth Geneva Convention. Hundreds of senior Kashmiri political leaders and thousands of young men, including human rights defenders and journalists have been arbitrarily detained and incarcerated to stifle the call for freedom and suppress their legitimate struggle for right to self-determination,” he added.

“Peaceful protestors, including children as young as 4, have been blinded by pellet guns; women and girls dishonoured and threatened with rape and violence; hundreds killed in extrajudicial executions, whole neighbourhood destroyed as ‘collective punishment’”.

The council, Ambassador Akram emphasised, must denounce India’s illegal actions in Kashmir and take urgent actions to reign in its “fascist ambitions that are putting enormous strain on peace and security of our region and beyond”.

In this regard, he said, the council must urge India to: lift the military siege in Kashmir and rescind its illegal actions since 5 August 2019, when New Delhi annexed the disputed region; remove restrictions on communication, movement and peaceful assembly; allow access to international human rights organisations to undertake relief efforts; release detained and incarcerated Kashmiri political leadership; reverse new domicile rules designed to change the demographic structure of Kashmir; remove draconian laws that enable Indian forces to commit rights violations with impunity; and protect Muslim minority in India from apartheid-like oppression.

“These actions are urgently need not just to calm down tension in our region, but are also imperative for the credibility of the Security Council and the continued efficacy of the United Nations in matters related to peace and security,” Ambassador Akram said.
https://tribune.com.pk/story/2253645/pakistan-urges-unsc-to-reign-in-indias-fascist-ambitions
 
BJP’s Bandipora leader, his brother, father shot dead by gunmen

Bandipora: Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) Bandipora leader, Sheikh Waseem Bari, his father and his brother were on Wednesday shot dead by the unidentified gunmen outside their residence in Muslimabad area of the north Kashmir district.

Official sources said that Bari, his father Bashir Ahmed and brother, Umar Bari were shot outside their residence located in the vicinity of local police station.

Hospital sources also confirmed that all three were declared dead on their arrival to the hospital.(KNO)

https://kashmirreader.com/2020/07/08/bjps-bandipora-leader-his-brother-father-shot-dead-by-gunmen/
 
Kashmir politician from Modi's BJP party killed by rebels

Unidentified gunmen have fatally shot a pro-India politician along with his father and brother in Kashmir, police said, in a first significant attack against India's ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) members in the disputed region.

Gunmen fired at Sheikh Wasim Bari, a leader with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's BJP party in northwestern Bandipora town on Wednesday night, police said in a statement. The statement said "during indiscriminate firing," Bari, his brother and father were injured but later died in hospital. Bari's brother and father also were BJP members.

Police blamed rebels fighting against Indian rule in the Muslim-majority Himalayan region for the attack on Bari, who was an executive council member of the party in the region. He was reported to be 35 years old.

He helped the BJP to strengthen its base in the region and was considered the face of the party in Bandipora district.

Modi's BJP-led government last year revoked Muslim majority Kashmir's special autonomy to cement its grip over a region that has faced years of armed rebellion against Indian rule. Rebels have vowed to fight the change.

All 10 security guards of the BJP leader were arrested after the attack, said Kashmir Police Chief, Vijay Kumar.

According to police officials, at least two fighters fired at the three outside their home, which is about 100 metres from the town's main police station.

Government forces cordoned off the area and launched a search for the attackers, police said.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...-bjp-party-killed-rebels-200709040056540.html
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">No 4G internet in J&K for now, special panel will review decision after 2 months — MHA to SC<a href="https://twitter.com/BhadraSinha?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@BhadraSinha</a> reports<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ThePrintLaw?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#ThePrintLaw</a><a href="https://t.co/UdMshdCIYo">https://t.co/UdMshdCIYo</a></p>— ThePrintIndia (@ThePrintIndia) <a href="https://twitter.com/ThePrintIndia/status/1286313871603458048?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 23, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">No 4G internet in J&K for now, special panel will review decision after 2 months — MHA to SC<a href="https://twitter.com/BhadraSinha?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@BhadraSinha</a> reports<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ThePrintLaw?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#ThePrintLaw</a><a href="https://t.co/UdMshdCIYo">https://t.co/UdMshdCIYo</a></p>— ThePrintIndia (@ThePrintIndia) <a href="https://twitter.com/ThePrintIndia/status/1286313871603458048?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 23, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

After 2 months? Can't even imagine what people from tech industry are going through there.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">It's one year since Indian PM Modi revoked Kashmir's special status. In that time, "thousands of Kashmiris were arrested on vague charges, and the government enacted a strict curfew and the world’s longest internet blackout." <a href="https://t.co/kanj8lXxAR">https://t.co/kanj8lXxAR</a> <a href="https://t.co/8UbmdbBU7X">pic.twitter.com/8UbmdbBU7X</a></p>— Kenneth Roth (@KenRoth) <a href="https://twitter.com/KenRoth/status/1289894077559799809?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 2, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
With a heavy hand, India rides out occupied Kashmir’s year of disquiet

The scars of last summer remain in Soura, an enclave that became a symbol of occupied Kashmir’s resistance to India’s central government a year ago on Wednesday.

Coils of concertina wire, remnants of makeshift road blocks, lie close to the broken tar of roads dug up to keep the security forces of Prime Minister Narendra Modi out of this area of 15,000 people in occupied Kashmir’s main city of Srinagar.

A year after stripping occupied Kashmir of its autonomy, Modi’s government has prevented widespread protests and violence, with a heavy hand on people who for weeks had barricaded themselves in and staged protests, hurling stones at federal troops armed with pellet guns and tear gas.

Security forces eventually broke through.

But local politicians warn that anger is rife with young men still picking up arms — and stones.

This Himalayan region has been at the heart of tensions between Hindu-majority India and Muslim Pakistan for decades, the cause of two of the three wars between the nuclear-armed neighbours. Both countries claim the region in full, but each rules only in part.

On Aug 5, 2019, Modi split the state of occupied Jammu and Kashmir into two federally controlled territories and took away its special privileges, saying this was necessary to better integrate the region with the rest of India.

New Delhi flooded troops into the Muslim-majority valley, where armed Kashmiris have struggled since the 1990s. India detained thousands, imposed harsh movement restrictions and forced a communications blackout.

Many of those measures have since been eased, but the internet remains throttled and a subsequent Covid-19 lockdown — India has the world’s third-highest coronavirus infections and rising fast — has forced millions of Kashmiris to stay in their homes for 12 months.

“The government said that they did it for the good of Jammu and Kashmir. What good things have happened since then? They have destroyed our economy,” said Mohammad Yusuf Tarigami, a former lawmaker. “Where is the development?”

Modi’s government says it has undertaken reforms but that the pandemic, hitting occupied Kashmir hard like the rest of India, got in the way.

Reforms include legal changes to help non-Kashmiris who can now apply for government jobs and secure seats in colleges for their children, 10,000 new government jobs, extending federal schemes to the territory and bolstering the village-level administrative system.

“We have to try and win public sentiment,” a government official told Reuters, adding there is a push to improve roads, water and electrification.

Indian occupied Jammu and Kashmir police chief Vijay Kumar said security forces had kept up the pressure on the uprising, killing 138 fighters in the year to July, slightly more than the 129 killed in the same period last year.

Still, officials express concern that there is little sign of a let-up in disaffected youth joining the armed revolt.

This year around 60 new recruits have joined the groups through July, compared with 80 for the same period last year, according to a government estimate.

“The challenge would be how do we tamp down the recruitment,” the government official said.

Symbol of resistance

Two of Fatima Wani’s three sons have found little work as labourers in the past 12 months, making it difficult to make ends meet.

But the 62-year-old housewife’s worry is with her eldest son, picked up for allegedly taking part in a protest and booked under the Public Safety Act, which allows for detention for up to two years without charge.

About 150 people arrested last year are still detained, two-thirds of them charged under the law, according to government data.

Wani said her family had to sell a cow to pay for their travel to the northern town of Agra to meet her son in prison.

“He is innocent,” she said, tears rolling down her cheeks. “I want justice.”

Police chief Kumar said arrests had been made of stone-throwers and associates of fighters trying to stir up violence in the streets, some of whom had been booked under the security act.

In Soura, the indignation remains. A young man, who gave his name as Sahil and claimed he had been detained three times by police for clashing with troops, said he wasn’t going to back down.

“We are being suppressed, and I will fight against that suppression in whatever way I can,” he said. “I will continue stone pelting.”

https://www.dawn.com/news/1572388/w...-rides-out-occupied-kashmirs-year-of-disquiet
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Archives | Saiba Varma, a medical anthropologist, described the Kashmir siege as “more like an assault on the spirit rather than the body … It is about breaking their spirit, by not even allowing them to share even the most basic level of information.” <a href="https://t.co/jeMnUGdnqy">https://t.co/jeMnUGdnqy</a></p>— The Caravan (@thecaravanindia) <a href="https://twitter.com/thecaravanindia/status/1290188150988582912?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 3, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Modi’s govt failed to achieve any result of Aug 5, illegal actions: ex-Indian minster

A senior Indian politician and former Union minister, P Chidambaram has said that Indian Illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) is a big jail, stressing that Prime Minister Narendra Modi government has failed to achieve any result of its August 5, 2019 illegal actions.

According to the Kashmir Media Service, P Chidambaram, who is currently Member of Rajya Sabha, the upper house of parliament, said in an article published on Sunday that all major fundamental rights were effectively suspended.

“The Public Safety Act and the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act are invoked indiscriminately. Cordon and Search Operations (CASO) are conducted widely. All statutory commissions to uphold rights have been wound up. The new media policy … sanctifies censorship,” the article said.

Referred to the abrogation of Article 370 of the Indian constitution to strip IIOJK of its special status, he said that the move was intended to break up the IIOJK, reduce its status to Union territories, bring the territories under the direct rule of New Delhi, suppress political activities, intimidate 7.5 million people of the IIOJK into submission, and quell freedom struggle.

“While the means have been employed, none of the ends has been achieved and, in my view, will never be achieved under the current dispensation’s policy,” he said. The Indian politician pointed out that the cases of Mubeen Shah, Miyan Abdul Qayoom, Gowher Geelani, Masarrat Zahra and Safoora Zafgar illustrate the abuse of law and the difficulties in getting justice.

The Kashmir Chamber of Commerce and Industry had estimated that the loss of production in IIOJK alone since August 2019 was about Rs400,000 million and loss of jobs was 497,000. Tourist arrivals fell from 611,534 in 2017 to 316,424 in 2018 to 43,059 in 2019. The fruit, garment, carpet, IT, communications and transport industries have been badly hit, he added.

At the end of the article he said: “It will be a year on August 5, yet our vaunted Constitutional institutions—Parliament, courts and plural political system—have found no answers to the new Kashmir issue created on August 5, 2019.”

He concluded, saying: “That is a sad failure, and the sadness is compounded by the fact that there is no Abraham Lincoln on the horizon. Nor can we hear the soul-stirring words ‘that this nation shall have a new birth of freedom; and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth’.”

https://tribune.com.pk/story/225781...lt-of-aug-5-illegal-actions-ex-indian-minster
 
Modi’s govt failed to achieve any result of Aug 5, illegal actions: ex-Indian minster

A senior Indian politician and former Union minister, P Chidambaram has said that Indian Illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) is a big jail, stressing that Prime Minister Narendra Modi government has failed to achieve any result of its August 5, 2019 illegal actions.

According to the Kashmir Media Service, P Chidambaram, who is currently Member of Rajya Sabha, the upper house of parliament, said in an article published on Sunday that all major fundamental rights were effectively suspended.

“The Public Safety Act and the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act are invoked indiscriminately. Cordon and Search Operations (CASO) are conducted widely. All statutory commissions to uphold rights have been wound up. The new media policy … sanctifies censorship,” the article said.

Referred to the abrogation of Article 370 of the Indian constitution to strip IIOJK of its special status, he said that the move was intended to break up the IIOJK, reduce its status to Union territories, bring the territories under the direct rule of New Delhi, suppress political activities, intimidate 7.5 million people of the IIOJK into submission, and quell freedom struggle.

“While the means have been employed, none of the ends has been achieved and, in my view, will never be achieved under the current dispensation’s policy,” he said. The Indian politician pointed out that the cases of Mubeen Shah, Miyan Abdul Qayoom, Gowher Geelani, Masarrat Zahra and Safoora Zafgar illustrate the abuse of law and the difficulties in getting justice.

The Kashmir Chamber of Commerce and Industry had estimated that the loss of production in IIOJK alone since August 2019 was about Rs400,000 million and loss of jobs was 497,000. Tourist arrivals fell from 611,534 in 2017 to 316,424 in 2018 to 43,059 in 2019. The fruit, garment, carpet, IT, communications and transport industries have been badly hit, he added.

At the end of the article he said: “It will be a year on August 5, yet our vaunted Constitutional institutions—Parliament, courts and plural political system—have found no answers to the new Kashmir issue created on August 5, 2019.”

He concluded, saying: “That is a sad failure, and the sadness is compounded by the fact that there is no Abraham Lincoln on the horizon. Nor can we hear the soul-stirring words ‘that this nation shall have a new birth of freedom; and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth’.”

https://tribune.com.pk/story/225781...lt-of-aug-5-illegal-actions-ex-indian-minster

Own goal by Chidambaram. Sadly, no one will care about what he said.

With an aggressive neighbor in Pakistan and growing popularity of “going back to your roots” ie. Hindutva in India, Islam in Turkey, etc., being self centered and gaining “lost pride” is the flavor of the day. Not many care about the oppressed.

Also, Chidambaram’s image has been tarnished beyond repair since 2010. Many people remember him only for the corruption that he did when he was in power.
 
“That is a sad failure, and the sadness is compounded by the fact that there is no Abraham Lincoln on the horizon."

What, what, what??? Abraham Lincoln of people!!!

Chidambaram is coming across as quite illiterate by invoking Lincoln, who to deny secessionists started a civil war in which over 650,000 died.

[MENTION=76058]cricketjoshila[/MENTION] @Romali_Roti [MENTION=151383]Local.Dada[/MENTION]
 
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The Saffron extremists will never be able to break the spirits of the Kashmiri people. They are a 100 x stronger in their hearts and minds thans the cowardly army which occupies them.
 
Authorities imposed a curfew in many parts of Indian-administered Kashmir on Tuesday, a day ahead of the first anniversary of India's controversial decision to revoke the disputed region's semi-autonomy.

Shahid Iqbal Choudhary, a civil administrator, said the security lockdown was clamped in the region's main city of Srinagar in view of information about protests planned by anti-India groups to mark August 5 as "black day".

Police and paramilitary soldiers drove through neighbourhoods and went to people's homes warning them to stay indoors. Government forces erected steel barricades and laid razor wire across roads, bridges and intersections.

The curfew will be enforced on Tuesday and Wednesday, Choudhary said in a government order.

"A series of inputs have been received suggesting that separatist and Pakistan-sponsored groups are planning to observe August 5 as Black Day and violent action or protests are not ruled out," he said.

The curfew is similar to the one introduced just before Kashmir's semi-autonomy was stripped on August 5 last year.

A total communications blackout was imposed, with phone and internet lines cut and tens of thousands of fresh troops moved into the valley in one of the world's most militarised regions.

"Police went around in jeeps ordering everyone not to leave their homes just like this time last year," a resident in the southern Kashmir valley region of Kulgam, who asked to remain anonymous, told AFP news agency.

Change in demographics

India's Hindu-nationalist government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi also downgraded Jammu and Kashmir state and divided it into two federally governed territories following the revocation of the Article 370 that granted special status to the Himalayan region, which is ruled in parts by India and Pakistan. The two countries, which have fought two of their three wars over Kashmir, claim Kashmir in its entirety.

Since then, New Delhi has brought in a slew of new laws which locals say are aimed at shifting the demographics in the Muslim-majority region, many of whom want independence from India or unification with Pakistan.

The status of Kashmir has been a key dispute between Pakistan and India since the two split after the end of British colonial rule. They each control part of Kashmir and have fought two wars over their rival claims.

Initially, the anti-India movement in the Indian-administered portion of Kashmir was largely peaceful, but after a series of political manipulations, broken promises and a crackdown on dissent, Kashmiris launched a full-blown armed revolt in 1989.

After the August 5 decision, Indian authorities enforced an information blackout and a harsh security clampdown in Kashmir for months.

Thousands of Kashmiri youth, pro-freedom leaders and politicians who have traditionally supported Indian rule were arrested. Hundreds of them are still incarcerated.

As some of the restrictions were eased, India enforced another harsh lockdown in March to combat the spread of coronavirus epidemic, deepening the social and economic crisis in the restive region.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...y-revocation-anniversary-200804044327456.html
 
The Human Rights Watch (HRW) Tuesday slammed the Indian government's "harsh and discriminatory restrictions" on the Muslim-majority areas of occupied Jammu and Kashmir, one year since the India's unilateral move to bifurcate the disputed valley continues to repress residents of the occupied valley.

"The [Indian] government’s unwarranted restraints on the rights to free speech, access to information, health care, and education have been intensified by the Covid-19 pandemic," read a statement from the HRW, citing the imposition of curfew by India on August 4 and 5 to stifle protests by Kashmiris in the occupied territory.

The NGO noted how the Indian government had detained thousands of people, shut down telecommunication services and imposed restrictions on freedom of movement and public meetings.

"Indian government claims that it was determined to improve Kashmiri lives ring hollow one year after the revocation of Jammu and Kashmir’s constitutional status,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "The authorities instead have maintained stifling restraints on Kashmiris in violation of their basic rights," she added.

Terming India's notorious Public Safety Law as 'draconian', the HRW noted that thousands had been arrested in occupied Kashmir and three former chief ministers as well as more than 140 children, had been held in custody ever since the unilateral move was undertaken by the Modi government.

The human rights organisation mentioned allegations of torture and ill-treatment against the Indian security forces and the misuse of sedition laws to clamp down on peaceful, dissenting voices.

"In June, the government announced a new media policy in Jammu and Kashmir that empowers the authorities to decide what is “fake news, plagiarism and unethical or anti-national activities” and to take punitive action against media outlets, journalists, and editors," read the statement from the HRW.

"The policy contains vague and overbroad provisions that are open to abuse and could unnecessarily restrict and penalize legally protected speech. International law provides that restrictions on freedom of expression must be necessary for a legitimate purpose, such as the protection of national security, public health, or the rights of others, and strictly proportionate to achieve that end."

The HRW noted how the coronavirus pandemic, its crippling economic effects due to the lockdown in the territory and the suspension of internet services by the Indian government, had made life difficult for people especially in countering COVID-19.

"Doctors have complained that the lack of internet was hurting the Covid-19 response. “It is a new virus – research, studies, guidelines and updates are changing every other day,” said one doctor, according to the HRW. “The internet helps doctors to keep a tab on developments around the world, but we cannot access video lectures or other information in the absence of high-speed internet.”

The rights watch organisation recommended New Delhi take certain measures to restore order in the disputed valley. These included "releasing political detainees; upholding the right to free speech, including by withdrawing cases against journalists and activists; restoring full internet access; and holding to account officials responsible for rights violations".

"Even as the pandemic is forcing the world to address discrimination and inequality, the Indian government is persisting with its repression of Kashmiri Muslims,” concluded Ganguly. "The government should reverse its abusive policies and provide remedies for those whose rights were violated."

https://www.geo.tv/latest/301112-hu...s-indias-abusive-policies-in-occupied-kashmir
 
What, what, what??? Abraham Lincoln of people!!!

Chidambaram is coming across as quite illiterate by invoking Lincoln, who to deny secessionists started a civil war in which over 650,000 died.

[MENTION=76058]cricketjoshila[/MENTION] @Romali_Roti [MENTION=151383]Local.Dada[/MENTION]

Chidambaram is another elitist know all. His corruption is well known. He is trying to stay relevant by making Mani Iyer like statements.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I stand in solidarity with my brothers and sisters of Kashmir. <a href="https://t.co/SCZPuqyWz6">https://t.co/SCZPuqyWz6</a></p>— Cornel West (@CornelWest) <a href="https://twitter.com/CornelWest/status/1290706081639886849?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 4, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Kashmir under strict lockdown on anniversary of lost autonomy

With a heavy deployment of troops and barricades of barbed wire, India put Kashmir under the strictest lockdown in several months on Wednesday, the first anniversary of the Himalayan region’s loss of autonomy.

Streets in the Kashmir’s main city of Srinagar were deserted, with armed paramilitary and police manning roadblocks to enforce a lockdown that was initially imposed on Tuesday to prevent any violent protests.

Top police officer Vijay Kumar said security agencies had received intelligence reports of a suicide attack or attempts to target politicians, and that restrictions would be further tightened on Wednesday.

“We are monitoring the situation,” he told Reuters.

Jammu and Kashmir, India’s only Muslim-majority state, was stripped of its special rights last August and divided into two federally-administered territories in an attempt by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to draw the restive region closer to the rest of the country.

The move was accompanied by a communication blackout, widespread movement restrictions and mass detentions, including those of elected leaders. Most of these measures have been eased, although internet speeds are still restricted and most families remain indoors because of coronavirus-related lockdowns.

But Modi’s promise to rapidly develop the region is yet to pick up pace, partly hamstrung by the coronavirus outbreak. There is strong local resentment, particularly in the Kashmir valley where an armed insurgency has raged on since the 1990s.

“Forget about development and creating new employment opportunities, thousands of daily-wagers, casual labourers, scheme workers and others have been denied wages for months,” former leftist lawmaker Mohammad Yousuf Tarigami said.

The August decision was also condemned by India’s arch rival Pakistan which has called for protests in solidarity with the Kashmiri people.

Both countries claim the region in full but rule in parts, and have gone to war twice over the territory.

Sajjad Ahmad, 37, said he tried to visit his critically-ill father in a Srinagar hospital on Tuesday but was not allowed by police and paramilitary troops.

Ahmad said these were the strictest restrictions he had seen since August last year. “There are barricades everywhere,” he said.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-i...niversary-of-lost-autonomy-idUKKCN2502X8?il=0
 
What, what, what??? Abraham Lincoln of people!!!

Chidambaram is coming across as quite illiterate by invoking Lincoln, who to deny secessionists started a civil war in which over 650,000 died.

[MENTION=76058]cricketjoshila[/MENTION] @Romali_Roti [MENTION=151383]Local.Dada[/MENTION]

lol Chitambaram, wasnt this fool in jail recently, with Ammayi Sonya bending over backwards to get him out :))... I love Congress, I hope they stay as the opposition with that clown Rahul Gandhi as their face, it will ensure BJP leads for the next few decades at least...
 
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