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Amarnath Land Deal
“dugdhAbdhi dhavalaM tena saro dUra-girau kR^itaM |
amareshvara yAtrAyaM janair adyApi dR^ishyate ||”
kalhaNa’s rAjataraMgiNi 1.267

Bodhi you are doing a tremendous service in bringing to light the evils of this napumsaka secular India army and police. It is truly as though India is an Islamic state.
  Reply
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The kashmir muslims are a lot weaker than in 1990,
Pakistan is falling apart
The western public is sick of islam
Their godfathers are weaker

India is much richer and much stronger than in 1990

And the hindu public is a lot less psec
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
GS: True, but where it matters the most, the political will/resolve has deteriorated to a shameful extent. Even back in late 80s Rajiv was firm in dealing with the likes of Abdulla.
  Reply
More shuffling of chairs on Titanic's deck. Lot good this 'core group' will do.
Centre may form core group on Kashmir
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The Union Home ministry is likely to constitute a core group on Kashmir and members of this core group would call on Prime Minister Manmohan Singh [Images] on Wednesday, sources said on Tuesday.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Govt mulls mixed panel, wants talks in Delhi </b>
Pioneer.com
Rakesh Singh/ Kumar Uttam | New Delhi
<b>Groping in the dark to resolve the Amarnath shrine land controversy, the Centre is now mulling over a committee of politicians, senior bureaucrats and retired judges to hold further talks with the protesters in the border State.</b>

The modalities of holding the dialogue with the agitators in Jammu and Kashmir have not been finalised and under the Government's consideration is a proposal to invite the agitating groups to New Delhi for meeting in a "conducive" atmosphere. <b>The four-member committee constituted by Governor NN Vohra can also play a role in initiating the dialogue.</b>

Moreover,<b> there were reports that the Government may not take the final call before August 16, the day of Chhari Mubarak, when the Amarnath Yatra comes to an end.</b> It could give time to let the simmering temper cool down in both the Valley and Jammu. The Government stopped short of suggesting any "concrete formula" to defuse the crisis in Jammu when the all-party delegation under Home Minister Shivraj Patil met here for the second consecutive day on Tuesday.

"The Government will take steps to engage the groups concerned from Jammu as well as Kashmir in the talks so that the issues can be resolved amicably to the satisfaction of all concerned. Various modalities for this were suggested in the meeting," Patil told newspersons after the meeting.

The Home Minister said several options were suggested at Tuesday's meeting, like initiating the dialogue process by inviting representatives of both Jammu and Kashmir regions here, sending a delegation to the State, or the Centre constituting a committee to start the talks.

Sources pointed out that the overwhelming opinion of the delegation was to hold the meeting here instead of sending the delegation to Jammu or Srinagar as passions were running high there and it would not provide a conducive environment for the talks.

<b>BJP leader Arun Jaitley, sources revealed, asserted that the High Court order -- which asks for allotment of the land for providing facilities to the pilgrims during the Yatra period -- should be honoured. He pointed out at the meeting that the Government should in no case violate the shrine board's Act and the High Court's order.</b>

At one point, Jaitley said "seminars" were no solution to finding a solution to any problem; while another person who attended the meeting clarified that the issue being discussed was complex in nature and to ascribe failure of the meetings of the all-party delegation was only a simplification of the problem at hand.

<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Now Babu Moron Singh had pushed his files to another Babus after messing up, Now other Babus will get chance to mess up more and will pass file to another Babu and at the end these Babu will blame Hindus calling them fundamentalist.
  Reply
http://www.vijayvaani.com/article_30ju2.html

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--Puts the issue in perspective, and shows how this land deal is a continuation of anti-hindu policies and acts in the footsteps of glorious muslim leaders and kings.

================
Amarnath imbroglio: should the Himalayas be de-Sanskritized?
Shashi Shekhar Toshkhani
30 July 2008

back
Some people may have been surprised to see the dour-faced, acerbic-tongued Peoples Democratic Party chief, Mehbooba Mufti, sitting cozily behind Pranab Mukherji at a recent meeting of the Congress Working Committee, days after she brought down the Ghulam Nabi Azad-led Congress-PDP coalition government in over the Amarnath land allotment episode.

Ms. Mehbooba was flown to Delhi by the Congress managers by special plane, in a desperate bid to shore up UPA numbers for the trust vote (22 July). Yet this only demonstrated the extent to which Congress was willing to go in pandering to Islamists, even if it meant making their own man the fall guy. Few in Congress appeared concerned that the same Mehbooba Mufti had only a few days before tried to set the Valley on fire and inflame passions over the issue of allotment of some land to the Shri Amarnath Shrine Board for providing temporary shelters to Amarnath pilgrims.

She thus helped the Islamists bring their anti-India insurgency back almost to the 1990’s level. In fact, it was perfectly in consonance with the “secularist” policy of Congress to ignore all this and unabashedly display insensitivity towards Hindu sentiments - if only to keep its Muslim votebank appeased. After all, there are no differences between the Congress and the PDP of Mufti Sayyid, or for that matter other so-called secularist political parties in Jammu & Kashmir, over their shared agenda of Muslim precedence in the State.

Yet it would be wrong to view the Amarnath issue only in an electoral context. The intensity of the recent explosion of Islamist violence that brought thousands on to the streets in every town and village in Kashmir is reminiscent of the early days of militancy and cannot be dismissed as a sudden outburst caused by the decision to grant some land to the Amarnath Shrine Board. It reflected the jihadi mindset, so deeply entrenched in the social milieu of Kashmir, which views any expression of Hindu faith or culture in the Valley, however feeble, with pathogenic intolerance and regards it an impediment in establishing a purely theocratic Islamic state in Kashmir or securing its secession to Pakistan .

Not that the political establishment at the Centre, or its erstwhile Communist allies, could have any objection to this. It hardly ruffled their secular conscience. Secularism after all has come to a euphemism for anti-Hindu bias in this country. The irony is that it is the Indian taxpayer who is being bled mercilessly to sustain another Pakistan within the “secular” Indian state. How long?

No one knows better than traumatized Kashmiri Pandits who have been hounded out of their homesteads by jihadi insurgents and shamelessly abandoned by the Indian state, what it meant to be a Hindu in Muslim-dominated Kashmir . Hindus have been hapless witnesses to the sordid drama going on in the Valley since Sheikh Abdullah started his Muslim political movement in 1931, of which Amarnath is the latest episode. In the unrest that broke out in its wake against the Hindu Maharaja that year, Kashmiri Hindus were made targets of an unbridled orgy of communal violence.

Incited by the Sheikh, agitating mobs went berserk, killing, looting, torching Hindu homes and damaging their places of worship, particularly in Maharajganj, Vicharnag and other localities in downtown Srinagar . Few people know that some of the slogans raised by the frenzied followers of Sheikh Abdullah then were very similar to those that Hurriyat-organized agitators raised to protest against the allotment of land to the SASB.

This explains why razing temples was a regular feature of Muslim rule right from the time of bigots like Sikandar Butshikan down to reign of the Mughals and the rapacious Afghan governors. The covenant of Caliph Omar which forbids non-Muslims to build new temples or repair old religious structures provided scriptural sanction. Its full text was explained to Sultan Qutubu’din by the 14th century Sayyid Mir Ali Shah Hamadani, popularly known as Shah Hamadan for his leading role in spreading Islam in Kashmir , in his book Zakhiratu’l Mulk.

The Sayyid from Hamadan, Iran, himself showed the way by demolishing the temple of Kalishri in Srinagar and turning it into a Khanqah for delivering his sermons. This Khanqah-i-Maulla is touted by secularists as a glorious example of religious tolerance and communal harmony in Kashmir because Hindus were allowed to daub a stone engraving on its outer wall with vermilion to worship Mahakali! While most splendid examples of Kashmiri Hindu temple architecture were destroyed in this manner, no new temples were allowed to be built in Kashmir before it passed into the hands of the Dogra Maharajas who revived temple building activity. These later places of worship became an eyesore for contemporary fundamentalist Muslims; continuing the good work of their medieval mentors, they went about appropriating Hindu religious properties, stealing and breaking images, and damaging or destroying temples.

The genocidal process became rather frenzied from the 1980’s when rabid anti-India elements began to be armed by Pakistan for a jihad for “creation of Islamic Republic of Kashmir.” Hindu shrines were attacked and murtis frequently stolen in early 1985. The Indian Express reported on 12 April and 26 April 1985 that 20 murtis, including a famous Mahakali image of rare black stone in Hari Parbat Fort temple built under Maharaja Gulab Singh, first Dogra ruler; a priceless 9th century image from Lok Bhavan in Anantnag and terracotta Ganesh, Balram, Shankahpurusha and Nandi images were stolen, besides other priceless images including that of Goddess Kali of Anantnag, a fossil of the thirteen century, and other images of the fourteenth century.

The same paper reported on 26 April 1985: “Anti-national elements threw a bomb at Shiva temple, and later set it on fire at Handwara … The fire gutted the entire temple complex. Bombs were lobbed at temples in Srinagar also which created a scare amongst the Hindus. It was a calculated device to dissuade them from going to temples and adhering to their way of life”.

But it was in February 1986 that a full-dress rehearsal for the religious cleansing of Kashmiri Hindus was staged and scores of their religious places wantonly demolished, torched, damaged or desecrated throughout the Valley, particularly in Anantnag district. Brutal attacks were made on the lives and property of hundreds of members of the community, causing many to flee from the State.

Attacks on Hindu places of worship across the length and breadth of Kashmir became a regular feature after terrorism peaked in 1989-90, causing tremors that shook the entire Valley. A sustained campaign of religious cleansing, brutal killings, arson, rape and loot frightened the minority away and forced them to live as refugees outside the Valley to save life and limb. Despite their dispersal and dispossession, attacks on their places of worship did not cease. According to a written admission of the Government in the Lok Sabha on 12 March 1992, 38 Hindu religious places were destroyed in the Kashmir Valley between 1989 to1991. In 1992, over 52 temples were wrecked in an orgy of iconoclastic fury after 6 December. The pseudo-secularist media tried to deny these horrible happenings or present them as non-events, in stark contrast to the “masochistic circus” staged over Ayodhya.

In May 2006, Panun Kashmir, a representative political organization of Kashmiri Hindus, mounted a photo-exhibition in Delhi documenting the destruction and devastation of over 70 temples and shrines in “all the districts and tehsil headquarters in Kashmir along with at least twenty villages in each of the six districts.” These included eight temples in the very heart of Srinagar . The exhibition presented a heart-rending tale of demolition of “exquisite temples representing a unique school of temple architecture,” desecration of places of pilgrimage and destruction of sacred images of Hindu deities. The pseudo-secular English press and television channels ignored it so as not to displease the political establishment.

Despite these chilling acts of iconoclasm, the destabilized Hindus of Kashmir have not forgotten their pilgrimage centres and heritage places, such as the shrines of Sharika Devi at Hari Parbat, Kshir Bhavani at Tulmul, Jyeshtha Devi near Srinagar, and of course Amarnath. Kashmiris continue to visit them in ever greater numbers, even at the risk of life, and this is what makes the fundamentalists rage. On the eve of 26 January 1998, they brutally massacred 23 members of three Kashmiri Hindu families, including two infants and nine women in Wandhama village adjoining Kshir Bhavani, for daring to stay back despite the general exodus of the community. This was clearly to deter Hindus from coming to visit their shrines. With the same idea, jihadis have been lobbing grenades at pilgrims to the holy Amarnath cave almost as regular terror tactics. But Hindu faith overpowers fear and a record five lakh pilgrims visited the holy cave this year, to the chagrin of the jihadis.

Amarnath is different from other shrines, which are more of local or regional importance. What happened to them remained largely unknown to the country thanks to our “secular media” and its distaste for truth, and of course the callous ruling class. The yatra to the holy cave, however, has a pan-Indian character. Pilgrims from all over India have been going there for centuries for darshans of the miraculous self-made snow Shiva lingam, with hymns on their lips and a desire for spiritual merit in their hearts. Shiva is believed to have given ambrosia to the gods at this place and made them truly immortal.

This concept of Amriteshwara Shiva is unique to Kashmir Shaivism, but strikes a chord of deep devotion in every Hindu heart. But for the fanatics who want to impose on Kashmir an exclusivist Islamic order, this is an anathema. Politically, this is a corollary to the demand to retain the current Muslim-majority character of Kashmir ; a point on which all political parties in the Valley, Peoples Democratic Party, National Conference and even Congress, are one. This was why Sheikh Abdullah arm-twisted Jawaharlal Nehru to include Article 370 in the Constitution.

It is pertinent that during his tenure as Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir , Mufti Sayyid stunned everybody by trying to officially change the names of two well-known hills of Srinagar , Hari Parbat and Shankaracharya, very sacred to the Hindus, to Koh-i-maran and Takht-i-Suleiman respectively. He had to retreat before the stiff opposition. Earlier, 800 historical place names in the Valley were changed to Islamic ones by Sheikh Abdullah and Dr. Farooq Abdullah through government circulars, to wipe out vestiges of Kashmir ’s Hindu heritage. Islamists merely seek to take this to its logical conclusion by ‘freeing’ Kashmir of the pollution of other faiths. They balk at the sight of Hindu pilgrims from all over India coming to pay obeisance at Amarnath.

The recent violence by separatist outfits in the Kashmir Valley was not just over allotment of 100 acres of land to the SASB, but because of the perceived threat to the agenda of turning Kashmir into another Taliban country. Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad’s charge after resigning, that the agitation was funded by Pakistan and Saudi Arabia , is significant. It shows an international conspiracy of Islamic fundamentalists to make Kashmir an arena of pan-Islamic terror.

Their intolerance of Hindu cultural presence in the Valley, whether by way of pilgrimages or any other form, must be viewed in this perspective. Their game seems to be to altogether scuttle the Amarnath yatra by making such pilgrimage places hazardous and inaccessible to Hindus. This has given the issue the dimension of a clash of civilizations. Hindus have to stop the jihadi mindset from guiding the course of events in the Valley.

From Kailash Mansarovar to Panchakedars to Amarnath, Shiva reigns supreme in the whole inner Himalayan region as the most beloved deity, with Devi dominating the outer Himalayas from Kamakhya in Assam to Vaishnodevi in Jammu . Hindus have already lost Kailash to the Chinese because of Mr. Nehru’s ill-conceived foreign policy. Will they now allow Amarnath to be lost to the Islamists? If that happens the whole of the Indian Himalayas will be de-Sanskritized and literally become Hindukush (“Hindu-killer”). History is calling upon us to decide if we will let that happen.

As holy Amarnath with its “wild grandeur of glaciers and eternal snows” shows, Kashmiri Hindus have chosen the most charming spots of scenic beauty in the Valley for pilgrimage and worship. This is not only because such places held a great aesthetic appeal for them, but because “they viewed Nature as the manifold manifestation of the Almighty.”

Unlike the Muslims, the cultural identity of Kashmiri Hindus is shaped by the sacred soil of Kashmir and is not an import from far off lands. Hindus love every inch of this soil and celebrate it in their myths, legends and folklore. To them the Vitasta ( Jhelum ) is not just a waterway draining the Valley, but the loving embodiment of the Mother Goddess, sustaining life. Though uprooted by the perpetrators of jihad, they are trying to hold tenaciously to their civilisational ethos. It is an uphill task. From its very advent, Islamic rule has made every effort to appropriate by force the indigenous sanctuaries of Hindu faith or destroy them altogether, in order to erase all traces of Kashmir ’s pre-Islamic past which they are unable to stand up to.

The author is an eminent scholar

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<!--emo&:guitar--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/guitar.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='guitar.gif' /><!--endemo--> Yossarinovacha:

The people’s upheaval in Jammu has exposed 3 fault lines.

Fault line #1 - The Congress in Jammu versus the Congress in New Delhi on how to deal with the crisis in Jammu

Fault line #2 - The BJP versus the rest on how to deal with the Amarnath issue

Fault line #3 - The vocal majority of Jammu versus the vocal minority in Kashmir

Of these 3 fault lines, the first two will likely have predictable outcomes. The last however is bound to radically change the popular Indian attitude towards the conflict in Kashmir. It is this aspect that Offstumped had in its sights when it said “recognize the moment”.

For the first time since the conflict in Kashmir errupted decades ago, the psychological advantage has shifted.

The Valley has for the first time realized how vulnerable and isolated it is.

-----------------------------------------------

Comment # 40
Tathagata Mukherjee

Gujjuman: have patience sir. It took long, hard , dedicated work by Sangh for last many decades in Jammu.

Next uprising will happen in Assam and NE against illegal bangladeshi sooner than u thought.

August 08, 2008 4:42 pm
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http://offstumped.nationalinterest.in/2008...ing-the-moment/
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<!--emo&Sad--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/sad.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='sad.gif' /><!--endemo--> The damage that Mr Patil and his ministry have done will have adverse repercussions. Fruit growers are not accepting the compensation so magnanimously offered by Mr Patil. First, because very little fruit has been ruined and second, trucks have been moving out of the Valley. By contradicting himself, Mr Patil managed to simply earn bad publicity for the Centre.

Given the suspicion that the Centre is viewed with, this was the last thing the Congress-led government needed. Not only was the suspicion reinforced, but in Jammu, Mr Patil became the embodiment of the ‘discriminatory practices’ of the Centre. Headlines in Jammu drew attention to this discrimination by highlighting the “compensation for the Valley and bullets for Jammu[SIZE=7][COLOR=red] <!--emo&:devil--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/devilsmiley.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='devilsmiley.gif' /><!--endemo--> .” All this making it more difficult to diffuse the crisis in the state.

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/News/P...903,curpg-2.cms
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Rural or urban -- whole jammu continues to march in unity.

<img src='http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20080811/capt.f421602a90f44f3188d1892c72d12f4f.india_kashmir_shrine_protests_jmu102.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' />

Villagers carry out a procession on bullock/mule carts (with an effigy of kashmir ki kali.)

urban youth protesting on bikes

<img src='http://l.yimg.com/ki/epaper/jagran/20080812/09/jmu11jkcd07-c-3-1_1218514789_m.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' />
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<img src='http://l.yimg.com/ki/epaper/jagran/20080812/09/jmu11jkcd05-c-3-1_1218514820_m.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' />

<img src='http://l.yimg.com/ki/epaper/jagran/20080812/09/jmu11jkcd29-c-3-1_1218514819_m.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' />

<img src='http://l.yimg.com/ki/epaper/jagran/20080812/09/jmu11jkcd28-c-3-1_1218514818_m.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' />
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Shraddhanjali-s to martyrs continue...

<img src='http://l.yimg.com/ki/epaper/jagran/20080812/09/jmu11kth2-c-3-1_1218514853_m.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' />

<img src='http://l.yimg.com/ki/epaper/jagran/20080812/09/jmu11jaa102-c-3-1_1218514833_m.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' />

<img src='http://l.yimg.com/ki/epaper/jagran/20080812/09/jmu11jaa-4-c-3-1_1218514840_m.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' />

Jagadish sharma, father of a youth killed says I have four more sons, ready to sacrifice them and then myself if it awakens our people and defeats the enemy. Proud that the eldest son has died for dharma and become immortal. Says real shraddhanjali would be to not stop the movement for which martyrs died until success is acheived.

<span style='color:red'>एक बेटा ही शहीद हुआ है, चार अभी बाकी हैं</span>

कठुआ, राकेश शर्मा सरकार भले ही जमीन की जंग को हल्के में ले रही हो लेकिन इस जंग में कूद चूके लोग अब पीछे हटने वाले नहीं है। वह इसे धर्म युद्ध मानकर अपने सपूतों की बलि देना भी पुण्य का काम मान रहे हैं। ऐसा ही एक पिता है जगदीश शर्मा, जिसके जवान बेटे ने जमीन की जंग में हंसते हुए अपनी शहादत दे दी। दैनिक जागरण ने जब जवान बेटे के गम में डूबे पिता की भावनाओं को कुरेदने का प्रयास किया तो शहीद के पिता ने बेबाक होकर कहा कि अभी तो उनका एक ही बेटा इस धर्म युद्ध में शहीद हुआ है, अभी चार और हंै, और उसके बाद मैं भी तो हूं। अभी जमीन के लिए लंबी लड़ाई लड़नी है। एक जवान बेटे की शहादत पर पिता द्वारा कहे गए ये शब्द साबित करता है कि जमीन की जंग में लोग अपने प्राणों की आहुति देना पुण्य का काम समझ रहे हैं। जगदीश शर्मा ने कहा कि उन्हें गर्व है कि उसके पांच बेटों में से एक ने धर्म युद्ध में अपना फर्ज निभाया है। उन्होंने यहां तक कह दिया कि अगर उस दिन उनका बेटा शहादत नहीं देता तो शायद जमीन को लेकर जारी आंदोलन कठुआ में ठंडा पड़ जाता। उन्होंने कहा कि मुझे इस बात का गर्व है कि मेरे बेटे की शहादत के बाद कठुआ में जमीन के लिए जारी आंदोलन ने तेजी पकड़ी। उनकी इच्छा है कि आंदोलन इतना तेज हो कि वह अंधी व बहरी सरकार के आंख-कान खोल दे। उन्होंने कहा कि जम्मू के लोग जमीन के लिए लड़ रहे इस धर्म युद्ध में किसी भी हद तक जा सकते हैं। अगर लोग अपने बेटों का भी बलि चढ़ा सकते हैं तो सरकार को इस आंदोलन की मजबूती का अहसास हो जाना चाहिए। उन्होंने कहा कि उनके बेटे का बलिदान जम्मू में जारी आंदोलन में शामिल लोगों को प्रेरणा देता रहेगा। लोग उसकी शहादत से प्रेरणा लेकर इस जंग को और तेज कर दें और हर हाल में सरकार को जमीन देने पर मजबूर कर दें। ताकि जिस मकसद के लिए उसके बेटे ने जान दी है, वह पूरा हो सके और उनका कलेजा ठंडा हो।
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<img src='http://l.yimg.com/ki/epaper/jagran/20080812/09/jmu11jal-30-c-3-1.5_1218514859.jpg_m.5.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' />

<img src='http://l.yimg.com/ki/epaper/jagran/20080812/09/jmu11jal-29-c-3-1_1218514858_m.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' />

Sikhs behind the movement in full strength.
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<img src='http://l.yimg.com/ki/epaper/jagran/20080812/09/jmu11jkcd06-c-3-1_1218514856_m.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' />

<img src='http://l.yimg.com/ki/epaper/jagran/20080812/09/jmu11udm13-c-3-1_1218514852_m.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' />

Marching on streets has become a daily ritual of women and kids.
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<span style='color:red'>
The song Kuldeep Varma Dogra sang before his Public Suicide:

Bigul Baj Raha Andolan Ka
...Gagan Goonjta Hai Naaron Se
Milaa Rahee Hai Aaj Jammu Ki
...Mitti Nazar Sitaaron Se
Ek Baat Kehni Hain Lekin
...Aaj Desh Key Pyaaron Se -
Janata Se, Logon Se,
...Faujiyon Ki Khadi Kataaron Se :

Sambhal Ke Rehna Apne Ghar Mein
...Chhupe Huye Gaddaron Se
Jhaank Rahe Hain Apne Dushman
...Apni Hi Deewaron Se
Sambhal Ke Rehna Apne Ghar Mein
...Chhupe Huye Gaddaron Se

Jaago Tumko Dogron Ki
...Jagir Ki Raksha Karni Hai
Jaago Tumko Laakhon Ki
...Takdir Ki Raksha Karni Hai
Abhi Jo Bani Hai
...Us Tasveer Ki Raksha Karni Hai</span>

Last line:

<b>Wake up, that the picture just drawn, is for you to preserve</b>
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http://in.reuters.com/article/topNews/idIN...-34984520080813

Interesting psyops. The article starts with this..

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Homes burn as Hindu-Muslim anger grows in Kashmir

By Alistair Scrutton

GARKHAL, India (Reuters) - When a mob shouting praises for a Hindu god torched this Muslim hamlet, any hopes of religious peace in India's Kashmir state may have been destroyed along with these charred homes and scarred drums of ruined wheat.

"We never had a problem like this before," said Bashir Ahmed, a farmer from the Muslim Gujjar community. In oppressive humidity of a dark cattle shed with scorched brick walls, he revealed crescent-shaped scars on his back from the mob's beating.

"I had heard from parents about '47," he said, referring to Partition in 1947 when India and Pakistan were formed and hundreds of thousands were killed in religious clashes.

"But this is the first time I have seen anything like this."
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You would think this is all related to the current situation over Amarnath Shrine. There is even more if you read further to confirm your fears..

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Standing only a few hundred metres from the Pakistani border, Gujjars in Garkhal told how Hindus shouted "Burn them all!" and chanted slogans for the Hindu god Lord Shiva. Due to the intervention of security forces, no one was killed.

"Both our regions are poles apart, with daggers drawn," said state government spokesman K.B Jandial.

That was easy to see in Garkhal.
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By now one would conclude about the rest. But then this tiny bit..

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>The attacks by several thousand Hindu villagers were sparked, villagers say, by rumours a Muslim boy had attacked a Hindu girl.</b><!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

Alistair mahashay then shrugs it off and continues ...

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->But this kind of religious conflict has been extremely rare for decades in Jammu, and few have doubts to why it happened now.

"This is all hundred percent linked to the shrine issue," said Hamid Choudhary, leader of Muslim Front Jammu, a group formed by Muslim leaders to sooth religious tensions.
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<!--emo&Sad--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/sad.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='sad.gif' /><!--endemo--> The spokesman said that such statements do not contribute to "creating the atmosphere necessary for the dialogue process between India and Pakistan to move forward."

Sarna said the Government of India as well as the State Government are taking all steps necessary to restore law and order in this part of the country.

Qureshi on Monday said that Pakistan was "deeply concerned over the deteriorating situation in (Jammu and Kashmir) which is resulting in loss of life and property of the Kashmiri people. We call for immediate steps to end the violence against innocent Kashmiris." Qureshi had said it was "important that an enabling environment, free of violence, is created to sustain the peace process and address the long standing dispute of Jammu and Kashmir".

Earlier, in a separate statement, Sadiq expressed concern at reported attacks on the life and property of Muslims in Jammu and Kashmir and what it described as the community's "economic blockade by extremist elements".

This is the second time in five days that India reacted sharply to such comments emanating from Pakistan over the situation in Jammu and Kashmir.

Pakistan Senate last week passed a resolution which expressed concern over the reported "economic blockade imposed by Hindu extremists against the Muslims of Jammu and the valley of Kashmir".

India dubbed it as "gross interference" in its internal affairs and asked the Pakistani upper house of Parliament to rather focus on issues where it has a "locus standi".
http://www.dailypioneer.com/indexn12.asp?m...t&counter_img=1
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Sikhs or Hindu who had migrated from Pakistan after pertition had no rights in J&K. But Muslims who had migrated from Pakistan after partition and still migrating had full rights in J&K, even they had became minister in J&K.
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A very good example of news media distortion and bias.

Divided Valley

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Divided valley
David Devadas
Wednesday, August 13, 2008  20:36 IST     



<b>The turmoil in Jammu has revived fears of secession and boosted Islamism</b> <!--emo&Sad--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/sad.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='sad.gif' /><!--endemo-->

The current violence in and around Jammu has promoted the two-nation theory. <b>There is a growing tendency there to see not only Kashmiris but all Muslims as recalcitrant anti-nationals — to be taught a lesson by flag-waving nationalists.</b>

<i>This is totally untrue. Only the PAK flag waving secessionists are seen as anti-nationals.}</i>

In the valley too, the highway blockade has sharpened the perception that Kashmiris/Muslims are persecuted in Hindu-dominated India (the valley press uses words like ‘fanatic’ and ‘extremists’ to describe Jammu agitators). Further, it has not only resuscitated secessionism but also boosted Islamism — by buttressing the Utopian construct already budding in public discourse that Kashmiri means Muslim and, since Islam is pristine, social, political and moral imperfections must stem from flawed religious practice, for which the blame lies with Indian “occupation.” That increasingly used term is, of course, calculated to club Kashmir with Palestine, and an economic blockade adds grist to that mill.

This has distressing implications. <b>Yet, the effect of Jammu’s violence on the valley’s psyche is only critical concern. For Kashmir’s counter-agitation has focused on economic effects — and economic-cum-political opportunities, as in the Muzaffarabad chalo campaign.</b> It has not turned communal so far; the Amarnath pilgrimage has gone on quite amicably.

The other concern is the relatively neglected area between Jammu and the valley. Along with Kashmiris, Gujjar and other Muslims from beyond the valley have been targeted, causing them to flee home with the virus of communal hatred. Attacking Muslims from these other areas is curious, since they had nothing to do with the agitation against the transfer of land for the Amarnath shrine, the success of which sparked Jammu’s violence. It is also very dangerous.

Large parts of the state near the Chenab, stretching from Gul Gulabgarh, Kishtwar and Bhaderwah to Rajouri and Poonch have a nearly balanced population of Hindus and Muslims. Given vast isolated stretches of difficult terrain — plus the fact that many (largely Hindu) Village Defence Committees are armed with self-loading rifles - a civil war in this mountainous stretch could be catastrophic.

If Muslims are forced to flee these areas, as happened in Jammu in 1947, the BJP may gain electoral advantage. Hindutva-based nationalists might also see territorial advantage with regard to <b>the India-Pakistan peace plan currently on the anvil — which apparently envisages autonomous self-rule for the valley and areas around it.</b> In fact, any such perception of advantage would be blinkered. A simple referendum would have kept these areas out of the envisaged autonomous region; for the majority of Muslims (including ethnic Kashmiris) there would not want to be appended to the valley.

<b>Whether or not the Jammu violence sparks further communal upheaval, however, there is no gainsaying the intensity of the rage. Even government employees ranging from police officers to doctors have reportedly joined or advised the agitation.</b> Since the pilgrimage to the shrine has not been affected, one must search deeper for the causes of this fury. A cynical explanation popular in the valley is “India” allowed, if not covertly organised, the blockade. There are signs that higher echelons in the state government were caught off guard and that firmer action was then stymied from within.

<b>For 60 years now, other parts of the state have resentfully watched the valley being pampered. Some even accuse valley Kashmiris of simultaneously playing to advantage their special position as predominantly Muslim and the threat of secession.</b> Indeed, People’s Democratic Party (PDP) leader <b>Mufti Mohammed Sayeed argued in 2002 that the chief minister must be from the valley. The wrath of Pandit migrants over the loss of life and property  in 1990 also fuelled the fire.</b> And fear that Hindu aspirations are getting short shrift in the India-Pakistan deal-making too might be at play. History surely is. Most Kashmiri Muslims were wretchedly impoverished during the Dogra rule but have dominated since. The result: each side sees itself as victim of the other.

Since geopolitics has lumped their destinies together, it is imperative that animosities ease so that both may share their various fears and aspirations. At present, there appears little hope for that. The BJP might gain political ground in Jammu. However, secessionists have regained  greater ground in the valley. The via media at least partly acceptable to all sides which the PDP had tried to creatively forge — almost making the Hurriyat irrelevant until this June — is the biggest loser.

The writer is author of In Search of a Future, the Story of Kashmir.
This article was written before Hurriyat leader Sheikh Abdul Aziz (Mirwaiz group) was killed in police firing during a march to Muzaffarabad.

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I thought that in Jammu all the communities are together in the protests. Why this expert is lying?
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http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/Opinio...how/3362180.cms

This is either incredibly hilarious or stupid. This mahashay makes a grand opening in first paragraph by saying

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->One set comprises the separatists in Kashmir and Islamic fundamentalists who want all Muslims to see themselves primarily as members of a religion under siege around the world and only thereafter as normal human beings with worldly goals, affinities and affiliations. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

One sentence. And then the rest of the nonsense he goes through unbelievable contortions to blame god know who.. His basic aadhaar stumbh is..

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Pilgrimage, let us be clear, is as much tourism as it is piety.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

<!--emo&:blink:--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/blink.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='blink.gif' /><!--endemo--> <!--emo&:blink:--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/blink.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='blink.gif' /><!--endemo--> <!--emo&:blink:--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/blink.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='blink.gif' /><!--endemo-->

Perhaps in his next column he is going to write another opinion based on another mahavakya....

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Terrorism, let us be clear, is as much employment as it is timepass.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

As Soorma Bhopali says in Sholay..

Key jaane kaan-kaan se aa jaate hain.. <!--emo&:flush--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/Flush.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='Flush.gif' /><!--endemo-->
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<!--emo&Big Grin--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/biggrin.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='biggrin.gif' /><!--endemo-->

The truth, let us be clear, is clearly not a word in the psec dictionary...
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<img src='http://www.hindu.com/2008/08/14/images/2008081456080101.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' />
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