When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris i

InsafianPTI

Minister (2k+ posts)
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Cathy Scott-Clark


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For 22 years this contested region has endured a regime of torture and disappeared civilians. Now a local laywer is discovering their unmarked graves and challenging India's abuses


A former rebel commander recounts the torture meted out by India to surrendered militants. Link to this video(sorry don't know how to paste the video in here)

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 protg, 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?"
Kashmir's Torture Trail, Tuesday 10 July at 11:10pm on Channel 4
 
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Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

sorry to say but india needs to learn from Zia, Bashar , Saddam and Qadafi on how to holocast fellow muslims
 

alimohsan52

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

Apparently the Kashmiris are not the only ones in India that have suffered, the mass murder of Sikhs in 1984, to date India has not prosecuted any person for these murders and even the Gujarat Massacres who was prosecuted for those crimes?

World countries want to trade with India, and now that India appears to be on its way to becoming a power, other countries will not take any note of the plight of minorities in India.
 

desicad

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

Apparently the Kashmiris are not the only ones in India that have suffered, the mass murder of Sikhs in 1984, to date India has not prosecuted any person for these murders and even the Gujarat Massacres who was prosecuted for those crimes?

World countries want to trade with India, and now that India appears to be on its way to becoming a power, other countries will not take any note of the plight of minorities in India.
punish those responsible for the genocide of '71 and come back..........
 

alimohsan52

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

punish those responsible for the genocide of '71 and come back..........

Oh So now you are justifying the murder of Sikhs and Muslims in India by asking us to punish those of the 71 war, who killed thousands of Biharis?? They were Indian trained Mukhti Bahni that committed massacres against the the non Bengalis.


 

Mullah Omar

Minister (2k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

The real question is why has Pakistan gone silent on Kashmir? Our government and media barely talk about Kashmir.
 

desicad

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra


Oh So now you are justifying the murder of Sikhs and Muslims in India by asking us to punish those of the 71 war, who killed thousands of Biharis?? They were Indian trained Mukhti Bahni that committed massacres against the the non Bengalis.


you are totally wrong.....I am not justifying anything.......my point is you should not be the one talking about prosecution and justice and all that.....
practice before you preach should be your mantra......
 
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alimohsan52

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

The value of cow in India is more sacred than the value of a human being:

This Sikh guy who is a rising star in the Sikh community (UK) claims more than 250,000 Sikhs murdered in India! Many sikhs have joined his war against India, congratulations in advance!

 

alimohsan52

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

you are totally wrong.....I am not justifying anything.......my point is you should not be the talking about prosecution and justice and all that.....
practice before you preach should be your mantra......

Why not? You claim to be the biggest democracy in the world, but the value of cow is more sacred than that of a human being?
 

haqiqath

Senator (1k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

LONG LIVE PAKISTAN AND TRIBUTE TO PAKISTANI FORCES but Pakistani army politician killing own people since long so many years in tribal areas still no peace dollars thirst usa the most cunning wicked nation just doing appologise on killing 24 soldiers for their own benefits is the worst misery of pakistani nation till complete cutt of nato supply completely stopping drone attacks putting heavy taxes on nato supplies with clear accountability the money used on the pakistani nation rather then going in corrupt people pockets destroying integrity and sovereginity of pakistan daily bomb blasts rockets suicide attacks corruption internal terrorism is not ONLY problem there is no rule of law in pakistan the same one law for all and no implementation of court orders neither respected followed neither court judges do proper decisions on time all night sleep look at the face of advocates to know the case what will be the standard of their justice just winding up increasing crimes rather then reducing it Till USA in afghanistan impossible stability in the region never gona solve kashmir very old indian pakistani dispute never palestine issue gona be solved ever never similar supporting india against china the country who had broken all records of human rights voilations in kashmir with the help of hindu extremist terrorist indian organisation shev cena bal takray Most important Pakistan >>Balochistan issue with the support of india because of several reasons usa cia raw creating instabilty through some internal corrupt brahamdaug bugthi others who trying to save their sardari personal benefits creating the whole destruction inside pakistan –since long similar syria iran jordan libya iraq qatar shaam etc etc many other countries going to be new target pre planned 911 al qaida osama cia agent useless propaganda war started by haterd jewish lobbies sitting in america playing making american people fool making their life more risky and eating their taxes like parasites playing the chess in their congress for their devilish desires to capture muslim world resources oil hunger to cool down their haterdness ever some one heard in europe or canda america uk bomb blasts suicide attacks Drones no why ???? till america itself dont splash into pieces like russia including israel impossible for this world to live in piece pakistan is stucked around all time hidden enemies india russia usa israel GOD BLESS the world from parasites who living in peace and enjoying lives while making hell for others.
 

desicad

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

Why not? You claim to be the biggest democracy in the world, but the value of cow is more sacred than that of a human being?
just because India is the biggest democracy does not mean others can wash their hands off justice and still hold the license to preach.....
 
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mh.saghir

Minister (2k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

you are totally wrong.....I am not justifying anything.......my point is you should not be the one talking about prosecution and justice and all that.....
practice before you preach should be your mantra......

Sorry to say but it is a known fact that India formed the Mukti Bahini, the first of the non-state military force in the region.
All of the figures of 1971 massacare are either given by India or those Muktis which are almost 10 times of the original numbers. No one denies the justice to that but those were the traitors killed by the state military force. So, out of 180 million Pakistanis, at least I give the clean chit to my army.

But Indian situation is totally different, you are not in the state of war with enemy rather you have turned your people against you...
So better be looking at yourself...
 

desicad

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

Sorry to say but it is a known fact that India formed the Mukti Bahini, the first of the non-state military force in the region.
All of the figures of 1971 massacare are either given by India or those Muktis which are almost 10 times of the original numbers. No one denies the justice to that but those were the traitors killed by the state military force. So, out of 180 million Pakistanis, at least I give the clean chit to my army.

But Indian situation is totally different, you are not in the state of war with enemy rather you have turned your people against you...
So better be looking at yourself...
stop reading your pakistani text books otherwise you will never come out of giving clean chits...............
 

mh.saghir

Minister (2k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

stop reading your pakistani text books otherwise you will never come out of giving clean chits...............

Sorry again to burst your bubble; I never remember what was written in my course books.
I always search on internet by adding the phrase "by neutral sources/writers".
So, I am standing still on what I have said...
 

desicad

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

Sorry again to burst your bubble; I never remember what was written in my course books.
I always search on internet by adding the phrase "by neutral sources/writers".
So, I am standing still on what I have said...
:lol::lol:[hilar][hilar]................like that.........(clap)(clap)
 

Afaq Chaudhry

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

Real Face of Indian Democracy........India is not a Secular Country.

1984 Anti-Sikh Riots


Main article: 1984 anti-Sikh riots

Sikh man being beaten to death


For several decades after Partitions, Sikhs in Punjab had complained about domination by the Hindu majority.[SUP][62][/SUP] In a 1975 court case, Indira Gandhi was found guilty of electoral malpractice which barred her from government offices for six years and opposition parties staged protests to demand her resignation. In response, she declared a State of Emergency during which she jailed thousands of opposition members, censored the press, postponed elections, and changed the constitutional law she was convicted of violating. During the Indian Emergency, thousands of Sikhs campaigning for autonomous government and against the "fascist tendency" of the Central Government[SUP][63][/SUP] were imprisoned.[SUP][62][/SUP] As a result of their "Campaign to Save Democracy", out of 140,000 people arrested without trial during the Indian Emergency, 40,000 were Sikhs.[SUP][64][/SUP]
In later elections she supported the politics Jarnail Bhindranwale, a religious conservative, in an effort to undermine the Akali Dal, the largest Sikh political party. However, Bhindranwale began to oppose the central government and moved his political base to the environs of the Darbar Sahib in Amritsar, Punjab. While there he gained considerable political power and disrupted the local state machinery. In June 1984, under orders from Indira Gandhi, the Indian army attacked the Darbar Sahib with tanks and armoured vehicles.[SUP][65][/SUP] Although the operation was militarily successful, it aroused tremendous controversy, and the government's justification for the timing and style of the attack are highly debated.[SUP][66][/SUP] In response, some Sikhs and some Punjabi Hindus began a separatist campaign to free Punjab from the Indian Government.[SUP][67][/SUP]
Indira Gandhi was assassinated on 31 October 1984 by two of her bodyguards in retaliation for the storming of the Golden temple. After the assassination the 1984 anti-Sikh pogroms took place in Delhi, where government and police officials aided Congress party worker gangs in "methodically and systematically" targeting Sikhs and Sikh homes.[SUP][68][/SUP] As a result of the pogroms 10,000-17,000 were burned alive or otherwise killed, Sikh people suffered massive property damage, and "at least 50,000" Sikhs became displaced persons.[SUP][69][/SUP] To date, the Government of India has not prosecuted any of the assailants.[SUP][68][/SUP] The attack on the Harmandir Sahib and the 1984 Anti-Sikh pogroms led to the increasing popularity of the Khalistan movement. From 1987 until 1992, the Indian government dismissed the elected government of the state, banned elections and imposed direct rule.[SUP][70][/SUP]
In the peak years of the insurgency, religious violence by separatists, government-sponsored groups, and the paramilitary arms of the government was endemic on all sides. Human Rights Watch reports that separatists were responsible for "massacre of civilians, attacks upon Hindu minorities in the state, indiscriminate bomb attacks in crowded places, and the assassination of a number of political leaders".[SUP][71][/SUP] According to Human Rights Watch, the Indian Government's response "led to the arbitrary detention, torture, extrajudicial execution, and enforced disappearance of thousands of Sikhs".[SUP][71][/SUP] The government generally targeted "young Sikh men on suspicion that they were involved in the militancy" but would later deny having them in custody, as a result, many of the victims of enforced disappearances are believed to have been killed.[SUP][71][/SUP] The insurgency resulted in the paralyzation of Punjab's economy until normalization in 1993.[SUP][71][/SUP]
Ethnic cleansing of Kashmiri Hindus

In the Kashmir region, approximately 300 Kashmiri Pandits were killed between September 1989 to 1990 in various incidents.[SUP][72][/SUP] In early 1990, local Urdu newspapers Aftab and Al Safa called upon Kashmiris to wage jihad against India and ordered the expulsion of all Hindus choosing to remain in Kashmir.[SUP][72][/SUP] In the following days masked men ran in the streets with AK-47 shooting to kill Hindus who would not leave.[SUP][72][/SUP] Notices were placed on the houses of all Hindus, telling them to leave within 24 hours or die.[SUP][72][/SUP]
Since March 1990, estimates of between 500,000 to 750,000 pandits have migrated outside Kashmir[SUP][citation needed][/SUP] due to persecution by Islamic fundamentalists in the largest case of ethnic cleansing since the partition of India.[SUP][73][/SUP] The proportion of Kashmiri Pandits in the Kashmir valley has declined from about 15% in 1947 to, by some estimates, less than 0.1% since the insurgency in Kashmir took on a religious and sectarian flavor.[SUP][74][/SUP]
Many Kashmiri Pandits have been killed by Islamist militants in incidents such as the Wandhama massacre and the 2000 Amarnath pilgrimage massacre.[SUP][75][/SUP][SUP][76][/SUP][SUP][77][/SUP][SUP][78][/SUP][SUP][79][/SUP] The incidents of massacring and forced eviction have been termed ethnic cleansing by some observers.[SUP][72][/SUP]
Religious involvement in North-East India Militancy

See also: Insurgency in Northeast India and Christian terrorism in India
Religion has begun to play an increasing role in reinforcing ethnic divides among the decades old militant separatist movements in north-east India.[SUP][80][/SUP][SUP][81][/SUP][SUP][82][/SUP]
The separatist group National Liberation Front of Tripura (NLFT) seeks to convert all tribals in the state of Tripura, who are mostly Hindu or Buddhist, to Christianity. It has proclaimed bans on Hindu worship and has attacked animist Reangs and Hindu Jamatia tribesmen who resisted. Some resisting tribal leaders have been killed and their womenfolk raped. The RSS has attempted to counter Christian separatist groups by backing Reang and Jamatia tribals, and has called for the central government to help arm and fund them.[SUP][81][/SUP]
Hindu nationalists, upset with the rapid spread of Chistianity in the region, link the overt Christian religiosity of the groups and the local churches' liberation theology-based doctrine to allege church support for ethnic separatism.[SUP][81][/SUP] Vatsala Vedantam identifies statements from the American Baptist Churches USA as endorsing the Naga separatist cause.[SUP][83][/SUP]
According to The Government of Tripura, the Baptist Church of Tripura is involved in supporting the NLFT and arrested two church officials in 2000, one of them for possessing explosives.[SUP][84][/SUP] In late 2004, the National Liberation Front of Tripura banned all Hindu celebrations of Durga Puja and Saraswati Puja.[SUP][85][/SUP] The Naga insurgency, ethnic separtism reinforced in their identity by Christianity, has been repeatedly involved in violence against Hindus in the region.[SUP][86][/SUP][SUP][87][/SUP][SUP][88][/SUP][SUP][89][/SUP]
The United States does not designate as terrorist organizations most of those groups that continue violent separatist struggles in Indias northeastern states.[SUP][90][/SUP]
Anti Muslim Violence

Main articles: Ayodhya debate , Bombay Riots , and 2002 Gujarat violence

The 16th Century Babri Mosque was destroyed by the members of VHP and Bajrang Dal in 1992,[SUP][91][/SUP] resulting in nationwide religious riots.


Two major anti-muslim riots have happened in India since the 1990s and none since 2002. The history of modern India has many incidents of communal violence which, in many cases, are alleged to be state-backed, and police has supposedly played an active and biased role in carrying out cold blooded massacres,acts of rape and damaging properties of the minority communities especially Muslims, Christians and Sikhs. Tensions between Hindu and Muslim started coming to light a few years before the independence of the Indian-sub continent and as per the Pakistani historians, anti-Muslim riots were one of the reasons which led to the creation of Pakistan. This thought contrasts with the more widely held Two Nation Theory as the main reason. These riots were supposedly provoked by colonizers and politicians for personal gains and vested interests. India have risen[SUP][92][/SUP] and has led to several major incidences of religious violence such as Hashimpura massacre (1987), Bombay riots, 1993 Bombay bombings, Godhra Train Burning, and 2002 Gujarat violence.
On 6 December 1992, members of the Vishva Hindu Parishad and the Bajrang Dal destroyed the 430 year old Babri Mosque in Ayodhya,[SUP][91][/SUP] it is believed to be built over the birthplace of the Hindu deity Rama. This action caused great anger in the Muslim community. The resulting religious riots caused at least 1200 deaths.[SUP][93][/SUP][SUP][94][/SUP] Reprisals against Hindu minorities also occurred in Pakistan and Bangladesh. Since then the Government of India has blocked off or heavily increased security at these disputed sites while encouraging attempts to resolve these disputes through court cases and negotiations.[SUP][95][/SUP]
In the aftermatch of the destruction of the Babri Mosque in Ayodhya by Hindu nationalists on 6 December 1992, riots took place between Hindus and Muslims in the city of Mumbai. 500 Muslims died in the resulting violence. Four people died in a fire in the Asalpha timber mart at Ghatkopar, five were killed in the burning of Bainganwadi; shacks along the harbor line track between Sewri and Cotton Green stations were gutted; and a couple was pulled out of a rickshaw in Asalpha village and burnt to death.[SUP][96][/SUP] The riots changed the demographics of Mumbai greatly, as Hindus moved to Hindu-majority areas and Muslims moved to Muslim-majority areas.

Many Ahmedabad's buildings were set on fire during 2002 Gujarat violence.


The Godhra train burning incident in which Hindus were allegedly burnt to death by Muslims led to the 2002 Gujarat riots in which mostly Muslims were killed in an act of retaliation. According to the death toll given to the parliament on 11 May 2005 by the government, 790 Muslims and 254 Hindus were killed, and another 2,548 injured. 223 people are missing. The report placed the number of riot widows at 919 and 606 children were declared orphaned.[SUP][97][/SUP][SUP][98][/SUP][SUP][99][/SUP] According to hone advocacy group, the death tolls were up to 2000.[SUP][100][/SUP][SUP][101][/SUP][SUP][102][/SUP][SUP][103][/SUP][SUP][104][/SUP] According to the Congressional Research Service, up to 2000 people, mostly Muslim were killed in the violence.[SUP][105][/SUP] Tens of thousands were displaced from their homes because of the violence. The large-scale, collective violence has been described by some as a "massacre" and an attempted pogrom or genocide[SUP][106][/SUP] of the Muslim population. According to New York Times reporter Celia Williams Dugger, witnesses were "dismayed by the lack of intervention from local police", who often "watched the events taking place and took no action against the attacks on Muslims and their property".[SUP][107][/SUP] Sangh leaders[SUP][108][/SUP][SUP][109][/SUP] as well as the Gujarat government[SUP][110][/SUP][SUP][111][/SUP] maintain that the violence was rioting or inter-communal clashes - spontaneous and uncontrollable reaction to the Godhra train burning.
Anti-Christian violence

Main article: Anti-Christian violence in India
In recent years, there has been a sharp increase in violent attacks on Christians in India, often perpetrated by Hindu Nationalists.[SUP][112][/SUP] Between 1964 and 1996, thirty-eight incidents of violence against Christians were reported.[SUP][113][/SUP] In 1997, twenty-four such incidents were reported.[SUP][114][/SUP] In 1998, it went up to ninety.[SUP][113][/SUP] Between January 1998 and February 1999 alone, one hundred and sixteen attacks against Christians in India were reported by church.[SUP][115][/SUP] Between 1 January and 30 July 2000, more than fifty-seven attacks on Christians were reported.[SUP][116][/SUP] These acts of violence include forcible reconversion of converted Christians to Hinduism, distribution of threatening literature and destruction of Christian cemeteries.[SUP][112][/SUP][SUP][113][/SUP][SUP][116][/SUP]
In some cases, anti-Christian violence has been co-ordinated, involving multiple attacks. In Orissa, starting December 2007, Christians have been attacked in Kandhamal and other districts, resulting in the deaths of two Hindus and one Christian, and the destruction of houses and churches.Christians first killed a hindu saint Laxmananand. So the attacks on christians were in retaliation.[SUP][117][/SUP][SUP][118][/SUP][SUP][119][/SUP][SUP][120][/SUP][SUP][121][/SUP] Twenty people were arrested following the attacks on churches.[SUP][120][/SUP] Similarly, starting 14 September 2008, there were numerous incidents of violence against the Christian community in Karnataka.
Foreign Christian missionaries have mostly been targets of attacks.[SUP][122][/SUP] In a well-publicised case Graham Staines, an Australian missionary, was burnt to death while he was sleeping with his two sons Timothy (aged 9) and Philip (aged 7) in his station wagon at Manoharpur village in Keonjhar district in Orissa in January 1999.[SUP][112][/SUP][SUP][122][/SUP][SUP][123][/SUP][SUP][124][/SUP] In 2003, Dara Singh was convicted of leading the gang responsible.[SUP][125][/SUP][SUP][126][/SUP][SUP][127][/SUP]
In its annual human rights reports for 1999, the United States Department of State criticised India for "increasing societal violence against Christians."[SUP][128][/SUP] The report listed over 90 incidents of anti-Christian violence, ranging from damage of religious property to violence against Christian pilgrims.[SUP][128][/SUP]
In 2007 and 2008 there was a further flare up of tensions in Orissa. Another church was attacked in BJP-ruled Madhya Pradesh, where unidentified persons set two idols inside St Peter and Paul Church in Jabalpur on fire,[SUP][129][/SUP] and more attacks in Karnataka,.[SUP][130][/SUP] The archbishop, Bernard Moras, met the BJP CM BS Yeddyurappa after he had taken a decision to invoke the provisions of Goonda Act against those nabbed for vandalising churches as part of its strategy to salvage its image and to instill confidence. The Bajrang Dal convenor was arrested after the incidents of church burning in Mangalore.[SUP][131][/SUP][SUP][132][/SUP] In light of these events NDTV asked to ban the Bajrang Dal.[SUP][133][/SUP]
Anti-Hindu violence


Swami Lakshmanananda Sarasvati



The passage to the permanent Durga mandap at Chattalpalli was being dug up to prevent the Hindus from entering the area.


There have been a number of more recent attacks on Hindu temples and Hindus by Muslim militants. Prominent among them are the 1998 Chamba massacre, the 2002 fidayeen attacks on Raghunath temple, the 2002 Akshardham Temple attack allegedly perpetrated by Islamic terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Toiba[SUP][134][/SUP] and the 2006 Varanasi bombings (supposedly perpetrated by Lashkar-e-Toiba), resulting in many deaths and injuries. Recent attacks on Hindus by Muslim mobs include Marad massacre, Godhra train burning etc.
In September 2008, Swami Laxmanananda, a popular regional Hindu Guru was murdered along with four of his disciples by unknown assailants (though a Maoist organization later claimed responsibility for that[SUP][135][/SUP][SUP][136][/SUP]), allegedly due to the Guru's provocative opposition of Christians' conversion activities and Missionary propaganda[SUP][citation needed][/SUP]. Later the police arrested three Christians in connection with the murder.[SUP][137][/SUP] Congress MP Radhakant Nayak has also been named as a suspected person in the murder, with some Hindu leaders calling for his arrest.[SUP][138][/SUP]
Lesser incidents of religious violence happen in many towns and villages in India. In October 2005, five people were killed in Mau in Uttar Pradesh during Hindu-Muslim rioting, which was triggered by the proposed celebration of a Hindu festival.[SUP][139][/SUP]
On 3 and 4 January 2002, three Hindus and two Muslims were killed in Marad, near Calicut due to scuffles between two groups that began after a dispute over drinking water.[SUP][140][/SUP][SUP][141][/SUP]
On 2 May 2003, eight Hindus were killed by a Muslim mob, in what is believed to be a sequel to the earlier incident.[SUP][141][/SUP][SUP][142][/SUP] One of the attackers, Mohammed Ashker was killed during the chaos. The National Development Front (NDF), a right-wing militant Islamist organization, was suspected as the perpetrator of the Marad Massacre.[SUP][143][/SUP]
In the 2010 Deganga riots after hundreds of Hindu business establishments and residences were looted, destroyed and burnt, dozens of Hindus were severely injured and several Hindu temples desecrated and vandalized by the Islamist mobs led by Trinamul Congress MP Haji Nurul Islam.[SUP][144][/SUP]
International Human Rights Reports


  • The 2007 United States Department of State International Religious Freedom Report noted The Constitution provides for freedom of religion, and the National Government generally respected this right in practice. However, some state and local governments limited this freedom in practice. [SUP][145][/SUP]

  • The 2008 Human Rights Watch report notes: India claims an abiding commitment to human rights, but its record is marred by continuing violations by security forces in counterinsurgency operations and by government failure to rigorously implement laws and policies to protect marginalized communities. A vibrant media and civil society continue to press for improvements, but without tangible signs of success in 2007. [SUP][6][/SUP]

  • The 2007 Amnesty International report listed several issues concern in India and noted Justice and rehabilitation continued to evade most victims of the 2002 Gujarat communal violence.[SUP][146][/SUP]

  • The 2007 United States Department of State Human Rights Report [SUP][147][/SUP] noted that the government generally respected the rights of its citizens; however, numerous serious problems remained. The report which has received a lot of controversy internationally,[SUP][148][/SUP][SUP][149][/SUP][SUP][150][/SUP][SUP][151][/SUP] as it does not include human rights violations of United States and its allies, has generally been rejected by political parties in India as interference in internal affairs,[SUP][152][/SUP] including in the Lower House of Parliament.[SUP][153][/SUP]
In film and literature

Religious violence in India have been a topic of various films and novels.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_violence_in_India#Anti_Muslim_Violence
 

mh.saghir

Minister (2k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

:lol::lol:[hilar][hilar]................like that.........(clap)(clap)

Sorry again, I am still not embarrassed...
 

Imranpak

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When will the world start asking as tough questions of India as it is of Syria?Or are we Kashmiris invisible?The mass gra

The nominally but still Christian west is the most powerful part of the world who certainly don't care about Muslim suffering when they're invders themselves. The funny thing is that many Muslim's continue to look at NATO and western human rights groups as liberators when the British themselves are mostly responsible for the Kashmir dispute. They could have solved it at the time of independence but deliberately left as a bone of contention too create eternal unrest in the entire subcontinent.

Don't blame the Hindu's either when Allah tells us that these idolaters are our eternal enemies instead it's our own weakness mostly due to disunity that we've not been able to liberate Kashmir.
 

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