Kashmiri protesters clash with
Indian police in Srinagar July 30, 2010. Police fired on large anti-India
demonstrations in Kashmir on Friday, killing two civilians, officials said, the
latest violence in the region at the core of the dispute between India and
Pakistan. - Photo by Reuters
Indian security forces have killed at least four
more Kashmiris, as violence returned to the Indian-held territory on Friday and
Saturday. The number of civilians killed since June 11 has now climbed to more
than 20, with countless injured and hundreds of people thrown into jails. But
evidently neither New Delhi nor the Delhi-backed chief minister is willing to
learn from the deaths and try earnestly to find out the reasons behind the new
wave of protests that has rocked the valley.
Most shocking was Omar Abdullah’s remark on Thursday when
he asked the Kashmiris to call off the protest because it was causing
“discomfort” to the people. Here are Kashmiris in a state of rebellion. They
have rendered sacrifices in blood for the sake of freedom, because they want to
be masters of their destiny. India, on the other hand, has deployed 700,000
troops in the valley to keep them in bondage. That the Kashmiri stir is
urban-based is obvious, and not even the most rabidly pro-India elements abroad
have detected a foreign hand in the uprising. Even sections of the Indian media
admit that the protest is indigenous, with urban youths in the lead. Against
this background, one is shocked that Mr Abdullah should refer to this struggle
as “discomfort”.
The violence and human rights abuses have finally drawn the attention of UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who on Wednesday asked Pakistan and India to start talking to resolve the Kashmir dispute. It need not be repeated that Islamabad has never shied away from talks on Kashmir to seek a peaceful solution to the dispute. One wishes New Delhi, too, had the wisdom to realise that killing Kashmiris is no solution to the problem and the only way out are sincere and purposeful talks with Pakistan and the Kashmiris.
The violence and human rights abuses have finally drawn the attention of UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who on Wednesday asked Pakistan and India to start talking to resolve the Kashmir dispute. It need not be repeated that Islamabad has never shied away from talks on Kashmir to seek a peaceful solution to the dispute. One wishes New Delhi, too, had the wisdom to realise that killing Kashmiris is no solution to the problem and the only way out are sincere and purposeful talks with Pakistan and the Kashmiris.
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