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  • EDI Operation Ends; ‘Two Bodies, Two Rifles Recovered,’ says Army

    Srinagar: The security establishment has finally declared the “operation EDI” over at Sempora, Pampore.

    Two dead bides have been recovered from debris of the hostel building by the armed forces. The “encounter” started around 6 in the morning on October 10 and was closed after almost 56 hours.

    It was second such gun battle which rattled the 30-kanal EDI premises on Srinagar-Jammu highway.

    “Two militants have been killed,” Srinagar based defence spokesperson, Rajesh Kalia told.

    “We have recovered two rifles from the encounter site,” Kalia said and hung the call. The defence spokesperson did not reveal the identity of the body.

    An official at EDI said, “the forces have recovered two dead bodies.” He said that the counter-insurgent forces are sanitizing the seven-storey-seventy-room building.

    The personnel of police, CRPF and Rashtriya Rifles were involved in the operation. Elite para-troopers were called and choppers were

    Earlier, police spokesperson had told that they recovered two dead bodies and the identity of these two dead bodies was being ascertained.

    In February 2016, the encounter lasted for 48 hours which resulted in the death of an EDI staffer, three army men and three suspected militants. Two top floors of front building in thirty kanals-EDI premises were destroyed and they were under reconstruction.

    The EDI had shifted its work station to the same hostel building which was destroyed today as army fired over 100 rockets, several KGs of IED and countless grenades and other ammunition.

  • Er Rasheed reacts sharply to Mohan Bhagwat’s speech

    Says it is Muslims who face discrimination, not Hindus. Says W.P Refugees will have to go back to their native places in Pakistan

    Srinagar: Reacting sharply to RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat’s speech in Nagpur on eve of Dussehra where he had claimed that people of Jammu and Ladakh face discrimination at the hands of Kashmiris, AIP President and MLA Langate Er Rasheed has challenged him to prove the same on basis of facts and figures. In a statement issued today Er Rasheed said, “By batting for a particular region, RSS and other parties of Sang Parivar have been promoting regionalism and communalism and the basic purpose is to avoid resolution of Kashmir dispute and create confusion. Mr Bhagwat must know that despite being just 27 per cent of total population of state, Hindu community has got proportionately beyond lines share in top rank bureaucracy and political establishment. Mr Bhagwat should know that both heads of civil and police administration which include Chief Secretary and DGP, are from Jammu region and of Hindu community. Similarly from commissioner secretaries to district SPs, presence of Muslim officers has been reduced to nominal figures. Even a layman can draw the comparison between the overall development among three regions and it will take him not long to find that Kashmir lacks for behind in every field. However, the focus of all governments in Jammu region has been just two districts of Jammu province dominated by Hindu community and the main population of Pir-Panchal and Chenab Valley have been ignored and are being continuously deprived of their all rights. The BJP government has recently announced IIT and IIM for Jammu but ignoring the main region of Kashmir.” Er Rasheed asked RSS chief to forget about giving citizenship rights to west Pakistani refugees and added that they will always remain refugees, unless they either go back to their native places or are settled elsewhere in India. He said, “It is a universal law that refugees in any part of the world have to go back to their native places, once situation is normal and the west Pakistani refugees should be sent to Pakistan and those Muslims forced to migrate from Jammu should be allowed to resettle in Jammu.” Er Rasheed also condemned Bhagwat for threatening Kashmiris of consequences if they don’t give up their resistance and asked Bhagwat not to forget that when Indian’s were fighting Britishers, J&K was an independent sovereign state. He said, “If Bhagwat truly believes that Gilgit Baltistan and Azad Kashmir are also integral part of India then why should he not support holding plebiscite in entire J&K so that people decide whether we are India’s integral part or Pakistan’s jugular vein.”

  • Rape is not a spectacle, don’t violate privacy: Barkha Dutt

    Barkha Dutt
    A judge who tried the case acquitted the accused because he believed men of a certain caste would not ‘touch’ a woman of a caste considered inferior to theirs; forgetting, again that Rape is Not about Sex; it’s about Power, says Barkha Dutt. 

    Dear colleagues,

    Before we talk about what the most sensitive and appropriate way there might be for all of us to report on rape and sexual abuse, we should first acknowledge how long it took all of us — women journalists included, and sometimes especially us women — to place the issue at the top of the news hierarchy. I can confess that when I first began my job as a twenty-something I was very defensive about being saddled with covering what were then called ‘women’s features’. I wanted to report on politics, insurgency, riots, war, calamities — what I thought was the ‘tough’ stuff that wouldn’t ‘gender’ me as a ‘female’ reporter.

    Among my earliest assignments though was the gang rape of a Dalit woman — Bhanwari Devi — in a village in Rajasthan, who had been assaulted for trying to stop the child marriage of a one-year-old infant. She worked with a government program that sought to create local awareness against this retrograde custom. The rapists included the father of the child. If that was not bone-chilling enough; a judge who tried the case acquitted the accused because he believed men of a certain caste would not ‘touch’ a woman of a caste considered inferior to theirs; forgetting, again that Rape is Not about Sex; it’s about Power. Bhanwari Devi was ostracised by the village for daring to complain against the perpetrators. She lived on the outskirts of her own village, shunned at weddings and funerals and forbidden to draw water from the common well. That first assignment taught me swiftly that there is nothing ‘soft’ about reporting violence against women; it remains mired in our country’s deepest fault lines — caste and class.

    But in 2016, the story of Bhanwari Devi brings home some new and critical questions for me as a journalist. Our collective reportage on the ‘Nirbhaya’ case (the horrific gang rape of Jyoti Singh, a young medical student in Delhi) and the mass student protests that followed it pressured Parliament to change the laws and finally made sexual violence a lead story that could no longer be buried in the inside pages. But I have always wondered why we never responded to Bhanwari Devi with the same intensity as we did to Nirbhaya. The year that the Nirbhaya case made international headlines was also the 20th year that Bhanwari Devi had been fighting a hostile system for justice. Ironically, it is to Bhanwari Devi that we owe the ‘Vishakha’ guidelines — the first legal sexual harassment code that is now required to be followed by all workplaces. The Supreme Court recognised that Bhanwari had been abused while doing her job. It is because of Bhanwari and these guidelines her battle gifted us that influential men like RK Pachauri or Tarun Tejpal are facing trial. Yet, her own story is now on the margins of public attention as is the fact that the men who did this to her have still not been punished. More than two decades later there is still no verdict in her case. So why is our outrage missing? Is it because we are guilty of fickleness, moving on from one headline to the next? Or is it because our coverage of rape betrays the worst sort of (subliminal) class bias?

    Did ‘Nirbhaya’ get our attention in a way Bhanwari did not because one was the story of aspirational India set in an identifiable urban setting and the other was the suffering of a marginalised woman, the injustice to her as a woman clearly compounded by the caste bigotry against her. The Nirbhaya case was an inflection point in how we talk about rape and not one of us can ever shake off the thought of that moving bus and an iron rod being forced into the private parts of a young woman coming home from watching a movie. I will never undermine the enormity of that case; but I often wonder what it says about us that others like Bhanwari Devi don’t get an equal amount of anger and attention._8feb2628-9036-11e6-957d-83f787ac5cdf

    Apart from our transitory and selective focus there is a trivialisation that is creeping into our media conversations about rape that is disturbing. Take a recent ‘sex’ tape for example on the assignations of a Delhi minister. What first appeared to be consensual sex between adults has subsequently been registered as a case of rape but not before a tawdry, albeit censored camera recording played out on several TV channels. There are legitimate questions about whether the minister (since sacked) misused the power of public office to coerce the woman who is also on tape. However, the looping of this sordid footage that played endlessly to satisfy the vicarious curiosity of a mass audience surely undermines the gravity of an offence like rape. Salacious sensationalism can only do disservice to a conversation that we as a people have only just begun to have. The National Commission for Women then summoning an Aam Aadmi Party representative for writing a skeptical column (importantly at a time when there was no known complaint of rape) on the tapes and way his own party responded further eroded the seriousness of the debate.

    Finally, we must discourage language that links rape to honour. In the aftermath of every such assault aggrieved families, politicians and lawyers will often use words that confuse notions of respect. When women fight back, it is suggested they are fighting for their honour; their self-respect. The rapist and his crime cannot be allowed to define a woman’s sense of self. The fight is for justice; the dishonour is that of the criminal. And though finding that balance is always precarious, we must look for ways to report the monstrosity of the crime without violating the privacy of the rape survivor or her family with intrusive questions and thrusting microphones. We must allow the women or their families (or young men who have experienced sexual abuse as boys) to choose their own pace, their own language and give them the freedom to draw their own red lines. They cannot and must not be pushed by the punishing and often insensitive deadlines of the next television bulletin or next morning’s newspaper.

    Rape is not a spectacle. Rape is not a first headline only when it’s absolutely macabre or when it happens identifiably to people like us. Never forget – most women in India get abused within the circle of trust; 90% of Indian women who have been sexually abused know their aggressor. And we haven’t even begun talking about marital rape yet. Rape and sexual violence — they’re closer home than we think.

    (The author is consulting editor, NDTV, and founding member, Ideas Collective)

  • Will clear reputation in court unless Miandad withdraws allegations: Afridi

    Karachi: The altercation between Javed Miandad and Shahid Afridi that had been making headlines since Sunday finally settled on Tuesday when the former decided to “forgive” the latter, DawnNews reported.
    “Shahid Afridi’s statement disheartened me but I pray for him,” the legendary batsman said, adding, “Being an elder, I forgive him.”

    The tussle began when Miandad alleged that Afridi wanted to play a farewell match for money.

    Rebuffing Miandad’s claims on Sunday, the former Pakistan T20 captain went ahead to launch an attack on the former Test captain and said: “Money has always been an issue for Miandad.

    Fast-bowling legend Wasim Akram called for “appropriate mediation” in a war of words between the former skippers.

    Akram said on Twitter it was “really sad” to see the altercation between the veteran cricketers, adding that the situation called for a quick resolution “instead of this unwanted chaos”.

    “Javed Bhai and Shahid mean a lot to me and to Pakistan,” he wrote.

  • Those supporting terrorism won’t be spared, says PM Modi

    Lucknow: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday attended the historic Ramlila celebrations here where he launched a veiled attack on Pakistan, saying those who help and provide shelter to terrorists cannot be spared, but made no reference to the “surgical strikes.”
    Making terrorism the centrepoint of his over 20-minute speech, he said terror was the worst enemy of humanity and called upon the world community to speak in one voice against the menace to put an end to it.

    “Terrorism does not have any boundaries. It is bound to destroy all…a need has arisen to root out those who spread terrorism. Those who help terrorists and provide shelter to them can no longer be spared,” he said.
    “Terrorism is against humanity. The entire world is being destroyed…if you think that we are insulated against terrorism, then we are wrong. It is a virus affecting our societies. All forces across the world have to talk in one voice and end it. It will not be possible to save humanity without eradicating terrorism,” the Prime Minister said.
    “The forces of humanism should unite globally to end the menace,” he said.

    Modi became the first Prime Minister to attend a Ramlila event outside Delhi and his participation at the Aishbagh celebrations assumes significance in the context of assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh early next year.
    The theme of this year’s Dussehra here was ‘destruction of terrorism’. In the run up to the event today, there have been many references to the surgical strikes by characters enacting Ramlila.
    In significant gestures, Modi was presented a Sudarshan Chakra, bow and arrow and a mace at the event, symbolising valour.
    At the Delhi event at Ramlila Maidan, as usual, President Pranab Mukherjee, Vice President Hamid Ansari, former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress president Sonia Gandhi were present.
    “No one should have this misunderstanding that they are safe from terrorism as terrorism has no boundary, no morality, it can go anywhere and it is bent upon crushing humanity…It is essential for all to come together against terrorism,” Modi said.
    “The entire world is being harmed. For the last two days we are seeing the picture of a little girl of Syria….And so today, when we are burning Ravana, all human forces as one will have to resolve to fight terrorism as humanity cannot be saved without bringing an
    end to it,” he said.
    Modi recalled his meeting with a top US official who had then not recognised terrorism as a problem and had instead termed it as a law and order issue. He said the world’s perspective towards terrorism changed after 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks.
    He also urged the people to remain vigilant against terrorists, saying their attempts to carry out attacks can be thwarted by alert citizens.
    While celebrating Dussehra, which signifies victory of good over evil, the Prime Minister said Lord Ram represented humanity and its rich values and traditions.
    He said the first person to fight terror was neither a soldier nor a politician, but the mythological bird Jatayu who fought against Ravana to protect a helpless Sita, whom he was trying to kidnap.
    Noting that war at times becomes inevitable due to prevailing circumstances, he said India is a country which follows the principles of peace as taught by Lord Buddha.
    “We balance between the Mohan of the Sudarshan Chakra, and the Mohan of the Charkha (Mahatma Gandhi)…We are the people who have seen yudhh (war) and Buddha. We can go from yudh to Buddha. Buddha’s path (of peace) should be our final path,” he said.
    Terming castiesm, communalism and nepotism as the forms of social evils present inside people, he said and there is a need to get rid of these ‘Ravanas’.
    Modi said on side the country was celebrating Vijay Dashmi and on the other the world was observing the day of the girl child today and called upon people to end the menace of female infanticide and feoticide.
    “We have pledged to burn Ravana’s effigy every year for abducting Sita. But we continue to discriminate between the male and female child. It should end. Who will end the Ravana inside us that kills many Sitas inside a mother’s womb. We should stop killing Sitas in this 21st century,” he said.
    He said women athletes brought laurels to the country in the recently-held Rio Olympics and they are a fine example of what girls can achieve.
    Modi also used his speech to drive home the importance of sanitation and called for a fight against the social evil of manual scavenging which continues to eixist despite efforts.
    Using the occasion, Modi said just as we burn Ravan every year, people should draw lessons from the tradition by taking a pledge to end all evils from our lives.
    Highlighting the significance of Uttar Pradesh, which goes to polls early next year, Modi said this land has given us Ram and Krishna.
    Modi began and concluded his speech with chants of ‘Jai Shri Ram; Jai, Jai Shri Ram’ the slogan often heard at the height of Ram temple movement. BJP has in recent elections, however, desisted from making the Ram temple issue an electoral plank.
    Earlier, Home Minister Rajnath Singh, who also represents the Lucknow constituency in Lok Sabha, thanked the Prime Minister for being successful in eradicating corruption and for enhancing the country’s image across the world.
    “Wholesale corruption was at its peak earlier. I thank the PM for being successful in eradicating corruption,” he said, apparently targeting the previous Congress-led government.
    He said Modi has also helped improve India’s global standing by showing to the world its strength.

  • Govt infringing on rights of Muslims: JIH

    New Delhi: Jamaat-e-Islami Hind (JIH), one of the prominent Muslim organisations, has come out strongly against the government’s stand on triple talaq, insisting that there should be no interference “in the belief and religion of any citizen”.
    In a statement, JIH chief Maulana Syed Jalaluddin Umari said Muslims consider divorce, polygamy and other personal laws as “an intrinsic part of their religion and are hence obliged to follow the Sharia in those matters”.

    “The government should respect this position of Muslims, instead of conspiring to put an end to it,” he said.
    Maintaining that attempts to “impose” a common civil code in the name of social reform and gender justice will prove “counterproductive”, he said, “The Constitution guarantees the freedom to profess, practice and propagate one’s own religion.”
    Stressing that the government cannot force Muslims to follow other communities in issues related to personal laws, the Jamaat chief said it would amount to “infringement” on their fundamental rights.

    “Those clamouring against triple talaq and demanding a ban on polygamy are a minuscule minority and are not representative of the Indian Muslim community,” he said, adding the government should respect this position of Muslims instead of “conspiring” to put an end to it.

    “Jamaat-e-Islami Hind completely stands by the All India Muslim Personal Law Board which is the authentic representative body of Indian Muslims,” he said, adding all “major” Muslim organisations and a “vast majority” of the Muslim community stand solidly behind the Board and “will not accept any interference in their personal law.”
    Asserting that those who are trying to “sow the seeds of dissension among Muslims will never succeed”, the Jamaat chief said, “The problem of triple talaq and polygamy has been blown out of proportion with the sole motive of portraying Muslims as being patriarchal and misogynistic.”

    On the question of triple talaq, the JIH President said, “Most of the Islamic scholars accept pronouncement of triple talaq in one sitting as leading to a final and irrevocable divorce. However, if a person pronounces triple talaq in one sitting but says that he intended only a single divorce, then it will be treated likewise.”
    “The ideal way of divorcing one’s wife is to pronounce talaqs one by one over a period of three months between her menstrual cycles, so that there is an opportunity for reconciliation between the spouses,” he said. PTI

  • India’s decision to seal Pak border irrational: Chinese experts

    Beijing: India’s move to completely seal its border with Pakistan was a “very irrational decision” and would further complicate India-China relations considering Beijing’s “all-weather” strategic ties with Islamabad, a state media report today quoted leading experts as saying.
    “India is making a very irrational decision, since no exhaustive investigation has been conducted after the Uri incident, and no evidence proves Pakistan is behind the attack,” the Global Times quoted Hu Zhiyong, a research fellow from the official thinktank Institute of International Relations of the Shanghai Academy, as saying.

    Hu was commenting on Home Minister Rajnath Singh’s announcement on Friday that the 3,323-km-long border between India and Pakistan would be “completely sealed” by December 2018.
    A “completely sealed” border would further hinder the already scarce border trade and talks between the two countries, Hu said.
    Wang Dehua, director of the Institute for Southern and Central Asian Studies at the Shanghai Municipal Centre for International Studies, said that a sealed border would only disrupt peace efforts made by the two sides.

    “The country’s decision reflects its Cold War mentality, and would only cause deeper hatred among residents living in Indian- and Pakistan-controlled Kashmir,” Hu added.
    Since Pakistan is China’s “all-weather” strategic partner, India’s decision would make China-Pakistan-India relations more complicated, Hu said.
    But he said a peaceful resolution of the Kashmir dispute is in the interest of China’s homeland security, especially its western regions.
    Their hardline comments come ahead of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to India this week to take part in the BRICS Summit in Goa during which he would meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
    This will be their second meeting in two months. The two met on the sidelines of the G20 Summit in Hangzhou last month. Yesterday, China’s Vice Foreign Minister Li Baodong defended China’s “technical hold” in the UN on a ban on Masood Azhar, the head of Jaish-e-Muhammad.
    “China is opposed to all forms of terrorism. There should be no double standards on counter terrorism. Nor should one pursue own political gains in the name of counter terrorism,” he had said indirectly accusing India. PTI

  • Military cooperation with Pakistan will create problems: India to Russia

    New Delhi: Ahead of their annual bilateral summit, India has conveyed its opposition to Russia over its joint exercise with Pakistan, a nation which “sponsors and practises terrorism as a matter of State policy”, saying it will create further problems.
    “We have conveyed our views to the Russian side that military cooperation with Pakistan which is a State that sponsors and practises terrorism as a matter of State policy is a wrong approach and it will only create further problems,” Indian ambassador to Moscow Pankaj Saran said in an interview to Russian news agency Ria Novosti.

    Saran’s remarks come ahead of the bilateral meeting in Goa on Saturday between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russian President Vladimir Putin, who will be arriving in India on October 14. Apart from bilateral Summit, Putin will attend the Brazil-Russia-India-China-South Africa (BRICS) meet on October 16.
    India has been communicating its unhappiness to Russia over its joint military exercises with Pakistan. However, these concerns have been played down by the Russins who maintain that they hold similar military drills with other countries of the region as well.
    Saran also said, “There are some burning issues before the world today which the BRICS countries will certainly address and this includes the question of terrorism and the threat of terrorism faced by all the countries in the BRICS group. So this will be a major item of discussion during the Summit apart from the regional conflicts and the global situation.”

    On India-Russia ties, the envoy said as far as India’s relations with Russia are concerned, the two countries share a special and privileged strategic partnership.
    “We see no change in this. On the contrary, this has only strengthened in all areas, including in the field of military-technical cooperation. This partnership is an anchor of peace and stability in the region and the world.
    We have a regular system of military exercises with Russia. We have been holding these exercises for the last few years with Russia and we will continue to do so. The plan for these exercises is drawn up between the relevant agencies of the two sides. This will continue even next year,” he said. PTI

  • Kashmir unrest: Many local start-ups shift outside state

    Srinagar: Amid the ongoing unrest in Kashmir, many young local entrepreneurs have temporarily shifted their operations to traditional start-up hubs such as Noida and Gurgaon.
    A 22-year-old entrepreneur running an advertising firm in Kashmir, has shifting to Delhi and switched over a new business line. “I took on rent some office space in Delhi though my business is partly operational in Srinagar with the help of managers operating during deal hours,” he said.
    “I have also some plans about interior designing business. I am managing manpower and will start my new venture in a couple of days,” he said.
    A 30-year-old entrepreneur, who had set-up a venture in 2012 providing services such as utility payments, air-ticketing, etc., from 1500 mobile kiosks across Kashmir has shifted back-end operations to Delhi NCR.
    “Being an online system, lack of mobile internet proved to be a hurdle for our franchisees so we moved to Delhi three months back,” the budding businessman said.

    “It was the internet blockade which forced me to shift base. The aim of my company is to reach people who don’t have access to technology. It is the communication gag which has forced me to leave Kashmir and be based in Delhi NCR,” he added.
    Another young entrepreneur from Shahr-e-Khaas, who sells Pashmina online is busy searching for office space in Delhi. “I was temporarily operating from a residential house in Delhi but will soon have an office,” he says.
    The shutting down of courier services and custom office in Kashmir for a long period proved to be a hurdle for exporters to run operations smoothly, he said.
    “I had some international orders which needed to be delivered. This could be made possible only once I operated from Delhi,” the entrepreneur said.
    An owner and founder of an e-commerce portal from Kashmir said that while procurement and processing of goods for his firm “are still happening from Kashmir but a new design centre of my firm is being set-up in Delhi”.
    He said being based in Delhi it was possible for him to deliver the export orders received prior to July 8.
    “We are setting up a new design centre in Delhi. I am among thousands of persons who wanted to do something and make a difference to the society. Everyone is bearing the brunt, so are the youngsters,” he said.
    The persons quoted in the storey wished not to be identified by name.

  • Pampore standoff continues; Three forces personnel injured so far

    Srinagar: The standoff between forces and militants holed-up inside a government building near Pampore town in Jammu and Kashmir’s Pulwama district continued for the second day on Tuesday even as reports said one militant had been killed but there was no official confirmation yet.
    Forces kept on pounding the hostel of the Entrepreneurship Development Institute (EDI) where militants have been holding the forces at bay for over 36 hours now.

    While parts of the multi-storey building caught fire, militangs kept on changing position inside the building while using their ammunition sparingly, police said.

    Reports said in the evening, one militant had been killed in the operation and his body was lying inside the building.

    Defence sources here said they would confirm the death only after the body was recovered.

    “Although the entire complex has been illuminated with floodlights, there is complete darkness inside the building this time.

    “We don’t want to take any unnecessary casualties. The operation will be resumed with the first light tomorrow (on Wednesday),” a defence sources said.

    Forces had resumed the operation on Tuesday morning with rockets and heavy automatic weapons being used against the ensconced militants.

    Two forces personnel and a policeman were injured as the militants fired from inside the hostel building of the EDI on Monday after they entered the building.

    The 70-room, seven-storey building is located at Pampore on the banks of the river Jhelum and 12 km from the Srinagar city centre.

    The joint operation was launched by the army, the Special Operations Group of the state police and the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF).

    The main building of the institute was attacked in February when militants captured it and launched a major attack on forces. Six persons – a civilian, three soldiers and two paramilitary troopers — were killed then before the three militants were shot dead. IANS