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  • Samboora gunfight: One more militant killed, toll reaches 02, Solider injured, Ops ON

    Pulwama: One more militant has been killed while as an armysolider has received an injuries in an encounter that raged between government forces and militants in Samboora village of Pampore belt in South Kashmir’s Pulwama district on Sunday taking toll of Killed militants to two

    An official told news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), that two unidentified militants have been killed while as army solider has received injuries in Samboora encounter so far while as operation is on in the area.

    He further added that injured solider has been shifted to 92 base hospital srinagar whose condition is said to be stable.

    Earlier an official said that a joint team of Police, army’s 50 RR and CRPF launched a cordon and search operation on specific information about the presence of militants in the area.

    He said that as the joint teams of forces approached towards the suspected spot, the hiding militants fired upon them which was retaliated, triggering an encounter.

    Meanwhile, as a precautionary measure internet services have been snapped in Police district Awantipora—(KNO)

  • Militant arrested in Anantnag

    PTI

    Srinagar: A militant was on Saturday arrested by security forces in Anantnag district of Jammu and Kashmir and incriminating material, including weapons, was seized from his possession, police said.

    In a joint operation in the Kapran area of Dooru in the south Kashmir district, security forces arrested a categorised active militant, Talib Bhat, a resident of Dehruna, a police official said.

    He said weapons and other incriminating material were seized from his possession.

    A case has been registered and investigation taken up, the official said.


    (This story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • Oldest graveyard ‘Malkhah’ becomes safe haven for ‘evil practices’; authorities unmoved

    I observed many graves with crestfallen and every second grave was telling the same tale

    Srinagar: In what could be described as ‘lackadaisical’ approach of the authorities to deal with the evil practices, Malkhah, the major Muslim cemetery of Kashmir has turned out to be a safe haven for gamblers and boozers while black magicians perform evil practices with impunity.

    Sources informed the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO) that Malkhah graveyard has become a safe haven for drunkards, gamblers and black magicians who regardless of moral and religious values have been carrying out evil practices without any fear or intimidation.

    They claimed that the historic Muslim cemetery is being used for boozing and gambling while as the incidents of the desecration of graves is also done for black magic practice.

    Malkhah graveyard literally known as (field of grave diggers) has been reduced from 1300 to 700 kanals owing to the illegal structures erected upon by some blue eyed persons on it. The land was actually purchased and donated by known Muslim Sufi saint Hazrat Mir Syed Ali Hamadani (RA) for common cause.

    “This graveyard is being used as a nightclub for illegal activities like gambling and boozing while black magic practicing is also being done to harm people,” sources said.

    Residents living around the graveyard said the authorities despite being well aware of the issue have maintained a criminal silence.

    “We cannot blame gamblers and drunkards alone for desecration of Malkhah as the authorities despite being well aware of the issue have maintained an unjustifiable hush. This is a grave issue and the government must wake up from slumbers before it is too late,” Tahir Hussain, a Malkhah resident told KNO.

    “I had gone to offer Fateha to my grandmother, the moment I reached near the grave, I found many of graves empty, initially when few graves in similar condition caught my attention, I did not paid much heed, as old graves sometimes look like that,” he said, adding when I moved further into the graveyard, I observed many graves with crestfallen and every second grave was telling the same tale, forcing me to think ‘all is not well’.

    The residents appealed to the Inspector General of Police (IGP) Kashmir and Deputy Commissioner (DC) Srinagar to take serious cognizance of the issue and those involved in evil practices be dealt with iron hands—(KNO)

  • Earthquake of 4.5 magnitude hits Jammu and Kashmir at 12:02 pm

    PTI

    Srinagar: A medium-intensity earthquake hit Jammu and Kashmir on Saturday, but there were no reports of any damage or loss of life, officials said.

    The earthquake of 4.5 magnitude occurred at 12:02 pm at a depth of 120 km.

    There were no reports of any damage to property or injury or loss of life, they added.

    (This story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • Man held with nearly 1kg cannabis in Rajouri

    PTI

    Jammu: Police arrested an alleged drug peddler and seized nearly 1kg cannabis from him in Jammu and Kashmir’s Rajouri district on Friday, officials said.

    Senior Superintendent of Police Chandan Kohli said the man was moving suspiciously near Darhali bridge in Aitti area and tried to escape when asked to stop but was nabbed.

    During a search, 924 grams of cannabis was recovered from him and he was arrested. The man has been identified as Mohammad Alyas Mir of Palangarh village of Thanamandi, Kohli said.

    A case has been registered at Rajouri police station and further investigation is underway.

    (This story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • Pak shells forward areas along LoC in Rajouri

    PTI

    Jammu: Pakistani troops on Saturday violated ceasefire by resorting to firing and shelling on forward areas along the Line of Control (LoC) in Rajouri district of Jammu and Kashmir, a defence spokesman said.

    The shelling and firing from across the border in Nowshera sector was “unprovoked” and drew a befitting retaliation by the Indian Army, the spokesman said.

    “At about 11.15 am, Pakistan initiated unprovoked ceasefire violation by firing with small arms and shelling with mortars along LoC in Nowshera,” the spokesman said.

    The cross-border shelling between the two sides was going on when last reports were received.

    However, there was no immediate report of any casualty on the Indian side, he said.

    (This story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • Militant associate linked to LeT held in Kupwara

    PTI

    Srinagar: Security forces nabbed a militant associate linked to Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) in Jammu and Kashmir’s Kupwara district and recovered arms and ammunition from his possession on Saturday, police said.

    Based on a specific input, a cordon and search operation was launched by the security forces in the orchards of village Mandigam Kralgund in the north Kashmir district’s Handwara, a police spokesperson said.

    During the searches, a militant associate identified as Akeel Ahmad Parray, a resident of Mandigam Kralgund, was arrested, he said.

    Incriminating materials, including arms and ammunition, were recovered from his possession, he added.

    Preliminary investigation revealed that Parray is an active militant associate linked to proscribed terror outfit LeT, the spokesperson said.

    A case has been registered and investigation has been initiated, he said.

    On Friday, two militant commanders of LeT were killed in an overnight encounter with security forces in Anantnag district.


    (This story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • Vodafone wins international arbitration against India in ₹14,200-crore tax dispute case at International Court of Justice

    REUTERS

    The British telecom giant moved the Hague-based International Court of Justice (ICJ) in 2016.

    Vodafone Group Plc said on Friday that it had won an international arbitration case against the Indian government, ending one of the most high-profile disputes in the country involving a $2 billion tax claim.

    An international arbitration tribunal in The Hague ruled that India’s imposition of a tax liability on Vodafone, as well as interest and penalties, were in a breach of an investment treaty agreement between India and the Netherlands, two sources with direct knowledge of the matter said.

    India had claimed a total of ₹279 billion ($3.79 billion), including about $2 billion in tax, as well as interest and penalties, one of the sources said.

    The tribunal, in its ruling, said the government’s demand is in breach of “fair and equitable treatment” and it must cease seeking the dues from Vodafone. It also directed India to pay 4.3 million pounds ($5.47 million) to the company as compensation for its legal costs, one of the sources added.

    Vodafone said in a statement the amount of the award was confidential. Shares in the company’s India unit, Vodafone Idea , ended 13% higher on Friday.

    “The tribunal held that any attempt by India to enforce the tax demand would be a violation of India’s international law obligations,” Vodafone said in its statement.

    India’s Finance Ministry said it would carefully study the award, together with its lawyers. “After such consultations, the government will consider all options and take a decision on further course of action including legal remedies,” the Ministry said in a statement.

    “Vodafone has finally got justice, first from the Indian Supreme Court and now from an international arbitral tribunal,” said Anuradha Dutt, senior partner at DMD Advocates, an Indian law firm representing the company.

    The ruling brings an end to one of the most controversial disputes in India under international treaty agreements that it enters into with countries to protect foreign investments.

    India is entangled in more than a dozen such cases against companies, including Cairn Energy, over retrospective tax claims and cancellation of contracts. The exchequer could end up paying billions of dollars in damages if it loses.

    To reduce future arbitration claims, India has ended such agreements with over 50 countries and is working on a new law to protect foreign investors by offering relief from possible policy changes even as it upholds the right to tax them, Reuters reported.

    Vodafone’s tax dispute stems from its $11 billion deal to buy the Indian mobile assets from Hutchison Whampoa in 2007. The government said Vodafone was liable to pay taxes on the acquisition, which the company contested.

    In 2012, India’s top court ruled in favour of the telecom provider but the government changed the rules to enable it to tax deals that had already been concluded.

    (This story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • Prime Minister Imran Khan warns India against committing any misadventure, says Pakistan will stand by Kashmiris

    In his UN General Assembly speech, Pakistani leader also denounces India’s moves to cement control of Muslim-majority Kashmir.

    Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan On Friday, repeated his claims about India’s revocation of Article 370 and 35 A – terming them illegal, in his UN General Assembly (UNGA) address. Repeating his claims on ‘RSS’ Hindutva’, Khan commented on India’s new domicile law for Kashmir – calling it a ‘war crime’. As Khan began his speech, Indian delegate Mijito Vinito walked out of the hall in New York.

    Terming India as a country sponsoring ‘Islamophobia’, he claimed that India had regarded Muslims as ‘propellers of COVID-19 virus’ and alleged that they were denied medical attention. Commenting on Assam’s NRC, he fearmongered that 2 million Muslims had been ‘stripped off their citizenship’. India’s Permanent Representative to UN – Tirumurti has vowed a ‘befitting right of reply’ to Khan’s ‘litany of vicious falsehood’.

    Khan also spoke about Pakistan's coronavirus response and called for debt relief for poor nations amid the pandemic [Aamir Qureshi/AFP]Khan also spoke about Pakistan’s coronavirus response and called for debt relief for poor nations amid the pandemic [Aamir Qureshi/AFP]

    Prime Minister Imran Khan warned India against carrying out any misadventure, saying “it will be met by a nation that is ready to fight till the end for its freedom” as he addressed the 75th United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) session via video link on Friday.

    “While the Nazis’ hate was directed at the Jews, the RSS directs it at the Muslims, and to a lesser extent, the Christians,” he said, adding that the extremist ideologists believe that India is exclusively for Hindus and others are not equal citizens.

    “The secularism of Gandhi and Nehru has been replaced by the dream of creating a Hindu Rashtra, by subjugating, even cleansing India’s 200 million Muslims and other minorities,” he said.

    PM Imran spoke about the RSS’s attempt to destroy the Babri Masjid and the massacre of 2,000 Muslims in the Gujarat riots. “And this was [Gujarat massacre] under the watch of chief minister Modi,” he said.

    India’s targeting of minorities ‘unprecedented in history’

    The premier spoke about India’s discriminatory policies for Muslims during the pandemic, saying that the government blamed the minority group for spreading the coronavirus and they were denied medical treatment on many occasions.

    “Last February, Muslims faced target killings with police complicity in Delhi,” he said.

    Referring to it as something that was “unprecedented in history”, PM Imran said that the Hindutva ideology sought to persecute 300 million Muslims, Christians and Sikhs.

    PM Imran then spoke about India’s August 5 attempt to annex occupied Kashmir, adding that this was against the commitments India had made to the people of Kashmir and the world.

    “About 13,000 Kashmiri youth were incarcerated and thousands tortured [since the August 5 move],” he said. “Indian occupation forces have used brute force including pellet guns against peaceful protesters,” he added.

    “The Kashmiri media and those daring to raise their voices are being systematically harassed through draconian laws,” he said, drawing the world’s attention to the Indian forces’ brutal act of killing hundreds of Kashmiris in fake encounters and refusing to hand over their bodies back to their relatives.

    India playing a ‘dangerous game’, says PM Imran

    He called on the international community to prosecute the Indian civil and military personnel for their “crimes against humanity” in occupied Kashmir.

    PM Imran said that India was attempting to obliterate the distinct Kashmiri identity by altering the area’s demography, to escape the plebiscite which is in line with the UN resolutions.

    “This action is in violation of the UN charter, [Security] Council resolutions and international law, particularly the 4th Geneva Convention,” he said. “Changing the demographic structure of an occupied territory is a war crime.”

    The prime minister praised the people of Kashmir, saying that “generation after generation of Kashmiris have laid down their lives to rid themselves of Indian occupation” and that they will never submit before the Indian state as their struggle was indigenous.

    “The government of Pakistan is committed to stand by its Kashmiri brothers and sisters in their legitimate struggle for self-determination,” he said.

    PM Imran warned that India was playing ” a dangerous game” by upping the military ante against Pakistan to divert the world’s attention in a nuclearised environment.

    He said that if the fascist RSS-led Indian government decides to commit any misadventure against Pakistan, it will be met by a nation that is ready to fight till the end for its freedom.

    PM Imran said that durable peace in South Asia will not be possible till the issued of occupied Kashmir is not resolved on the basis of international legitimacy, confirming the world’s concern that Kashmir is a nuclear flashpoint.

    PM praises Pakistan’s smart lockdown policy
    Speaking about his government’s smart lockdown policy, the prime minister said that Pakistan opened up the agriculture and construction sector.

    He credited the government’s Ehsaas Emergency Cash Programme and other policies towards steering Pakistan out of the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the prime minister cautioned that Pakistan was not yet “out of the woods”.

    “We are not yet out of the woods like no country is out of the woods yet,” he said, referring to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    The prime minister spoke out against the flow of illicit financing from developing countries to the developed ones. He said that these “stolen resources” that flow from the developing countries to the developed ones end up weakening the economy and promoting poverty in third world countries.

    “If this policy continues, it will accentuate the difference between the rich and the poor,” said PM Imran, adding that rich countries lacked the political will to “curb this criminal activity”.

    “Eventually, it will spark off a bigger global crisis, a far bigger global crisis than the migration crisis poses,” he said, adding that rich states cannot talk about human rights when they provide protection to money launderers and their ill-gotten wealth.

    Prime Minister Imran Khan said that there are robust anti-money laundering regimes, adding that he calls upon the UN “to take the lead in efforts to build a global framework, to stem the illicit financial flows and ensure speedy repatriation of stolen wealth”.

    “It is important to realise that the aid that flows from the rich to the developing world is minuscule compared to the massive outflows by our corrupt elites,” he said.

    PM Imran calls for world to observe an international day to combat Islamophobia
    The premier also touched upon the issue of Islamophobia during his speech, condemning the rising incidences of the burning of the Holy Quran and the publication of blasphemous material against Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).

    “Muslims continue to be targeted with impunity in many countries,” he said. “Our shrines are being destroyed, our Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) insulted, the Holy Quran burnt, and all this in the name of freedom of speech.”

    PM Imran on climate change

    The prime minister said that Pakistan’s contribution to carbon emission was very low when one considered many countries in the world but it was one of the countries most affected by climate change.

    The prime minister said that his government has launched an “extremely ambitious” plan to combat climate change by planting 10 billion trees over the next three years.

    He called on world leaders to abide by the provisions of the Paris agreement on climate change. “Commitments made through the Paris agreement must be fulfilled, in particular, the commitment to mobilise $100billion annually as climate finance,” he said.

  • Two held in Kulgam; arms, cash seized

    PTI

    Srinagar: Two persons were arrested and a huge quantity of arms, ammunition and cash seized from their possession in Jammu and Kashmir’s Kulgam district, police said on Friday.

    Security forces seized a huge quantity of arms, ammunition and cash from a vehicle in Qazigund area of the south Kashmir district during a search on Thursday, a police official said.

    He said two persons were arrested in this connection.

    Police have registered a case and investigation has been taken up, the official said.

    (This story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)