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  • Kashmir Tally Cross 200-Mark as 13 More Test Positive; J&K COVID-19 count at 258

    Srinagar: Thirteen more people tested for coronavirus in the Kashmir on Monday, taking the total number of cases in Jammu and Kashmir to 258, official sources said.

    They said twelve of the positive cases were confirmed from SKIMS lab and included samples received from other hospitals mainly GMC Baramulla. The cases include nine from Bandipora and 3 from Baramulla.

    The other case was confirmed at CD hospital lab and pertains to a man from Kulgam.

    With these cases, the officially confirmed tally stands at 258—49 in Jammu and 208 in Kashmir. Four people have died due to the deadly infection in the J&K while six others—three each in Jammu and Kashmir divisions have recovered and have been discharged, leaving the active cases in Kashmir to 202 and 45 in Jammu. (GNS)

  • Good News: Two COVID-19 positive kids test negative, discharged from hospital

    Srinagar, Apr 13: Two kids who were tested positive for Covid-19 were discharged from the hospital after their re-confirmation tests were again turn negative. Hospital sources told Kashmir News Trust that a five and 7 year old sibling were admitted in the JLNM Rainawari Hospital Srinagar after they were tested positive for Covid-19. A medico said that first Covid-19 positive sibling was discharged from the hospital today along with their mother who was Covid-19 negative but was staying with her children. The re-confirmation tests of all the three were found negative today and thus they were discharged. These two kids hail from Azad Basti Natipora area of Srinagar city. They were tested positive after coming into contact with their grandfather who had a travel history of Saudi Arabia.

    Nodal Officer for Coronavirus, Dr Bilques confirmed to KNT that both these sisters were discharged from the hospital today after tested negative. (KNT)
  • Cop dead, another critical in Dachan militant attack ‘Ascertaining facts: Police

    Kishtwar: Suspected militants Monday fired upon a police party in mountainous Dachan region of district Kishtwar.

    Dachan is 80 kilometers away from district headquarter Kishtawar.

    Reports said that suspected militants fired upon two cops among which one died on spot while another has been shifted to hospital in critical condition. Sources added that assailants snatched service rifle of both the cops after targeting them.

    Unconfirmed reports said that the policeman who died on the spot is Khurshid Ahmed while injured cop has been identified as Vishal Singh.

    Station House Officer Kishtwar, Ajaz Ahmed Wani told KNT that Dachan is a far away mountainous area. “We have dispatched a police party there and it will take time to reach there. What I have learnt is that militants attacked a police party resulting in the death of two cops. They have also snatched their service rifles,” he said adding that facts are being ascertained. (KNT)

  • NC Spokesperson Asks PM Modi To Announce Restoration Of 4G In His Speech

    “If you really think that INFORMATION, AWARENESS & SOCIAL DISTANCING can play a vital role in eradicating Covid19. Announce the restoration of 4G in J&K at 10 Am in your speech tomorrow. Thanks!” Tweeted NC Spokesperson Sarah Hayat Shah

  • Indian police officer’s hand chopped off in sword attack during coronavirus lockdown

    The officer whose hand was chopped off — Assistant Sub-Inspector of Police Harjeet Singh — went through a surgery that lasted nearly eight hours

    PTI

    New Delhi: An Indian policeman’s hand was chopped off with a sword and six other officers were severely injured when they were attacked while enforcing coronavirus lockdown measures in northern Punjab state on Sunday morning.

    The severed left hand of Harjit Singh, an assistant sub inspector for Punjab Police, was later reattached to his wrist following nearly eight hours of surgery.


    The attack took place when a vehicle carrying seven men — who belong to the minority Sikh warrior sect known as the Nihangs — was stopped at a barricade outside a vegetable market in Patiala district, KBS Sidhu, a senior state government official, told media personals.

    When police asked the men for valid travel passes, one of them took out a sword and cut off Singh’s hand.

    The injured officers, one with sword wounds to his back, were taken to the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research in Chandigarh.


    “I am happy to share that a 7 and a half hour long surgery has been successfully completed in PGI to repair the severed wrist of ASI Harjeet Singh. I thank the entire team of doctors and support staff for their painstaking effort. Wishing ASI Harjeet Singh a speedy recovery,” the state’s chief minister Amarinder Singh

    “The police didn’t even take out their arms and you attack them and cut off the hand of an innocent person? This cannot be tolerated and strict action will be taken …Once more, I am telling all of Punjab, I am warning the people that strict action will be taken against those who don’t follow the curfew,” Singh said in a voice message posted on Twitter.

    Following an hour-long operation at a local gurdwara (Sikh temple), police arrested the seven accused men. A further investigation is underway. Punjab police chief Dinkar Gupta told media personals.


    India is currently under a nationwide lockdown due to end April 14. Punjab, however, was one of the first states in the country to extend the measures until the end of the month. The state has reported a total of 151 confirmed coronavirus cases, including 11 deaths.

  • Killing of civilians in Chowkibal, Timuna Villages of Kupwara a gruesome act, deserves strong condemnation: Altaf Thakur

    Urges DC Kupwara to provide immediate ex-gratia to NoK’s of slain, injured and to conduct fast-track damage assessment of damage caused due to shelling

    Srinagar: Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) J&K spokesman Altaf Thakur on Monday lashed out at Pakistan and its army for resorting to unprovoked and unjustified ceasefire violation in Tandghar, Keran and Chowkibal areas of Kupwara district which left three civilians including a woman and an eight-year-old boy dead.

    Thakur said that it highly condemnable act and reflects frustration on part of the neighbouring country that when entire world is fighting Covid-19 pandemic, it is resorting to unprovoked ceasefire violation.

    In a statement issued here, Thakur said that it was painful to see massive damage caused to residential houses in Chowkibal, Keran, and Timuna-Vilgam village besides wails and shrieks of those whose loved ones have been killed. The BJP leader said that Pakistan must mend its ways and stop funding terror and targeting innocent civilians who live along the Line of Control in Kupwara district of north Kashmir.

    He said that there are reports of massive damage to property worth lakhs and also many cattle including sheep and cows have died as well. Thakur said Pakistan must work to stop spread of pandemic rather than targeting innocent civilians. Killing of civilians in shelling is highly condemnable and is a gruesome act and world community should take serious note of it. The BJP leader also urged the Deputy Commissioner Kupwara to go for a detailed damage assessment and to release immediate ex-gratia in favour of next of kin (NoKs) of those who were killed in shelling and also for those who were left injured. He said a thorough damage assessment of houses damaged, cattle and other livestock lost should also be done and affected be granted immediate relief.

  • House boat owner booked for hosting and hiding British foreignor

    Srinagar: A British national has been sent to a quarantine facility while his host in Srinagar has been booked here in Kashmir capital Srinagar.

    Media reports said that a house boat owner not only hosted a British citizen but also provided him accommodation at his house boat.

    The said foreigner was spotted by a police official. During questioning, he foreigner admitted that he reached to Valley via

    Srinagar-Jammu Highway and had managed to skip the Foreigner Registration Offices of both Jammu and Kashmir Tourism and police in Srinagar.

    The house boat owner according to media reports also admitted that he was hosting since March 15.

    The foreigner was immediately taken to the hospital for checkup where his condition was stated to be stable and was directed to remain in quarantine.

    The FIR vide number 45/2020 has been registered at Nehru Park police station under sections 269 and 188 of IPC in this regard. (KNT)

  • Shopian village under siege, search operation underway

    Shopian: A cordon and search operation is going on in a Shopian village here in South Kashmir.
     
    Sources told KNT that combined forces received inputs about the presence of militants in Babapora Shopian village that falls under the jurisdiction of police station Zainpora.
      
    Sources added that soldiers from 1 Rashtriya Rifles, SOG and troopers from 178 Battalion have laid a siege and door-to-door search operation is underway.
     
    A police official while confirming that search operation is in progress said that no contact with militants has been established so for. (KNT)

  • US-Afghanistan War | A waste of 19 years

    The US withdrawal doesn’t mean peace in Afghanistan

    Paul Wood | Spectator USA

    Afghanistan, Helmand province, 2011: I walked out of a British base toward a beaten-up taxi on the corner. A sentry gave me a quizzical look. The sound of my boots crunching on gravel seemed louder than usual. I was painfully aware that what I was doing was incredibly, stupidly risky. Right on cue, the huge metal gate set into the high wall of the base clanged shut behind me.

    I was going to meet a member of the Taliban who had agreed to an interview. I’d sat down with the Taliban twice before, but in Kabul, where I had people to watch the building in which the meeting took place, in case the interview turned into a kidnapping. Here, I had only the word of my Afghan fixer, someone whose judgment I had trusted over many years, but still…

    The taxi drove along a deserted road, dropping me and the fixer by a half-built house. We were to meet the man inside. After a few minutes that seemed like hours, he arrived. As promised, he had come alone. He was taking a risk with the meeting too, wondering if he was going to be arrested. Both of us glanced nervously outside while we spoke. He told me that when it was announced that British troops were coming to Helmand in 2006, the men of his village gathered in the mosque. They voted unanimously to join the Taliban and to fight the British until they left. ‘No one argued. We all thought the same.’

    This wasn’t surprising: ‘Son of a Brit’ has been a vicious insult in southern Afghanistan ever since the British Army was last there, in the second Anglo-Afghan war of 1878-80. In 2006, several thousand British soldiers arrived to replace a few dozen Americans who’d been sensibly holed up at a base in the Helmand capital of Lashkar Gah, rarely going outside the gates. Before 2006, you could jump in your car and drive almost anywhere in Helmand. After the Brits arrived, westerners could go out only in armored convoys. The British brought the war to Helmand.

    The Americans came back in force in 2010, sending 20,000 Marines. But by then, the Taliban had fused with tribal groups growing and smuggling opium. Western forces had made the fatal mistake of trying to take on opium and the Taliban at the same time. This made victory all but impossible: there was too much money in the drugs business, and it was everywhere. The first ambush of British troops in 2006 was reported as a Taliban attack. It wasn’t. The soldiers had been on their way to an Afghan police station, and the police thought that the sacks of opium in the cells there would be discovered. So they fired rocket-propelled grenades at the British convoy to delay it.

    The opium trade in southern Afghanistan was rumored to be under the control of the then-president’s brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai, or AWK, governor of the southern province of Kandahar. I went to his majlis, or council, in 2006, to ask him if this was true. The room fell into a shocked silence and there was a long pause before AWK answered. Shooting a venomous look toward my poor translator, he forced a smile and said that these were, of course, lies put about by his enemies. A complaint duly came down to the BBC — my employer at the time — through the British embassy in Kabul. Despite his denials, a US diplomatic cable later published by WikiLeaks said AWK was ‘widely understood to be corrupt and a narcotics trafficker’. It also said: ‘Given AWK’s reputation for shady dealings, his recommendations for large, costly infrastructure projects should be viewed with a healthy dose of skepticism.’

    Perhaps this was unfair on AWK, perhaps not. But like opium, corruption was everywhere in Afghanistan. It was probably the most corrupt country in the world. A former official in President Hamid Karzai’s office told me about a room they had, stacked floor to ceiling with bricks of US dollar bills, the money to be used for payoffs. The corruption was so open that people forgot to pretend it wasn’t happening. At the end of a Karzai news conference I was astonished when an Afghan journalist stood up to say he had been promised an apartment during the election campaign in return for helpful coverage — and was upset that he was still waiting for it.

    Billions of dollars of aid money poured into the country, yet the main roads in Kabul remained broken and potholed. The money poured out of the country just as quickly. An Afghan vice president was stopped by customs in Dubai with $52 million of cash in his suitcases (that figure is not a typographical error). As the great Vietnam journalist Neil Sheehan wrote, ‘one cannot build upon the quicksand of corruption a sound government and army that will stand up to its opponent’. It is also hard to justify asking young American and British soldiers to die to keep a bunch of thieves and crooks in power.

    Since 2014, Afghanistan’s president has been Ashraf Ghani, a former professor at Johns Hopkins. In my one meeting with him, he seemed an honest but unworldly academic, anxious to discuss the latest books on microeconomics piled up on his desk. He has tried to fight corruption, with a few, limited successes. The fundamentals of the conflict remain unchanged — including, most importantly, the unreliability of the Afghan police and army. In each of the 19 years of the war, with numbing regularity, Washington has announced that there will be a new push to ‘train and equip’ the Afghan security forces. Yet the Taliban continued to take more towns and villages.

    The main British base in Helmand, Camp Bastion — which cost more than $1.5 billion to build — was overrun by the Taliban after it was handed to the Afghan army. The Afghan security forces got it back, but I wouldn’t be surprised if the Taliban eventually get control of the base and all of Helmand along with it. Camp Bastion is surrounded by the Dasht-e-Margo, the desert of death. This was regularly enveloped in dust storms that locals said consisted mainly of dried excrement. That seemed to me to sum up the British, and American, experience in Afghanistan. The current withdrawal is recognition of defeat.

    Back in 2011, the Taliban member I met told me he’d lost more than 30 friends and relatives fighting the Americans and their British allies. But he was not full of the usual rhetoric about killing infidels. Instead, he was tired and wanted to put down his Kalashnikov. This immense war-weariness is the best chance for the peace talks that will take place among Afghans, now the foreigners are leaving. But Afghanistan has never had a strong central government. The most likely outcome of the American withdrawal is that the country will remain divided: the Taliban in the south, a weak central government controlling Kabul, and warlords squabbling over the rest. The foreign troops were fighting history as much as the Taliban and history will reassert itself. This is not, yet, peace in Afghanistan.

    This article is in The Spectator’s April 2020 US edition.

    Disclaimer: The opinions expressed within this article are the personal opinions of the author. The facts and opinions appearing in the article do not reflect the views of Kashmir Today and Kashmir Today does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same.

    (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • Coronavirus | Protect firms from takeover, says Rahul Gandhi

    PTI

    Former Congress president Rahul Gandhi on Sunday asked the government to ensure that Indian companies did not face any hostile takeover bid by foreign companies during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    “The massive economic slowdown has weakened many Indian corporates making them attractive targets for takeovers,” he wrote on Twitter. “The Govt must not allow foreign interests to take control of any Indian corporate at this time of national crisis,” he said.

    His comments came days after reports suggested that Chinese investors were scouting for shares in distressed European companies.

    Last week, Italy announced changes to its foreign investment policy and protected its banking, insurance and healthcare sectors from hostile takeover by foreign companies. Spain, too, has made it mandatory for its companies to seek government approval if any foreign company wants to pick up over 10% stake in them.