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I am trying to get the pics of its interiors.. anyone got anything on that?? the train does look very pretty.. not like the usual Indian trains..
der amad...durust amad.....it has taken 60 years for the train to get there, in a few decades other issues should be resolved too.
der amad...durust amad.....it has taken 60 years for the train to get there, in a few decades other issues should be resolved too.
I think the future of the Freedom struggle in Kashmir is a peaceful one. In the last 8 to ten years, Pakistan largely backed off from supporting the militants in Kashmir, with teh start of the US WoT.
Violence and infiltration dropped dramatically, and the result was some of the biggest anti-India rallies ever seen in Kashmir, and a complete rejection of Indian rule. Opinions in mainstream India were also offered on why India should accept the Kashmiri demand for a plebiscite in the valley.
I think all of that indicates that blowing up the train or any such thing will in fact have the reverse effect on the freedom movement.
New Recruit
I think the future of the Freedom struggle in Kashmir is a peaceful one.
In the last 8 to ten years, Pakistan largely backed off from supporting the militants in Kashmir, with teh start of the US WoT.
Violence and infiltration dropped dramatically, and the result was some of the biggest anti-India rallies ever seen in Kashmir, and a complete rejection of Indian rule.
Opinions in mainstream India were also offered on why India should accept the Kashmiri demand for a plebiscite in the valley.
I think all of that indicates that blowing up the train or any such thing will in fact have the reverse effect on the freedom movement.
New Recruit
New Recruit
desipride, ye kaunsa continent confuse kar liya...the famous million march was in the USA.
as for pakistan, it is notoriously difficult to get people on the streets, no matter what the political or social cause. People are just not intersted, even students don't protest, strikes are almost unheard of. The only time in recent memory was probably the lawyer protest, and that consisted of mainly lawyers, and an issue related to the justice system.
Even the Muhammad cartoon controversy did not get many people on the streets of pakistan. Pakistanis are generally very pragmatic, and are not rabble roused so easily. So do not say it is easy to find assemble a mobin S.A...maybe in India/Bangladesh it could be so.
So what these famous million marches are, I have no idea. Could it be the figment of a very fertile Indian imagination??
Dig Vijaya
p.s. see how the peaceful protests of the Kashmiri people are dismissed as mobs and assemblies of people, that can be gathered at a whim...Indians don't give a damn about the aspirations of the people of Kashmir.
google: "million march" pakistan
No
I don't give a damn to the aspirations of others.