Qutb-ud-din Aybak
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@waz @WAJsal @The EagleBullshit. If this is kind of link you are going to provide to make unsubstantiated claims then I can link ANYTHING done in Pakistan to terrorism using such flimsy bs.
For example I can provide link of pak govt funding Lal masjid and then claim on every CPEC thread that pak govt revenue will be used for funding terrorism. Flimsy no?
@waz @WAJsal @The Eagle is this the kind of disingeneous trolling we want here?????
derailing from topic again and then reporting me. LAL masjid, CPEC is not the topic being discussed here.
This guy don't want to listen and don't want to stay on topic. after i gave him the reference, he is reportig m for trolling and answering me by trolling and derailing from the topic. I got my first warning for derailing from the topic before. Is it justice??????
and here is some more mirch maala:
Issuance of “permanent residence certificates to non-residents, allotment of land to retired Indian army personnel, issuance of land to non-Kashmiris, the establishment of separate townships for Kashmiri Pandits , this all shows how India is fooling world but reality can't be changed on the ground level, where freedom struggle is up to the core of hearts and INSHALLAH indian occupied Kashmir would get freedom in coming days, we are with you our Kashmiri brothers, LONG LIVE KASHMIRIS FREEDOM FIGHTERS BROTHERS INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENT , KASHMIR BANEY GA PAKISTAN INSHALLAH
Diversion. Do the militants care WHY one joined the police? No. Hence applying for police jobs is everything to do with defying terrorists (terrorists because they target homes, not a military target).
@waz @WAJsal @The Eagle this poster invents stuff without sources on every India thread and derails it. Can we have SOME integrity left here and curb such behaviour?
Yday he was talking about some imaginary legal case between pof and Israel over cornershot gun on a thread about an Indian procured SAM system.
At least such low quality behaviour should be curbed on defence related threads?????
@That Guy as titleholder can you help here pls.
Unemployment trumps fear in volatile Kashmir as youth turn up for police jobs
More than one lakh candidates applied for 5,000 posts, and over 50,000 applications were received from Kashmir itself.
india Updated: May 14, 2017 12:27 IST
Abhishek Saha
Hindustan Times, Anantnag
Young men undergo physical endurance test in the Kashmir Police recruitment drive in Anantnag on Saturday. (Waseem Andrabi/HT Photo)
He ran the race of his life, clocked a good time and qualified for the next round. But Bashir doesn’t want to be photographed nor does he want his real name used.
He has just finished the first task of the physical endurance test at a police recruitment rally. His friends and family don’t know that the resident of Anantnag in south Kashmir, the hotbed of insurgency, is among 1,600 young men who have queued up at the town’s Highground to prove themselves worthy of a police job.
“I hid my file inside the jacket,” a man standing next to Bashir told HT on Friday morning. He doesn’t want to upset his friends or neighbours. “They will say things like: Why do you want to join the force which commits atrocities on us? Someone might attack me too or threaten my family.”
Bashir, who refused to be quoted, overcame these fears but is a bit sheepish about vying for a place in the force that is at the receiving end of people’s anger and militants’ bullets in the Valley, which is again witnessing a summer of discontent.
The ongoing police recruitment drive in Kashmir has seen a big turnout although militants in the last few months have shot dead policemen, threatened their families and ransacked their homes.
Around 1,00,000 candidates have applied for 5,000 posts across Jammu and Kashmir and more than half the aspirants are from the Kashmir Valley, where anger against security forces spills on to the streets regularly, with youngsters pelting stones at them.
Police was not his first choice. The 24-year-old Bashir trained as an electrician but couldn’t find a job. His father has retired and he has siblings who need support.
He is confident of clearing the push-up round after he successfully ran the 1,500-meter race. He is sure he will get the job but he and others around him refuse to be photographed and are reluctant to open up.
“I have not told my friend in my village that I am going for the police recruitment rally. You have to understand the feeling of anger many people harbor against police,” said another aspirant, explaining their reluctance.
Jobs are hard to come by in the Valley, where tourism is the biggest employer. The years of violence have taken a toll on the picturesque Valley nestled in the Himalayas. Summer is the tourist season but the unrest and increased militant violence is keeping travellers away.
Girls take part in a race in the Kashmir Police recruitment drive in Anantnag on Saturday. (Waseem Andrabi/HT Photo)
Job avenues are limited and unemployment is high.
“A police job is a good job,” said the man standing next to Bashir.
Earlier this month, militants killed five policemen and two bank guards in an attack on a cash van in Kulgam district of south Kashmir.
Didn’t the killings scare them?
“No I am not scared. Life and death are in the hands of Allah. I will work for the safety of Kashmiris,” one of them said.
What about his family?
“Of course, because of the situation here, they will be worried if I start working as a policeman but they also want me to get a good job.”
Young women, too, want to join police though none of them were there in Anantnag on Friday.
Director general of state police (DGP) SP Vaid said the turnout was huge. “I wish the candidates luck. They should serve with full dedication,” Vaid said.
They would definitely need luck. It is not easy being a cop in Kashmir. Militants target them as they are symbol of the state; for civilians, many of who harbour anti-India sentiment, they represent repression and are traitors in a just cause. The stone-pelter they chase during protests is often a friend or a neighbor.
A policeman, who hails from central Kashmir’s Budgam district and now posted in the south, said khaki was a red rag for protesters.
Stone-pelters tell them: “When you get rid of the wardi (uniform) and quit your jobs, azaadi (freedom) will come.” The policeman said many of his colleagues were mocked or even abused by neighbours.
Those in charge are aware of the danger. Last month, DGP Vaid asked policemen, especially those from south Kashmir, to be cautious while visiting their homes and preferably avoid the visits for the next few months.
In March, 10 armed militants ransacked the house of a police officer in Shopian and warned his family of serious consequences if he did not quit his job. Vaid had then reminded the militants that they, too, had families.
The J-K Police has around 83,000 personnel, according to data available on their website. A “very large number of them are Kashmiri Muslims”, said a spokesperson, adding it was difficult to give the break-up.
Police are one of the big recruiters in the Valley but the response to recruitment rallies was not an indication of ebbing separatist sentiment, political observers say.
At the peak of last summer’s unrest that left around 100 people dead, at least 26,000 young men applied for the job of special police officers, a temporary position with a starting salary of Rs 5,000. Many of the applicants, police sources said, were stone-pelters.
Similarly in 2010, one of the bloodiest summers, a recruitment drive in downtown Srinagar, the epicenter of the stir, saw youngsters turn up in huge numbers. But old Srinagar sill erupts every Friday.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/india...police-jobs/story-FVPCVz36BifqTIUCP3GyQJ.html