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Kashmiris join insurgency against India at highest rate in two decades

Devil Soul

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Kashmiris join insurgency against India at highest rate in two decades
By Reuters
Published: February 24, 2015
843452-kashmir-1424783232-802-640x480.jpg

PHOTO: AFP

SRINAGAR: An insurgency in the Indian-held region of Kashmir is increasingly dependent on homegrown, educated fighters with the highest number of local youth joining in two decades, according to Indian army data seen on Tuesday.

The trend represents a new threat in the region where Muslim separatists have been fighting Indian forces since 1989. At least 70 young Kashmiris joined the insurgency in the last year, army records showed, with most joining the banned group Lashkar-e-Taiba, which was accused of carrying out attacks on the Indian city of Mumbai in 2008.

At least 14 of them have been killed, the army said. “Youth joining the militancy is disturbing,” Subrata Saha, the head of Indian army in Kashmir, said recently. “If educated youth are joining, it is more disturbing. It is certainly is a cause of concern for us.”

Two of the new recruits have doctorates and eight were post graduates, the army data showed.

Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since a war after independence from Britain in 1947. The nuclear-armed neighbours have fought two of their three wars over the territory.

India accuses Pakistan of training and arming the rebels in the portion of Kashmir it controls and sending them to the Indian side. Pakistan denies that. For years militant groups had struggled to recruit fighters from Indian Kashmir, forcing them to rely on Pakistan-based fighters, the officer said.

To maintain control, the Indian army has a massive military presence in its northernmost and only Muslim-majority state famed for its snow-capped mountains and fertile valleys.

The trend of homegrown fighters joining the militancy started in 2010 after a summer of unrest when 112 people were killed in clashes between police and protesters, according to a senior army officer. The decade before that had seen a lull in militancy, and numbers are still low compared with the 1990s.

With the Indian army stepping up patrols on the border fewer Pakistani fighters have been able to cross in, forcing militant groups to recruit local youth, the officer said.
 
Kashmiris join insurgency against India at highest rate in two decades
By Reuters
Published: February 24, 2015
843452-kashmir-1424783232-802-640x480.jpg

PHOTO: AFP

SRINAGAR: An insurgency in the Indian-held region of Kashmir is increasingly dependent on homegrown, educated fighters with the highest number of local youth joining in two decades, according to Indian army data seen on Tuesday.

The trend represents a new threat in the region where Muslim separatists have been fighting Indian forces since 1989. At least 70 young Kashmiris joined the insurgency in the last year, army records showed, with most joining the banned group Lashkar-e-Taiba, which was accused of carrying out attacks on the Indian city of Mumbai in 2008.

At least 14 of them have been killed, the army said. “Youth joining the militancy is disturbing,” Subrata Saha, the head of Indian army in Kashmir, said recently. “If educated youth are joining, it is more disturbing. It is certainly is a cause of concern for us.”

Two of the new recruits have doctorates and eight were post graduates, the army data showed.

Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since a war after independence from Britain in 1947. The nuclear-armed neighbours have fought two of their three wars over the territory.

India accuses Pakistan of training and arming the rebels in the portion of Kashmir it controls and sending them to the Indian side. Pakistan denies that. For years militant groups had struggled to recruit fighters from Indian Kashmir, forcing them to rely on Pakistan-based fighters, the officer said.

To maintain control, the Indian army has a massive military presence in its northernmost and only Muslim-majority state famed for its snow-capped mountains and fertile valleys.

The trend of homegrown fighters joining the militancy started in 2010 after a summer of unrest when 112 people were killed in clashes between police and protesters, according to a senior army officer. The decade before that had seen a lull in militancy, and numbers are still low compared with the 1990s.

With the Indian army stepping up patrols on the border fewer Pakistani fighters have been able to cross in, forcing militant groups to recruit local youth, the officer said.
Kashmir will be free sooner or later and war with India is in evitable
 
and what they will got ? or what pakistan will gain ? nothing but more blood more murders and more tension . this dirty war must be over now and solve this issue on tables . for hell sake its been 60 years of LOC how many inches these jihadis freed from india ?
 
Kashmir will be free sooner or later and war with India is in evitable


Now I got the meaning of that interview with BLA leader .

and what they will got ? or what pakistan will gain ? nothing but more blood more murders and more tension . this dirty war must be over now and solve this issue on tables . for hell sake its been 60 years of LOC how many inches these jihadis freed from india ?

Honestly if those Kashmiri Pandits and other minorities were involved in this insurgency we would have been in a difficult situation.
But that is not the case in there.Those youths are destroying their life .Soldiers who fight against them will get full incentives , privileges and on top will also get love and respect of 125 crore people.What would these kids yget from these madness ?Nothing except a name as a terrorist .
And this is a twisted tied rope .Any effort to unties it will csuse further tighting of situation.
 
Kashimiri issue will be solved when the natives, the kashmiri pundits will return to Kashmir and settled down there.
 
Kashmiris join insurgency against India at highest rate in two decades
By Reuters
Published: February 24, 2015
843452-kashmir-1424783232-802-640x480.jpg

PHOTO: AFP

SRINAGAR: An insurgency in the Indian-held region of Kashmir is increasingly dependent on homegrown, educated fighters with the highest number of local youth joining in two decades, according to Indian army data seen on Tuesday.

The trend represents a new threat in the region where Muslim separatists have been fighting Indian forces since 1989. At least 70 young Kashmiris joined the insurgency in the last year, army records showed, with most joining the banned group Lashkar-e-Taiba, which was accused of carrying out attacks on the Indian city of Mumbai in 2008.

At least 14 of them have been killed, the army said. “Youth joining the militancy is disturbing,” Subrata Saha, the head of Indian army in Kashmir, said recently. “If educated youth are joining, it is more disturbing. It is certainly is a cause of concern for us.”

Two of the new recruits have doctorates and eight were post graduates, the army data showed.

Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since a war after independence from Britain in 1947. The nuclear-armed neighbours have fought two of their three wars over the territory.

India accuses Pakistan of training and arming the rebels in the portion of Kashmir it controls and sending them to the Indian side. Pakistan denies that. For years militant groups had struggled to recruit fighters from Indian Kashmir, forcing them to rely on Pakistan-based fighters, the officer said.

To maintain control, the Indian army has a massive military presence in its northernmost and only Muslim-majority state famed for its snow-capped mountains and fertile valleys.

The trend of homegrown fighters joining the militancy started in 2010 after a summer of unrest when 112 people were killed in clashes between police and protesters, according to a senior army officer. The decade before that had seen a lull in militancy, and numbers are still low compared with the 1990s.

With the Indian army stepping up patrols on the border fewer Pakistani fighters have been able to cross in, forcing militant groups to recruit local youth, the officer said.

May god help them achieve their objectives

Kashmir issues must be solved according to the will of Kashmiri people

We ain't giving up that land simple as that
 
May god help them achieve their objectives



We ain't giving up that land simple as that

we never like Simple things ... We are Pakistani .. we always choose the complicated foes :D
 

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