What's new

Pulwama: Migrant Worker Shot Dead, Second Targeted Attack in 24 Hours in Kashmir

hatehs

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Mar 10, 2023
Messages
1,901
Reaction score
-2
Country
Pakistan
Location
Canada

Pulwama: Migrant Worker Shot Dead, Second Targeted Attack in 24 Hours in Kashmir​

The brick kiln worker from Uttar Pradesh’s Unnao district has become the first non-local casualty of targeted killings in Kashmir this year. The J&K Police said that Mukesh Kumar (45) was gunned down by terrorists.
Pulwama: Migrant Worker Shot Dead, Second Targeted Attack in 24 Hours in Kashmir

A group of migrant labourers getting instructions from a J&K police officer at their work site after one of their workers was killed in a targeted attack on Monday. Photo: The Wire.

Tumchi, Nowpora (Pulwama, J&K): With the Hindu festival of Karva Chauth two days away, Mukesh Kumar (45) planned to gift some hard-earned money to his wife who lives in a village in Uttar Pradesh along with their four small children.

A worker at a brick kiln in south Kashmir’s Pulwama district, Kumar was out on a bank visit on Monday, October 30, when he was shot dead in a targeted attack, the second such incident within 24 hours in Kashmir.

The circumstances of his killing remain shrouded in mystery, but locals, who spoke with The Wire, said that Kumar’s body was recovered in Pulwama’s Tumchi Nowpora village, near the ruins of a temple which appears to have been recently demarcated with a freshly painted chain-link fence coming up around the premises.
At the brick kiln in Tumchi Nowpora where Kumar worked as a fireman, concerns began to rise on Monday morning when he didn’t return even after a good deal of time had passed. When one of his coworkers phoned him, the tragedy of Kumar’s passing began to unravel.
According to sources, Kumar was accompanied by Ram Bikhari, another worker from Uttar Pradesh, when he left the brick kiln on Monday morning to visit the bank. “Bikhari has been taken away by police for questioning to know more details,” said a source, ruling out any foul play involving Bikhari.
The migrant worker from Uttar Pradesh’s Unnao district has become the first non-local casualty of targeted killings in Kashmir this year. The J&K Police said that Kumar was gunned down by terrorists and the area was cordoned off after the attack. However, no further details have been shared.
Kumar’s killing has sent a wave of grief and shock among more than three dozen migrant workers who live along with their families in the many shanty hutments made of raw bricks that have come up in rows inside the premises of the brick kiln.

PlayNext
Unmute

Current Time 0:12
/
Duration 4:03
Loaded: 22.99%



Fullscreen
Backward Skip 10sPlay VideoForward Skip 10s




“What purpose will his killing serve?” said Prem Shankar, a resident of Uttar Pradesh who also works at the brick kiln, “We are poor labourers. We come here so that our families don’t die of hunger. He was earning to feed his small children. He was not committing any crime.”
IMG_1395.jpeg

A migrant worker from Uttar Pradesh breaks down while speaking with media at a brick kiln in Pulwama district. Photo: The Wire.
According to independent estimates, around 10 lakh labourers come to Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh every year to work in real estate, agriculture and other services-driven sectors. The migration starts at the onset of spring and ends before the winter chill sets in.
“There are no jobs back home, so we come here to make some earnings. Even though the situation is not good, we get good wages here which is sufficient to keep us going. But we had never thought that something like this would happen,” said Ram Kumar, a worker at the brick kiln.
Rajesh Kumar, a manpower contractor who had facilitated the fireman’s job for Kumar, said that the slain worker’s uncle also works at a brick kiln in a nearby village. “We are in touch with his family. The body was taken by police for post-mortem examination after which preparations will be made to send it to his home,” he said.
The killing doesn’t seem to have daunted the spirits of other migrant workers who work at the kiln. A new fireman has replaced Kumar already and he is filling the fuel feed holes of the kiln with more carbon powder.
IMG_1403-1.jpg

A fireman adding fuel to the brick kiln in Pulwama after one of the workers there was killed in a suspected militant attack on Monday. Photo: The Wire.
“The work has to go on. If we fall behind in production, it will affect our earnings,” said the fireman, who didn’t want to be named.
The targeted attack in Pulwama was the second such incident in Kashmir within 24 hours. On Sunday, Masroor Ali Wani, a J&K Police inspector, was shot multiple times and critically injured in a targeted attack in the capital Srinagar when he was reportedly playing cricket.
The Resistance Front, which officials believe is an offshoot of Lashkar-e-Toiba, had claimed responsibility for the attack. Wani is battling for life at Srinagar’s Sher-e-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences and his condition remains critical, officials said.
Reacting to the attack on the police officer, the outgoing director general of J&K Police, Dilbag Singh, said the security forces “have to remain cautious as threats remain” in Jammu and Kashmir. “We can’t take things lightly,” DGP Singh, who is retiring on October 31, told reporters in Srinagar.
According to official data, nearly two dozen security personnel and 10 civilians have been killed in suspected militant attacks this year.
Security forces have also gunned down more than 70 militants in the Union territory this year with official estimates suggesting that more than 100 militants are active in Jammu and Kashmir, many of them believed to be foreigners.
Meanwhile, J&K’s Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha condemned the killing of the migrant worker, saying it “will not go unpunished”.
“I strongly condemn the despicable and cowardly terrorist attack in Pulwama. Heartfelt condolences to the family of Mukesh Kumar. We are firmly resolved to eliminate the terrorist menace that continues to receive encouragement and reinforcement from across the border,” he said in a message.

 
.
Their plans for the demographic elimination will not succeed
 
.
Kashmiri hate these people

All of India is divided and dividing even more

Outside of the propaganda bullshit, where they get a few pajeets surrounded by security to dance around and take pictures for propaganda purposes their is mass hatred amongst the populations

The kashmiri won't tolerate hindus in their communities

Just like in India the various communities are pulling apart
 
. . .
targeted attacks are on targeted people ( like merchants , buisness men etc ) , not simple workers.

feels more like bollywood drama imposing it on freedom fighters
 
.
In 1947, BIMARU chimps swarmed Kashmir and were given free license by the HINDU occupier of J&K to slaughter the Muslim inhabitants of the region. Nehru and Gandhi (lanat on both) buried this story because they feared it would weaken BHARAT's stance on Kashmir

1698761695499.png


As a result, BIMARU bandars like this dead occupier seem to have forgotten what their vile ancestors did and how they are perceived, but obviously, Kashmiris haven't forgotten. Maybe future BIMARU chimps should stick to their own states which are supposed to be flourishing under pajeet Vishwaguru instead of going to Kashmir!
 
. . . .
“What purpose will his killing serve?” said Prem Shankar, a resident of Uttar Pradesh who also works at the brick kiln, “We are poor labourers. We come here so that our families don’t die of hunger. He was earning to feed his small children. He was not committing any crime.

They were comitting crime by going to Kashmir.

Kashmir belongs to Pakistan.

So Hindus need to obtain the Pakistani visa before they go to Kashmir for work. Else they are illegal aliens and are fair targets.
 
. . . . .

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom