What's new

Sleepy village baffled by link to captured terrorist

i will say bring him in pakistan under securty of ROW and ISI for one day and he has to show were is his home in pakistan

he make us confuse
 
.
Faridkot is also in Indian Punjab ;)

Gunmen spoke Hindi with strong Punjabi, north-Indian accent

MUMBAI, Nov 30: The militants waited in the shadows for the police van to pass and when it slowed down in the narrow road, they sprayed it with gunfire.

They opened the doors and dumped five slumped officers’ bodies into the streets, then piled into the van. What they did not know was that two officers, including constable Arun Jadhav, were in the backseat, alive.

Jadhav was then taken on a chilling 10-minute ride through the dark streets of Mumbai with two of the gunmen who had launched a siege that would last for 60 more hours and leave at least 174 people dead.

While one of the men drove the van, another pointed his rifle out of the window and fired on a crowd milling outside a cinema. Later, he threw a grenade outside a state government building.

The young gunmen said little during the harrowing drive, but spoke Hindi with a strong Punjabi, north-Indian accent.
 
. .
Someone from Faridkot is a fluent English speaker?

And he says Julm and Jiyadati?

I wonder if he can read Urdu. He speaks fluent English so I assume he's educated and should have no problems reading or writing in Urdu.
 
.
Whf...they do that? :eek: :what: :confused:

To ensure terrorists trained by RAW follow the script exactly and are able under mild torture to implicate both Pakistan and Bangladesh. If they forget they lose their goolies .....
 
.
Anyone seen that happening?

Why don't you guys prove it?
 
.
It has always troubled me about the American press the way they quote "facts" from anonymous sources without giving any reasons why the information should be credible. Then, of course, the press never follows up later when the info proves wrong to tell its readers who gave them the erroneous information and why. I have only witnessed three or four news stories with my own eyes, as they happened. In all cases, when I later read the press reports about the events I had seen myself, I was amazed at the distorted picture and explanations that were given to readers. I think that journalists should be brought to task for their false reports when they are based on secret sources of information. I don't know how. Perhaps some "media watch" that exposes the worst perpetrators. Unfortunately, the press protects it own above all else!
 
Last edited:
.
Hunting Mumbai militant's roots

The one known surviving militant behind last week's terrible attacks in Mumbai is reported to have come from the Pakistani village of Faridkot. The BBC's Syed Shoaib Hasan travelled there to speak to some of the villagers.

Faridkot villagers do not want to be linked to the Mumbai attacks

"We're tired of being hounded by people from the media," says Bilal, a Faridkot villager. "They have been coming here every day since the news broke."

He is referring to reports in the international media, following the terror attacks in Mumbai, which said the only surviving militant comes from Faridkot in the province of Punjab.

The reports, which have led to an outcry in India, said the gunman is a Pakistani national variously named as Ajmal Amir Qasab or Kasav.

The information came from interrogation of the gunman, the reports added.

Fertile recruiting ground

They also said that Qasab is a 21-year-old and a fluent English speaker.

That description seems to be at odds with the general population in the village he is said to hail from.

Confusingly, there are three villages by the name of Faridkot in this part of southern Punjab. A BBC Urdu service colleague visited two of them and found no one who knew of the man currently in Indian detention.

I visited a third Faridkot, about 50km (31 miles) from Multan on the road to Khanewal.

It is an archetypal Punjabi village - a dusty enclave of mud and stone buildings of about 4,000 people.

We are all hardworking, honest people here

Farmer Mohammad Ilyas Khan

Almost all of the villagers are semi-literate farmers and labourers. They are surrounded by green fields and brimming canals.

Nearby Multan - known as city of the saints - is one of the oldest cities in the world and the hometown of Pakistan's current prime minister and foreign minister.

Located close to the Indian border, the city also houses the headquarters of the Wifaq-ul-Madaris (association of religious schools), which operates establishments throughout Pakistan.

Khanewal is another, smaller city in southern Punjab, an area which since the partition of India has long been known for its strong religious sentiments and staunchly anti-Indian views.

It is also one of Pakistan's most under-developed and poverty stricken areas.

Multan and its adjoining districts have served as a fertile recruitment ground for militant organisations fighting in Kashmir and Afghanistan.

In particular, hundreds of young men joined the Lashkar-e-Toiba and the Jaish-e-Mohammad groups to fight Indian forces in Kashmir.

'Indian propaganda'

But just a week ago, this Faridkot was just another obscure village in Pakistan's rural landscape. Now, question marks over the identity of Mumbai's attackers has shaken it out of its rustic existence.

CAPTURED GUNMAN

Suspect named as Azam Amir Qasab
21 years old, fluent English speaker
Told police he is from Faridkot village, in Pakistan's Punjab province
Said the attackers took orders from handlers in Pakistan

School is out, and dozens of girls and boys line the broken streets as we venture deep into the village.

A local and his friends are willing to talk, although they are a little jaded by the questions.

"We are all hardworking, honest people here," says Mohammad Ilyas Khan, a local farmer.

"People in the village rarely leave and that is only for occasional work or business trips."

Ilyas Khan adds that no-one from the village has been to India, and he does not know of anyone who has been a member of a militant organisation.

"There were three Ajmals in the village, and none of them fits the description of the man the media has named," he explains.

"One Ajmal worked in Faisalabad (another city in the Punjab) and was killed in an accident. The other two are young men who live in the village. One works as a waiter and the other is employed in a factory."

Qamar-uz-Zaman, another villager, says the men have been recently questioned by Pakistani security agencies.

Faridkot residents fear for the future if war with India breaks out
"Obviously, it was a serious accusation and the officials came here to check things out," he said. "They checked the ID cards of both the men and their activities."

Evidently, the security personnel were satisfied by the answers they received as no arrests or detentions have taken place so far.

But the villagers are quite perturbed by this recent turn of events, and vehemently denounce what they call "Indian propaganda".

"No man from our village has ever been involved in any such activity," one says. "It is not fair that so many people have been disturbed by these false accusations."

Another says: "We are worried now because India is turning belligerent and is threatening to attack. We are scared of what can happen if war breaks out.

"The loss will not be just of Faridkot, or Khanewal. It will be for all of Pakistan."
 
.
It is funny that people are taking media news at its face value and going to the extent of actually going to Faridkot to verify. What is this is done to confuse the enemy as part of psy-ops propaganda. I don't think investigating agencies will give away such crucial information so easily.
 
.
It is funny that people are taking media news at its face value and going to the extent of actually going to Faridkot to verify. What is this is done to confuse the enemy as part of psy-ops propaganda. I don't think investigating agencies will give away such crucial information so easily.

Well, the BBC has sent its reporters to Faridkot, and that's what they say. The Indian media are reporting, and partly making up their side of the stories.

Remember the excrement is coming out of India, not Pakistan.

And I'm still interested in the Kalava that was worn.
 
.
Whole thread makes no sense the terrorist is still alive his claim is being verified hence there was a request to pakistan on cooperation on ground level.
 
.
Whole thread makes no sense the terrorist is still alive his claim is being verified hence there was a request to pakistan on cooperation on ground level.

What claims should be taken as true?
This is one that has been reported widely by all Indian news outlets since the day he was captured.

If this is not true, what is, and why should any other claim emanating from India be believed?
 
.
Well, the BBC has sent its reporters to Faridkot, and that's what they say. The Indian media are reporting, and partly making up their side of the stories.

Remember the excrement is coming out of India, not Pakistan.

And I'm still interested in the Kalava that was worn.

You still didn't get my point. I'm saying that, all this faridkot thing might be a disinformation to confuse the enemy, a psy-ops propaganda. Actual location of that guy must have been kept secret, because there was no official statement from the GoI regarding this guy or faridkot.
 
.
What claims should be taken as true?
This is one that has been reported widely by all Indian news outlets since the day he was captured.

If this is not true, what is, and why should any other claim emanating from India be believed?

I agree on the report but Terrorists claims still needs to be verified on grounds. The advantage is he is alive.
 
.
You still didn't get my point. I'm saying that, all this faridkot thing might be a disinformation to confuse the enemy, a psy-ops propaganda. Actual location of that guy must have been kept secret, because there was no official statement from the GoI regarding this guy or faridkot.

If this is true, this doesn't explain how irresponsible the Indian media, the Indian release info has been. There's been statements all the terrorists were from Pakistan. Yes, the captured terrorist might be spreading disinformation, or saying what his interrogators want to here. He is only 19 or so. Sooner or later he'll be tracked down. If it isn't Faridkot, after all that's been said, the media, the police, the military, the politicians in India are going to look pretty stupid, and lose credibility on an international scale. All the terrorist's claims can be verified by reporters regarding Pakistan. That's why the Indian media is making a fool of itself currently.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom