Dear National & International media,
This is Manipur right now at 10 PM IST (Friday, 17th April today). Is Manipur even a part of India? Why are you silent on Manipur? Wake up! No Justice, No Rest.
#HappeningNow
@JioCare@Dharmendra_2026 Dharmendra Bhai, I am waiting since April 2024 for my refunds. Have paid my times for Airfiber Installation. Aaj Tak only getting assurances. Agar aapko mil jaaye to Zaroor bata dena humko bhi. Aapke leye he sahi Khush hi lenge.
There was a time in Ladakh when in Govt. Schools students studied in Urdu till Class 8, yet faced Class 10 board exams in English. Enrollment was high, but only 3-5% passed. Even Class 8 pass candidates were recruited as teachers, and many transfers from Kashmir treated Ladakh as a punishment posting.
Generations suffered under a broken system.
In July 2000, Ladakh marked "Education Failure Day." It was a public admission that the system had collapsed.
Seeing this injustice, Sonam Wangchuk vowed to change it. He reminded people that citizens must demand their rights when systems fail them, and he helped transform Ladakh's education landscape through SECMOL.
Today, the same man who revolutionized Ladakh's education stands behind bars, labeled "anti-nationa” without proof.
Source : jullay_unfiltered IG
FEAR IS NOT PEACE
The #GovernmentOfIndia’s appointees #SGI and #ASGI have been claiming in the #SupremeCourtofIndia that #Ladakh is “peaceful” after @Wangchuk66’s detention. This cannot be farther from the Truth.
First of all, it is a Logical Fallacy: Correlation ≠ Causation.
Secondly, it was not Peace that followed- it was dread that was cultivated: curfew and internet blackout was enforced for weeks after Sept 24, 100+ youth jailed for months (some still inside), 4 young men shot dead heartlessly under Government orders by CRPF, social media posts attract police summons and hours of interrogation till date.
The dreaded silence of the graveyard is not equal to sacred peace of the temple that Ladakh was known for!
#satyamevajayate
#releaseSonamWangchuknow
#EnoughIsEnough
#Dontmislead
Elon , you’re retweeting something that, on paper, sounds accurate, but in reality is highly misleading.
Yes, Europeans were enslaved in North Africa between the 16th and 19th centuries. That is historically documented. Estimates often place the number at roughly 1 to 1.25 million over several centuries. That should not be erased.
But context matters.
The transatlantic slave trade involved the forced transport of approximately 12 to 13 million Africans. Of those, roughly 10 to 11 million survived the Middle Passage and arrived in the Americas. Between 1 and 2 million died during the ocean crossing alone. Millions more died during raids, forced marches to the coast, imprisonment in holding forts, and other stages of capture and transit.
So when we discuss “brought” versus “taken,” precision matters. Africans were not immigrants. They were captured, commodified, and transported in a system with catastrophic mortality before and during shipment.
Scale is one distinction.
Permanence is another.
In the Americas, slavery became racialized and hereditary chattel slavery. Enslaved Africans and their descendants were legally defined as property for life. Their status passed automatically to their children. It became a permanent, race-based caste system embedded in law. There was no built-in expectation of ransom, no structural pathway back home, and no generational reset. Once transported across the Atlantic, for nearly all, it was a final and permanent severance.
By contrast, while European captives in North Africa endured brutal conditions, many were ransomed, exchanged, or eventually freed. Their enslavement was not generally codified as a hereditary racial status automatically imposed on their descendants for generations. It was not constructed as a permanent, biologically inherited legal condition.
Slavery in any form is wrong. That is not in dispute.
But collapsing these systems into a numerical comparison without discussing scale, mortality, heredity, and structural permanence distorts history. One was a large-scale, transoceanic, racialized, hereditary labor system foundational to New World economies. The other, while violent and real, operated under different legal and structural conditions.
Accuracy requires more than a headline comparison. It requires context.
People ask what gives me the strength to keep going through the fight around @Wangchuk66’s illegal detention. It is this:
1. An unshakable faith that nothing happens to us without a purpose - that every experience including painful ones carry the quiet hand of the Divine
2. Sri Krishna’s words to Arjuna: when life places us in a battle we never chose, we accept it and act - using our minds for strategy, hearts for courage, hands for skill with the soul turned towards the Divine, without clinging to outcomes.
3. I often return to Roosevelt’s Man in the Arena-because i believe it is better to be bruised and striving than safe and silent!
#satyamevajayate
#truesanatanadharma
#freesonamwangchuknow