@talk2anuradha@BhagwaanUvacha That is a perfectly legitimate demand - performance liability is a basic right we must have. If we paid taxes, the , we need to expect quality of infrastructure. But then the govt also will ask us to pay more taxes - that is good, let the cycle of virtuous accountability start
Abhijeet is right. I spoke to the sources within the system, and they confirmed that Dipke had Matar Paneer for lunch yesterday and Dal Makhani for dinner.
Ghatkopar JIHAD
8 Muslims "Gangsters" found TRAPPING 16/17 year Old Hindu Young Girls. KIDNAP & take them to a "Villa" at Lonavala, after having Physical Relations starts Blackmailing them.
FIR registered at Ghatkopar West Mumbai Police Station
Mohammad (Age 22), Niihal (age 22 ) Fatima....are under investigation
In last 4 months 3 such Ghatkopar JIHAD cases exposed
@GuntherEagleman@rvaidya2000 That is the case everywhere in the world, from India (the largest democratic experiment on planet earth) to USA. If any idiot in USA needs proof of how sabotage happens, just look at India and how leftists sabotaged the social fabric by using islamists to do their bidding.
Yesterday, I was having a discussion about religion with a Muslim girl. During the conversation, I asked for her opinion on Nikah Halala. Without any hesitation, she said that she supports the practice.
I asked, "Why?"
She replied, "Because of this practice, many men will be afraid to divorce their wives. They will know what happens afterward, so they will think twice before giving a divorce."
I then asked, "But if the decision to divorce is made by the man, why does the woman have to bear the burden and go through the process of Halala? Why doesn't the man face the direct consequences instead?"
She said, "A man's greatest honor is his wife. When he sees his wife with another man, he will realize his mistake deeply. That fear will stop him from divorcing her."
Finally, I asked her, "If such a situation ever arose in your own life, would you still support Halala?"
Without any hesitation, she replied, "Yes. I would still support it, because only then would my husband realize his mistake."
They are so blinded by religion that they even justify the injustice and exploitation against themselves.
@ANI The most horrid part of this letter is it holds India and Pakistan equally responsible. It is Pakistan state that continually resorts to terrorism and India merely responds(previous governments didn’t even do that). If at all, these guys should be writing only to Pakistan!
What Bolton and other ex-U.S. officials will not reveal is that the Pakistan-based, A.Q. Khan-led global nuclear-smuggling network operated with impunity for years because Washington deliberately turned a blind eye.
The U.S. was not averse to the idea of Pakistan developing a nuclear-weapons capability to balance India. Former Netherlands Prime Minister Ruud Lubbers revealed in 2005 that Dutch authorities wanted to arrest Khan in 1975 and again in 1986 but that on each occasion the CIA advised against taking such action. https://t.co/jZNpgD8Z6P
@MattooShashank@suhasinih Only the people who made it feel democracy is better; those that didn’t get opportunity or infrastructure feel a China style system is better where there is certainty and confidence in what one is supposed to do
After Pearl Harbour on 7 th December 1941 the US persevered till they obtained the unconditional surrender of Japan in 1945.
Post 9/11 the US chased the Al Qaeda and the Taliban to the gates of hell and back for twenty years including neutralising Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad in Pakistan in 2011 .
From 2003 -13 the House of Saud fought a secret war inside Saudi Arabia against the Al Qaeda before driving the remnants to Yemen and other places in the Middle East .
From 1999-2009 Russia fought a brutal campaign against Chechen separatists before finally triumphing.
The fight against terror requires firmness and steadfastness and the national resolve to stay the course.
How can people forget the Baisaran ( Pahalgam ) Massacre within 14 months ?
And the countless similar atrocities perpetrated over the past four decades that were state sponsored by Pakistan.
To some folks it seems that the misty eyed romanticism of a dialogue with Pakistan is far more important than the lives of innocent Indian Tourists who were identified on the basis of their faith and slaughtered in cold blood by terrorists who came from Pakistan.
Which is that invisible hand that is incentivising the push for a pseudo normalisation with Pakistan without any verifiable guarantees that Pakistan will dismantle the Military- Jehadi Complex ( MJC) they have spawned over the past 55 years?
https://t.co/gFVJwhsjR6
@jgopikrishnan70 Infact, we should merge all cards into one and replace the old cards. In Singapore / HK, they have 1 card for citizenship, identity, tax, social benefits, voting etc. Jist maintain the database so comprehensive that it has all information about every person.
@jgopikrishnan70 Sir, If we didn’t have it so far, that’s not a bash of honour; it means we need to fix our messy system at least now. Why are you so agitated about it? Compulsively opposing what should have been done decades ago? Evry serious country has some form of unique citizen identity card
Her name was Saraswathi Rajamani.
She was born in 1927 in Rangoon, into one of the wealthiest Indian families in Burma. Her father owned a gold mine. She grew up in a mansion, slept on golden beds, and had newspapers and a radio at a time when few people did.
When she was about ten years old, Mahatma Gandhi visited her family’s home. Seeing her practising with a gun, he asked why she needed it. She replied that she wanted to shoot the British. The answer startled him.
At sixteen, she heard Subhas Chandra Bose speak in Rangoon. He called upon Indians to give their wealth and, if necessary, their blood for India’s freedom.
She walked up and donated all her gold and diamond jewellery to the Indian National Army.
Bose was astonished when he learned both the value of the donation and the age of the girl who had made it. He renamed her Saraswathi, saying she possessed a wisdom beyond her years.
She wanted to fight.
Instead, Bose recruited her into the INA’s intelligence network.
For nearly two years, she cut her hair short, dressed as a boy called Mani, and worked inside British military camps as a servant. She carried messages, gathered intelligence, and secretly passed it to the INA.
When one of her fellow women spies was captured, Saraswathi entered the British camp disguised as a dancer, drugged the guards, and rescued her.
As they escaped, she was shot in the leg.
She survived, but walked with a limp for the rest of her life.
She called it her medal.
When the war ended, the INA was dissolved. Her family had given away nearly everything they owned in support of the freedom movement.
They returned to India with almost nothing.
The girl who had once grown up in one of Rangoon’s richest homes spent her later years in a small rented room in Chennai, surrounded by photographs of Netaji.
When the 2004 tsunami struck, she donated her freedom fighter’s pension to the relief fund.
She died in 2018.
One of the youngest spies of the Indian National Army spent her final years in quiet obscurity, remembered by few, despite giving both her wealth and her youth to India’s freedom.
Follow for stories India deserves to remember.
She is not an Indian. She is a Muslim stranded in india. Now going back to the homeland her forefathers created.
No indian would have agreed to that map.
India just did something the rest of the world hasn't. On June 26 at Kalpakkam, we switched on the world's first plant that makes hydrogen from nuclear heat. Not electricity. Heat. Built at home. Here's why that's a bigger deal than it sounds
While we often praise Indira Gandhi for the 1971 war, we should certainly read the statement made in the Pakistani parliament by Asif Ali Zardari—the husband of Benazir Bhutto.
This was a time when over 90,000 Pakistani soldiers were in Indian custody, and the Pakistan Army had surrendered. The Indian Army had integrated the Tharparkar district of Sindh into India—declaring it a new district of Gujarat—and the Tricolour had been hoisted over the parliament building in Muzaffarabad.
When Zulfikar Ali Bhutto arrived to sign the Simla Agreement with Indira Gandhi, he brought his daughter, Benazir Bhutto, along with him.
Indira Gandhi placed a condition before Zulfikar Ali Bhutto: if he wanted his 93,000 soldiers back, he would have to hand over Kashmir to India. Bhutto refused, telling her that he would not give up Kashmir, nor would he sign any such agreement; he told her to keep the 93,000 soldiers herself.
Indira Gandhi had never imagined that Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was an even shrewder player than she was. He knew how to turn a military defeat at the border into a victory at the negotiating table.
Indira Gandhi found herself in a very tight spot.
Both Pupul Jayakar and Kuldip Nayar have written in their books that Indira Gandhi missed a crucial opportunity; neither she nor her advisors possessed the diplomatic acumen required to handle such a situation.
Under the Geneva Convention, if a country captures prisoners of war, it is obligated to fully uphold their dignity. That evening at the hotel, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto said to his daughter, Benazir Bhutto, "India's back has been broken in this war; we fought with great valor. We have dealt a severe blow to India's economy. India was already burdened by Bangladeshi refugees; how will it now sustain 93,000 Pakistani soldiers? And if India wants to settle these 93,000 Pakistani soldiers there, let it do so—what use would we have for such cowardly soldiers anyway? I have reduced Indira Gandhi to a pathetic state."
And in the end, Indira Gandhi was reduced to a meek, cowering figure.
Indira Gandhi handed over Kashmir to Pakistan, returned the 93,000 soldiers, and abandoned 56 of her own soldiers to die in Pakistani prisons. Furthermore, eight months later—driven by a desire for the Nobel Prize—she returned the Tharparkar district (which had been incorporated into the Indian state of Gujarat) to Pakistan, even though 98% of Tharparkar's population at the time was Hindu.
In the book he wrote after retiring, the Army Chief at the time of the Shimla Agreement stated, "We won this war on the battlefield, but politicians defeated India at the negotiating table—and that politician was Indira Gandhi."
This is the truth about the so-called 'Iron Lady'...
Prafulla Dash
@MRVChennai@sumanthraman that is why we need NRC. For 80 years successive governments neglected the issue of citizenship cards - now it is beginning to happen. CAA -> SIR -> WB & Assam Gov’ts -> now NRC is inevitable.