@ChuranMistri@lg_ladakh@ArvindKejriwal@Wangchuk66 Ladakh supports Wangchuk’s stand on protecting Ladakh’s land, identity and future. You may disagree politically, but portraying one of Ladakh’s most globally respected voices as a criminal only reflects intolerance toward anyone speaking independently for Ladakh’s interests.
@Tsering_gaphel Fully support this. For Ladakh, air travel is a necessity, not a luxury. Why are there no fare caps during peak student & medical travel seasons? Will authorities introduce concessions for students and emergency patients? Connectivity to remote regions must remain affordable.
@SnyingThup@KamzanRadyrov@lg_ladakh Bon came from Zhangzhung. Islam came from Arabia. Buddhism came from India. By that logic, Ladakh has no identity because nothing “started” here. Identity is shaped by centuries of rooted existence. After 2,500 years, Buddhism in Ladakh is not an “import”, it is home. #justPOV
@SnyingThup@KamzanRadyrov@lg_ladakh That’s exactly the point, despite all the grievances you mention, many in Kargil still emotionally and politically prefer attachment to Kashmir over a separate Ladakhi identity. Leh’s experience was different, which is why the UT demand survived for generations there.
@SnyingThup@KamzanRadyrov@lg_ladakh So decades of political neglect under Kashmir governance were acceptable, but every current issue suddenly makes the entire UT demand a “blunder”? Criticising today’s system is valid, but pretending the old arrangement worked well for Ladakh ignores why the UT movement existed.
@SnyingThup@KamzanRadyrov@lg_ladakh I respect Ka Lakrook because he speaks honestly, but even he understands Ladakh’s political history is more complex than slogans. Leh’s UT demand was real, and today’s demand for legislative safeguards is equally real. One does not cancel the other.
@SnyingThup@KamzanRadyrov@lg_ladakh Leh struggled for dignity, representation and separation from decades of political neglect under J&K, not for any party.
Govts change, but that struggle existed long before your current political labels.
Leh’s struggle still seems difficult for you to honestly acknowledge.
@KamzanRadyrov@SnyingThup@lg_ladakh Nobody even mentioned government in the last post. It was simply about preserving Ladakh’s native architectural identity. Turning every cultural discussion into religious victimhood only proves the insecurity, not discrimination.
@KamzanRadyrov@SnyingThup@lg_ladakh Celebrating Buddhist heritage in Ladakh isn’t an attack on Muslims. Every community’s culture deserves space and recognition without turning it into victimhood or alienation.