negligible ST SC OBC, wow! guess u conducted a census by urself and came up with these stats. also, what makes financially struggling kashmiri aspirants ineligible for EWS? anyone who fulfills the pre requisite for obtaining EWS can get one. stop misleading people.
173 seats are reserved and just 115 are open for everyone. Not just that, Kashmiris form a population of around 8 million with negligible percentage of ST+SC+OBC. So 116 out of the 288 posts, more than the open seats, are already out of bounds for Kashmiris. Even most poor Kashmiris fail to come under the criteria of EWS despite their tough financial situation.
Reservation ka samajh aata hai...what is the point of whining about over qualification? does the eligibility criteria deprives only OM students of this job opportunity or every such person who has UG, PG irrespective of the category he or she belongs to?
288 vacancies.
Open Merit can compete for only 115.
This is the reality of recruitment in Jammu & Kashmir.
But here’s the bigger irony. An Open Merit candidate suffers a double whammy.
First, They belong to the General category so they are left to compete for just 115 out of 288 posts.
Second, If they work hard, graduate or earn a higher qualification, they become ineligible because this recruitment allows only candidates with qualifications up to 10+2.
So what exactly is the message to our youth? Study hard, but not too hard. Dream big, but not too big.
A General category student is punished twice, first by shrinking opportunities and then by being overqualified for the few opportunities that remain. We are raising a generation that is penalized both for believing in merit and for pursuing higher education.
How do you expect the youth to have hope when every path leads to a dead end?
krehin...ugly people...since when we started calling Allah's creation ugly? HE SWT created everyone in this universe with utmost perfection using HIS ultimate wisdom. May Allah guide as all towards righteous path.
Two Muslim men pulled an elderly couple and their grandson from a burning house in Leeds last Friday.
You probably didn’t hear about it.
Mohsin Qayyum. 22.
Mohammed Yusuf Iqbal. 20.
Both from Bradford.
They drove past the garden. They saw the fire. They ran straight in.
Sheila Robinson, the grandmother who was trapped inside, posted on social media:
"My family and I will be forever grateful to these young men."
Her granddaughter Kayla wrote:
"Drove past the garden, seen it, and ran straight in and made sure everyone was okay without a second thought."
Everyone got out. The house can be replaced. The family is alive.
Every outlet that covered it called them heroes.
They deserved every word.
But not one headline told you they were Muslim men.
We have seen this before.
Two weeks ago, a teacher was stabbed in the neck protecting his pupils from a knife in his Manchester classroom.
Maysum Abdullah. 27. Science teacher.
LBC named him a hero. So did the Independent, the Manchester Evening News, the Mirror, the Sun.
He ran towards the blade.
A hero in every paper. A Muslim man in none of them.
This is the pattern.
When a Muslim name appears in a crime, the faith leads the headline.
When a Muslim name appears in a rescue, it vanishes from the page.
Now look at who that erasure clears the path for.
Bradford, the same district these men come from, is now led by Reform as its largest party.
One of their candidates, Daniel Devaney, topped the poll in his ward after writing on Facebook that Muslims were "pure scum" and that he wanted to "blast [them] off the face of the earth."
He was not deselected. He was not suspended. He was elected.
They are loud about our religion when they want to call it a threat.
They are silent when that same religion sends two young men running into a fire.
The book they want to criticise is the same book that commands us to save a life.
"Whoever saves one life, it is as if he had saved all of mankind."
— Qur'an 5:32
Qayyum and Iqbal lived that verse on a Friday in Leeds.
Abdullah lived it in a Manchester classroom.
And the headlines recorded the act, but erased the faith that drove it.
When we are the suspect, our religion is the whole story.
When we are the rescuer, it is not worth a line.
Their names are Maysum Abdullah, Mohsin Qayyum, and Mohammed Yusuf Iqbal.
Muslim men.
Say both.
Sources first comment.
Report: https://t.co/D9amGp2yxO
Keep us alive: https://t.co/Z8H0Flg44Y
Substack: https://t.co/9x6sqmwMge
IG: @islamophobiauk
Passenger next to my seat spent the whole 8 hour train journey eating and throwing all the leftovers under the seat. Dustbin was right outside. Later, when everyone was trying to sleep, he started playing videos loudly.
Wanted to teach him a lesson in civic sense, but I stopped myself because getting home safely is more important than teaching a random stranger morality. I have a family, goals, and plans for the future. You need to be practical. You can't change the whole country. If you confront these people, they won't learn or acknowledge their mistake. Instead, they'll start a fight and can turn violent.
Mumbai local train incident is one example. Man asked someone to close the door because of the rain and ended up losing his life to a person carrying a knife.
Reality is, civic sense can only be taught where people are willing to listen, in a moral society. Smartest choice is to stay invisible, earn more and build a life where you move up the economic ladder so you and your family can have safer spaces to avoid such people.