I am a Farmer. I support the farmers. Putt Jatt da kisaana naal khad da. Farming is our civilization, heritage & our way of Life. Meri jaat kisaani. Jai Kisaan.
Countries with the Most International Airports ✈️🌍🔥
🇺🇸 United States ~ 195
🇧🇷 Brazil ~ 36
🇨🇳 China ~ 32
🇲🇽 Mexico ~ 25
🇨🇦 Canada ~ 22
🇮🇳 India ~ 20
🇷🇺 Russia ~ 18
🇮🇩 Indonesia ~ 17
🇯🇵 Japan ~ 17
🇹🇷 Türkiye ~ 15
🇪🇸 Spain ~ 15
🇮🇹 Italy ~ 14
🇫🇷 France ~ 13
🇩🇪 Germany ~ 12
🇬🇧 United Kingdom ~ 11
🇹🇭 Thailand ~ 11
🇦🇺 Australia ~ 10
🇻🇳 Vietnam ~ 10
🇵🇭 Philippines ~ 10
🇦🇪 United Arab Emirates ~ 9
Source: ICAO / National Aviation Authorities
Bazı Brezilyalılara göre 🇧🇷
Geraldao’nun 1986’da Cruzeiro formasıyla attığı bu frikik…
Roberto Carlos’un Fransa’ya attığı o efsane frikikten bile daha iyi.
Does anyone have an answer to what former Punjab Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh himself said in his interviews?
He stated that he personally brought 8–10 Kharkus to then Prime Minister Chandra Shekhar because they wanted to surrender. They were assured they would only be interrogated, but according to Captain Amarinder Singh, they were later killed.
Those who oppose the Satluj ’95 movie should explain this. If these people had surrendered under official assurances, why were they allegedly killed afterward?
Do anti sikh journalists like Gupta and propagandists Puneet Sahni, or anti sikh politicians like Ravneet Bittu, have an answer to Captain Amarinder Singh’s own account?
There are longstanding allegations and serious accusations regarding the conduct of KPS Gill and security forces during the Punjab insurgency, including claims of extrajudicial killings. These remain a significant and deeply debated part of Punjab’s history, and many families continue to seek accountability.
If your lies are loud doesn't mean you can bury the truth.
- Daughter of bhai jaswant Singh ji khalra.
This is the record of your butcher grandfather and butcher Panjab police.
It wasn't just Punjab under K.P. Gill.
In 1991, UP police stopped a bus of Sikh pilgrims returning from Sri Hazur Sahib in Pilibhit. They were dragged out and ki!!ed in a fake encounter.
Years later, the Supreme Court sentenced 47 policemen to life imprisonment.
India seems to have a selective approach to recognizing victims. The Kashmir Files, which focuses on the suffering of Kashmiri Pandits, was widely promoted and even made tax-free in several states. Meanwhile, films like Punjab 95 and Satluj, which depict the experiences of Sikhs, have faced bans or restrictions.
This raises questions about whether all communities’ suffering is treated equally. In my view, the voices of some victims receive more recognition than others, and that is a debate worth having in any democracy.
Top 10 stories of the day
1. Jaswant Singh Khalra did not begin with a courtroom or a protest. He began with cremation records. By painstakingly examining municipal registers, the Punjab human rights activist uncovered evidence pointing to alleged illegal cremations during the militancy years, challenging the state's narrative at great personal risk.
This Long Read traces how his investigation into the "missing" reshaped India's human rights discourse and ultimately led to his own abduction and murder.
https://t.co/yosjrmadMc
Even conservative Australian media is calling out the absolute absurdity of Modi’s Melbourne rally.
Foreign journalists are literally asking why their own PM is hosting a domestic political campaign for a foreign leader on their soil.
The global rockstar image completely falls apart when the host nation's media starts pointing out that you're just using their country as a taxpayer-funded PR backdrop.
Embarrassing look for the nation.
"Nunca vou esquecer o passe de Leo Messi contra nós, um passe impossível. Van Dijk falou comigo depois da partida e me disse: "Messi não é normal... Há um segredo dentro dele... Como ele passou aquela bola?".
- Frenkie de Jong.
On November 15, 1995, then U.S. President Bill Clinton sent a letter to Congressman Gary A. Condit expressing concern over reports regarding the disappearance of Bhai Jaswant Singh Khalra, the Sikh human rights activist who had documented alleged illegal cremations and enforced disappearances in Punjab.
In the letter, Clinton stated that the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi had already raised the matter with Indian government agencies and that U.S. Ambassador Frank Wisner had discussed the issue with senior Indian officials. He also said the United States would continue its efforts to follow up on the case.
The letter is significant because it shows that Khalra’s disappearance had attracted international attention at the highest political level, becoming a matter of concern not only within India but also for foreign governments and human rights advocates.
Bhai Jaswant Singh Khalra was later found to have been abducted and killed. In subsequent legal proceedings, several Punjab Police officials were convicted for their roles in his abduction and murder. His work documenting alleged human rights violations in Punjab continues to be widely discussed and debated today.
A film depicting the life of a Sikh human rights activist has ignited a political row in India after it was pulled from a streaming platform https://t.co/h3qgq70MBe
SFJ General Counsel Gurpatwant Singh Pannun to WSJ on Bishnoi-Brar Indictment in US:
“Lawrence Bishnoi is merely the proxy finger pulling the trigger.” SFJ General Counsel Pannun.
“How does a gangster incarcerated inside a maximum-security Indian prison run a global cross-border assassination syndicate?” said a statement issued by a U.S.-based group called Sikhs for Justice that advocates on behalf of Sikhs in India and for a Sikh homeland.
https://t.co/4LkuRI0iKf
Bolstering these suspicions is a separate case in the U.S. in which federal prosecutors charged an Indian government official with planning a hit on an ally of the late Nijjar—the founder and counsel at Sikhs for Justice. Both alleged plots unfolded in June 2023, around the time Modi was making a state visit to Washington.
In the second case, filed in late 2023, the U.S. said a senior field officer with India’s spy agency sent an operative to look for a hit man in New York, only to see the plot foiled when the operative unwittingly hired an undercover U.S. drug enforcement agent. India said it responded to U.S. concerns by opening an inquiry into that alleged plot.