Her name was Neha Shoree.
She was a drug inspector in Punjab.
In 2009, while posted in Ropar, she raided a chemist shop run by a man named Balwinder Singh.
During the inspection, she found dozens of types of tablets commonly misused by drug addicts. According to official records, he could not produce the required documents for them.
She cancelled his licence.
Then she moved on and continued doing her job.
By 2016, Neha Shoree had become the zonal licensing authority at a government drug laboratory in Kharar, near Mohali.
She was thirty six years old.
She had a young daughter at home. Her father was a retired Army captain who had fought in the 1971 war.
The man whose licence she had cancelled never forgot what had happened.
On the morning of March 29, 2019, Balwinder Singh walked into her office in Kharar carrying a licensed revolver.
He shot her inside her workplace.
Neha Shoree was rushed towards a hospital but died on the way.
The gunman then turned the weapon on himself and died soon afterwards.
According to the police, she had been due to testify against him in court.
Ten years had passed since the raid.
Ten years after she enforced the law, he came back for revenge.
Her father later said that his daughter had lived under pressure for years because of her work, but she never compromised and never backed down.
She was killed for doing exactly what the job had asked her to do.
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After 36 long years of exile, an elderly Kashmiri Pandit woman returned to her ancestral home in Danew, Bogund, Kulgam.
The moment she stepped into her courtyard, time seemed to stand still. She bent down, touched the soil she had been separated from for decades, and kissed the old walnut tree that had silently witnessed her childhood, her memories, and her absence.
Overcome with emotion, she broke down in tears. She knelt before the tree, folded her hands in prayer, and embraced it as if she were reuniting with a beloved family member lost to time.
With a trembling voice, she whispered in Kashmiri:
“Che cheya b’e yaad?”
(“Do you remember me?”)
A question not just to a tree, but to a home, a homeland, and a lifetime of memories left behind.
One of the most heart-wrenching scenes you will ever witness, a reminder that exile may separate people from their homes, but never from their roots.
36+ years of forced exodus from homeland Kashmir. Hope the world remembers the genocide and ethnic cleansing against Hindus of Kashmir.
After Australia, now UK has recognised and unveiled Sushruta statute in Royal Surgeon Society, Edinburgh.
Waiting for India to incorporate in its text books and unveil his statue in all Medical Universities in India.
@tathvamasi6 WELL NO. FIRST BEFORE ANYONE OUR SICKULAR HINDUS WILL START SHOUTING AT THE TOP OF THEIR LUNGS WHY WE SHOULDNT DO IT?!!! OPPOSITION WILL COME UP WHATEVER EXCUSE TO STOP IF AT ALL THE CURRENT GOVT. WILL TAKE IT UP!
🇮🇳🔥 She was 73 years old.
The British Empire had guns.
She had a flag.
That was enough.
Matangini Hazra was not a queen, a military commander, or a famous political leader. She was an ordinary village woman from Bengal who chose to do something extraordinary.
Born into poverty, married young, and widowed early, life had already given her more hardship than most people could endure. Yet instead of surrendering to circumstances, she dedicated herself to India's freedom struggle.
Then came 1942.
The Quit India Movement had ignited a wave of resistance across the country. While many people her age would have chosen safety, Matangini stepped forward.
On 29 September 1942, she led thousands of protesters toward the police station in Tamluk, carrying the Indian tricolour at the front of the procession.
The British ordered the crowd to stop.
They refused.
Then came the gunfire.
The first bullet struck her.
She kept moving.
The second bullet hit.
She tightened her grip on the flag and continued forward.
As chaos erupted around her, one voice rose above the noise.
"Vande Mataram."
Then came the third bullet.
It was fatal.
But even as she fell, she refused to let the tricolour touch the ground.
With her final breaths, she continued chanting "Vande Mataram," holding the flag high until the very end.
She carried no weapon.
She commanded no army.
She possessed no power except courage.
And sometimes, courage is enough to change history.
Matangini Hazra never saw the dawn of an independent India.
But she helped make that dawn possible.
Her story reminds us that patriotism is not measured by age, strength, wealth, or status.
It is measured by what you are willing to sacrifice for a cause greater than yourself.
Some people are remembered.
Some become immortal.
🇮🇳❤️
#MatanginiHazra #FreedomStruggle #QuitIndiaMovement #VandeMataram #IndianHistory #UnsungHeroes #WomenInHistory #IndiaProud #Patriotism #InspiringIndia 🇮🇳🔥
I’m part of the so-called ‘genocide-facing minority’ in India and nobody bothered to tell me, Madam @IlhanMN
I work. I write. I speak my mind, meet people, celebrate special days and festivals I basically move around freely but this deranged woman has other views! Wonder what her source of info is???
Meet the father of NEET candidate Abdullah Talib.
-Registers for NEET
-Candidate does not prepare for the exam
-Gets a notification from NTA about a location change before the exam
-Father checks the admit card
-Father gets shocked
-Calls the media and mocks and blames NTA
-NTA and the government get mocked and targeted by politicians and the media
-NTA investigates the case through its technical team
-NTA finds that the location was changed using the student's credentials
-Abdullah's family gets exposed
What did we learn today?
A community can go to any extent to defame the government and NTA for its benefits.
Illegals occupying devbhoomi. Locals approached court and got a stay order. This is from Uttarakand. Case is in court.
Still illegal constructions are going on. Nearby village don’t have piped water supply but these illegals got piped water supply. They have a pole installed and they got electricity as well.
Entire system is corrupted by the Islamist eco-system.
Hindus are living like 8th class citizens in their own country. 😳😭
I want to ask every conscientious Indian, irrespective of political leaning: what justifies the hatred for the BJP? When I joined the BJP, the hostility was so intense that members of my wife’s extended family urged her to divorce me, take our children, and leave. They claimed we had betrayed the family’s elders and community. Some were even willing to crowdfund support for her and my children. Is political disagreement now reason enough to destroy families and relationships?
#WATCH | Kupwara, J&K | A Kashmiri Pandit family, that had been living in exile for the last 36 years, have returned to their ancestral village in Langate, and have opened a restaurant in the area. (19.06)
It's hard to believe that this md c got a 13yo boy sentenced to life imprisonment just because he was seen carrying a BJP flag.
That boy is now 25 years old and has finally been released after spending 12 years in prison.
Even the British probably didn't commit as many atrocities as this md c and his R aunt have.