FM Qureshi urges India to end state-terrorism as Kashmir turns into ‘planet’s largest concentration camp’
August 4, 2021
Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi on Wednesday called upon India to rescind its unilateral action of August 5, 2019 on Jammu and Kashmir and end all instruments of oppressions and state-terrorism.
“India must respect the United Nations Security Council’s (UNSC) resolutions and let the Kashmiris exercise their right to self-determination,” the foreign minister said in his address at the Islamabad Policy Research Institute.
Qureshi said India in a state of “power drunkenness” had embarked upon a Hitlerian final solution to the Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir.
FM Qureshi Urges India To End State-terrorism As Kashmir Turns Into planets Largest Concentration Camp urdupoint.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from urdupoint.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A scrimmage in a border station, A canter down some dark defile, Two thousand pounds of education, Drops to a ten rupee Jezail….Strike hard who cares, The odds are on the cheaper man.(Rudyard Kipling) Afghanistan is a place where the staccato sound of the machine intones the funeral dirge of the peace every other […]
May 10, 2021
By Noam CHOMSKY, Vijay PRASHAD
The U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001 was criminal. It was criminal because of the immense force used to demolish Afghanistan’s physical infrastructure and to break open its social bonds.
On October 11, 2001, journalist Anatol Lieven interviewed the Afghan leader Abdul Haq in Peshawar, Pakistan. Haq, who led part of the resistance against the Taliban, was getting ready to return to Afghanistan under the cover of the U.S. aerial bombardments. He was, however, not pleased with the way the United States had decided to prosecute the war. “Military action by itself in the present circumstances is only making things more difficult especially if this war goes on a long time and many civilians are killed,” Abdul Haq told Lieven. The war would go on for 20 years, and at least 71,344 civilians would lose their lives during this period.
United States Withdraws From Afghanistan Not Really
Pressenza
08 May 2021, 16:28 GMT+10
The U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001 was criminal. It was criminal because of the immense force used to demolish Afghanistan s physical infrastructure and to break open its social bonds.
By Noam Chomsky and Vijay Prashad
On October 11, 2001, journalist Anatol Lieven interviewed the Afghan leader Abdul Haq in Peshawar, Pakistan. Haq, who led part of the resistance against the Taliban, was getting ready to return to Afghanistan under the cover of the U.S. aerial bombardments. He was, however, not pleased with the way the United States had decided to prosecute the war. Military action by itself in the present circumstances is only making things more difficult-especially if this war goes on a long time and many civilians are killed, Abdul Haq told Lieven. The war would go on for 20 years, and at least 71,344 civilians would lose their lives during this period.