Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

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Anand K
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Anand K »

In hindsight, everyone agrees that IG should have gone in when Shri A. S. Atwal was shot in the temple premises. IIRC Bhindranwale faced a lot of flak from within the community and SGPC/SAD. Probably they would have given a ceremonial sword to IG after she hauled off the deranged Khalistani filth without much damage - also at that time Bhindranwale was not living in the Akal Takht, just in a Guest House in the premises.

However, IG was advised against a *police* action after Atwal assassination - wonder which Brainiac pulled that off? Only when open rebellion was in the air that our.... nuclear option was used - Indian Army boots and armor in the Harmandir Sahib! :cry:
Oh well, hindsight is always 20/20 I guess.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by anupmisra »

Anand K wrote:Oh well, hindsight is always 20/20 I guess.
For most people. Some still don't get it. Never will.
ramana
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by ramana »

Philip, Looks like the old Westland helicopter deal was at theback of the Thatcher sending SAS adviser.

Augusta Westland at Center of Controversey again

Very verbose article but the point is being made by Labor MP
LONDON: It may be a case of history repeating itself as the defence company at the heart of parliamentary queries over Britain's involvement in Operation Blue Star is none other than Agusta-Westland, which recently lost out on a lucrative contract to supply helicopters to India over allegations of corruption.

Britain's opposition labour MP Tom Watson, responsible for publicising recently declassified documents that imply British collusion in planning Operation Blue Star 30 years ago, asked British Prime Minister David Cameron to directly question the ministers in charge at the time under former prime minister Margaret Thatcher if help was offered to India in order to secure a helicopter deal for the firm.

"On his Amritsar inquiry, instead of ordering the civil servant to investigate, why does the Prime Minister not just ask Lords Geoffrey Howe and Leon Brittan what they agreed with Margaret Thatcher and whether it had anything to do with the Westland helicopter deal at the time," Watson said in the House of Commons yesterday
.

Cameron, who has instructed his Cabinet secretary Jeremy Heywood to inquire into Britain's role, if any, in the 1984 operation, dismissed any link with defence deals as a "conspiracy theory". :rotfl:

"I fear that the honourable gentleman might have gone a conspiracy theory too fast on this one. Look, it is very important that we get to the bottom of what happened, and that is why I have asked the Cabinet secretary to lead this review," Cameron said in the House of Commons.

"He will establish this urgently and establish the facts. The process is underway. I want it to be fast; I want it to find out the truth; and the findings will be made public," he said.

"I remember and will never forget my visit to the Golden Temple in Amritsar. It is one of the most beautiful and serene places anywhere on this planet, and what happened at Amritsar 30 years ago led to a tragic loss of life," Cameron said, reminiscing his last year's India visit.

"It remains a source of deep pain to Sikhs everywhere. Prime Minister Singh, in my view, was absolutely right to apologise for what has happened, and I completely understand the concerns that these papers raise, so let us wait for the outcome of the review by Jeremy Heywood," he said.

Cameron yesterday appeared to downplay the likelihood of an inquiry finding evidence that Britain was to blame for the operation.

"I do not want to prejudge the outcome, but I would note that, so far, it has not found any evidence to contradict the insistence by senior Indian army commanders responsible at the time that, on the responsibility for this, it was planned and carried out solely by the Indian army. It is important to put that, but we do need an inquiry, so that we can get to the bottom of this," he said.

Besides letters dating back to February 1984 that indicate Britain's Special Air Service (SAS) commanders may have been involved in training Indian officials for Operation Blue Star, the recently released documents by the National Archives have a series of correspondence linked to the lucrative sale of defence equipment to India.

A background briefing document describes India as "a large and growing market for both commercial and defence sales. British exports in 1983 exceeded 800 million pounds and since 1975 India has bought British defence equipment worth over 1.25 billion pounds."


Some of the letters exchanged between Thatcher and her trade and industry minister Norman Tebbit shed light on the role the British government had played in securing a deal for the Indian government to acquire 21 AgustaWestland helicopters using 50 million pounds of British aid money.

These aircraft were intended for the Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) at the time and included a promise to acquire more later for VIP use, similar to the deal recently cancelled by the Indian government
.

"The Minister of Overseas Development points out that there is a weak developmental case for the proposal; he is sceptical of the commercial case; but he notes that there are some important political considerations which have to be taken into account," reads a confidential note addressed to Thatcher.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by brihaspati »

nah! how can people even believe that Brit intel came in at all and collaborated with Indian intel in the 80's! Were we not time and again reminded that we became "independent" in 1947 by staunchly freedom loving independence waving non-Brit-loving almost semi-divine one or two or grudgingly, three individuals?

Anything that does no gel with that view is conspiracy theory. Just wonder why a friendly nation like the UK who has the best interests of India on their hearts and minds, would choose to embarrass the IA and gov and by association with both the actual incident as well as the ruling party in both periods!
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Lilo »

Thatcher and Co of Briturdia demonstrate real "spirit of Commonwealth"

Image

Some thing also on Lard Paul
Paul’s power

From Peter Ricketts, private secretary to the foreign secretary, to Coles, private secretary at 10 Downing Street on January 19, 1984: “Dr (Seyid) Muhammad has been High Commissioner since September 1980. He will depart on 12 February. Although Dr Muhammad’s contribution to the development of India-British relations has been limited (and somewhat overshadowed by the private efforts of Mr Swraj Paul), relations with India during his time in London have been excellent.”

The assessment reflects a joke that had done the rounds then: Paul was the “higher commissioner”.
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1140117/j ... tjd2PbNdEI
Haresh
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Haresh »

This entire khalistan thing is overblown. Nothing is going to come of it.
I used to cycle past 10 Downing St, to and from work and I would see these khalistan demonstrators.

My take on this, and I say this as someone who was raised a Sikh, and is not religious at all and totally against this nonsense.
I don't live in India and don't think I have any right to be actively involved in any Indian political issues. Any of you guy's who wish to correct anything I have to say, please do.

From the reading I have done and my personal experience:

A/ Bhindrenwalle was a creation of Indira Gandhi (IG)
B/ I visited the Golden Temple with my father in Feb 1984, we were threatened with guns and left.
C/The IG/congress government could have dealt with the issue without a full blown military assault.
D/ A delegation of prominent Sikh's should have been sent in to get the khalistani's to leave.
E/ There were massacres, in and around the temple.
F/IG should have resigned from politics and disappeared from public life, never to return...ever
G/After she was killed, the military should have been out to prevent massacres.
H/Rajiv Gandhi should have resigned from politics and disappeared from public life, never to return...ever, after his comment about big tree's falling.
I/ All congress leaders implicated in the massacres should have been arrested and tried and given heavy sentences, all of them with no exceptions.
J/It was the massacres which made it a "populist" movement amongst Sikh's in the west. If Sikh's had seen the perpertrators punished heavily this could have been prevented.
K/ The present loud shouting about khalistan in the west is mainly by youngsters who I think are just trying to get a coonection of some sort to what they see as their root's.
L/ the khalistan movement in my experience was always about the jaat caste in Punjab, if you go to the jatworld or jatland websites you will see a lot of support for it.
M/ The congress party should have offered a formal apology.
N/ There should be a memorial in Delhi for those murdered.

This is what the discussion on the Sikhnet website has come to so far, you can tell the young age of the person who started the thread.

Khalistan, a reality or a shambles?

http://www.sikhnet.com/discussion/viewt ... f=2&t=9470

It never should have happened, it was handled totally wrongly.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Karan M »

Haresh, fair points but the Khalistanis had undertaken a huge reign of terror throughout Punjab. So a military response was all but inevitable.

Hindus, were targeted en masse. So were Sikhs who were deemed as not being pro Khalistan. I grew up in that era and remember trucks/buses being stopped and Hindus being massacred every other day. It was a pretty bad time. Also, the Golden Temple was fortified with the help of a disgruntled ex IA General and Bhindranwale had taken to walking around with an arrow in his hand, and rumors were rife that he and his folks were going to deify him as a version of the revered Guru
He was not going to walk out with any delegation talking to him or otherwise.

Granted a direct assault was not the best idea, perhaps a siege would have worked better. But its 20/20.

Also, when the IA entered the temple, reports noted they found many captives & the details were purposely hidden/ not spread around, to prevent further deterioration of the communal situation.

I would take a lot of the claims about massacres etc that occurred with a pinch of salt.

Basically, the Khalistanis had free space to conduct their Propaganda, with the willing assistance of many western "academics", HR "agencies" and others. And the ham handed Indian establishment did not do enough to counter the narrative.

A constant sense of victimhood, an inflated list of claims re: their success etc is a constant in their claims. They neither admit nor take any cognizance of how they brutalized all others in their pursuit of power. Many folks noted that they were so drunk with power that their depredations became so extreme that finally the public started supporting the SecFor.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by anupmisra »

Anjem "Inbred" Choudhary - 24 Hours after the Establishment of the Islamic Caliphate (Khilafah)

A post-khalifa step by step guide to events in UKistan according to choudhary. It is 57 minutes long drivel, so prepare yourself.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by chaanakya »

Karan M wrote:Haresh, fair points but the Khalistanis had undertaken a huge reign of terror throughout Punjab. So a military response was all but inevitable.

Hindus, were targeted en masse. So were Sikhs who were deemed as not being pro Khalistan. I grew up in that era and remember trucks/buses being stopped and Hindus being massacred every other day. It was a pretty bad time. Also, the Golden Temple was fortified with the help of a disgruntled ex IA General and Bhindranwale had taken to walking around with an arrow in his hand, and rumors were rife that he and his folks were going to deify him as a version of the revered Guru
He was not going to walk out with any delegation talking to him or otherwise.

Granted a direct assault was not the best idea, perhaps a siege would have worked better. But its 20/20.

Also, when the IA entered the temple, reports noted they found many captives & the details were purposely hidden/ not spread around, to prevent further deterioration of the communal situation.

I would take a lot of the claims about massacres etc that occurred with a pinch of salt.

Basically, the Khalistanis had free space to conduct their Propaganda, with the willing assistance of many western "academics", HR "agencies" and others. And the ham handed Indian establishment did not do enough to counter the narrative.

A constant sense of victimhood, an inflated list of claims re: their success etc is a constant in their claims. They neither admit nor take any cognizance of how they brutalized all others in their pursuit of power. Many folks noted that they were so drunk with power that their depredations became so extreme that finally the public started supporting the SecFor.

I think people have forgotten what Punjab wen through all those years. Military response was inevitable. But credit also goes to Punjab Police and KPS Gill and scores of his boys, who sacrificed their life , to bring peace in the land of five rivers. Only second example of such kind is that of Sri Lanka now.

Since IA respected Har Mandir Saheb it stood . Less said about Khalistanis the better.
I still repent 1984 riots and want perpetrators punished. Congis are worst offenders in this episode.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Haresh »

I remember the massacres of Hindu bus passengers as well, people being dragged off buses and murdered. In fact during one of my visits with my father our bus from Delhi was given an armed escort as soon as we got to the border with Punjab.

In my experience it hasn't poisoned relations between the Sikh and Hindu communities in the UK. I always point out to any khalistani's I may meet, that the massacres were instigated, organised and carried out by congress.

I am still to this day shocked that so many of the instigators are walking around and how callous congress is.
There was an interview in NDTV with Mani Shankar Ayer, Tavleen Singh and a Sikh widow in her mid/late 60's, her entire family had been murdered and the accused I think it was sajjan kumar. The widow was upset at the not guilty verdict. Mani Shankar's response was word's to the effect "let her campaign for another 30 year's" I just cannot understand how some one with that sort of attitude can have any authority.

With regards to reported massacres, our neighbours in London at that time were actually from Amritsar and their home was near the main hospital. They were not khalistani at all, totally opposed to the concept. Any way the grandfather was actually there when Blue Star happened and he told me that he had seen corpses with hands tied behind backs and gunshot wounds to the head. If they were fighters then I have no problem, but if they were civilians that's a different matter.

My entire family in Punjab no longer support congress, they just regard them as corrupt.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by chaanakya »

Of course they were shot by Khalistani Militants who had help up civilian hostages and did not allow them to leave despite Army Announcement.
Haresh
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Haresh »

chaanakya wrote:Of course they were shot by Khalistani Militants who had help up civilian hostages and did not allow them to leave despite Army Announcement


I suppose that is a very real probability.

My relations who were in the army/police/security forces at the time were quite adamant that these khalistanis were caste based communalists, and also they were told me about the murders committed.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Vikas »

Going back to UK's role, One one hand they claim to be helping India during Op BS, and on the other they were the ones who were protecting and shielding all these Khalistani terrorists in US and Canada.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Haresh »

Borough of Tower Hamlets: a byword for sleaze

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politic ... leaze.html
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by panduranghari »

x post
http://forums.bharat-rakshak.com/viewto ... 7#p1580807


Confessions of Indias Thugs
There were two other things that made the Thugs particularly unpleasant. One was the scale of their killing: Sleeman’s grandson estimated that over the centuries they had committed more than one million murders. (More realistic estimates now put the figure at somewhere between 50,000 and 200,000.) One single Thug named Buhram apparently confessed to more than 900 murders.
Moreover, Sleeman said, their crimes were not simply murders, they were acts of devotion to the goddess Kali, the many-armed, black-faced Hindu goddess of death and destruction, who wore a necklace of severed heads. She fed off the blood of their victims. To compound the litany of horror, Sleeman claimed that some Thug gangs were actively protected by local princes in return for a share of their spoils.
ne can see exactly why Sleeman’s writings caught the imagination of the British. In the fervid atmosphere of the evangelical 1830s, the Thugs became a byword for the dark, fascinating strangeness of the East – of the evils and moral redundancy of Hinduism, and the corruptness of the Indian ruling class. In 1839, Confessions of a Thug, a now unreadable Gothic novel by another former Indian hand, Philip Meadows Taylor, which drew closely on Sleeman’s writings, became an instant bestseller. Queen Victoria was apparently a fan.
One striking thing about these early accounts was that they retained a sliver of almost admiring fascination for the Thugs: Sleeman described them as remorseless killers but loyal and devoted family men. One gang leader, Feringhea, was portrayed as a prince among Thugs, irresistibly attractive and dangerous. Meadows Taylor based his protagonist on Feringhea, having him describe his life as a Thug in a tone of pride as well as horror.
The extent to which these stories penetrated Victorian Britain can be seen in the way that a series of garrottings and muggings in London in the 1860s conjured a widespread and entirely unjustified panic that Thugs had arrived in Britain. Sinister Indian cults began to turn up in other novels, for example in Wilkie Collins’ The Moonstone.
Over subsequent decades the word gradually lost its Eastern connotations. Now and again, though, the old colonial meaning would reassert itself: in the 1939 film Gunga Din, where the Thugs appeared as monstrous religious fanatics and rebels against the Raj; in John Masters’ 1959 novel, The Deceivers, based on the character and writings of Sleeman; and in the 1984 film Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, where they were a crazed underground death cult bent on world domination through human sacrifice. The Indian government deemed the script so racist, it refused to allow filming in India. It was shot in Sri Lanka instead.
In Hindustani “thug” originally meant not murderer, but trickster or con man. It was undeniable that they had appeared at a moment when the East India Company, then ruling large parts of India in the name of the British government, had been very keen to find justifications for its continued and ever-extending presence in India, and that their lurid story perfectly illustrated why India needed the British and their civilising influence.
This write up is so darn racist and full of stupid colonial assumptions which clearly have not changed though Britain is turning into a dump and India is cleaning up the dump that British made when they were in India.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by LakshO »

Scholars ask for declassification of 400 year old British state files

:shock: Secrets held for 400 years! I wonder what these files hold :?:
The foreign ministry only publicly admitted the existence of the so-called "special collection" of some 600,000 dossiers in 2011, when an historian came across a 45-year-old memo that referred to it.
600,000 dossiers :eek: Must have been ancestors of Sir Humphrey Appleby :)
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by member_19686 »

Northern Ireland Christians force cancellation of comedy based on Bible
Play is pulled from schedule of Newtownabbey theatre after calls for ban from DUP politicians

Christians have forced the cancellation of play at a Northern Ireland theatre because it supposedly mocks the Bible, it has emerged.

The irreverent comedy The Bible: The Complete Word of God (Abridged) has been pulled from the schedule of the Theatre at the Mill in Newtownabbey on the northern outskirts of Belfast.

Evangelical Christian politicians from the Democratic Unionist party (DUP) called for the play to be banned from the theatre, which is run by unionist-dominated Newtownabbey borough council.

The Reduced Shakespeare Company was due to start its latest UK tour by presenting the show at the venue in Co Antrim on 29 and 30 January.

But the Theatre at the Mill confirmed on Thursday that the two planned performances had been cancelled and said refunds would be available from its box office.

The Democratic Unionist councillor Billy Ball had called for the play to be banned because it would cause offence to Christians.

"For Christians, the Bible is the infallible word of God and it's not something to be made fun of. These people are treating something sacred with irreverence and disrespect," he said.


But the theatre group behind the production pointed out that they had taken the show to Jerusalem recently and had had no problems staging it, nor were there any protests from the Israeli authorities.

Before the cancellation on Thursday, Dave Naylor, the play's producer, had said: "Maybe Councillor Ball should come and see our show before denouncing it as unholy. But he'd better be quick as all his comments have done is increase ticket sales."

The drama company's production poses questions in the play such as: "Did Adam and Eve have navels? Did Moses really look like Charlton Heston?"

In its promotion for the play, the company adds: "Whether you are Catholic or Protestant, Muslim or Jew, atheist or Jedi, you will be tickled by the RSC's romp through old-time religion."

The evangelical Christian wing of the DUP has a long history of trying to ban works of art, films, exhibitions and dramas that it regards as blasphemous or offensive. DUP-controlled councils have banned Monty Python's Life of Brian and even barred the Electric Light Orchestra from playing a concert in a Ballymena-council-controlled leisure centre because the band were staging the gig on a Sunday.

The DUP also pioneered protests against the first sex shops to open in Northern Ireland during the 1980s. Outside one sex shop that had opened in the future first minister Peter Robinson's East Belfast constituency, DUP activists held up placards calling on passing motorists to "bump your horn for decency".

http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2014 ... CMP=twt_gu
Haresh
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Haresh »

panduranghari wrote:This write up is so darn racist and full of stupid colonial assumptions which clearly have not changed though Britain is turning into a dump and India is cleaning up the dump that British made when they were in India.
The UK media is in full overdrive in tarnishing India. The Daily Mail and other tabloids have on average 3 stories per week, sometimes more that show India in a bad light. The stories of rape appear regularly. The recent gang rape of a tribal woman was reported as being "ordered by a court", they did not mention that it was a panchayat kangaroo court. The great british public believes that this is an official court.
There are never stories about development only misery.
The recent diplomatic spat between India and the USA betrayed some interesting comments the usual moral self righteous claptrap about caste to calls to supply Pakistan with weapons.

Let them carry on. How quickly they forget how the paks and Saudi's betrayed them on 9/11, 7/7 arming the Taliban, hiding OBL etc, etc.
They need to be bitten and mauled a few more times by their own dogs.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Vivek K »

Haresh wrote:I remember the massacres of Hindu bus passengers as well, people being dragged off buses and murdered. .....

In my experience it hasn't poisoned relations between the Sikh and Hindu communities in the UK (so have the Hindus forgiven, yet the Sikhs hang on?). I always point out to any khalistani's I may meet, that the massacres were instigated, organised and carried out by congress.
Haresh, you may want to ponder this situation a bit more. The terrorists were trained in Pakistan. How could they have been organized by Congress? Or are you saying that Indira Gandhi whose administration was in power when India broke Pakistan into two, was actually a friend of Pakistan? These two events seem hard to reconcile.

I would encourage you to explore the matter and read about the kind of weapons were held by the terrorists, the desecration of the sacred facilities, torture of those opposed to their aims etc carried out in the buildings around the Golden Temple. In effect, the terrorists estimated that out of respect for the Golden Temple, India would not dare attack it and therefore they were in a sort of secured protectorate.

On the issue of sending in a delegation to ask the terrorists to leave, I cannot imagine that is something you believe in. Remember this is the period when Hindus were targeted and removed from buses and heartlessly shot dead in cold blood by these very terrorists.

IG can have played a part in creating the monster, but to suggest that the terrorists were congress men is really naive. I agree that all those that supported murder, should be tried and punished as per the Law. There is a lot of blame to go around. The best thing today is to look forward and not back. Punjab is green and prosperous once again. Let us not make it mirror Afghanistan.

Forgiveness is a great thing. The Sikhs need to forgive the Hindus and the Hindus need to forgive the Sikhs. Two brothers need to get back together.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Haresh »

Vivek,

apologies for not being more clear.
What I meant is that the massacres of Sikhs after IG's murder were orchestrated by Congress, I didn't mean the killing in Punjab by khalistani terrorist's. Sorry should have been more precise.

I know the pakis were arming and training the khalistani's. I had just finished college in 1984/85 and I know remember the paks would always try to get us to be anti-Hindu and anti-India.
I was even propositioned by a paki facilitator.

My family are part Sikh part Hindu.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Vivek K »

Haresh, that is very common. Hindus and Sikhs are brothers. We need the brotherhood to grow again.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by rgsrini »

Vivek wrote:The terrorists were trained in Pakistan.
.
Saar. Just a nitpick. It was not just Pakistan. The whole gamut of Terrorist states (US, UK, Canada, Israel etc) and Soviet Union were fanning the flames of separation. They were funding, arming, training the Khalistani terrorists to divide India. Pakistan, a previously broken part of India, was also using this to scratch several itches up its Musharaff caused by India.

http://www.larouchepub.com/eiw/public/1 ... 850927.pdf

By the way, the white collar British terrorists are trying to escape the burden of history, by planting a laughable story about UK's involvement/support in the storming of Golden Temple. It confuses and angers, some sections of Indian population and the remaining Khalistani terrorists and their sympathizers, while earning brownie points with major sections of India who were against the Khalistani terrorists.

I don't know why the Indian government is not publishing a report that names all the countries that support terrorism against India (every year), and take punitive actions against them (or atleast keep the public educated, for awareness and future actions). May be we will start this in the future.

The Sikhs need to forgive the Hindus and the Hindus need to forgive the Sikhs
I don't think most Hindus have any anger whatsoever towards the Sikhs. If the Sikhs are still carrying misplaced anger towards the Hindus, then only the truth (about the whole cast of terrorist states) can wash the anger out. There is as usual a total lack of effort from the government in educating the public and directing the anger to the appropriate cast of characters (countries).
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Singha »

in the months leading up to BlueStar what was really happening in and around the Golden temple? are there accounts of the situation....I read somewhere people including police were being murdered at random in the narrow lanes and bodies found later.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by chaanakya »

Let us talk what is really hurting them rather then dead Khalistanis
Drop in Indian students: British VC hits out at visa policy

Vice-chancellors of British universities have blamed the David Cameron government’s immigration policy and the accompanying rhetoric for a major drop in the number of “extremely important” Indian students coming to British universities. ( and who are the major beneficiaries??)

Edward Acton, vice-chancellor of the University of East Anglia and a leading figure in the discourse on international students and the government's student visa policy, told HT today that he was “deeply concerned” by the latest figures that showed the major drop of Indian students.

“I am deeply concerned by the latest figures but, regrettably, not at all surprised; the words of a Home Secretary spoken in the House of Commons take only seconds to reach the newspapers of India and have the potential to do untold damage to long-established and cherished relationships”, he said.
Last edited by chaanakya on 25 Jan 2014 16:52, edited 1 time in total.
Haresh
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Haresh »

rgsrini wrote: If the Sikhs are still carrying misplaced anger towards the Hindus
I don't think it is wise to generalise like this.
In the UK (I am sure it is true in Canada &USA) it is a very small minority of Sikhs. In my experience every khalistani I have met or heard about has been a Jaat Sikh.

The sad truth is Sikh's do practice caste, even though it is expressly forbidden.
There has been conflict between various Sikh caste groups. The Ravidassia Sikhs have been totally against khalistan, this has resulted in violence in the west for example the shooting/murder in Vienna. I believe they account for 25% of the population in Punjab. There were problems in the Punjab town of Talhan a few years ago.

There is also resentment from the Ramgharia Sikh's at Jaat domination. All throughout the west the Sikh temples are based on caste. Sad but true. :(

A quick visit to the Jaatworld and jatland websites will confirm this.

The renewed calls for khalistan in the west are from youngsters who I think are just using it as a means of connecting to their roots.

The khalistani's were coming out of the temple complex and murdering police/civilian opponents and then running back inside. This was told to me by a distant relation who's friend/relation was quite senior in the security service at the time.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Karan M »

>>The khalistani's were coming out of the temple complex and murdering police/civilian opponents and then running back inside. This was told to me by a distant relation who's friend/relation was quite senior in the security service at the time.

Its mentioned in Tavleen Singhs Darbar as well. A Sikh liberal journalist who was an observer of the events first hand. Many interesting vignettes of that era (apart from the sec force POV from KPS Gill and others at SATP).
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Haresh »

From memory I seem to recall that the Heritage Foundation at the time was very pro Khalistani.

I have just googled "jesse helms khalistan" and a whole lot of information comes up.
But I noticed this:
http://www.larouchepub.com/eiw/public/1 ... ratist.pdf
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by vishvak »

We are splitting hair on this while ignoring pakis who got away with terrorism. How is it sensible ?

Pakis have spread terror movements in 2 states directly- J&K and Punjab and still we are allowing such a terror enterprise to exist next to us. It is like accepting by default that a terror state in Punjab region is allowed to function as legitimate - for which Indians must be accepting terror as part of being neighborhood by default. Today it is spreading drug culture only because we accept such arbitrary pakistaniyat as acceptable by default.

We should notice how Syria has not invited pakis for peace talks - even when going through war and in need of friends. pakis can't be friends and we can not ignore such primary reasons for militancy while hair splitting.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Yogi_G »

Vivek K wrote:Haresh, that is very common. Hindus and Sikhs are brothers. We need the brotherhood to grow again.
+1

As a RSS Swayamsevak, I dont even see a difference between Hindus, Sikhs, Jains and other Indic traditions. I take inspiration from all of them just as I take inspiration from people such as Sri.Jesudas and Sri Abdul Kalam. The teachings of the Gurus are considered by me to be part of my culture and cherish the fact that as an Indian I can proudly also call them my ancestors. Sri Jassa Singh Ahluwalia and Sri Hari Singh Nalwa apart from Sri Ranjit Singh are my heroes and I have told my young son their exploits, how proud we are of them.

Never shall the Dharmics be separated again by Mleccha forces. Sorry for the OT admins but emotions took me over. :mrgreen:
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Haresh »

I have just been doing a bit of google research on this entire khalistan rubbish.
In my very humble view, the reason it came to nothing was because of the internal caste conflicts in Sikhism.

I found these two interesting links:

Harish K. Puri

The Scheduled Castes in the Sikh Community

– A Historical Perspective

http://www.apnaorg.com/research-papers/harish-puri/

and

Exposing the crimes of khalistani Fascism

http://b484.wordpress.com/about/


http://b484.wordpress.com/
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Lisa »

Golden Temple attack: UK advised India but impact 'limited'

https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... eme....pdf
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by rgsrini »

^^UK was on of the terrorist states, fanning the flames of Khalistan, training the terrorists and arming them. I suspect that if UK had offered advise to India, it may be to misguide India and also understand India's strategies (to pass on to the terrorists) , and to ensure that India fails. Sorry! it is not easy to trust the UK, considering the history.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by shiv »

rgsrini wrote:^^UK was on of the terrorist states, fanning the flames of Khalistan, training the terrorists and arming them. I suspect that if UK had offered advise to India, it may be to misguide India and also understand India's strategies (to pass on to the terrorists) , and to ensure that India fails. Sorry! it is not easy to trust the UK, considering the history.
Well that explains why the UK's advice was not utilized.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Karan M »

chaanakya wrote:Let us talk what is really hurting them rather then dead Khalistanis
Drop in Indian students: British VC hits out at visa policy
Vice-chancellors of British universities have blamed the David Cameron government’s immigration policy and the accompanying rhetoric for a major drop in the number of “extremely important” Indian students coming to British universities. ( and who are the major beneficiaries??)

Edward Acton, vice-chancellor of the University of East Anglia and a leading figure in the discourse on international students and the government's student visa policy, told HT today that he was “deeply concerned” by the latest figures that showed the major drop of Indian students.

“I am deeply concerned by the latest figures but, regrettably, not at all surprised; the words of a Home Secretary spoken in the House of Commons take only seconds to reach the newspapers of India and have the potential to do untold damage to long-established and cherished relationships”, he said.
Good stuff and hope it continues. I think the British and Aussie education systems are the biggest ripoffs. Charge phirst world prices for so-so education and then dont even permit students (mostly) to recoup their expenses by working locally in proper jobs for an extended period (as they have limited work visas and all sorts of issues in granting them).
Hope Indian economy booms with new admin, and this brain-drain even to the US reduces.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Vayutuvan »

Karan: Some Aussie and most UK instis are quite good, IMHO.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Lalmohan »

the report is worth a read - it disproves my dad's old regiment hypothesis, and is specific in saying that an advisor/assessor was sent on request. a recce was done in feb

it describes the nature of the advice offered as being 'paramilitary in nature' and 'utilising multiple simultaneous helicopter insertions' to achieve complete surprise and that this advice was offered in feb. it goes on to say that the advice was rejected due to paramilitaries not being capable enough and IA needing to take over in the assessment of the indian decision makers. Also that IA turned down the heli-assault option due to insufficient resources, and that the option of surprise was rejected in favour of giving advance notice to enable civilians to exit the complex ahead of any action.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Karan M »

matrimc wrote:Karan: Some Aussie and most UK instis are quite good, IMHO.
Well, judging by their human output (I mean by the students who studied there) they don't come across as anything special versus even some of the Tier 2 Indian ones (at least in the non science areas, like Business). At best, they offer bragging rights. In engg., the US schools appear to be better funded & upto date. E&E in one US school I know, was hard. Another guy who studied (well) in a similar program in UK is not that well versed.
In terms of value for money the UK & Aussie schools seem to be a come enjoy, hand over your money, now go back home business model which (IMHO) is a nice little scheme (for them). Of course, I am generalizing heavily, but simply put the money these guys are making off of us, is ebcause of GOI incompetence in setting up a good setup in India as versus one populated by dead wood & how to keep people out filters as versus taking people in & making something of them.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Vayutuvan »

UK universities are good in most basic sciences and mathematics and of course economics. Just see the list of world research universities and you find several UK ones and a few australian ones but none from India - not even IITs or IISc. IISc use dto be ranked 30th at one time on some list but not any more. Of course, there are several lists and have their own biases depending on whether it is from Shangahi, China or Times of UK or various lists published by US entities. But the intersection contains several schools from UK and a two or three from Ozzie land.

At least in education, we cannot write off UK. As for recouping the investment, nothing like US with Canada coming a close second I suppose, especially for Iindian students who are certainly comfortable with the medium of instruction. Now the calculation is different for Chinese students as medium of instruction is of no consequence (though that is changing fast as they become more proficient with English).

Recently I was listening to NPR and this odd tidbit had my attention. Univ of Southern California attracts the maximum number of foriegn students followed by Urbana. I think it is for the the entire US.

Now if you look at the fees structure, Oxford and Cambridge or any Ozzie universities would be about the same or a little cheaper. Oxbridge would certainly be harder to get into so it is but natural for people to come to US and recoup the costs. If people are going abroad for research though there is no question of recouping any costs as they get paid - measly sums they may be but they are a positive in flow.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by brihaspati »

The UK "best in edu" could also be based on mythology of a certain sort. The "reputation" and "past glory" in itself is an engine for future reputation in perpetuity, if you also combine economic and political global influence. A formal degree from "Oxbridge" may help in overcoming rival competition from similar degree holders. This in turn makes students report favourable reviews which become part of the ranking factors used. The other factor becomes the "alma mater" identity itself, which would be likely to favour same "oxbridge" candidates when it comes to professional success/promotion/selection. As for research funding and peer reviewed publications - they will be highly interrelated, since the fund allocation happens through reviewers from similar peer circles, who in turn have every possible opportunity to push for research aligned to their own interests in perfectly formally legitimate ways.

By the way, the preponderance of Oxbridge types, the existence of "glass ceilings", and possible network bias within the UK is not my invention but an observation based on formal reports thrown up from time to time.

Most journals of the sciences are published in the "west", and because increasingly formally bureaucratic measures of academic performance have come into place over the decades since ww2, the number of journal papers becomes important - so that editorial boards and groups can become a matter of fights and coterie formations. Papers representing "own" or complimentary circles will appear "significant" and "game-changing", while those outside the circle may only be producing trivial, or insignificant contributions. More papers means better funding, which in turn means gathering the next gen of students who will carry on the flag of the coterie, who in turn will eventually become editors or reviewers and perpetuate the funding+publishing cycle.

If Indian universities, or government institutions quietly devalued foreign degrees, and made performance criteria connected to local, internal visible criteria - the ability to develop industry or public partnerships, start-ups, commercialization inside the country, and contribution to defence - tech and science especially - and not become dewy eyed or melt at the casual throwing around of a "oxbridge" degree, things will change.

A country's views of a "foreign degree" should be guided by concrete, practical, and crucial contributions to that country's internal needs, economy, and science and defence especially. I am not sure there are concrete impact factor studies of the contribution of UK degrees, and research experiences to areas we would hold crucial for our own goals - the defence industries, our economy, agriculture, ityadi. Satyen Bose did not have an "oxbridge degree" for example, as far as I know.

There would be a historical angle to appreciation and "respect" for an Oxbridge degree in a post-colonial India, especially the ruling circles to whom power was handed over and which has continued to a certain degree though so-called elite public schools/college system in India like the Doon or St Stephens, and which would in turn help perpetuate the superior status of oxbridge degrees in the higher echelons. But as was mentioned here before quoting a study on Doon by a very sympathetic "researcher" - these institutions serve as model enclaves of ideal society and civilization, the supposed tranquil centres of sanity against the big-bad wider Indian wilderness - and its members naturally inclined to distance themselves psychologically or ideologically from what is "native". The "oxbridge" nexus therefore maintains the colonial myth, in more ways than one.
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Re: Indo-UK News and Discussion - April 2013

Post by Vayutuvan »

Brigaspati: Neither did cv Raman. I agree with your general thrust. But Indian edu and research is in a slump because what after the advanced degree and training as a postdoctoral? The length and the diameter of the pipeline has to be increased. As an aside just this afternoon was listening to short interview of prof. J. Bhagwati with rebroadcast on npr. Dr. Amartya Sen was also asked to appear looked like he declined. The interviewer's antagonism towards Bhagwati came though in spades. The reporter kept interrupting Bhagwati whose views are diametrically opposite of dr. Sen but the reporter was arguing for Sen. It was unvarnished chamchagiri. Incredible.
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