Videos of Indian Forces destroying shops after setting them on fire in Budgam district

KashmirVideos of Indian Forces destroying shops after setting them on fire in...

Monitoring Desk: Indian Forces sat several shops on fire and then destroyed them at Budgam district in Indian Occupied Kashmir.

According to news pouring out of Budgam district, shops of essentials items and edible like rice, wheat and clothes were set on fire in central Kashmir’s Budgam district then destroyed by Indian Forces.

Residents confirmed that government forces set shops on fire, damaged vehicles, and set essentials on fire and destroyed shops in a rage because local Kashmiri men protested over civilian killing in central Kashmir’s Budgam district.

A 24-year-old Mehrajuddin Peer was killed by Indian Paramilitary CRPF while he was driving his Wagon vehicle and carrying his uncle. Now the body of the boy lies in the PCR. CRPF in its statement says the car sped and didn’t stop at a checkpoint. And that the personal fired at the car, the bullet hit the left shoulder of the driver and he was declared brought dead at the hospital. Kashmiri women separately protested over this killing.

When DND News Agency asked social media participants who shared the video why did Indian Forces burn shops and foodstuff in his area (Budgam district), he said because of rage what do Kashmiris want freedom and because Indian Forces want to purge Kashmiri Muslims.

He wrote a message as:

“I wish I had an easy answer. There was a protest demonstration in the area.

Anyway, an eighteen month old baby girl Hiba Jan was hit by the pellets in south Kashmir. What could be the motivation?

A school principal Rizwan of Awantipora in south Kashmir was killed in police custody in Srinagar.

A lecturer named Shabir was killed in an Indian Army camp in Khrew in south Kashmir. An ATM guard Riyaz was killed in the heart of Srinagar by the Indian paramilitary CRPF personnel. Thousands of civilians including Tufail Mattoo, Wamiq Farooq, Sameer Rah, and other names and the nameless.

What could be the motivation? I don’t have easy answers. Perhaps a civilizational idea that Kashmiris are Kashmiris and majority happens to be from a particular community and with geographical proximity with Pakistan; to teach them a lesson, make them realise and submit that they are second class citizens, subjects and shouldn’t expect or demand fundamental human, political or economic rights. As JL Nehru told academic Balraj Puri at the time of PM Sheikh Abdullah’s arrest and unceremonious removal as Prime Minister of Jammu and Kashmir on August 9, 1953 that “ Democracy and morality can wait.” So in waiting list since”.

Must read

Advertisement