You mean like how the future looks for Pakistan, if they don't change their way of governing ?Chide all you want, it still will not change the inevitability of what I state clearly.
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You mean like how the future looks for Pakistan, if they don't change their way of governing ?Chide all you want, it still will not change the inevitability of what I state clearly.
You mean like how the future looks for Pakistan, if they don't change their way of governing ?
No I think that EP (isn't that Bangladesh, why not call it that ?) issue is different now, also I think the rivers from Bangladesh could if ever channelled through pipes solve the water crises in Pakistan
I am trying to follow up on some points from the documentary (I've been saying that a lot), and apart from K/J being blessed lands fertile and all that, the rivers running through it are like the lifeblood for what lays down the stream.
Surely if the current stand off is because of land alone, then I would still argue like I did previously (post 111 atm).
Mending wounds, healing the land and people.
If issue is full control over a river....Pakistan could have made it clear by not entering into any negotiation for this river system....much less signing a treaty....and making it very clear complete physical territorial control of a river(s) was the only position they could accept.
If every treaty signed is then speculated upon with "fears" (even with full precedence of the treaty holding up even during war time)....no treaty in the world will last then....
What should Tigris and Euphrates downstream countries think of Turkey control upstream? It is their lifeblood right?...there is a fear...
I don't need to bring in the Nile dispute happening now with same lifeblood argument, precisely because there was not a good treaty negotiated and agreed upon with enough provisions for further arbitration.
Or maybe ASEAN countries should unite and invade China so the Mekong comes under their full control?...its their lifeblood again.
Only solution I see is referendum to clearly give ppl peace of mind.
Who?Considering the sad events that led to K/J current situation. The displacement of so many who ended up living in Jammu region, forgotten.
But why?the problem of Pakistan is and will always be connected to the rivers.
I was actually thinking of the Pandits, who if I remember correctly left/fled/moved from Kashmir.Who?
If you ask the political segment that I hate the most in Indian politics, the right-wing religious, they will point to the refugees in Jammu, refugees from the mass rape and slaughter in Rajouri, and in other western Jammu (=Poonch) locations [NB: Jammu is both a city and a region, correctly only a city, but the name has been loosely used for a region below the foothills around the Vale of Kashmir].
It will not take them long to work themselves into a hysteria about the fate of the Kashmiri Pandits, who were expelled from the Valley by Islamic browbeating and threats, by beatings, rapes and killings, according to the right-wing; who fled the Vale in a planned exit encouraged by the then Governor of the State, a truly despicable character whose religious bigotry guided his every move.
Perhaps you are talking about refugees within Azad Kashmir; in that case, referring to those taking refuge in Jammu is misleading.
I would like @Kaptaan to comment on this. For myself, it is a non-issue, a contrived grievance, as there has never been any problem with Pakistan getting their fair share of the waters. Without connecting the two matters, it is also worth pointing out that Pakistani water management in its Punjab wheat bowl has been shoddy and negligent. Instead of complaining about hypothetical complications in future, they would gain benefits in plenty from concentrating some brainpower on rational use of all the water that they do get.I do not think the problem of K/J can be solved unless Pakistan has full control over the mentioned river that is like the lifeblood of a nation deprived of other rivers of magnitude.
If possible landswapping to such a degree that Pakistans control over the river is established, would that help ? Even if it is a thin sliver of land ?
Thanks for taking the wind out of my sails. This was the argument I was planning to use to amplify the objections to a referendum taking place now.I mean wouldn't a perfect country in the world by this logic simply by "peace of mind" afford a referendum down to the minutest unit (say each square km of its territory and the people living in it) and say at yearly frequency so that their absolute peace of mind is achieved on this important question? They may simply come and go totally voluntarily...as the nation (whatever is left by that definition) should simply be that degree of non-collectivised, with anarchy being the ultimate ideal.
Yes, I've seen that Turkey has made some investments to alleviate the water crises in some places, but more needs to be done, and a dedicated budget to this end would be best. And on bigger scale.I would like @Kaptaan to comment on this. For myself, it is a non-issue, a contrived grievance, as there has never been any problem with Pakistan getting their fair share of the waters. Without connecting the two matters, it is also worth pointing out that Pakistani water management in its Punjab wheat bowl has been shoddy and negligent. Instead of complaining about hypothetical complications in future, they would gain benefits in plenty from concentrating some brainpower on rational use of all the water that they do get.
It is a mysterious happening. Even though I have very dear friends among the KPs, including one who has visibly gone completely right-wing - extreme right-wing - I am not convinced about their flight. This is even while I accept that the pressure on them was horrifying.I guess the documentary depicting them as innocent citizens of a minority must be misleading then
Oh, completely.2019 August - Indian government strips Jammu and Kashmir state of the special status that gave it significant autonomy.
Wouldn't this last move not make a referendum a must, either that or an armed uprising.?
I find following the intricates of occurances difficult, and seeing what mistakes has been makes (in hindsight) I wonder if following decisions made by the governing states was attempting to solve the issue, but kept falling short or getting disrupted by coup d'etat.May I take this opportunity, @Saithan, to compliment you on your balanced, sensitive and thoughtful posts in this thread. Very nice reading.
This is also an opportunity to reassure you most sincerely that you need not hold back, and are fully entitled to make your points as forcefully as you wish. We are, none of us, little children to be put into a flutter by a contradictory post with views contrary to our own, especially when posted by a sensitive, informed member.
Bangladesh was actually fertilized in August 1947 but gestation took another 24 years before it was born in 1971 after a difficult delivery.I would love to know more about the issues that resulted in a sovereign Bangladesh, but perhaps a separate thread would connec the dots more easily
I don't think Pakistan is capable of solving the issue alone with India, especially not considering the economic debt that Pakistan has accumulated. You need economic stability and wealth in order to reduce the influence of the Army. In my opinion.
I was pissed off by then by the 101 Dalmatians: the Pan-Islamic Pakistan, PakistanForever bunch.