Essayer OR - Gratuit
Op Sindoor Must Ensure Freedom For Pakistanis
The Sunday Guardian
|May 11, 2025
Op Sindoor should be the catalyst facilitating the dawn of freedom to the oppressed in Pakistan, oppressed by GHQ Rawalpindi and its admixture of ethno reality with a fictional ideology that posits Hindus as being of a different species of homo sapiens than Muslims.
Operation Sindoor has to accomplish its purpose of ensuring that the terror machine of the Pakistan military be operational only at the peril of Pakistan.
And the cloud that Beijing through Rawalpindi has lifted, so that investments transferred from China can be expected to shift to India. Unlike past precedents. In 1971, India was assisted by the Mukti Bahini to liberate Bangladesh, which was being treated as a colony by GHQ Rawalpindi. Mission Accomplished, a far more challenging task is now at hand, the liberation of Pakistan.
This was a war forced on India and not sought by India. This is a war pitting a free, multicultural, multifaith country on track to become the third superpower of the globe against a country enslaved by a military that resembles the chemistry of Hamas and Hezbollah. It is glued together by hatred, hatred of the Hindu and hatred of a country where over 230 million Muslims of diverse sects live peaceably with their Christian, Buddhist and Hindu brothers and sisters.
In contrast, the population of Christians, Hindus and sects such as the Ahmadiya (the sect which was the prime mover in the British colonial game plan of dismembering India) live amicably side by side with each other. Certainly there are those who spout fiery rhetoric, but "sticks and stones break my bones, words will never hurt me", as the adage goes. Save occasions when mobs for hire are let loose, violence is absent.
Unlike in Pakistan, where violence against some Muslim sects as well as on non-Muslims has become so endemic that the phenomenon is accepted as natural. Of course, there is nothing natural about hate and violence.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition May 11, 2025 de The Sunday Guardian.
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