Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
No Quarter For The Innocent
Outlook
|April 02, 2018
The 39 Indian workers were killed when ISIS had reached a peak of brutality and had no intention of negotiating, unlike earlier hostage situations
On March 20, Minister of External Affairs Sushma Swaraj informed a stunned Rajya Sabha that the 39 Indian workers who had been in the custody of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) since June 2014 were dead. This announcement has ended four years of hope in the hearts of family members that their loved ones still lived, a hope that had survived in spite of persistent reports of ISIS’s intolerance and brutality and its dreadful record of killing those in its custody.
ISIS was the product of the US-led war on Iraq in 2003 and the subsequent occupation of that country, during which state structures and institutions were systematically dismantled and the virus of sectarianism was injected deliberately into the broken political and social order.
Wellsprings Of ISIS
The US occupation of Iraq meant not just the robust ‘empowerment’ of the Shia as part of its deliberate divide-and-rule policies—it also meant the dismissal, incarceration, torture, unemployment and humiliation of Sunnis in senior ministerial, civil service, armed forces and security positions, besides attacks on them and their family members by the newly set-up Shia militia, often backed by Iran.
The jehad led by the Afghanistan veteran Abu Musab al-Zarqawi from 2003 attracted a large number of such disenfranchised Sunnis who now took up arms against the US occupation and the Shia community in general.
Bu hikaye Outlook dergisinin April 02, 2018 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Outlook'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
Outlook
Watch the Ball
I remember playing cricket as a seven-year-old in the cricket grounds across the road from our apartment building in north London.
4 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
History of Sound
From villages to the national squad, India's blind women cricketers battled disability, patriarchy and caste to win the inaugural World Cup. Beyond sport, their journeys reveal their fight for dignity
6 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
One Battle After Another
Women's cricket in Jharkhand is not built on infrastructure, funding or institutional care. It has survived on endurance and sacrifice
5 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
“Fix the Pipeline, Not the Pay Cheque”
When Doorva Bahuguna played cricket in the late 1980s and ’90s, there was no money, little recognition, and no illusion that the sport could become a career. You played, she says, because something inside you demanded it. Today, women’s cricket in India has a league, salaries, sponsors, and visibility—but also new constraints, new narratives, and familiar battles over agency, safety and femininity. In conversation with Lalita Iyer, Bahuguna—who captained Andhra Pradesh’s sub-junior, junior and senior cricket teams and later built a corporate career—speaks candidly about why grassroots matter more than pay parity, how sport reshapes women's sense of self; and why the real revolution in women’s cricket is still unfinished.
5 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
Where Roses Bloom
If the oligarchs return to Venezuela, the social housing will go, the public schools will go, the healthcare clinics will go, the food parcels will go, and the forests will be cut down
6 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
Baramati's Dada
Ajit Pawar's sudden death leaves a power vacuum, but for people, especially from rural pockets in and around Baramati, who considered him a grassroots strongman, the loss is more profound
5 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
The Foreigner India Came to Trust
The Indian media fraternity appears unable to live up to Mark Tully's standards of balance, honesty, trustworthiness and credibility
3 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
'Mother of all Trade Deals'
The EU-India trade agreement is an economic bonanza as it will merge two of the world's largest economic blocs into a single trade zone
3 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
Fiery Kolhapuri
Pratiksha Pawar's cricketing journey is a reminder that dreams know no boundaries
6 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
Spice Girls
In the once nondescript villages of Wayanad, cricket is no longer just a sport. It has become a way to dream and to rise above the limits of geography, poverty and custom
6 mins
February 11, 2026
Translate
Change font size
