


Should Rohingyas be settled in J&K or KPs
Dear community members,
Namaskar,
Pseudo-liberals, Leftists and Islamists are shouting from house tops that Rohingyas should be settled in India. It pains me to think that no one is saying that Kashmiri Pandits should be settled in their original homeland in secure and tension-free surroundings Jammu and Kashmir has shown such a magnanimity in settling Rohingyas which no other country in the world has done Even when Muslims countries disallowed them from entering their lands, quietly and systematically, the J&K State settled 7,000 of them in the Jammu division They are, peacefully living there for seven years now. Political analysts opine that this arrangement is in keeping with the future programme in making some areas of the Jammu division, which are currently Hindu majority areas, into Muslim-majority ones. Some such non-Indian nationals have been provided loans for starting businesses. Some others are reported to have been issued State subject certificates.
Some of the Rohingyas are in contact with the Pak terror groups. For decades, ISI has been sending some to these to India to create trouble in the normal security arrangement. Some of these were part of the jihad against the erstwhile Soviet Union in Afghanistan After the Soviet influence, in Afghanistan, collapsed, many of them participated in the jihadist movement in Kashmir Many of the so-called Rohingya refugees are members of the jihadist groups who have been massacring Hindu Rohingyas in Myanmar China did not allow such Rohingyas to enter that country. The Chinese Government is sympathetic to the Myanmar Government which wants that such groups should stop killing non Muslims of Myanmar. The correct solution to the Rohingya problem is that they should be persuaded not to take up guns against non-Muslims and they should, respectfully, go back to where they have come from.
Members of the majority community of Kashmir, too, have come to realise that it is improper to kill civilians and those on law-and-order-maintaining duty. Constable Mohammad Yasin Teli, of CRPF's Quick Action Team, was shot dead by a Jaish-e-Mohammad fidayeen in the last week of the past month. His death found a significant change in the way residents of the valley reacted to such killings of the security personnel. A day after his killing, hundreds of the valley's residents arrived in his village and took part in the funeral process. They described Teli as a "brave heart" . An officer, on duty in that area, said that such a crowd at the funeral of a trooper was seen for the first time in several years. A week, earlier, there was a shut down against civilian killings by militants because among the killed was a university student Rattandeep Kaur. Her father, Richhpal Singh, told correspondents that hundreds of people from the neighbouring areas had gathered at their village to condole Rattan Deep's death
Organisations of Punjabi and Gujarati societies have suggested to their community members to reduce unnecessary expenditures on marriage ceremonies. We, also, need to take a cue for such customs. When Farouq Abdullah was a member of the Union Cabinet, Shri Advani told him that he wanted to increase the amount of the money being provided to KP migrants Farouq Abdullah showed him video clippings of Kashmiri Pandit marriage ceremonies in which a lot of money was being spent on unnecessary items and a lot of eatables was being wasted. Then, Farouq asked Advani: Do you think such migrants need enhanced funds? Advani had no reply. From time to time we need to keep a watch on our customs. Kashep Bhando had started a good social reform movement which proved a success. We need to revive such movements. The money, thus saved, can help the low-income-group ill members of our community who cannot bear the high medical expenses of the current era. Such saved funds can, also, help our brilliant students who have enough intelligence but lack enough funds to pursue higher education.
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Courtesy: Vijay Raina Koshur Samachar 2017, October