Recently all that deshdrohi things ....supporting
‘terrorists’ Afzal Guru and Maqbool Bhat ....we know lot about Afzal but many
don't know about MAQBOOL BHAT ...letz see !
Who was
Maqbool Bhat ?
- Maqbool Bhat a resident of Trehgam in Kupwara District
of Kashmir was hanged to death in Tihar Jail on 11 February 1984 on
charges of committing a double murder.
'TERRORIST' MAQBOOL BUTT |
Political
career ?
- Bhat entered the political arena of Kashmir with an
ideology of Jammu and Kashmir existing as an independent state.
- To further his political agenda he founded the Jammu
Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) along with his friend, Hashim Qureshi and
others.
Kaarnaame
aur inki kahaani ?
- Being young and impressionable, he came under the
devious spell of Pakistan.
- He and his friends generated anti-India propaganda and committed a number of crimes, including hijacking and murder.
- They were too young to realise that Pakistan had no love lost for Kashmir or its people; its objective was to use the state as a tool to disintegrate India and seize its rivers.
- As Maqbool Bhat spoke more and more about an independent Kashmir, free from both India and Pakistan, he became persona non grata for the Pakistani military establishment.
- He publicly stated that the military rulers of Pakistan had never supported the peoples' armed struggle in Kashmir for which reason he and his comrades became the target of brutal torture and humiliation.
- He was forced to flee from Pakistan Occupied Kashmir
(POK) back to Jammu and Kashmir where he was arrested for his crimes,
tried as per law and sentenced to death .
How his IDEOLOGY and
METHODOLOGIES were flawed ?
The ensuing events over the years have clearly
established the errors in his ideology and the means adopted to fructify the
same.
- His first mistake was to opt for the path of violence as an instrument to realise his political
goals.
- He also erred by not understanding the benefits that his
people would accrue by aligning themselves with democratic tenets of the
Indian nation.
- The biggest mistake, however, was his reliance on Pakistan for support.
Realisation...BUT too late
!
Towards the end of his life he realised his
mistakes. Sadly, by that time, it was too late for him to make amends.
BUT his this APPROACH still MISGUIDES and INFLUENCES the
techniques used by the Kashmiris !!
- Unfortunately, the approach adopted by Maqbool Bhat was
wrong and he became instrumental in guiding his own family members and a
host of young, impressionable and misinformed young boys towards a path
which gave them nothing but hardship, disruption and finally death.
kya hai MAQBOOL ki family ka haal PoK
me ?
- Maqbool Bhat's immediate family is fighting a hard battle for survival in POK. His son Showkat Maqbool Bhat is politically active.
- The family floated a political party, the Jammu and Kashmir National Liberation Front (JKNLF). Later on it was changed to Jammu Kashmir National Liberation Council.
- The party holds regular demonstrations to highlight the glaring human rights violations being faced by the people of POK and Gilgit-Baltistan at the hands of the oppressive Pakistani regime, especially the Pakistan Army.
- Showkat has, on many occasions, been arrested in Muzaffarabad in POK for leading peace marches to the UN office to highlight the sad plight of the people of POK and Gilgit-Baltistan.
- Showkat has also been speaking against the use of POK for infiltration of terrorists into Kashmir. He highlights the insecurity that the people of POK feel with the barbarian Jihadis roaming across their land as they await their turn for infiltration.
- Also, the artillery shelling that is carried out to
facilitate infiltration elicits a massive response from the Indian side
which causes great damage and loss of life and property to the villagers
who reside along the Line of Control.
What about his ASSOCIATES ?
- Maqbool Bhat's old associate, Hashim Qureshi, who hijacked an Indian Airlines Fokker Friendship plane from Srinagar to Lahore in 1971, after 30 years in exile in Holland, returned to India and onwards to Kashmir in 2000 and entered the political arena. He has admitted that the hijacking of the aircraft Ganga was a mistake and has expressed his support for electoral politics with a clearly non-violent agenda.
- In his recent interviews Hashim Qureshi has lambasted
the Government of Pakistan for its brutal practices in POK. "It is
not shocking for me because I've been through the atrocities and the
people are still going through them. Pakistan only talks about issues
which are prevalent in Indian part of Kashmir. Pakistani security forces
are no better than the British colonialists," said Qureshi in an
interview. He also praised India for its
efforts to obtain and retain Kashmir in a democratic way.
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Who was RAVINDRA MHATRE
?
- Ravindra Hareshwar Mhatre was a 48 years old Indian diplomat in UK who was kidnapped and later murdered in Birmingham in 1984 by British Kashmiri terrorists.
- When Mhatre stepped out of a bus, clutching a birthday cake for his daughter Asha, was bundled into a car and held captive for three days in the Alum Rock area of Birmingham, an area with an overwhelmingly Kashmir-British population. His body was found two days after he was kidnapped in a Birmingham suburb.
- The Jammu Kashmir Liberation Army claimed responsibility and within hours of the kidnapping, the abductors issued their list of demands, which included one million pounds in cash and the release of Maqbool Butt, the JKLF’s co-founder, who was lodged in Delhi’s Tihar jail after being sentenced to death for killing personnel of Indian security forces.
- There were hectic efforts to goad Mrs Indira
Gandhi, then prime minister, into agreeing to negotiate a deal with
Mhatre’s abductors. But Mrs Gandhi remained unmoved and her message was
unambiguous: No talks, no deal.
On February 6, Mhatre’s body was found in a lane.
He had been shot dead after the JKLF realised it was futile to expect a swap. A grim-faced Mrs Gandhi
struck back.
- Maqbool
Butt was executed five days later on February 11 after then President Zail Singh was told to spurn
his mercy petition.
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About RAVINDRA MHATRE as a person !!
He was, as a friend recalls: "Simple,
almost naive, sincere and honest, without any flare or flamboyance." His
mother, a primary teacher at the Poddar School in Santa Cruz, had a great
impact on her son as well as on her numerous students who hold her in great
esteem.
Mhatre himself never smoke
or drank. He was interested in a variety of subjects, from history to art and
the sciences. While posted in Delhi he obtained diplomas in company law and
taxation from the Bharatiya Vidya Bhawan. As a boy he was so immersed in books
that he was sometime absent-minded about carrying out family chores.
Mhatre brought to his job a
rare personal touch. A sobbing woman mourner at Vikhroli recalled how when she
was feeling homesick and pregnant in strife-torn Teheran, Mhatre tried to cheer
her up by secretly arranging a quiet ceremony to celebrate her seventh month
of pregnancy, a custom among Maharashtrians. He had even written to his wife to send a green sari for the
function.
Another friend remembers
how when he wrote to Mhatre to find out, if possible, about a Dr Tilak from the
National Chemical Laboratory who was ill and in hospital in Teheran, Mhatre
went from hospital to hospital to locate the man and when he found him,
insisted on bringing him to his house.
He continuously showed a rare initiative and concern about Indians
abroad. When he recognised the famous classical singer Prabha Atre in Teheran,
he persuaded her to give a concert as he did with Aran Datte, the Marathi
singer. Hundreds of Indian students are indebted to him for the interest he
took in advising them about universities abroad.
Every city in which he was
posted, Mhatre got to know intimately. Said a friend: "He could always
tell you the restaurant where you got the best kulfi or the shop which had the
right goods from India. I remember when he was posted in Dhaka, he found a
tailor who stitched a suit for Rs 10. He got one made and wore it
proudly."
Ironically, on August 15,
1982, when he was transferred to Birmingham, the family was thrilled because
it represented the first safe post after years in trouble-spots.
- He was in Dhaka
in undivided Pakistan at the time of the Indo-Pakistan war in the mid-'60s
and was, like other Indians, placed under house arrest.
- He was in Iran
during the thick of the riots when the Shah was removed and Ayatullah
Khomeini took over.
As a result he was often
separated from his family, since Mhatre and his wife Shobha were keen that the
education of their only child Asha, now 14, should not suffer. Asha, a bright
student, had earlier stayed on in Bombay with her mother to study at St Columba
School.
In Birmingham, however, the family was finally
together and Asha studied at a local school. Tragically Asha's birthday fell a
day after her father was kidnapped. From phone messages to the family in
Bombay, it seems the teenager is trying bravely to cope with the situation. She
begged her concerned relatives not to phone at odd hours as it disturbed her
mother who was not at all well.
One of Mhatre's leisure
activities was "bhendia" a Marathi game of reciting couplets with the
ending word of a previous poem and very often he composed the poems and sang
them.
A colleague recalls that a
few years back when he visited the Qutub Minar in Delhi, he was so inspired
that in Marathi he composed a couplet remarking that as the "Qutub soars loftily
into the blue skies, so should a man soar high in his career and
attainments". But before he could
fulfil those ambitions for himself and his family, Mhatre was cruelly struck
down.