India and Pakistan




 
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India and Pakistan
 
February 20th, 2005  
OutcastHuman
 

Topic: India and Pakistan


India and Pakistan
What ever happened with those two nations? Are they still fighting over the Kashmir region or have they finally started to get along?
February 20th, 2005  
Sexybeast
 
wow.....i think Mod does not like nation vs nation thread,

but we can give it a try

i am not from either India or pakistan,

so i just make some sort of guess..

i dont think there will large scale war between these two nations in the recent....

as India has to focus on its building of economy,

as pakistan too, has loads of problems in home.....

and both nations have nukes....as their last resort..

i doubt any of them would risk of being nuked and provoke a large scale war to destroy one another
February 20th, 2005  
OutcastHuman
 
Well Im just wondering what happened with the Kashmir Region is it under Indian or Pakistani Control? Or are they still fighting?
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India and Pakistan
February 20th, 2005  
Sexybeast
 
i think they still each control about half of that region....


wait for indian ppl in this forum to give u details
February 20th, 2005  
OutcastHuman
 
Hopefully the mods wont lock it. I dont see why they would though since Im just curious not like Im trying to offend anyone.
February 20th, 2005  
Duty Honor Country
 
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by OutcastHuman
Hopefully the mods wont lock it. I dont see why they would though since Im just curious not like Im trying to offend anyone.
As long as there be no flaming, this thread can stay open. There is another thread on the conflict open, but it deals more with the history of the conflict. Also that thread got totally off topic. If this topic gets like that one, the mods will mostlikely lock it down.

Keep to the currect situation and everything will be alright.
February 20th, 2005  
OutcastHuman
 
I know I will stay on topic hopefully everyone else will also.
February 20th, 2005  
SwordFish_13
 
 
Hi,


Well Lots of Questions here ...........


Quote:
wow.....i think Mod does not like nation vs nation thread,
It's India and Pakistan

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and both nations have nukes....as their last resort..
Hmmm Well NUKES are not the last Resort ............. India ha a No - First use Policy ........... So Until Someone Uses it against us India will not Use it in any Circumstance.


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What ever happened with those two nations?
If you are Asking Form the Historical point of View i call it Partation based upon Religion

Unpartioned India


Quote:
Are they still fighting over the Kashmir region or have they finally started to get along?
Well Still Fighiting .....Not a straight War but a Pakstani Sponsered Proxy war........Pakistani bacekd Terror Organisstion as still active in Kashmir.

India cannot let go Kashmir under any circumstance no matter how bloody it gets ............ till date more than 60,000 people have been killed in this dispute


Quote:
Well Im just wondering what happened with the Kashmir Region is it under Indian or Pakistani Control?
It's Divided into three parts Indian Administered kashmir , Pakistan Administered Kashmir and some parts Controled by China .



A line of Control (LOC) Divides them apart ...............Both India and Pakisna Clam the Whole Kashmir.

When Country Got Partationed................ The Indian subcontinent was partitioned into Hindu-dominated India and the newly created Muslim state of Pakistan.....India Choose to be a Secular Country rather than a Hindu Country ......... the Constiturion States that Government would not Discriminate on the basis of Religion , Caste , Creed and Sex. ..............Pakistan Disputes kashmir saying that the majority people living there are Muslim.............. Now if India Accepts the seperation of kashmir on the basis of religion it would go against the Secular principle ............ and worse , then other Fraction( religios Communities ) also might start asking for seperate home land as they are not hindus .

IF you are Interested here is a Excelent Article that strats form the 1947 and ocvres the Disputes


Kashmir Flashpoint : In-Depth

and a FAQ regarding Frequently Asked Questions about teh Dispute :

Q&A: Kashmir dispute

Quote:
Q&A: Kashmir dispute

India and Pakistan have begun talks aimed at boosting their peace process that will cover their long-standing dispute over the northern territory of Kashmir.

The mountainous region has been a flashpoint between the two nuclear powers for more than 50 years. Here is a step-by-step guide to the dispute.

Why is Kashmir disputed?


The territory of Kashmir was hotly contested even before India and Pakistan won their independence from Britain in August 1947.

Under the partition plan provided by the Indian Independence Act of 1947, Kashmir was free to accede to India or Pakistan.

The Maharaja, Hari Singh, wanted to stay independent but eventually decided to accede to India, signing over key powers to the Indian Government - in return for military aid and a promised referendum.

Since then, the territory has been the flashpoint for two of the three India-Pakistan wars: the first in 1947-8, the second in 1965.

In 1999, India fought a brief but bitter conflict with Pakistani-backed forces who had infiltrated Indian-controlled territory in the Kargil area.

In addition to the rival claims of Delhi and Islamabad to the territory, there has been a growing and often violent separatist movement against Indian rule in Kashmir since 1989.

What are the rival claims?

Islamabad says Kashmir should have become part of Pakistan in 1947, because Muslims are in the majority in the region.

Pakistan also argues that Kashmiris should be allowed to vote in a referendum on their future, following numerous UN resolutions on the issue.

Delhi, however, does not want international debate on the issue, arguing that the Simla Agreement of 1972 provided for a resolution through bilateral talks.

India points to the Instrument of Accession signed in October 1947 by the Maharaja, Hari Singh.

Both India and Pakistan reject the option of Kashmir becoming an independent state.

How dangerous is the Kashmir dispute?

It is potentially one of the most dangerous disputes in the world.

In 1998 India and Pakistan both declared themselves to be nuclear powers with a string of nuclear tests.

2002 saw a huge deployment of troops on both sides of the border as India reacted to an armed attack on the national parliament in Delhi the previous December.

India said the attack was carried out by Pakistani-based militants assisted by the Pakistan Government - a charge always denied by Pakistan.

In the worst-case scenario, the Kashmir dispute would trigger a nuclear conflict.

Aside from that, the separatist militancy and cross-border firing between the Indian and Pakistani armies has left a death toll running into tens of thousands and a population brutalised by fighting and fear.

Who are the militants?

There are several groups pursuing the rival claims to Kashmir.

Not all are armed, but since Muslim insurgency began in 1989, the number of armed separatists has grown from hundreds to thousands. The most prominent are the pro-Pakistani Hizbul Mujahideen.

Islamabad denies providing them and others with logistical and material support.

The Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) was the largest pro-independence group, but its influence is thought to have waned.

Other groups have joined under the umbrella of the All-Party Hurriyat (Freedom) Conference, which campaigns peacefully for an end to India's presence in Kashmir.

Indian forces announced a unilateral ceasefire against militant groups in November 2000, but violence continued.

Attempts to get talks going between the government and the separatist parties have foundered over separatist demands that Pakistan should be included in any dialogue.

India says there can be no three-way discussion involving Pakistan because it sponsors violence in Kashmir.

Is religion an issue?

Religion is an important aspect of the dispute. Partition in 1947 gave India's Muslims a state of their own: Pakistan. So a common faith underpins Pakistan's claims to Kashmir, where many areas are Muslim-dominated.

The population of the Indian-administered state of Jammu and Kashmir is over 60% Muslim, making it the only state within India where Muslims are in the majority.

Are there grounds to hope the Kashmir dispute can be resolved?

Recent months have seen a big thaw in relations between India and Pakistan.

That process culminated on 6 January, with Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf and Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee committing themselves to a dialogue covering all issues between the two countries - including Kashmir.

The two men said they were "confident" that talks "will lead to peaceful settlement of all bilateral issues, including Jammu and Kashmir".

The two governments will have huge international backing to make the talks succeed.

An end to the violence and uncertainty in Kashmir would also be widely welcomed in India and Pakistan by those weary of the fighting and those who see it as a hindrance to economic development in the South Asia region.

Analysts say that Pakistan has also given ground, with President Musharraf in December saying that he was prepared to "put aside" his country's long-standing demand for a referendum on the future of Kashmir, as outlined in United Nations resolutions.

And when Mr Vajpayee agreed to talks, he did not mention India's long-standing insistence that all cross-border terrorism be halted before talks could take place.

Instead, he accepted an assurance from General Musharraf that he will not allow Pakistan-controlled territory to be used to support terrorism.

However, a diplomatic solution has escaped both sides for more than 50 years, and there are no signs of any new proposals yet.

Furthermore, both leaders face powerful hardline groups within their own countries who will be carefully monitoring the talks to make sure concessions they deem to be unacceptable are not offered to the other side.

In addition, violence within Indian-administered Kashmir persists.

The Pakistani and Indian armies are observing a ceasefire along the de facto border, the Line of Control that divides Kashmir.

But the ceasefire is not being observed in the conflict between the Indian security forces and Kashmiri militants.

India has long alleged that Pakistan-backed militants have been launching attacks across the country - including a double bombing in Bombay last year that killed some 50 people.

The possibility of major militant attacks will increase in the spring, as the snows melt and mountain passes again become accessible to infiltrators.

What is the Line of Control?

A demarcation line was originally established in January 1949 as a ceasefire line, following the end of the first Kashmir war.

In July 1972, after a second conflict, the Line of Control (LoC) was re-established under the terms of the Simla Agreement, with minor variations on the earlier boundary.

The LoC passes through a mountainous region about 5,000 metres high.

The conditions are so extreme that the bitter cold claims more lives than the sporadic military skirmishes.

North of the LoC, the rival forces have been entrenched on the Siachen glacier (more than 6,000 metres high) since 1984 - the highest battlefield on earth.

The LoC divides Kashmir on an almost two-to-one basis: Indian-administered Kashmir to the east and south (population about nine million), which falls into the Indian-controlled state of Jammu and Kashmir; and Pakistani-administered Kashmir to the north and west (population about three million), which is labelled by Pakistan as "Azad" (Free) Kashmir. China also controls a small portion of Kashmir.

What's the UN involvement?

The UN has maintained a presence in the disputed area since 1949.

Currently, the LoC is monitored by the UN Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan (Unmogip).

According to the UN, their mission is "to observe, to the extent possible, developments pertaining to the strict observance of the ceasefire of December 1971".
Peace
-=SF_13=-
February 20th, 2005  
Sexybeast
 
a comprehensive post on pakistan and india..

i didn't know that china is involved in that area too
February 20th, 2005  
TBA_PAKI
 
Both the countries have declared cease-fire in LOC region in 2003 and observing it up-till now and process of negotiations is under-discussion among there leaders. Although there are un-confirmed reports of cross-border violations but Indian side agrees that it is very much on the decline.

President Pervaiz Musharraf focuses on making a settlement on the Kashmir dispute that satisfies all the three parties involved (Pakistan, India and Kashmir Administration).

But possibility of Chinese intervention can be given attention.

Note that President Pervaiz Musharraf already banned the major Al-mujahedeen party and its co-ordinates that were involved in the Kashmir’s proxy war type situation after 9/11 event and pressure from US government. And I personally had not seen any Mujahedeen support fund programs being practiced now in the cities like they used to be before 9/11 (so this confirms the president’s claims).

Currently two major proposals are being discussed:

a) Declare LOC as permanent border
b) Give Independence to the disputed zone (might include Pakistani controlled region also)

For under-standing this dispute it is also important to note following things that date back to pre-partition stage:

The British rulers decided to partition the sub-continent on the basis of majority of population of any religion in a province, like a province with Muslims as majority would be acceded to Pakistan and the one with Hindu majority would be acceded to India.

The situation in Kashmir was that it had Muslims as majority but the provincial ruler was a Hindu and he decided to annex this region with India (without focusing on the British principle for the partition). He was then threatened by the Muslims there and migrated to Delhi.

On retaliation, India send its troops to Kashmir, while Pakistan army interfered from the western side and the war of 1948 took place, which ended in a stalemate with Kashmir territory divided among the two sides.

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i didn't know that china is involved in that area too
China became involved in this region during the 1962 Indo-China war (fought for border settlement), which ended with chinese forces occupying almost 20% of Kashmir territory and defeat of India.