The Pahalgam attack has made us angry and rightly so. But anger should not lead us into an abyss of hate.
-
COVER STORY
-
The area in and around Pahalgam has witnessed massive security deployment during the Amarnath Yatra; however, Baisaran seems to have been always off the radar
It is clear that India will retaliate. But a war between the nuclear-armed neighbours is a nightmare not just for India and Pakistan, but for the entire region
Amid emotional funerals, salutations and promises for justice, the families of those killed in Pahalgam are struggling to make sense of the unforeseen tragedy
The government must ensure that its response to the Pahalgam terror attack fosters trust and unity, rather than fear and division, writes PDP chief Mehbooba Mufti
Kashmir is not broken. It is resilient. It is humane. It is proud. And it will rise again
Across the Valley, people mourned with silent prayers and spontaneous vigils after the terrorist attack at Pahalgam
The sheer uncertainty and costs of war, present levels of preparedness and the nuclear balance discount war as a rational option for India, certainly at the present stage
After all the humiliations and deaths that the Kashmiri Pandits had to face in the early nineties, in our very lifetime, the terrorists are back with unimaginable vengeance, hell-bent on killing Hindus in Kashmir so that no Hindu will dare think of ever going to Kashmir
Perhaps, the liberals of the country should, for a change, stop viewing Kashmir from an ultra-nationalist lens and instead respond to the candle lit by Kashmiris in this darkness
-
The area in and around Pahalgam has witnessed massive security deployment during the Amarnath Yatra; however, Baisaran seems to have been always off the radar
-
It is clear that India will retaliate. But a war between the nuclear-armed neighbours is a nightmare not just for India and Pakistan, but for the entire region
-
Amid emotional funerals, salutations and promises for justice, the families of those killed in Pahalgam are struggling to make sense of the unforeseen tragedy
-
The government must ensure that its response to the Pahalgam terror attack fosters trust and unity, rather than fear and division, writes PDP chief Mehbooba Mufti
-
Kashmir is not broken. It is resilient. It is humane. It is proud. And it will rise again
-
Across the Valley, people mourned with silent prayers and spontaneous vigils after the terrorist attack at Pahalgam
-
The sheer uncertainty and costs of war, present levels of preparedness and the nuclear balance discount war as a rational option for India, certainly at the present stage
-
After all the humiliations and deaths that the Kashmiri Pandits had to face in the early nineties, in our very lifetime, the terrorists are back with unimaginable vengeance, hell-bent on killing Hindus in Kashmir so that no Hindu will dare think of ever going to Kashmir
-
Perhaps, the liberals of the country should, for a change, stop viewing Kashmir from an ultra-nationalist lens and instead respond to the candle lit by Kashmiris in this darkness
OTHER STORIES
-
After the Pahalgam terrorist attack, all those in Kashmir who rely on tourism for their livelihood, from local artisans to shopkeepers, are now facing days of inactivity, which they fear may prolong into months of economic uncertainty