[One must not forget that the state of Israel was created to ensure
expulsion of its original inhabitants - the Palestinians, to make room for
the incoming Jews from afar.
So, there should not be any, whatever, confusion when one talks of
following the Israeli model in Kashmir.

Beyond Kashmir, the video clip, for which the link is: <
https://www.facebook.com/alok.jagdhari/videos/10156536925871700/?t=0>, is a
copybook example of "stigmatise and emulate"!
"We" are nice and decent; they're not, they're just nasty rogues!
Hence "we" have got to be like "them"!

That's how Christophe Jaffrelot had brilliantly delineated one of the
strategies of the Sangh Brigade, to incite people to perpetrate the most
despicable crimes against the (designated) "other".

It, as it appears, was a rather restricted "private" social gathering.
So, this "gentleman" so merrily and so eloquently exposed his unguarded
self.
Of course, he did also expound the "official" position.

In case of Kashmir, he has, very much, batted for ethnic cleansing,
following the Israeli model.
That's not covered by this clip.
Even here, he has so coolly equated "India" with "Hindu".

<<“Because we already have a model in the world. I don’t know why we don’t
follow it. It has happened in the Middle East. If the Israeli people can do
it, we can also do it. I think we should push our leadership to do that….
Otherwise what’s the point…. Give us some time.… We will do it…. That is
the determination of this leadership….”>>
(Excerpted from the report below.)]

https://www.telegraphindia.com/india/diplomat-lobbies-for-israel-model-in-kashmir/cid/1722556?fbclid=IwAR2o_Ro6ENF9TCuGAiY6q9W6Vb_sFKAF2X8MTi6jbl8h_Vnkg_8G5xvaWDU

Diplomat lobbies for Israel model in Kashmir
The diplomat also equated “Kashmiri culture” with “Hindu culture”

By Anita Joshua in New Delhi
Published 28.11.19, 3:04 AMUpdated 28.11.19, 3:10 AM
3 mins read

Sandeep Chakravorty
@chakraview1971

India’s consul-general in New York has called for pushing the Indian
leadership to follow the Israeli model of building settlements to take
Kashmiri Pandits back to the Valley and suggested that those at the helm
are determined to do so.

“I think we should push our leadership to do that…. Otherwise what’s the
point?… Give us some time.… We will do it…. That is the determination of
this leadership…,” Sandeep Chakravorty told a private gathering of the
Indian diaspora in New York on Sunday.

The diplomat also equated “Kashmiri culture” with “Hindu culture” and
advocated that Hindus use their “strength as the majority community”.

The UN and the International Court of Justice have said the Israeli
settlements on the West Bank violate the Fourth Geneva Convention. But last
week, the US had backed the settlements.

The Donald Trump administration declared that the Israeli settlements on
the West Bank were “not inconsistent with international law”, reversing
American policy.

India has always rejected any comparison between Kashmir and Palestine, and
has voted for resolutions critical of Israel’s settlement policy in
international fora.

The setting for Sunday’s event was private but Chakravorty was very
specific in stating at the outset that “I want to make some personal
points, after that I will present the government’s perspective”.

His remarks on Hindu assertion and replicating the Israel model in Kashmir
came in the latter part of his speech, which he started by saying “now I am
speaking in my official capacity”.

Speaking about the government’s decision to do away with the special status
of Jammu and Kashmir and bifurcate the state, Chakravorty was of the view
that there was a need to understand the thinking behind the decision to
bring the two new Union Territories under direct central rule.

Advocating patience, the consul-general said: “Give us some time…. The
government wouldn’t take such an international risk just for making an
amendment. We ran the risk of international opprobrium…. It was an
international diplomatic struggle. We have successfully stalled it.

“You give us some time. You will see what is going to happen. I believe the
security conditions in J&K will improve. It will allow refugees to go back
and in your lifetime you will be able to go back and you will be able to
visit your villages, and you will find security.

“Because we already have a model in the world. I don’t know why we don’t
follow it. It has happened in the Middle East. If the Israeli people can do
it, we can also do it. I think we should push our leadership to do that….
Otherwise what’s the point…. Give us some time.… We will do it…. That is
the determination of this leadership….”

After the Six-Day War in June 1967 in which Israel conquered the West Bank,
Jews began moving into the area. Today, an estimated 4.3 lakh Israeli Jews
live in 132 officially recognised “settlements”, besides over 100
unofficial “outposts” that await recognition.

Chakravorty also sought to address concerns in the gathering about the fate
of Kashmiri culture because of the exodus of Pandits from the Valley. “Jews
kept their culture alive for 2,000 years outside their land and they went
back. We all have to keep the Kashmiri culture alive. The Kashmiri culture
is the Indian culture, it is the Hindu culture….”

Chakravorty asserted that India had “never used our strength as the
majority community”.

“We have never used the strength of our Hindu culture, of our ancient
civilisation in diplomacy. Now when we are using it, people are having
issues with it. Our decision is being dragged to the HRC (UN Human Rights
Council), to the US Congress…

“A delegation wants to go. Go elsewhere? Go to Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan. No
one is talking about taking photos there…. Why do you want to come to our
place? They do not like the fact that we are asserting ourselves. I believe
that in my lifetime we will have our land back…,” Chakravorty said.

Although the diplomat spoke of asserting “Hindu culture”, India’s outreach
to the foreign community after the scrapping of Jammu and Kashmir’s special
status and the Ayodhya judgment of the Supreme Court has been to reassure
the world about the country’s secular values.

After a controversy broke out over his remarks, Chakravorty tweeted from
his private handle: “I have seen some social media comments on my recent
remarks. My remarks are being taken out of context.”

The external affairs ministry maintained radio silence despite repeated
queries from reporters through the day on the diplomat’s remarks.

Chakravorty’s comments drew a sharp response from Pakistan Prime Minister
Imran Khan. Posting a news report on Chakravorty’s remarks, he tweeted:
“Shows the fascist mindset of the Indian govt’s RSS ideology that has
continued the siege of IOJK for over 100 days, subjecting Kashmiris to the
worst violation of their human rights while the powerful countries remain
silent bec of their trading interests.”

The private gathering in New York — mainly of Kashmiri Pandits — included
actor Anupam Kher and filmmaker Vivek Agnihotri, both vocal backers of the
Narendra Modi government. Agnihotri, whose latest film The Tashkent Files
had revolved around an alleged conspiracy to kill then Prime Minister Lal
Bahadur Sashtri, has announced a film where he would explore the “sinister
politics” behind the exodus of Kashmiri Pandits from the Valley because of
militancy in the late 80s.

In an hour-long video of the conversation on Kashmir, Chakravorty spoke at
the fag end.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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