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Global Leftist media starts covering up Islamic terrorism by Pakistan, calls Pahalgam terrorists ‘gunmen’, mentions ‘Indian administered Kashmir’ and more

On 22nd April, a deadly attack by Islamic terrorists in Pahalgam in Kashmir left at least 28 dead and several injured. The majority of the dead were Hindus. The terrorists, affiliated with the Resistance Front (TRF), a Lashkar-e-Taiba offshoot, were behind the attack. Victims said on record and on camera that the tourists were killed because they were not Muslims.

Amidst the ghastly attack, the leftist media began covering up Islamic terrorism sponsored by Pakistan and referred to the terrorists as ‘gunmen’. Simultaneously, they used the phrase “India-administered Kashmir” for the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir to establish the notion that it is a disputed region between India and Pakistan.

The BBC published the report on the terror attack with the title, “More than 20 killed after gunmen open fire on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir”. In the report as well, they did not provide any clear indication—other than quoting someone—that it was a terrorist attack. The report read, “At least two dozen people have been killed after gunmen opened fire on a group of domestic tourists visiting a popular beauty spot in Indian-administered Kashmir.” Archived link of the BBC report can be checked here.

Source: BBC

In its report titled “Gunmen launch rare attack on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir”, The Washington Post not only watered down the fact that it was a terrorist attack, but also challenged the sovereignty of the Indian state by calling Kashmir “India-administered Kashmir”. WaPo also failed to call it a terror attack in the body of the report and mentioned “terrorism” only while quoting Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Archived link of the Washington Post report can be checked here.

Source: Washington Post

In its report, France 24 called the terrorists “gunmen” and referred to Kashmir as “Indian-administered Kashmir”. Similar to other media houses, France 24 mentioned it as a “terror attack” or “terrorist attack” only while quoting leaders. Archived link of the France 24 report can be checked here.

Source: France 24

In a video report, Al Jazeera referred to Kashmir as “Indian-administered Kashmir” and described the terrorists as “gunmen”, thereby watering down the intensity and seriousness of the attack. In the video, Al Jazeera claimed no one had claimed responsibility for the attack, but stated that “the police blamed armed groups fighting against Indian rule”. Al Jazeera clearly attempted to shift the responsibility away from Islamic terrorists. Archived link of the Al Jazeera report can be checked here.

Source: Al Jazeera

In a report covering the attack, DW referred to the terrorists as “gunmen” and Kashmir as “Indian-administered Kashmir”. DW described Lashkar-e-Taiba as a “militant group” rather than a terrorist outfit. It also failed to label the incident a terror attack or mention “terrorism” outside of quotes from leaders, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Archived link of the DW report can be checked here.

Source: DW

Though SBS did not use the phrase “Indian-administered Kashmir” in the title, it used it in the excerpt and body of the report. The report read, “At least 20 people are feared dead after suspected militants opened fire on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir on Tuesday.” There was no mention of Islamic terrorists or even “terrorists”; they were referred to as “suspected militants”. Archived link of the SBS News report can be checked here.

Source: SBS

In its report, Bangladesh Guardian referred to the terrorist attack as a “gun attack” and described Kashmir as “Indian-administered Kashmir” in the body of the report. The attackers were referred to as “armed assailants”. Archived link of the Bangladesh Guardian report can be checked here.

Source: Bangladesh Guardian

Similarly, Middle East Eye described Kashmir as “Indian-administered Kashmir” and the terrorists as “gunmen”. MEE further attempted to gaslight India by claiming Kashmir is “often dubbed the world’s most militarised zone”, and by quoting the dubious NGO Amnesty International, which claimed that “all credible, independent sources of information on Jammu and Kashmir” are being silenced following the abrogation of Article 370. Archived link of the Middle East Eye report can be checked here.

Source: MEE

In its report, Euronews also used the phrase “Indian-administered Kashmir” and referred to the terrorists as “gunmen”. Furthermore, the report included the phrase “India-controlled portion of Kashmir”. Archived link of the Euro News report can be checked here.

Source: Euro News

Asia News Network also used “Indian-administered Kashmir” and “gunmen”; however, it did state that it was a terror attack and referred to TRF as a terrorist outfit. Archived link of the Asia News Network report can be checked here.

Source: ANN

The deliberate editorial choices made by global media houses to downplay the Pahalgam attack as anything but a terror act raise serious ethical questions. By avoiding the term “terrorist” and repeatedly using “Indian-administered Kashmir”, these outlets not only diminish the horror faced by victims but also echo the narrative peddled by Pakistan. Such reportage undermines India’s sovereignty and downplays the systematic targeting of Hindus.

TheWire misquotes eyewitness to whitewash the selective targeting of Hindus in Pahalgam terror attack, quietly updates report after backlash

Leftwing propaganda portal The Wire has a history of shielding Islamists. But on April 22, Tuesday, sank to a new low, even by their own diminished standards, when it misquoted an eyewitness testimony that established the religious motive behind the Pahalgam terror attack. 

More than 20 tourists were killed in a terror attack in Pahalgam, Kashmir, as terrorists opened fire after identifying them as non-Muslims. Reports and videos circulating online said terrorists checked ID cards and stripped tourists to confirm their religion, before finally shooting them, many of them point blank.

However, a report published by The Wire and authored by one Jehangir Ali quotes an eyewitness of the attack from a video that went viral minutes after it was uploaded online. In the video, a woman, clearly shocked by the attack, could be heard frantically saying that terrorists came and fired bullets at her husband after asking his name and saying he was not a Muslim.

The video also shows a man lying motionless with his pants pulled down. Another man, profusely bleeding from around his neck and his t-shirt stained with the crimson colour of blood, was also seen in the video.  

However, the Wire article misquoted the woman, saying that her husband was probably targeted for being a Muslim. 

screenshot from TheWire’s report

While the error was corrected following social media backlash, it still highlights The Wire’s well-known tendency to depict Muslims as victims of hate crimes driven by religion and whitewash atrocities committed when the perpetrators are Islamists.

In a chilling attack, terrorists in Pahalgam, Kashmir, targeted tourists after identifying them as non-Muslims. The attack came days after a video of Pakistan COAS Asim Munir ranting against Hindus had gone viral on the internet. 

A heart-wrenching video of the incident surfaced online, showing tourists frantically calling out for help as dead bodies lying along the meadows can be seen in the video. Eyewitnesses to the attack could be heard saying that the attack was religiously motivated as terrorists shot tourists point blank after identifying them as Hindus.

One of the haunting pictures of the attack that has gone viral on social media is of a grief-stricken woman helplessly sitting beside his dead husband. According to reports, the woman was recently married and was on her honeymoon in Kashmir when the terrorists attacked and killed her husband. 

According to unofficial sources who are privy to the attack, the number of casualties could exceed 25.

Pahalgam attack: Trader unions and political parties call for complete shut-down in Kashmir valley, say they condemn the incident

Following the terrorist attack in Kashmir’s Pahalgam on Tuesday, the political parties as well as traders’ unions in the region have collectively called for a complete shutdown in the Kashmir valley on Wednesday to show solidarity with the victims’ families and to condemn the attack.

Speaking to ANI on the complete shutdown in the valley, Bashir Ahmad Kongposh, General Secretary of the Kashmir Traders and Manufacturers Association, said that the complete shutdown was to show a strong condemnation and protest against the Pahalgam terror attack.

“Following the heart-wrenching incident that happened yesterday, the Kashmir traders and manufacturers association will be in complete shutdown today. We have protested against it and condemn this act as strongly as possible. Islam doesn’t allow such things where people get killed… It is the death of humanity… We are really against these acts… Yesterday we had a meeting on the shutdown… We also want to keep these acts away from the region… In solidarity, we have called for a total shutdown in response to the attack,” Kongposh said.

Business communities in Poonch also held protests, calling for a complete shutdown in response to the terror attack yesterday.

Ankit Maheshwari, a tourist from Rajasthan, stated that it was rare to witness such a shutdown in Kashmir; however, he noted that the locals have been very supportive despite the shutdown.

“This is a big incident, and it is very sad. This should not happen, as it is a very beautiful place, but it is very sad. It has never happened to tourists, and now it has happened for the first time. This should be condemned, and it is very rare that Kashmir has shut down… But the locals here are very supportive and are doing a lot despite the shutdown,” he said.

Ashiq Hussain, a resident of Srinagar, emphasised that the attack was the “murder of humanity” and questioned why such incidents take place, as it damages the name of the place.

“The news of the tourists who were attacked in Pahalgam is not a good thing because this is the murder of humanity… It is unclear why such incidents are occurring now. Currently, tourism is at its peak, but you will soon see the impact it has. Our name is being tarnished by this situation, which is worsening all over the world. If someone is making a mistake, then our name is getting worse. We don’t want such things to happen. This is absolutely wrong… We Kashmiris are all with them (the victims) right now, with their pain,” Hussain stated.

Earlier on Tuesday, several political parties in Jammu and Kashmir have extended their support to the call for a Kashmir Bandh (shutdown) on Wednesday to condemn the Pahalgam terror attack and show solidarity with the victims’ families.

Jammu and Kashmir National Conference (JKNC) has appealed to the people to make the Bandh a “complete success” and join in condemning the Pahalgam terror attack.

In a social media post on X, JKNC wrote, “On the instruction of the Party President, JKNC joins the collective call for a bandh in strong condemnation of the Pahalgam terror attack. We appeal to the people of J&K to ensure the hartal called by religious and social leaders is a complete success.”

Jammu and Kashmir Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chief Mehbooba Mufti has expressed solidarity with the victims’ families and supported the shutdown, calling it an “attack on all of us.”

Jammu-Kashmir Students Association (JKSA) has termed the attack an “assault on the very soul of Jammu and Kashmir” and has also extended its support to the Bandh.

All Parties Hurriyat Conference Chairman Mirwaiz Umar Farooq urged the people of Jammu and Kashmir to support the shutdown and peacefully protest against the “heinous crime.”

Meanwhile, the Indian Army and Jammu and Kashmir Police have launched a search operation in the general area of Baisran, Pahalgam, Anantnag, to nab the perpetrators of the attack. 


(This news report is published from a syndicated feed. Except for the headline, the content has not been written or edited by OpIndia staff)

‘Dharavi culture’ is a myth, no one deserves to live in a slum!

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Scrolling X is one of my favourite things to do when I am not writing anything. I come across a lot of voices—some genuinely good, and some so out of touch with reality that it pains my soul. A few days ago, I came across a post by one Asim Ali, who appears to be a columnist, as stated in his bio, for several media outlets, including The Times of India, The Diplomat, The Hindu, The New York Times, and others. A political researcher—that is what he calls himself.

He had shared a report questioning the Dharavi redevelopment project and quoted that post to claim there is a “culture of Dharavi” which is much richer than the “vulgar complexes of Gurgaon and Navi Mumbai.” He further claimed it has been “built up collaboratively by diverse sets of migrants, through adaptation and innovation. Even developed their own hip hop.”

Romanticising misery as ‘culture’

Without going into the details of the redevelopment process, land constraints, or other technicalities, what angered me the most is the fact that the lifestyle of people living in Dharavi is being romanticised as “culture”. What culture are we talking about? Slums, disease, no access to clean drinking water, no sanitation, no proper education, and the worst possible living conditions—is this the “culture” we wish to preserve?

Dharavi is the largest slum in Asia. It is not a “record”; it is a blot on society. Preventing redevelopment for whatever reason should be deemed criminal. To people like Asim, I have only one question—would you take your family and live in a Dharavi jhuggi forever? Will Asim live in a place, or wish his family would live in a place where community toilet is shared by 300-500 people? No, you wouldn’t. And if you wouldn’t live there, why do you wish for it to continue to exist?

The myth of Dharavi’s organic culture

The entire notion that Dharavi has a “culture” that is organic and thriving is one of the most elitist constructs ever forced upon the urban poor. The construct is so out of touch that it finds romantic sights in stinking sewage water, leaking roofs, mosquito-filled jhuggis, and the fact that people living in slums have a life expectancy at least ten years lower than those in cleaner areas.

The desire to preserve Dharavi’s “culture” is not the voice of the people living in those jhuggis. It is the voice of those watching them from air-conditioned cars, DSLRs in hand, hunting for the next dose of poverty aesthetics they can click and sell for millions in a posh art gallery. Every now and then, some filmmaker or foreign academic lands up in Dharavi and documents the struggles of its residents. They call it “resilience”. The film gets an award. The research paper is acknowledged and published. They earn thousands, if not millions. What do the people of Dharavi get? A sense of false pride—nothing else. The drains remain open. The roofs rot and collapse. Drinking water? What the hell is clean drinking water? But sure, talk about Dharavi “culture”, bro.

Calling neglect creativity doesn’t make it so

Coming back to the seriousness of the topic, several studies on slums worldwide have clearly busted the myth of slum culture. Slums are often portrayed as sites of creativity and resistance. However, in reality, they are, at best, symptoms of systematic neglect by governments. In plain English, calling it a culture is just a fancy way to ignore the fact that people living in slums are suffering and dying a horrible death.

The dark underbelly of slum tourism

Another problematic aspect of the slum “culture” is the existence of slum tourism. In “When urban poverty becomes a tourist attraction: a systematic review of slum tourism research“, Tianhan Gui and Wei Zhong discuss the many issues associated with slum tourism. It is generally believed to be a new phenomenon, but in reality, slum tourism has deep colonial roots. It is not because Bollywood or the elite have recently developed an obsession with poverty aesthetics.

The practice goes as far back as Victorian England and early 20th-century America, where elites would “slum” their way through the poorest neighbourhoods of London and New York. Why? For the kick and thrill. It was a mix of moral superiority and curiosity. By the late 20th century, it had evolved into a booming global industry—especially in cities like Mumbai, Rio, Cape Town and many others.

Dharavi becomes a ‘tourist product’

Dharavi was not always as popular among slum tourists as it is now. Films like Slumdog Millionaire played a major role in making Dharavi a hotbed of slum tourism. Yes, there are tour operators who offer slum tourism packages—everything from “local delicacies” to guided walks through the containment zone known as Dharavi—showing the elites how poor people live and survive. Every detail, every step, every turn, and every sight is curated by these operators to ensure Dharavi feels like something that ought to be “romanticised”.

Exploitation disguised as ‘ethics’

Slum tourism is nothing but commercial voyeurism. According to Gui and Zhong, slum tourism thrives on portraying poverty as a spectacle. But what is so “spectacular” about hundreds of people sharing the same toilet and cooking food while their homes reek of sewage? NOTHING. And yet, it is presented as something so spectacular that it becomes “culture”.

Operators often label them “ethical tours” and claim that these excursions help “raise awareness” or “support local businesses”. However, the commodification of poverty turns human suffering into a consumable product. The “resilience” and “existence” of the people of Dharavi are romanticised so that the elite can sip their high tea and say, “Oh, how beautiful these pictures are! You deserve a Pulitzer or an exhibition in New York’s finest art gallery!” Amid these GoPro recordings, DSLRs clicking endless photos, and all the lights-camera-action, the desperate cry for dignity has been lost. Romanticising it, packaging it, and monetising it is not culture—it’s exploitation. And the only thing worse than living in a slum is being treated like you’re part of a sightseeing stop. Think about it. How is this any different from the “human zoos” once operated by the elites of the past, where children of enslaved humans were caged and displayed?

It’s not innovation, it’s adaptation for survival

The idea that Dharavi is a story of innovation and collaborative spirit collapses the moment you start digging into the work of academics like Jan Nijman. In his paper India’s Urban Future: Views from the Slum“, he explains that slums in India, like Dharavi, are not the result of creative urban planning. They are spaces that have been “structurally shaped by economic necessity and institutional neglect.” Slums like Dharavi do not emerge because people come together to build something culturally rich—they emerge because the system gave them no other choice.

According to Nijman, slums like Dharavi are not merely a “labour reservoir” but have evolved into a “self-organising slum economy” that acts as a substitute for the missing growth of India’s formal manufacturing sector. On barely 2 square kilometres, it sustains livelihoods for half a million people through small-scale, labour-intensive activity, born out of exclusion, not empowerment. Calling this struggle a “culture” or “innovation” is romantic fiction. It is not progress. It is a coping mechanism, wrapped in neglect and sold as resilience.

The sad side of Dharavi hip-hop

As for the “hip-hop culture” that Asim mentioned—yes, it exists. But so does the fact that these artists are rapping not to glorify Dharavi, but to escape it. While it may carry the beat of ambition and the rhythm of resistance, it is less a celebration and more a scream muffled under basslines.

For example, in the lyrics of Straight Outta Dharavi by D Abdul, what sounds like cool street wisdom is actually trauma rendered in rhyme. There are lines about wearing only underwear yet “shining”, fighting with bare hands, living in a broken home where rain drops on your face… It all tells stories that are not of culture, but of collapse.

As Jan Nijman rightly argued, Dharavi is not a creative haven—it is a survival economy. These rappers do not glorify the slum; they endure it. There is a cry for help in their lyrics—sometimes loud, sometimes rhythmic—but always loaded with the unbearable weight of being left behind by the system.

Conclusion

Let’s stop calling this culture. Dharavi is not a canvas of creativity; it is a monument to the Indian state’s failure to provide a dignified life to its citizens. The children of Dharavi rap because nobody listened when they cried. Its people build micro-economies because no policy has ever truly reached their doors.

Yet, the elite romanticise their suffering as spirit, their desperation as resilience, and their poverty as pride. There is nothing noble about being forced into a 10×10 room with a dozen people, sharing toilets with hundreds, or eating chutney and roti while dodging death by disease. Culture is a choice. Dharavi is a compulsion. Pretending that poverty is beautiful is the greatest insult to its people. We do not need the preservation of slums. We need redemption from the fact that they ever existed.

Telangana Waqf Board claims 300 acres of land: 10,000 families worried about their future as it hangs in balance following the claim

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The Telangana Waqf Board’s claim to land in the Boduppal area has left about 50,000 people in a state of shock and uncertainty. Approximately 10,000 households living in 21 colonies spread across 300 acres are facing an impending crisis, reported Times Now. The Waqf board verbally told the Registration Department in 2018 that the 300-acre plot of land is Waqf property, citing a 1989 gazette notice which led to a major controversy.

The residents, many of whom have lived there for more than 20 years with what they assert are legitimate government approvals and official land documents, such as pahanis and pattas from the 1950s, have been left stunned by the development. They contend that land records from 1954 and 1955 unequivocally identify the region as patta property.

They further note that over the years, authorization and approvals for property registrations, loans and constructions have been issued by multiple government departments, including the Municipal Corporation, the Water Board, the Electricity Department and the Registration and Stamps Department.

“Two decades ago we have purchased lands after going through all the records since year 1954, 1955 the land we are staying in was showed as patta land. We have taken loans, permission and approval from all govt departments for registration and construction,” a local said.

The matter arose in 2018 when a resident tried to sell his property and the registration office informed him that the Waqf Board had filed litigation for the land. The residents were startled because neither the initial land acquisition nor the building process had made reference to this claim. The Waqf Board did not formally declare ownership of the land in a letter until 2022.

The legitimacy of the Waqf Board’s claim to the land has been challenged by residents, who point to decades of documentation and government endorsements that designate it as patta land. Many are skeptical about the authenticity of the 1989 gazette that the board is using as a reference. According to residents, if the government publishes any gazette, it will be communicated to all departments. However, when they made the purchase, no department notified them that this land was under the jurisdiction of the Waqf board.

It was only after a decade, post-purchase and construction of the building, that the Waqf board laid claim to the land. Currently, as their homes and futures face significant risks, the impacted families are seeking justice. They are advocating for an investigation by a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) and a revision of the Waqf Act, pointing out that the board should not possess unrestricted power to announce land claims many years after it has been developed and occupied.

The Layout Regularisation Scheme (LRS) was utilized to regularize unapproved plots. K Kiran Kumar Reddy, co-chairman of Joint Action Committee on Boduppal Waqf Lands informed the Times of India, “Citizens bought over 3,000 plots three decades ago and built houses on the land. HMDA (Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority) permitted layouts in Ghatkesar and implemented LRS after collecting a penal amount. Now, waqf board’s sudden claim over these plots and freezing of registrations is unacceptable,” in 2023.

According to him, numerous colonies in Boduppal have been designated as waqf property, including RNS Colony, Sri Sai Nagar Colony, Balajinagar, Shivapuri Colony, Maruthinagar, Vinayakanagar, Rajalingam Colony and other locations. The joint action committee has been holding rallies, vanta varpu programs and dharnas to make their point known to the state government.

Naragoni Praveen Kumar, president Telangana Realtors Association expressed, “The state government issued GO No. 15 in September 2020, banning registrations in waqf lands, which are notified in the gazette notification. Before the ban, the government should have reviewed the issue as it’s linked to nearly 6,000 families in Boduppal. These plot owners have paid taxes and fees towards registration, development charges, building fees and property taxes for two decades.”

Masiullah Khan, chairman of Telangana Waqf Board alleged, “The board is protecting land in survey numbers in gazette notifications. If there are claims by people, they can move court and get the order for removal of survey numbers from the gazette.”

The Federation of Boduppal Municipal Corporation Colonies Welfare Associations urged that 328 acres of residential land be taken off the Waqf property list by the state government, that same year. They said that residential colonies made about 95% of the land. Federation representatives disclosed that attempts to reach Labour Minister Chamakura Malla Reddy were unsuccessful and urged Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao to get involved. They added, “The Minister is avoiding such a serious issue rather than taking it up with the CM.”

The owners of the 328 acres in different survey numbers in Boduppal had pattadar passbooks and title deeds for the previous 50 years, according to federation chairman Rapolu Ramulu, vice-chairman Adla Srinivas Reddy, president Chenchala Narsing Rao, general secretary Gujjula Chandrashekhar, and treasurer K. Ramakrishna Reddy.  This was also evident from revenue records and the proprietors were farmers. 95% of the land sold by the owners during the past thirty years has been developed into residential colonies.

The gram panchayat issued permissions for these residential complexes. These colonies received utilities like CC roads, drains and water and electricity lines with the establishment of the Boduppal Municipal Corporation. However, three years ago, plots and land parcels in these colonies were listed as prohibited land, indicating that they were Waqf land. These land lots were no longer for sale and even licenses for extensions of existing homes were being refused. They mentioned that the owners of the property were all middle-class or impoverished individuals who used their hard-earned money to purchase it.

Pune Porsche accident case: Medics got 3 lakhs for switching blood samples, how corruption and influence worked at every level for the rich to get away with murder

The Pune Porsche case, the accident that took place on 19th May 2024, in Maharashtra’s Pune, serves as a grim reminder of how influence, wealth, systemic corruption and a dash of insensitivity together undermine justice in India. A 17-year-old son of a builder, Vishal Agarwal of Brahma Realty and Infrastructure, rammed his Porsche Taycan car into a vehicle in an inebriated state and killed two people named Aneesh Awadhia and Ashwini Koshta.

Medics involved in Pune Porsche case accused’s blood sample swap suspended

This hit-and-run case sparked nationwide outrage for many reasons, starting with the accused getting bail within 15 hours of the incident and multiple cover-up attempts. In a latest development, the Maharashtra Medical Council (MMC) has suspended registrations of Sassoon General Hospital’s former head of forensic sciences department, Dr Ajay Taware, and former casualty medical officer (CMO) Dr Shrihari Halnor. The two are facing trial in the case of swapping the blood sample of the accused teenager.

This came after the MMC sought committee reports and documents from the Pune police and the medical education department. Based on these documents, the decision to suspend both licences was taken by the council.

Notably, Shrihari Halnor was the CMO who attended to the accused after the accident. The Pune Police has said that Halnor swapped the blood samples on the instruction of Taware. Both of them were arrested on 27th May 2024, after the accused teenager’s blood sample test conducted at two hospitals gave different results. The results confirmed the Pune Police’s suspicion that the samples at the Sassoon hospital were swapped.

Later, the probe established that in exchange for money, the accused teenager’s blood sample was swapped with that of his mother, a co-accused who is also currently in jail along with the accused’s father. The accused’s parents got two middlemen to hand over the money to Halnor through a mortuary staffer at the forensic science department. All those involved were arrested by the police last year. It was earlier reported that the accused teen’s parents gave Rs 3 lakhs to the accused medics for blood sample swapping.

Notably, the initial plan of the accused’s family was to use the blood sample of the accused teen’s brother or father; however, since both were in an inebriated state, they decided to swap the blood sample with that of his mother. Moreover, the blood samples of the friends accompanying the accused were also swapped.

The accused teen’s father, Vishal Agarwal, made as many as 14 calls to Dr Ajay Taware, head of the Sassoon Hospital’s forensic medicine department, within two hours before the blood sample collection of the minor.

The Agarwal family’s attempt to shift the blame

After arresting the father, the Pune Crime branch, on May 25 morning, also arrested SK Agarwal, the grandfather of the minor accused in the case. It may be recalled that the Pune teen’s grandfather’s link with the underworld had come to the fore earlier. The accused grandfather allegedly threatened Gangadhar, their driver, snatched his phone, and forcibly kept him confined in their bungalow in an attempt to force him to take responsibility for the crime instead of his minor grandson.

Two police officials caused delay in filing FIR and collecting blood samples, NCP leader tried to put political pressure on police

It was reported that NCP leader and then MLA, Sunil Tingre, was called to the police station by the accused teen’s father, Vishal Agarwal, apparently to pressurise the police to soften action against the accused. Tingre was later questioned by the police regarding this.  Later, two cops, Inspector Rahul Jagdale and Assistant Inspector Vishwanath Todkari, were suspended for dereliction of duty, failing to inform seniors promptly, causing delays in registering a case and collecting blood samples, as confirmed by an internal inquiry against the two cops. It is interesting to note that while the medics involved in illegal blood swap have been suspended, no action has been taken against Sunil Tingre for his alleged role in asserting influence on police in favour of the accused.

Initially, the accused teen was booked under lighter IPC sections, such as Section 304a (causing death by negligence), rather than Section 304 (culpable homicide not amounting to murder). It must be mentioned that Section 304 was added only after a massive public outcry.

In March this year, the Pune Police Commissioner Amitesh Kumar said that a proposal has been sent to the state home department seeking the dismissal of these two suspended cops. It was reported last year that the accused teenager was provided with Pizzas and Burgers in the police station after being taken into custody.

Accused minor accessed alcohol, was riding car without registration

Notably, the accused and his friends consumed alcohol at two pubs, running up a Rs 48,000 bill. Back then, the police had arrested the pub owners and staff for serving liquor to a minor, violating the Juvenile Justice Act and the Motor Vehicles Act. While the Excise Department sealed both the pubs, the ease with which the accused minor got alcohol indicates laxity in law enforcement.

In addition to this, the police had revealed that the Porsche Taycan car, the accused teen was riding on the day of the incident, was being used since March 2024 without any registration. The owner did not pay the necessary registration fees while purchasing the vehicle.

Speaking about the same, Pune regional transport officer Sanjiv Bhor said last year, “The car was booked through a dealer in Bengaluru, which provided a temporary registration before delivering it to the owner in March this year. It was the responsibility of the owner to get it registered. The vehicle came to the Pune RTO, and an inspection was done. However, the owner didn’t pay the fee required for the registration. Since the fees were not paid, the registration number was not given.”

Juvenile ‘Justice’ Board granted bail to the accused on condition of writing a 300-word essay on road safety

The accused minor had obtained bail from the Juvenile Justice Board within 15 hours of his arrest, that too on conditions as outrageously trivial as two bonds of Rs 7500 each and writing a 300-word essay on road accidents, working with Yerwada traffic police for 15 days and undergoing de-addiction counselling. The JJB’s leniency indicated a clear dearth of empathy for the deceased and their family members, despite the severity of the crime. Later, however, the JJB revoked the accused teen’s bail on 22nd May, sending him to an observation home.

Such is the deplorable state of our society and the judiciary that a rich underage boy without a driving license driving a luxury Porsche Taycan car without any registration since March at its top speed, fails to control the vehicle while drunk and ends up killing two people, booked under IPC section 304A (causing death by negligence) among other sections get bail in a blink of an eye.

As if this was not enough, on 25th June 2024, the Bombay High Court decided that the accused teen’s detention was ‘illegal’ and ordered his release to the custody of his aunt, citing procedural errors.

Corruption, apathy, wealth and influence helped the rich to get away with the murder of two innocent people

The Pune Porsche case serves as a glaring example of how all it takes is wealth, influence and corruption within the ‘system’ to help an irresponsible rich brat get away with the murder of two innocent people. From RTO’s negligence, hospital staff’s corruption to judiciary’s apathy, the entire ‘system’ is collectively responsible for the killing of two innocent people who committed the only crime of stepping out on the road, knowing little that their lives are unimportant for drunk rich brat who would obtain bail within hours while munching pizza. From the Jessica Lal Murder case (1999), Sanjeev Nanda BMW hit-and-run case (1999), the 2017 Punjab and Haryana Court verdict reducing jail term of rash driver who killed one, the 2016 Mercedes hit and run case, or the one involving a Bollywood actor, there are numerous such cases wherein the police response was sluggish, punishments were minimal, hinting that we have a two-tiered justice system.

In the Pune Porsche case, while the public outrage and media scrutiny did force some accountability, however, the pace at which things are moving forward, justice remains elusive. In a fast-moving world where material gains and luxuries are more valuable than human life, incidents of hit-and-run cases in a country like India are, sadly, too common. The occurrence of hit-and-run cases is common to such an extent that in 2022, over 30,000 people died in such cases, while double the number were injured. While the number of cases has been high, the conviction rate in hit-and-run cases has been below 50% in 2022. A slow-moving legal system marked by lengthy wait times and gradual advancement allows a window for rich and powerful criminals to exploit the loopholes in the law and escape punishment for their crimes. Besides, the menace of corruption at multiple levels of the ‘system’ needs to be eradicated. Compassion should take precedence over corruption to ensure that no rich brat gets to exploit their privilege to evade or minimise punishment.

Hindus stripped and killed point blank after confirming identity: How the barbaric “Aurangzeb ki aulaad” is responsible for the Palgham terror attack

Just weeks ago, Nagpur was up in flames as Islamist mobs unleashed coordinated violence, targeting Hindu-owned shops, torching vehicles, and pelting stones at Hindu homes. Their provocation? A peaceful demand by Hindu advocacy groups to remove a tomb glorifying Aurangzeb, the Mughal tyrant notorious for temple destruction, forced conversions, and his brutal oppression of Hindus.

That ideological legacy came full circle on April 22 in Pahalgam, Kashmir. Islamic terrorists ambushed a group of unarmed tourists. According to eyewitnesses, the assailants checked IDs, pulled down pants to verify religion, and executed those identified as non-Muslims, point-blank.

This wasn’t an act of random violence. It was a ritual of hate— intentional, practised, scripturally sanctioned, and rooted in a centuries-old mindset that sees Hindus not as fellow citizens, but as targets in an interminable jihad to bring the whole of India under the fold of Islam.

It is important to bear in mind that what happened in Pahalgam wasn’t just a terror attack. It was a civilisational flashpoint that emerges now and then, reinforcing a centuries-old mindset that many believed died with tyrants like Aurangzeb and Alauddin Khilji, and even Bakhtiyar Khilji, the madman responsible for the annihilation of the Nalanda University. But which keeps rearing its ugly head as witnessed in protests around the country in support of Muslim invaders venerated as religious warriors who made significant contributions to spreading Islam. 

To understand the horror of Pahalgam, we must revisit the ideological ancestors of such savagery. Aurangzeb wasn’t just a Mughal emperor—he was the face of brutal Islamic imperialism in India. His reign saw the destruction of temples, forced conversions, and jizya—a tax imposed on non-Muslims simply for existing.

Alauddin Khilji is similarly whitewashed in some history books as a military genius and an administrator par excellence. But behind that façade was a tyrant who enslaved Hindu women and children, treating them as war booty. These men didn’t just conquer—they dehumanised. They saw Hindus not just as rivals, but as enemies of the faith, fit only for subjugation or extinction.

The never-ending jihad

Fast forward to 2025, and that mindset is far from extinct. It thrives among a radicalised fringe that sees itself as completing Aurangzeb’s unfinished war. In Pahalgam, terrorists reportedly checked ID cards and forced victims to strip to identify Hindus. This wasn’t random cruelty; it was ideological warfare, with roots in a medieval mindset.

These are not just men with guns. They’re warriors of an ideological jihad bent on finishing the “unfinished business.” And they are not just limited to Kashmir. They are ubiquitous, as evidenced in the recent targeted killings of Hindus in West Bengal, to the riots that swept Nagpur last month. To them, every Hindu temple that still stands is a reminder of defeat. Every festival is an insult to their supremacist fantasy. Killing a Hindu isn’t murder—it’s “divine justice.”

Aurangzeb’s ideological and religious descendants

Aurangzeb is still celebrated in parts of the Islamic world and even in Indian academia, under the banner of “nuanced history.” His atrocities are downplayed, while his “administrative genius” is bizarrely praised, much like how Hitler’s punctual trains don’t excuse the Holocaust.

The terrorists in Pahalgam made no effort to hide their inspiration. They were simply following what the Mughal tyrant did centuries ago, and which is still revered by a section of society, legitimised by the leftwing intelligentsia by summoning tropes such as “Freedom of Speech” and “right to practice one’s religion”. Destruction of idolators drove the religious fanaticism of Aurangzeb and Muslim invaders who became before him. That same religious zealotry powered the cowardly attack witnessed in Pahalgam. This isn’t fringe thinking—it’s foundational to many Islamist outfits, both across the border and disturbingly, within.

Why are Hindus targeted?

The targeting of Hindus is not accidental—it’s central to the agenda. Hindus are seen as idolaters, as resisters to a millennium of conquest. They rebuilt what was razed, revived what was outlawed. Their refusal to kneel is what earns them the sword.

In Pahalgam, this manifested again, just as it did during the 1990 Kashmiri Pandit exodus. History doesn’t whisper in India; it screams. And unless confronted, it repeats.

Political correctness and perverse commitment to “secularism” empowering terror

Mainstream narratives often chant: terrorism has no religion. But Pahalgam was drenched in religious motive. From selective targeting to execution chants—this was jihad, plain and simple. Yet if you call it that, you’re labelled “communal.”

This moral cowardice is not just dishonest—it’s dangerous. It assures the jihadist that no matter how barbaric his act, society will rush to excuse it. That his victims will be forgotten, while he’ll be explained as a victim of poverty or “misunderstood” theology.

A civilisation under threat: Temples looted, idols desecrated, women taken as war booty

This isn’t just about lives lost—it’s about a civilisation under assault. Islamist invaders didn’t just loot—they desecrated. Temples were torn down, not just for gold, but to send a message: your gods are dead, your culture is dust. From Somnath in the west to Qutub Minar in Delhi, which was once a magnificent home to over 27 Jain and Hindu Temples, to the sprawling Ram Mandir in Ayodhya, every Hindu foundational pillar suffered the wrath of Islamic fanaticism.

Even today, mosques stand atop razed temples. This isn’t religion vs religion—it’s about whether a native civilisation is allowed to survive.

Hinduism and other Vedic faiths have never been expansionist. They don’t seek conversions. For thousands of years, people belonging to different Vedic faiths lived in relative harmony across the vast expanse of India. While pacifism was a hallmark of these faiths and a secret to their economic success, the recent spate of events shows it can no longer remain passive. Pahalgam is a warning: resistance is no longer optional.

Demanding the removal of remnants dedicated to religious zealots isn’t hate, it is resistance

Calling out this ideology isn’t Islamophobia—it’s civilizational self-respect. Wanting to survive is not extremism. Defending temples, remembering martyrs, and safeguarding traditions is not fascism. The real fascists are the ones demanding submission, wielding dogma, and justifying murder.

Hindus must no longer fear being called names for defending themselves. This isn’t revenge—it’s resistance. Resistance rooted in memory, truth, and unapologetic pride.

India can no longer afford polite silence. Hollow condemnations and candlelight vigils won’t cut it. We need hard policy changes—tougher anti-terror laws, swifter justice, and zero tolerance for ideological denial.

The media must stop glorifying monsters. Academia must stop sanitising genocidal emperors. And civil society must stop equating victims with their killers.

From Ghazni to Aurangzeb to Pahalgam: The scriptural hatred that glues the intergenerational bigotry

Pahalgam wasn’t an isolated incident. It was part of a civilizational war that began with Ghazni, Khilji, and Aurangzeb, and seeks revival today. During his reign, Aurangzeb similarly slaughtered Hindus with abandon. Chhatrapati Sambhaji Maharaj was brutally tortured before being killed by Aurangzeb. Sikh Guru Tegh Bahadur was also brazenly executed on the orders of Aurangzeb for his refusal to embrace Islam. These are but an indicative list of the brutality perpetrated by Aurangzeb and the ideology he represented.

However, instead of condemning Aurangzeb, just weeks ago in Nagpur, Islamists attacked Hindus for opposing a shrine dedicated to Aurangzeb. This is the same ideology, wearing new clothes.

But India is not weak. Hindus are not helpless. The same civilisation that withstood Khilji, Babur, and Aurangzeb will endure again. But survival is not enough. The time has come not just to remember, but to resist.

So that never again will someone have to prove their religion at gunpoint. That’s not hate. That’s resistance. That’s what learning from history means.

In this sense, there is little difference between terrorists who killed tourists after identifying them as Hindus and stone pelters who take to the streets to attack Hindu commercial establishments and public property when an honest reckoning of the Mughal emperor’s religiously motivated crimes is demanded. It is essentially the same ideology that underpins the terrorists and the stone pelters: a deep veneration for medieval-era bigots like Aurangzeb and a strong yearning to follow in their footsteps. It is just a matter of time before the so-called “innocuous” stone-pelters graduate to become Kalashnikov-wielding terrorists, wantonly killing Hindus in their perverse desire to ape their idols. In fact, in Kashmir, one cannot be sure whether a part-time stone-pelter is a full-time terrorist.

So when Hindus call for the removal of Aurangzeb’s tomb, it isn’t just about erasing the remnants of a tyrant who inflicted unspeakable torment on their ancestors. It’s about dismantling a symbol—a rallying point—for those who still revere him as a warrior of Islam and seek to walk the same blood-soaked path. It’s about cutting off the ideological oxygen that fuels modern-day jihad.

The West never built a tomb for Hitler—for good reason. They knew that even stones can be turned into shrines, and shrines can breed fanatics. India must learn the same lesson. As long as we continue to tolerate monuments that glorify the tormentors of our past, we will continue to bleed—whether in Nagpur, in Pahalgam, or wherever the next “Aurangzeb ki aulaad” decides to strike.

Adani Group vs Hindenburg: Indian conglomerate emerged victorious in its battle against the short-seller

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Hindenburg Research, the short-seller firm, people who make money from others’ misery, like George Soros for example, challenged the Adani Group of India couple of years back. Ultimately they lost as Hindenburg shut down while Adani Group continues to thrive.

In January 2023, Hindenburg published a report against the Adani Group, one of India’s largest conglomerates, led by Gautam Adani, as “the largest con in corporate history”.

Following Hindenburg report, stock prices of all Adani Group companies plummeted, benefiting short seller Hindenburg, and Adani group’s biggest public offering was abruptly scrapped. For a while, it seemed like Gautam Adani’s empire was on the brink due to these short-sellers.

However, that mood in the markets didn’t last long. Adani Group staged a swift comeback to restore investor confidence.

Interestingly, the Hindenburg report, which accused the Adani Group of stock manipulation and accounting fraud, dropped just a week before Gautam Adani was in Israel to finalise a USD 1.2-billion deal to acquire the Haifa seaport.

The privatisation of Haifa Port was Israel’s largest and most ambitious infrastructure and financial undertaking of the 2020s. Initially, 18 international bidders expressed interest, but only five were cleared to submit final proposals.

The winning bid — after passing Israel’s stringent security vetting — came from a joint venture between Gadot Masofim for Chemicals Ltd and Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone Ltd, with the Indian firm holding the majority stake.

The entire process took 18 months, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was present at the signing on January 31, 2023.

According to PTI report, a top Israeli leader questioned Adani about the allegations against him, to which the Indian billionaire firmly responded that they were “absolute lies”.

As per reports, Eshel Armoni, the outgoing chairman of the port and a former high-ranking Mossad official, was present during the exchange.

Israeli establishment saw the Hindenburg report as a deliberate attempt to undermine the Haifa port deal with Adani, which Tel Aviv considered strategically vital for the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor — a counterweight to growing Chinese influence in the region.

Meanwhile, the controversial short-seller Nathan (Nate) Anderson, who is behind the infamous Hindenburg Research,faced serious allegations of colluding with hedge funds like Canada’s Anson Funds. The information came to light via court filings submitted in Ontario courts as part of a defamation lawsuit. These documents pointed to coordinated efforts that may have violated securities laws. The revelations made in the court documents cast doubt on Anderson’s earlier claims that his organisation worked independently.The New York offices of Hindenburg Research and its founder, Nathan ‘Nate’ Anderson, a certified Chartered Financial Analyst, were watched, they said.

Notably, Nathan Anderson, the founder of the short-seller Hindenburg Research, announced on 15th January, 2025, that he would disband the firm. 

‘Pants pulled down, ID cards checked’: Hindu tourists targeted in Pahalgam days after Pakistan COAS Asim Munir’s anti-Hindu rant; several casualties reported

In a chilling episode, terrorists in Pahalgam, Kashmir, targeted tourists after identifying them as non-Muslims. The attack came days after a video of Pakistan COAS Asim Munir ranting against Hindus had gone viral on the internet.

A heart-wrenching video of the incident surfaced online, showing tourists frantically calling out for help as dead bodies lying along the meadows can be seen in the video. Eyewitnesses to the attack could be heard saying that the attack was religiously motivated as terrorists shot tourists point blank after identifying them as Hindus.

One of the haunting pictures of the attack that has gone viral on social media is of a grief-stricken woman helplessly sitting beside his dead husband. According to reports, the woman was recently married and was on her honeymoon in Kashmir when the terrorists attacked and killed her husband.

According to unofficial sources who are privy to the attack, the number of casualties could exceed 25.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has spoken with Union Home Minister Amit Shah in the wake of the Pahalgam terror attack, directing him to take all necessary actions and personally assess the situation on the ground.

Responding to the directive, Amit Shah announced he will soon depart for Srinagar to lead an emergency security review meeting with all concerned agencies. Shah confirmed that he had already briefed the Prime Minister and conducted a video conference with top security officials. Strongly condemning the attack, Shah vowed that the culprits will face severe consequences, assuring that no one involved will be spared. Security operations in the area have been significantly stepped up.

It is worth noting that the attack against Hindu tourists came days after Pakistan COAS Asim Munir’s video, making bigoted comments as he urged Pakistanis to tell their children about the stark difference between “Hindus and Muslims”, had gone viral on the internet.

Pakistan COAS Asim Munir’s anti-Hindu rants

In a fiery speech that has set off alarm bells across human rights circles, Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff, General Asim Munir, declared that anyone not abiding by Sharia law cannot be considered a true Pakistani. Speaking at a national clerics’ conference in Islamabad, Munir didn’t mince words, tying Pakistan’s national identity directly and exclusively to Islamic principles. His message was clear: reject Sharia, and you reject Pakistan itself.

This hardline stance has sparked intense backlash, especially for its implications on Pakistan’s already marginalised non-Muslim minorities — including Hindus, Christians, and Sikhs. Critics are questioning: if adherence to Sharia is a precondition for citizenship, where does that leave millions who do not share the faith?

As if that weren’t enough, Munir doubled down by reviving the controversial Two-Nation Theory — the ideological backbone of Partition — claiming Pakistan and India remain fundamentally incompatible in religion, culture, and ideology. His remarks, steeped in divisive rhetoric, are being seen as a deliberate attempt to stir communal sentiments and reassert a theocratic vision of Pakistan at a time when calls for inclusivity and reform are growing louder.

With this speech, General Munir has not only drawn a line in the sand domestically — he’s sent a message to the world: Pakistan’s power elite still sees the country not as a diverse nation, but as a fortress of faith. And that, in today’s world, is a message many find deeply troubling.

Infighting breaks out within the Congress over Karnataka ‘caste survey’ which shows drastic rise of Muslim population, decline of Lingayats and Vokkaligas: Details

The nefarious agenda of the Congress to divide the Hindu community along caste lines has backfired in the State of Karnataka, with party leaders fighting among themselves over a ‘caste survey’ conducted in 2015.

The Karnataka State Commission for Backward Classes, led by headed by H. Kantharaj, had conducted a caste census in Karnataka under the rule of Congress Chief Minister Siddaramiah a decade ago.

Interestingly, the Congress government ‘lost‘ the original report. And a revised report was submitted by K Jayaprakash Hegde in 2023 (again under the regime of Siddaramiah).

This was confirmed by none other than K Jayaprakash Hedge to reporters.

He pointed out, “It is true the original data compiled under the Kantharaj Commission could not be located. We had to rely on a sample-based methodology to compile the current report. It was the only viable option given the circumstances.

The underlying causes behind infighting within Congress

OpIndia had previously reported how the Muslim population in Karnataka had increased by a whopping 5.16% in 4 years (2011-2015) as per this revised ‘caste census’ report of 2023.

Additionally, the population of dominant caste groups such as Lingayats and Vokkaligas seem to have declined. This was highlighted by none other than veteran Congress leader and former Chief Minister of Karnataka, Veerappa Moily.

Some of the ministers openly said that the population of large caste groups — such as Lingayats and Vokkaligas — was found to be lesser than what had been previously extrapolated. When I released the report of the Chinnappa Reddy Commission during my tenure as chief minister in 1992, the population of Lingayats was much higher than the current report. How can the numbers go down after so many years,” he questioned.

This had drawn the ire of other Lingayats and Vokkaligas Ministers and MLAs within the Congress party, which have questioned the scientific basis of the ‘caste survey.’

One of the recommendations of the 2023 report submitted by K Jayaprakash Hedge was to increase OBC reservation from the existing 32% to 51%. With the EWS reservation of 10% and the SC/ ST reservation of 24%, the net reservation in Karnataka would stand at 85%.

This has also become the bone of contention within the party, with representatives of ‘backward communities’ seeking immediate implementation of the report’s recommendations.

The final nail in the coffin of the ‘caste survey’ was the miraculous categorisation of the relatively well-off community of Kurubas (the one which CM Siddaramaiah represents) as ‘most backward.’

Veteran Congress leader Veerappa Moily did not mince words before attacking the sitting Congress CM in an interview with The New Indian Express.

There are whispers that Siddaramaiah is downplaying the numbers of influential castes,” he stated.

Moily further emphasised, “There is an increase in quota of 7% for communities such as Kurubas, which Siddaramaiah belongs to. The Kuruba community is classified as a “more backward” category in the Chinnappa Reddy commission. The new survey report has classified it as “most backward”. How can a “more backward” person become “most backward”?

Several Congress leaders including Moily have expressed fears of ‘polarisation’ arising out of the existing report and demanded a fresh, door-to-door caste survey.

While the grand old party set out to divide the Hindu vote bank, it ended up creating warring factions within the Congress.

This explains why an otherwise stern, decisive and loudmouth Siddaramiah is now taking a softer approach, placating his own party members and vowing to promptly correct errors in the existing survey.

Congress and its anti-national agenda

After having failed to counter the BJP on issues of development, national security and cultural preservation, Congress has taken it upon itself to divide the Hindu community by exploiting existing fault lines.

Besides promising a caste census, the party has also assured to lift the upper limit on reservation in its 2024 election manifesto.

Rahul Gandhi himself has been campaigning with the slogan ‘Jitni abadi utna haq,‘ hinting at proportional representation in government jobs, admission to colleges and more.

This has the potential to further polarise and divide the society. Not only that, once such demands are fulfilled, it can extend to electoral politics.

Given that India’s demography is changing fast, it may not be long until certain religious communities like Muslims to demand fixed representation based on their population size. It would then be akin to setting the nation on the path to disaster.

The nefarious objective behind the caste census is to divide the Hindus into castes and unify the Muslims, rendering the Hindu majority helpless and weak in the face of Muslim vote bank consolidation.

The Congress party, led by Rahul Gandhi, thereby hopes to gain electorally through such a strategy and return to the corridors of power.

While the drastic implications of the exercise of ‘caste census’ may look far-fetched today, it will not take long for the country to plunge into chaos when dangerous ideas of proportional representation manifest in reality.

OpIndia had previously reported how the concept of ‘proportional representation’ turned out to be a disaster for a peaceful country like Lebanon and why India must be wary of it.