Book Separatist Movements In India Launched

Book Separatist Movements in India launched

The Muslim Institute, a non-governmental and non-political think-tank, Thursday launched a book titled Separatist Movements in India, which exposed so-called secular India's real face and highlighted plights of minorities and low-caste communities living there

ISLAMABAD, (UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 25th Jan, 2018 ) :The Muslim Institute, a non-governmental and non-political think-tank, Thursday launched a book titled Separatist Movements in India, which exposed so-called secular India's real face and highlighted plights of minorities and low-caste communities living there.

The book, authored by renowned writer Tariq Ismail Saghir, contains 492 pages and 52 chapters. It gives a detailed overview of Hindutwa and Akhand Bharat mindset of Indian government and injustice meted out to minorities and low-caste Hindus.

The book narrated that how separatist movements took birth, which are almost 25 in number across India, and what kind of efforts it was making to suppress them with force. Chairman of the think-tank Sahibzada Sultan Ali congratulated Tariq Ismail Saghir for writing such an informative book in urdu language and appreciated his work to promote Pakistan's ideology and to expose nefarious designs of India.

He said the book had highlighted the separatist movements by different aspects, which are rare in Urdu literature, adding that India was a blue-eyed of world powers despite the fact that it was carrying out terrorism activities in different parts of the world.

Columnist Rana Abdul Baqi said the book contained valuable information which would help create awareness among younger generation of Pakistan that how conspiracies were being hatched against their motherland.

He said the book was a unique in its kind as it disclosed India's nefarious designs for its expansion, keeping hold in the region and ensuring rule of high-caste Hindus in its state, depriving all minorities and low-caste communities of their basic rights.

Defence analyst Brigadier (Retd.) Asif Haroon Raja said the book would expose the ugly face of India before the international community, as it had been projecting itself as a victim of terrorism and secular state where all citizens were enjoying their basic rights.

He urged the writers community to play their role in exposing India before the world by writing more and more books. He unveiled that in India over 100 terrorist groups were operating and all of them were going unnoticed by the international community, while the world was asking Pakistan to do more against terrorists, whom they themselves had fed.

This book is wonderful and it will help in knowing what is cooking in the so-called shining India, he said.

Former President Islamabad Chamber of Commerce and Industry Zafar Bakhtawari termed the book thought-provoking, adding that India had been projecting itself a so-called secular state and cheating the world.

He said prevailing situation in India had confirmed that it was a state of Hindu extremists and there was no room for others. In recent Indian elections, he said, no Muslim candidate was given the ticket for provincial assembly seat in the Muslim majority state Uttar Pradesh by the Bharatiya Janta Party.

He said there was an international conspiracy against China Pakistan Economic Corridor project and India was its part and involved in carrying out subversive activities in Balochistan, Sindh and Federally Administered Tribal Areas.

Director General MESAC Research Institute Abdullah Gul said India was exporter of terrorism as over 100 terrorist organizations were operating there, and the book exposed the rising and shinning India.

He said India was making efforts to change demography of Indian Held Kashmir to turn people of Kashmir into minority. He stressed the need to translate the book of Tariq Ismail Saghir in English and other languages so that real face of India could be exposed to the world.

Former ambassador Ishtiaq Hussain Andrabi said the ongoing separation movements in India were extension of the two-nation ideology, under which Muslims got their motherland Pakistan, for their religious and social freedom.

He said the book would be a good addition to libraries of researchers who are working on India and its affairs. Akhtar Nawaz Janjua, a defense analyst, was of the view that there should be an effective strategy of perception management at international level so that India's real face of so-called nuclear state could be exposed.

Author Tariq Ismail Saghir stressed the need to effectively expose Indian brutalities being carried out in occupied Kashmir and India in both print and electronic media. He said in Indian Punjab the Sikh community was almost two percent of the total population, while their casualty ratio in Indian Army was 80 percent, which speaks about price of lives of minorities living there.

Nawab Jehangir Khan said the people of Juna Gadh state had announced accession to Pakistan at the time of partition in 1947, but India occupied it with force and the case was still pending with the United Nations.