Friday, August 1, 2008

How do we fellow citizen's Stop Serial Bombs

After all the person setting up the Bomb is also another human, let us ask a question to ouselves on why he does this to us.
They have been educated that India is not your country - Let us make them feel that India is also their own country, do not show hatred to religion caste sect etc.. treat as human and get ur self treated as.......
If They are not from India - Let us make it a point, who ever i am i am an Indian and if some body wants to hurt my country it is like hurting my self so i will throw him out.

I personally feel that people of pakistan are our own blood so let us also tell them loud - you are my brother do you want to hurt your own brother - your own Blood, If he or she still tells yes stab him on his face not behind.

Jai Hind

1 comment:

Arunkumar said...

‘Yeh Hum Naheen’ rings through Pak

63 Million Sign Anti-Terror Signature Campaign

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi: The power to change the fortune of nations lies with the people. The citizens of Pakistan have just raised millions of hopes around the world that they don’t want to be crushed under the weight of extremism.
In an unprecedented gesture that has attracted a greater popular participation from the average Pakistani than ever before, 63 million Pakistanis have signed on to a unique antiterror signature campaign.
It’s actually a full third of Pakistan’s entire population. Billed as the biggest lobby effort anywhere in the world, Pakistanis signed on to a petition called “Yeh Hum Naheen (This is not us)” through just four weeks in the past couple of months. It’s been the strongest signal from Pakistanis — you could almost call it the
cry of a nation tarred with a deadly brush — that they don’t want fundamentalism or terrorism to be known as the Pakistani way of life.
You could raise eyebrows about the number of people, but the campaign apparently ensured that most of the signatories were verifiable individuals. Given that the Taliban are raising suicide bombers and death squads from tweens in the hardened badlands of FATA, children above 11 years were also allowed to sign on the petition.
What does this mean? In 2007, when Pakistani lawyers agitated through months against former President Pervez Musharraf, it seemed the stirrings of civil movement in Pakistan could finally change the direction of the nation. In 2008, “Yeh Hum Naheen” could be described as the cry of the silent majority in Pakistan — is there anybody listening?
Despite obvious attraction of the signature campaign, the history of the power of civil society has not left much room for inspiration in Pakistan. The obvious yearning for civilian government has repeatedly been run roughshod over by military rule, dictators, coups et al.
Besides, the “silent majority” has been repeatedly overtaken by the “determined minority”. Every time, the Islamists were trounced in Pakistani elections, the word went out to the West that the “fundoos” (as they are called in Pakistan) don’t get the time of day from the electorate. Yet the terror groups, the extremists grew and flourished and held the nation to ransom — over and over again.
But it’s equally true that Islamism and extremism in Pakistan cannot be rooted out by Predator drones and special forces. It can only find its come-uppance from popular discontent.
Is this the beginning in Pakistan? Hopes run high because campaigns like “Yeh Hum Naheen” have the potential to generate the kind of movement in Pakistan that the world might be hoping for.
The ‘Yeh Hum Naheen’ campaign was launched in 2007 with a hit song featuring some of the country’s biggest pop stars, including Ali Zafar. The idea originated with a British-Pakistani media consultant Waseem Mahmood, whose aim was to prove in a tangible manner that Pakistanis were against the violence that comes in the guise of Islamic “jihad”. “This is about giving people a common platform to fight terrorism,” Mahmood was quoted as saying in ‘The Guardian’.
The campaign was not the nameless stuffing of SMSes that we see in TV reality music shows — where the best voice can be drowned out by the clamouring multitudes. He said all signatures were verified and most signatures collected by direct promotions. The campaign was financed by Muslim businessmen from UK and Indonesia and has caught the imagination of Pakistani celebrities and media.
Terrorists continue to strike Pakistan, nevertheless. Only last week, when the campaign was unleashed, Pakistan suffered a string of suicide bombings, high level assassinations, beheading of tribal elders in Bajaur and Swat and attacks throughout Pakistan. In fact, some estimates say that about 1,200 people have died in terrorist attacks in Pakistan since July 2007.
Whether the campaign makes it to the ‘Guinness Book’ is not important. What’s important is whether Pakistanis can hold on to their beliefs and fight for their own identity — and not the jihadis’. As Mehmood was quoted saying, “The power to stop all this (terrorism) happening lies with the people. The government, and foreign powers, really can’t do anything.”