Indian Afraid of Taliban Fallout in Kashmir – News2IN
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Indian Afraid of Taliban Fallout in Kashmir

Indian Afraid of Taliban Fallout in Kashmir
Written by news2in

Srinangar: As Prime Minister Narendra Modi determined Taliban’s concerns to world leaders this week, the army carried out an attack and struggled against Kashmir’s guerrillas which he was worried about being persecuted by Islamist victory in Afghanistan.
The shooting of Kashmir Rebel from civilians and police, the raid for security forces in terrorist hiding, and rebel infiltration throughout India-Pakistan Geugefire has all increased in the majority of Muslims since the Overran Kabul Taliban on August 15.
About 40 people have done it killed in shootings and clashes in two months since then in the Himalayan region, which has been divided since India and Pakistan became independent in 1947.
Terrorists have targeted Hindu civilians and Sikh minorities, while fighting weapons near the ceasefire line The weapon has also left the soldier and.
Death rebels.
India has not openly blamed the Taliban takeover for uptick in violence, but has intensified patrols near Kashmir Pakistan and fortifying several army camps, according to residents and security officials who talk to AFP with anonymous requirements.
Modi told the G20 Summit in Rome earlier this week that international efforts needed to ensure Afghanistan is not a safe place for “radicalization and terrorism”.
He also raised Indian concerns with US President Joe Biden.
In September, he told the UN General Assembly that no country should be permitted to use Afghanistan “as a tool for its own selfish purposes” – Comments are widely seen as a reference to neighboring Pakistan City, head of Taliban supporters 1996-2001 regime.
This time, Islamabad has stopped recognizing the new Taliban government.
However, New Delhi accused his rival at Islamabad triggered Pakistani-based militant groups Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad, who were blamed for many attacks in Kashmir.
Pakistan denies the claim.
India was a supporter of the Soviet doll government in Kabul, which was overthrown by the Mujahideen forces in 1992.
In 2001 it helped US-led forces that overthrew the Taliban.
And it is the main donor for the government that hardline Islamists are destroyed in August.
Afghan militants fight with Kashmir fighters in the 1980s and 1990s.
About 20 Afghanistan “Mujahidin guests” were killed and 10 were arrested, according to the former Kashmir fighters.
India is worried that weapons and fighters can return to the area, where he has fought two wars against Pakistan.
“What we can say and learn from the past is that when the Taliban regime earlier in power, we certainly have foreign terrorists from Afghanistan in Jammu and Kashmir,” said Military Head of Indian staff M.M.
Naravane.
“So there is a reason to believe that the same thing might happen once again.” Protests were almost impossible in Kashmir because of the restrictions imposed by Delhi because the semi-autonomic status of the area was revoked in 2019.
But some in Kashmir quietly welcomed the takeover of the Afghan Taliban as a victory that they dreamed on one day.
“If they can defeat the largest military power in the world, we see the possibility that we can also win our freedom,” a businessman in Kashmir Utama Srinagar told AFP, declining to be named.
A former Kashmir militant who practiced in Afghanistan in the 1990s and a fight with Afghanistan Mujahideen in Kashmir added: “Taliban’s victory has been supplying oxygen to our movements.” Given the limitations of Indian security on Kashmir, Naravane and other military heads believe that Delhi can overcome any surges.
But talking to the terms of anonymously, a senior security official in Kashmir said, “There are several panic” in security establishments.
Michael Kugelman, a South Asian specialist at Wilson Center in Washington, said Afghan’s new ruler could inspire “increasing the riots” in Kashmir.
Taliban officials said they wanted to maintain trade and other relationships with India, which meant that a kind of contact must be maintained.
“The Taliban himself will not be nervous because of the riots in Kashmir, but which is harmonious with the possibility of doing so,” he said.
Mosharraf Zaidi, a columnist and security analyst at Pakistan, said he saw no reason Taliban wanted to “deliberately agitate Indian authorities”.
Their victory, he believed, was more important for the signal he sent to “young kashmir boys and women watching pictures of Afghanistan”.

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