IndiaOctober 21, 2005 9:25 am

On 21 Oct, TimeOfIndia brought out an article Google’s googly: PoK is shown as part of Pakistan! by Samiran Chakrawertti [ Friday, October 21, 2005 12:06:59 amTIMES NEWS NETWORK ] showing how on Google Earth, the part of Kashmir occupied by Pakistan in 1947/48 has been shown as part of Pakistan (which legally, as per the instrument of accession and as per the Indian constitution) is a part of India. There were a large number of comments on this article - many expressed concern, many said others like BBC, CNN and all are doing this as well and many others said, "So what! Indians should realise the reality and stop crying hoarse about something that we lost more than 50 years ago". My concern is with this last group - and other Indians who might be thinking this way. The reality today is that most Indians want peace and see the only solution to the Kashmir imbroglio as accepting LoC to be the de-facto international border. The problem is that whenever India and Pakistan want to discuss Kashmir and the possible solutions to it, a number of solutions are cited. Pakistan wants to discuss the part of Kashmir which is under us while India wants LoC to be made into a border. Fine, we want LoC to be the border (and live happily ever after), but there are certain things important in negotiations and bargaining - you can’t begin with your last price. If we are ready to settle for LoC as the border (and for an Indian map with the left ear cut off), we must begin our negotiations higher. Instead of letting Pakistan set the agenda at all international fora, we must be the one setting the agenda. Pakistan discusses what it calls "Indian-occupied Kashmir" or "Indian-held Kashmir" or "held Kashmir" (never mind that hardly any development took place in the so-called Azad Kashmir - alas, no one will find that out now - oh! there was a lot of development…all got destroyed in the quake) while India discusses LoC and soft borders. If Indians want to see the LoC as the border, they must be passionate about discussing PoK (and the word "occupied" here is important). Discuss PoK, only then can we have LoC as the solution, otherwise we might stand to lose more! Note: I’m happy that we were always taught the complete map of India in Geography lessons (including PoK and Aksai Chin). We realise today what has been lost and stands to be lost. A few years of exposure to the Internet and international media (with PoK being shown under Pakistan and Aksai Chin under China or as a separate disputed land), and many Indians are saying, "so what…this is always the case in maps shown outside India"

IndiaOctober 8, 2005 12:51 pm

>Sat Oct 8 2005 Major quake rocks North India, 23 killed >The earthquake has been measured at 7.6 in the Richter scale, epicentre is said to be >Muzzaffrabad in Pakistan and is described as "major". >[ 03:07 pm Sat, Oct 8, 2005, REUTERS ] Times of India seems to have accepted Muzzaffrabad (capital of Pakistan-occupied Kashmir or PoK) as part of Pakistan. A national newspaper should be careful in wording, especially in matters as sensitive as the territorial integrity of the country. Somewhere within the article, it writes: >The US Geological Survey (USGS) highlighted a large earthquake on its Website between >Indian- and Pakistani-controlled Kashmir with a magnitude of 7.6. When I’d read the news-piece first during the day, the article mentioned ‘Pakistani-Kashmir’ and ‘Indian-Kashmir’. While it is understandable for International media to use these terminologies, Indian newspapers must be careful in using the terminology in line with the Constitution of India. Pakistani online papers, such as Dawn, continue to use terms like Srinagar in Indian-held Kashmir or Indian-occupied Kashmir. P.S. It might be a newspiece from Reuters that TimesofIndia is using "as is". Not sure how this works, but in my view, sensitive bits can be put under quotes to show that "we don’t agree with this, but are reporting ‘as is’." In another TimesOfIndia piece, Quake not a surprise: experts IANS[ SATURDAY, OCTOBER 08, 2005 08:58:37 PM ] Referring to a scientist, Purnachandar Rao, from the Natiaonal Geophysical Research Institute (NGRI), it said, ‘He said the exact magnitude of Saturday’s earthquake would be known after they gathered all the relevant details. "At this point of time we can say that the magnitude was in the range of 7 to 7.5 on Richter scale and its epicenter was near Muzaffarabad (in Pakistan)."’ Note: However, in other pieces, TimesOfIndia has used terms like "Muzzafarabad district in PoK" as well. Comments of other Indian nationals on this are solicited.

 

   


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