Delhi, Kashmir and India
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Veteran journalist Tariq Ahmad Bhat’s death exposes the fading ethics of Kashmir’s press and the human cost of truth-telling in conflict. Read more.
The Express Tribune on MSNOpinion
Kashmir's unending siege
Seventy-eight years on, Kashmir remains a human tragedy and political failure rooted in denial of justice and dignity
Ram Rattan Sharma [email protected] Terrorism has had a profound and multifaceted impact on the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir, affecting its society, economy and environment. Inresponse, the Indian govt.
Al Jazeera on MSN
How a star-studded Kashmir cricket league bombed as organisers fled
Billed as Kashmir's biggest ever cricket show, the collapsed event has left a trail of questions, sense of betrayal.
Netflix’s Baramulla isn’t based on a true story, but its haunting mystery draws deeply from Kashmir’s real history, folklore, and conflict. Blending fiction with the valley’s emotional past, it transforms regional trauma into a chilling supernatural thriller.
The Express Tribune on MSNOpinion
The forgotten genocide that still haunts Kashmir
Today, the IIOJK remains one of the most heavily militarised zones on earth, its people living under surveillance and siege. The events of August 2019 — when India revoked Jammu and Kashmir's special constitutional status under Article 370 — deepened that sense of historical repetition.
Bullets are heard every day in the world's most militarised zone, but shots fired on goal by Danish Farooq have become a revelation in Kashmir. 22-year-old striker Danish Farooq (C) symbolises a fairytale rise by Real Kashmir, the first club from the war ...
Returning from their annual migration to high alpine pastures, the pastoralists of Himalayan Kashmir say their traditional lowland grazing lands are increasingly scarce due to flouted laws and forest enclosures.