Aman belongs to the strong and independent Message from Tarun Vijay, Director, Dr. Syama Prasad Mookerjee Research Foundation, BJP Head Quarters, New Delhi

Peace belongs to those who are powerful and independent decision makers. Not to those who fight with their brothers and depend on dollars to live and make merry in New York. They can be subjugated souls, create wars and hold 'Track Two' dramas taking money for their scotches and Vodkas but can never ever touch the pulse of the people who survive on corn and rice.

India and Pakistan might be two countries, but they are one people and one culture. I have seen it with my eyes while visiting Pakistan seven times from Taxila to Balochistan.

If the white man's mischief was not so strong, playing havoc with our land and people, we would be living much more happily and with peace. Aman ki Asha must mean two independent entities, willing to talk and resolve their conflicts at the negotiating table with full power in their own houses. Two powers who are in control of their destinies and have a mechanism that can effectively control the elements they dislike. The people of Pakistan and India want Aman; they hate the hostilities.

From Barmer border to Mirpurkhas and Karachi and Hingol on Gwadar highway, I saw common people lined up to welcome us - when we visited the renowned and highly revered Hindu shrine Mata Hinglaj Mandir with Shri Jaswant Singh, an ardent Devi Bhakta. These were not dramatics by the government. It was for real and very genuine. I wrote the exact scenes in Panchjanya on my return, a newspaper run by those who believe in RSS. Readers were amazed but none complained why I wrote good, positive reflections about Pakistanis. I was able to complete my preparations with help from my best friend, who symbolizes the friendly spirit of Pakistan, Mahmood Shaam. I can anytime give my blank cheque to him and accept his verdict. Such is my faith in him.

But when Kasabs come to Mumbai and hateful 'taliban' run amok, the trust shatters and walls are created. How can you do that and still want peace with us? Just for some mad heads? In a situation when many Pakistanis are also feeling enraged over the extremism and violence, it's time for the cultural roots to take precedence over everything else. Why should we feel shy to accept we are one people, two countries? Why shouldn't we think what stoking fires in Kashmir has given Pakistan? Is it not the right time to rethink and reshape its domestic policies and concentrate on making Pakistanis happier, more literate, more enterprising and empowering socially disadvantaged sections? Why can't Pakistani rulers think that their best friend can be India alone? China or America extract their price of support. How can anyone else be closer to Pakistan as we can, so naturally? But the hatred for Hindus, which is at the base of anything that emerges from Pakistan against India, must be shunned. It has not helped Pakistan. A smaller country, it could have developed into a haven, with its rich resources and industrious manpower. But it has gone into a pit of bombs and bomb makers and no one knows who is ruling it. And look where India with its Hindu majority and liberal ideas has reached. We would like you to come along as equal friend. Think why Pakistan has missed the bus of future.

We are brothers, blood brothers, try to behave like sons of the same mother and with the blessings of Allah and Ram ji, we shall together emerge as the greatest power on this earth. Revive the spirit of 1857, remember Dahir belongs to us all; Mohenjodaro and Panini are a shared legacy. We are you and you are us.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010




As the story goes How and why the Indian media ran with the LoC story, working itself up to frenzy all day with live coverage of the funerals… By Suhasini Haidar
Ironically, it was the words of the Indian Army Chief that made many journalists covering the tensions at LoC take the first pause in the ba .....more


Tenuous peace The Indian government’s Pakistan policy seems to be <br>driven less by strategic restraint and more by strategic fuzziness By Sushant Sareen
When it comes to democracy in Pakistan and the Indo-Pak peace process, the use of the word 'irreversible' is akin to tempting fate and worse. .....more


Critical observations The legality of the UNMOGIP at the LoC is questioned by India at a time when relations between the two countries are strained By Ather Naqvi
The presence of United Nations Military Observers Group in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP) is once again in the limelight in the backdrop of tensio .....more


Line under control Ever since Mumbai, <br>Pakistanis had feared that another such incident would foreclose the possibility of normalcy. Now that it has come and gone, it might be an opportune time to assess the worth of the process of engagement By Farah Zia
The recent bloody violations across LoC have proved that the project peace between India and Pakistan remains fragile as ever. Such is the baggage .....more


Editorial Just when relations between India and Pakistan were on the verge of normalcy, something untoward happened that suspended the gains of the last few years, at least momenta .....more


Indo-Pakistan trade to benefit both countries: Indian HC LAHORE: Indian High Commissioner to Pakistan, Sharat Sabharwal says mutual trade would not only benefit both the countries but the whole region as well, Geo News reported .....more

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55_7-03-2011_1.jpgThe News on Sunday Special Report: India Pakistan prisoners
We probably didn't need to do this Special Report. Newspaper stories don't matter when it comes to Indians in Pakistani jails and vice versa. In fact, 'vice versa' sums it up. We do to them what they do to us.

Except when the two countries decide to begin talking, yet again! This time a little before the foreign secretary level talks, some Pakistani prisoners were released by India (and vice versa must have happened) and some more were release....read more

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