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#the east india company the queen the bjp
iqmmir · 5 months
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I hate this fucking country
#vent#dont read the tags there uh stuff yeagg#———————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————#youre giving schools a holiday?? for this????#are you serious?????#you DESTROYED. STONED DOWN STAMPED DOWN. A RELIC OF OUR HISTORY#A MASJID. TO BUILD A FUCKING TEMPLE#and now youre giving schools a holiday AND MAKING PRIVATE SCHOOLS LIVESTREAM THE INAUGRATION??????#youre stamping down history to uphold this religion. you're killing and lynching people who disagree with you#god i hate this fucking place#all the shit about independence from the british and for what.#its just a switching of whos in charge isnt it??#the east india company the queen the bjp#whats the difference youre still killing youre killing children raping assaulting#destroying homes of people#to uphold your religion#as of it was about religion to begin with#'the abolishion of the caste system' then why are dalits still harassed still treated like a lower species not treated as human#youre forcing hinduism down our throats#youre putting orange everywhere in the country#YOURE KILLING PEOPLE FOR. EATING GOATS AND COWS JUST STOP LEAVE PLEASE#im so sick and tired of living in this country where i could be killed at any moment where rape is starting to become normalised#i hate this fucking place i hope i die i dont want to grow up im sick and tired of this place#im sick and tired of religion being tied to everything#education politics just stop just shut up
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zvaigzdelasas · 2 years
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The Koh-i-noor, Persian for Mountain of Light, is [not] the biggest diamond in the world[...], but it is arguably the most infamous. For many in India it has always represented the humiliation of colonisation.[...]
The ruling BJP party of Narendra Modi has let it be known that any plans for the Queen Consort to wear the Koh-i-noor at her coronation would bring back “painful memories of the colonial past”. For a country that is involved in top level trade negotiations with Britain at this very moment, this is a powerful statement, and one which the palace will now have to deal with. Does it refashion a new Queen Consort’s crown for Camilla, which would be costly at a time of financial hardship in the country? Can it swap out the diamond for another gem in the collection? [...]
The diamond’s past is something of a blood streak through history. Over the centuries, it has passed through Moghul, Persian and Afghan hands, with gore in every chapter of the story.[...]
In this rather blood-drenched relay race, Britain picks up the baton in 1849. At that time the Koh-i-noor belonged to Maharajah Duleep Singh, a 10-year-old boy-king who reigned over the north of India from his capital in Lahore. The East India Company forcibly separated him from his mother, imprisoned her, and then made him sign a treaty he was ill-equipped to understand, supposedly for his own protection. Duleep’s childish signature on vellum lost him the Koh-I-noor and his kingdom. He would eventually die, broken and broke, on the floor of a Parisian hotel at the age of 55. His story, for many, is an allegory of colonisation. In England, the diamond was somewhat disastrously recut, losing almost half its heft, and though Queen Victoria wore it, no other reigning monarch has[...]
In 1947 the government of a newly independent India asked for the diamond’s return. In 1976, as Britain sweltered in a heatwave, Benazir Bhutto’s father, the then prime minister of Pakistan, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, asked for the diamond’s return, reasoning that it was part of Lahore’s heritage. In a blistering letter he said its return would “be symbolic of a new international equity strikingly different from the grasping, usurping temper of a former age”. Such requests, and others like it, have been assiduously sidestepped, with the reply that its history is so complicated, Britain would not know to which country it belonged.
14 Oct 22
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Gujarat election campaign would see the PM and Amit Shah launch a blitzkrieg of public meetings
Prime Minister Narendra Modi is headed for a punishing schedule in the next 40-odd days.
As his party’s chief canvasser, the PM will be leading his Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP’s) election campaign in Gujarat, where a win is crucial, and Himachal Pradesh. He is slated to address dozens of public rallies in the two states but would also need to attend Parliament during the winter session, tentatively expected to begin from November 13 and end on December 11.
In the midst of a hectic schedule, the PM would also need to find time to meet visiting foreign dignitaries and attend the East Asia Summit in the Philippines.
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While much of his time is likely to be spent in Gujarat in November and December, a senior leader closely associated with the BJP’s election preparedness in the state rejected reports that Modi could be addressing as many as 50 public rallies in his home state.
Gujarat is scheduled for two-phase polling — on December 9 and 14. Himachal Pradesh votes on November 9.
The PM is slated to address five to six rallies in Himachal Pradesh, on November 2, 4 and 5.
On Saturday, the PM is scheduled to interact with the media at the BJP’s annual Diwali get-together in the Capital. He is scheduled to address a public rally in Karnataka’s Bidar on Sunday.
On Monday, the PM would be in New Delhi to attend delegation-level talks with visiting Italian PM Paolo Gentiloni. Not only is Italy one of India’s key trading partners in the European Union, the last visit by an Italian Prime Minister to India was a decade back in February 2007.
The PM would also need to find time to meet King Philippe and Queen Mathilde of Belgium, who will pay a state visit to India on November 5-11.
Prince Charles, the Prince of Wales and Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, will pay a two-day visit to India on November 8 and 9. They are scheduled to meet the PM on November 8. The PM is also likely to attend the East Asia Summit in the Philippines on November 13 and 14.
Besides, the PM would need to attend important government events. On November 3, he will inaugurate ‘World Food India’, which will be attended by chief ministers of Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, and Chhattisgarh as well as chief executives of leading food processing companies.
The Gujarat Assembly election campaign would see the PM and BJP chief Amit Shah launch a blitzkrieg of public meetings in their home state from the second week of November.
BJP leaders entrusted with poll preparedness said dates and venues of the PM’s public rallies in the state were still in the works and they would not hazard a guess as to the number of meetings that the PM might address.
BJP general secretary and Gujarat in-charge Bhupender Yadav is already stationed in the state, and most senior leaders and Union ministers have been asked to pitch in. Party chief Shah would be mostly in Gujarat galvanizing workers.
The party has reached out to its workers in each of the 50,128 polling booths of the state. The party is also preparing to counter the Opposition’s efforts to observe November 8, the anniversary of demonetization, as ‘black day’, by marking it as ‘anti-black money day’.
From mid-November, both Modi and Shah would be faced with the challenge finding time for both the Gujarat campaign and Parliament’s winter session.
Shah was elected to the Rajya Sabha in August and it will be his first full session. The winter session is expected to be stormy. It also coincides with protests by trade unions and farmer organizations.
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