Until My Freedom Has Come: The New Intifada in KashmirSanjay Kak Contributed articles. |
Contents
2pdf | 17 |
3pdf | 31 |
4pdf | 43 |
5pdf | 47 |
6pdf | 50 |
7pdf | 64 |
8pdf | 71 |
9pdf | 86 |
17pdf | 132 |
18pdf | 148 |
19pdf | 153 |
20pdf | 158 |
21pdf | 169 |
22pdf | 176 |
23pdf | 179 |
24pdf | 186 |
10pdf | 92 |
11pdf | 94 |
12pdf | 96 |
13pdf | 110 |
14pdf | 113 |
15pdf | 116 |
16pdf | 120 |
25pdf | 213 |
26pdf | 229 |
27pdf | 250 |
28pdf | 279 |
Timelinepdf | 289 |
Notespdf | 297 |
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activists AFSPA Ahmed armed forces armed militants article first appeared Arundhati Roy Azad Azadi Bharatiya Janata Party Bhat brutality bunkers called camp Centre civil society civilian claims CRPF cultural curfew death decades Delhi demand democracy deployed discourse Dogra dominant elections Facebook Farooq fire freedom Geelani Greater Kashmir groups human rights Hurriyat identity images India and Pakistan Indian Army Indian forces Indian media Indian security forces Indian state’s insurgency Islam Islamist Jammu and Kashmir Kash Kashmir Valley Kashmiri Hindus Kashmiri Muslims Kashmiri Pandits killed Lashkar-e-Toiba lives maharaja marginalities military minister movement narrative nation nation-states occupation officer Omar Abdullah Pakistan Panun Kashmir paramilitary Party people’s police political protests in Kashmir region religious resistance response secular self-determination September 2010 Sheikh slogans soldiers Srinagar stone-pelting stones streets struggle summer of 2010 territory torture troops village violence WikiLeaks women young youth YouTube