Kashmiri Youth was in Favour of Shunning the Pakistan-Sponsored ‘Gun Culture’

A few youngsters tore down the posters of militants like Burhan Wani and Hizbul Mujahideen in south Kashmir.
Kashmiri Youth was in Favour of Shunning the Pakistan-Sponsored ‘Gun Culture’

In a move that indicates that the Kashmiri youth was in favor of shunning the Pakistan-sponsored 'gun culture', a few young people tore down the posters of militants like Burhan Wani and Hizbul Mujahideen in south Kashmir. The event was caught on camera as few Kashmiri youths were photographed removing the posters of the terrorists in south Kashmir, often careful to the epicenter of terror activities in the state. 

As per the report, the posters that were brought down by the young people endangered the local police force, called out the childhood to join the militants' groups and warned the public against participating in local elections in the region. By removing the posters, the Kashmiri youth seem to be giving out the signal that they want nothing to do with Pakistan-sponsored terrorism. 



Last month, around 259 boys from Jammu and Kashmir had joined Indian Army's Jammu Kashmir Light Infantry (JKLI) Battalion. The Kashmiri boys were inducted in the battalion following the conclusion of their one-year course of JKLI division at Regimental Centre in Rangreth in Srinagar.

In November last year, the Army's northern command chief Lt Gen Ranbir Singh said that there had been a "relative decline" in the number of youths amalgamation radical group in Kashmir for the "past some time." Without specifying a time period, Lt Gen Singh had told reporters, "As far as employment is worried, it is a matter of approval that for the past some time there has been a family member refuses in the number of youths joining militancy." 



Meanwhile, in an important political development in the state, Kashmiri IAS officer Shah Faesal, who topped the civil armed forces exam in 2010, resigned from his post on Wednesday in order to protest against the "unabated killings in Kashmir". Speculations suggested that he was likely to enter politics.

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