Hindustan Times (Patiala)

SIKH, KASHMIRI PANDIT VICTIMS OF TERROR IN PAK STAMPS

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The set of 20 postage stamps on Kashmir issued by Islamabad, which had a key role in the cancellati­on of a meeting of the foreign ministers of India and Pakistan, uses images of Kashmiri Pandit and Sikh victims of acts of terror to depict victims of alleged rights abuses in Jammu and Kashmir.

New Delhi cited the stamps, especially one depicting slain Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani as a “freedom icon”, as a reason for calling off the planned meeting of external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj and her Pakistani counterpar­t on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.

The stamps – issued by Pakistan Post on July 24, a day before the general election and when the country was being administer­ed by a caretaker regime – depict what Pakistani officials have said are instances of “atrocities” in Kashmir, including “missing persons”, “protest against killers”, “tortured women”, “human shield” and “homeless children”.

However, several social media users pointed out on Monday that the image used in the stamp on “homeless children” had been issued in numerous news reports on the massacre of 35 Sikhs at Chittising­hpura in Jammu and Kashmir in March 2000.

One of the children in the in the original image is seen wearing Sikh headgear and this has been obscured in the stamp by its denominati­on.

The image used in the stamp on “missing persons” is a photo of a demonstrat­ion organised by the Kashmiri Pandit group Roots in Kashmir at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi in January 2014 to protest against terrorism supported by Pakistan.

The photo was distribute­d by a leading Indian news agency and Roots in Kashmir, in a tweet, said it had identified at least nine people seen in the stamp as Kashmiri Pandits. HTC

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