Tag: 1971 war

“Turtuk” The village that Lost its Country in 1971
Pakistan

“Turtuk” The village that Lost its Country in 1971

War is sometimes necessary but it costs hundreds of lives. Around 52 years ago people of Turtuk village slept in Pakistan but woke up as Indians. As surprising as it sounds, it's a historical fact. Turtuk was a border region in Pakistan until 1971. One fine day, it became a part of India. The unsettling effects of this switch are still visible. Shyok, which literally means ‘river of death,’ proves one in the dark night of 1971. On 14 December 1971, when the Indian Army captured this village, Turtuk, from Pakistan. At the edge of Baltistan, enclosed by the Karakoram mountain range with the Shyok flowing in the valley below, Turtuk was one of four villages captured by Indian forces. Also See: Mount Kailash: Centre of so many mysteries In 1971, one of history’s shortest wars wa...
Gen Qamar Bajwa said 1971 war was a Political failure
Pakistan

Gen Qamar Bajwa said 1971 war was a Political failure

Bangladesh, formerly East Pakistan, was a ‘political failure’ and not a ‘military one’, said Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa in his concluding public address as the army chief on Wednesday, 23rd November, 2022. Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa addressing his final public speech He commented that most people avoided talking about the performance and actions of the Pakistani army in Bangladesh during the 1971 war. Gen Bajwa condemned the anti-military narrative and rectified some facts related to 1971 Bangladesh war in his concluding address as army chief. "I want to correct some facts here. Firstly, former East Pakistan was a political failure and not a military one," said Gen Bajwa. He continued by saying that there were 34,000 soldiers that were fighting in the war not 92,000 and the others ...