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Maj Gen Mrinal Suman (retd.), military analyst, speaks with Col Anil Bhat (retd.) on the current situation in Jammu & Kashmir | SAM Conversation
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2 years ago
Maj Gen Mrinal Suman (retd.), military analyst, speaks with Col Anil Bhat (retd.) on the current situation in Jammu & Kashmir | SAM Conversation
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00:00
Welcome to SAM Conversation, a program of South Asia Monitor. Today we'll discuss a
00:21
development in Jammu and Kashmir where there has been an unprecedented massive input of
00:32
tourists but they are being looted. We welcome Major General Mrinal Suman, a seasoned defence
00:51
and security analyst. He's from the SEPAS and it is to his credit that when the nuclear
01:02
test was being performed at Pokhran, it is he who is in charge of preparing the shaft
01:10
for it. General Suman is out of one of the officers of a group of officers who recently
01:20
visited Srinagar and some other places. Ever since the abrogation of Article 370, the tourism
01:39
started picking up and it reached a stage where it is unprecedentedly high. But the
01:50
very disturbing aspect of it is that a lot of tourists are being fleeced. General Suman
02:02
sir, I request you to give us an overview of whatever you experienced recently.
02:12
Thank you Anil. It's a pleasure to be associated with you. My first visit to the Kashmir Valley
02:24
was in 1961, nearly six decades earlier, when my father was posted there and I visited that
02:32
place and took my NDA exam in Srinagar. After that, after having joined the army, the valley,
02:42
very often, mostly on duty. Now, after the abrogation of Article 370, there was an urge
02:51
to go and see the changed circumstances. I had seen the valley in the early 90s at its
02:59
worst when the turmoil was at its peak. And now we wanted to see how the things have changed
03:07
after the abrogation of Article 370. So we were three veterans with our wives, so six
03:13
of us, we decided to visit the valley and visit the major places. Our trip was for eight
03:20
days from 21st to 28th March. It was through a tour agency, a reputed tour agency, and
03:28
we stayed in three of the four-star hotels, hired a Krista, Innova Krista, for eight days,
03:35
which stayed with us. No complaints about the hotels. They were very warm, wanting to
03:41
do well, trying to establish themselves. They had lots of people who were untrained because
03:49
there was no hotel industry or hospitality industry earlier, and now they were picking
03:54
up. And they were grateful if we told them a few tips. So that was very nice. I mean,
04:00
as far as the hotel industry was concerned, they were warm, keen to serve us better, and
04:06
keen to impress us. But what actually hurt us most was the total neglect of the industry,
04:15
the tourism industry, by the state government. Centre is doing its bit, but ultimately it
04:21
is for the state government to carry out the infrastructure development. You will be surprised
04:30
that the first shock that we got was from the tour operator himself. We got a warning
04:38
from him, "Sir, you're going there. Please do not argue with people. People are very
04:43
rude. Whatever you fix with them, make sure that it's absolutely clear, because at times
04:50
there can be disputes about whatever they are talking to you or discussing with you."
04:56
And the worst was when they said that, "If you want our help, please give us a ring,
05:02
but away from the tour, from the local vendors and the local taxi drivers." I mean, it shows
05:08
the amount of fear they had about the local mafia, that they dare not intervene even on
05:14
behalf of their own tourist guests. I mean, that was quite a shock. They're saying that
05:20
you can complain to us, but complain in private so that the local taxiwallahs and the vendors
05:27
and others, the ponywallahs, they don't get to hear what we are talking about. Notwithstanding
05:34
that, the valley is beautiful. Nature has really blessed it. It is undoubtedly a paradise
05:42
on earth. The weather was excellent. We started our tour with the four Mughal gardens. Sad
05:50
to say, they're such beautiful gardens. They are in utter state of neglect. The steps are
05:57
broken. There are no railings for the tourists to climb up. When it started drizzling, the
06:02
whole place was slippery. There are no toilets nearby. And even the tiles had got uprooted
06:10
at most of the places, and nobody had set them right. They have a small ticket, entrance
06:16
ticket for the gardens. No issue in that. But at one garden, the security staff themselves
06:23
were taking back the tickets so that they could recycle it and pocket the money. It
06:27
was quite a shock that they were doing that. More than anything else, Anil, there is a
06:35
mafia working at all the tourist spots whose total aim is to act like vultures and to sort
06:44
of loot as much as they can. I give a very small example. We went to a place called Doodhpatri.
06:52
We had a vehicle, as I told you, hired vehicle for which we had paid, an Innova Christa.
06:59
It was stopped two kilometers short of the tourist spot. And we were told, and that is
07:04
at a 9,000 feet altitude, either walk down to Doodhpatri or hire our police or hire our
07:12
what they call ATV, all-terrain vehicle, four-wheelers, on which one person can sit, and they charge
07:19
1500 rupees for that. Six of us, we are all senior citizens, we walked about 500 meters,
07:26
then realized that it is not, won't be sensible to walk two kilometers downhill and two kilometers
07:33
uphill in 10,000 feet, 9,000 feet altitude when we had not acclimatized. So we gave up.
07:40
So the net result was that we had a vehicle, the road is there, blacktop road is there,
07:46
but we were deprived from visiting Doodhpatri just because the local mafia said, please
07:52
sit down on the ponies and visit that, otherwise we'll not let you go. The vehicle was stopped.
07:59
And our own taxi drivers are so scared. I'm talking about the taxi driver whom we had
08:03
engaged in Srinagar, who was with us for eight days, a good person, well-meaning person,
08:08
but they are so scared of the local mafia that they dare not disobey them. Because they
08:14
say they stone our vehicles, they break our window panes. So then it really, the net result
08:21
of our visit to Doodhpatri was that we did not do visit Doodhpatri, and we remained two
08:26
kilometers short and came back. We went to Sone Mark, that day there was heavy snowfall,
08:36
wonderful weather, bright sunshine. There were thousands of people, thousands when I
08:41
say thousands, they can beat even Karol Bagh. People playing in the snow, enjoying themselves.
08:49
All through that two kilometer stretch, there was not even a single toilet in such cold
08:55
weather. When people were playing in snow, they were getting wet. They wanted to urgently
09:00
go to the toilet. There was not even a single toilet. When I looked around and asked other
09:06
people, there was not a single tourist official, not a single policeman who could help you
09:12
out. Ultimately, we located that some people, some hoteliers, enterprising ones, they had
09:19
pitched a small little shack or a tent outside at the backyard, and they were charging 10
09:24
rupees per individual for going and using that place. And what had they provided there?
09:29
One single pot. Gent or ladies, use it or forget it. And when I wanted to go there,
09:36
we found that there was a queue of nearly 25 to 30 people. I mean, 30 people means your
09:42
turn would come maybe after about an hour. So there I went, entered a hotel, and then
09:49
we ordered some kava and all that. And there I saw a lady pleading with the manager there.
09:57
He was the maybe manager or the headman at that time, saying that she needs to go urgently
10:03
to the toilet. He told her to please go outside, pay 10 rupees and stand in that queue. She
10:08
says, I can't wait. He says, I can't help. Then ultimately, he told her that if you want,
10:14
you can hire a room for one hour. I charge 6000 rupees as rent for one night, but from
10:20
you, I'll charge 2000 rupees for one hour and then let you use the toilet. That lady
10:26
with the tears in her eyes paid 2000 rupees. She couldn't help and this ruthless, merciless
10:33
chap then only opened the door of the bathroom for her. I mean, what I have quoted you just
10:39
one incident. Believe you me, over eight days, I found that every single vendor, ponywala,
10:47
taxi driver, and other service providers, they are all the same. The one and single
10:55
aim is loot, loot and loot as much as they are more than vultures. I mean, the lady was,
11:02
I mean, she was wearing a sari. She was maybe from Maharashtra or South India. She was maybe
11:08
50, 55 year old. And you know, one aspect which I want to highlight is that when we
11:14
went in the month, end of March, at that time, most of the schools were or the exams were
11:20
on. So, the young crowd was less and middle age or the senior crowd was more because all
11:26
of us like we wanted to beat the, go before the schools closed down so that there's not
11:31
much rush. So, this lady was also maybe around 55, 60 year old, but what a plight and I don't
11:37
think she will ever carry a good opinion about the Kashmir Valley. And that man was heartless.
11:46
Heartless, he didn't even sort of think twice that, I mean, that lady was his mother's age
11:53
and what a state she was in. But she had to go, she had to go. That was unfortunate part.
11:59
When you talk about the Sonmarg, we told you about the Sonmarg. We went to Pahalgam. Same,
12:08
we have a vehicle, the vehicle is parked in the hotel, the vehicle is not permitted to
12:12
move beyond Pahalgam. There are three local sightseeing sites, the Aru Valley, Betaw Valley
12:20
and Chandan Valley. So, you have to hire the same Innova Krista from one of the trade union
12:27
and one of the drivers will come, charge you 3000 rupees and take you to these three places
12:32
over a trip for about five hours. Imagine the irony of the things, you have a taxi,
12:41
you have paid for it, it is standing in your hotel and you are still being asked to pay
12:45
for another taxi of the same kind to go around in that area. So, you land up paying for two
12:51
taxis at one time. We have paid for the taxi which we have brought from Srinagar and we
12:56
are paying for another car to take the taxi which we had to hire from Gulbarg, from Pahalgam,
13:03
the trade union. And they are so clever, they are so clever and they are so unscrupulous.
13:10
They take you around in what is supposed to be a five-hour trip, they try and finish off
13:14
in two, two and a half hours so they can do another trip. And in that also, let me tell
13:20
you, they took us one kilometre beyond Betaw Valley and they stopped. Sorry sir, we cannot
13:25
go any further. I said, why can't you go? He said, sir, all the taxis come here. I said,
13:30
where is Chandan Valley? Chandan Valley is six kilometres away. So, you have taken money
13:34
from us to go to Chandan Valley. Yes sir, we call this the Chandan Valley stop. So,
13:39
they are not, they didn't take us to Chandan Valley. They named a place called Chandan
13:43
Valley stop and they turned around and came back. So, we, after having paid for going
13:50
to Chandan Valley, we never went to Chandan Valley. And it was a personal loss for me
13:55
because in 1961, I had walked with my parents up to Chandan Valley and I wanted to see.
14:02
And border roads have made a beautiful road there. Everything is fine but these people,
14:06
they are not going to let us because they are a mafia and you can't argue. And we had
14:09
already been warned by the tour operators that don't get into an argument with them.
14:14
So what could we possibly do? So, we turned back. Yes, please.
14:20
Sir, it's in fact, it's a very unpleasant surprise to get all these inputs from you.
14:30
What about the local police? Were they not deployed there? Was there no help from their
14:41
side or? That's the saddest part. All through our
14:48
stay there, we saw a few policemen in Lal Chowk, Red Square what they call. Otherwise,
14:54
nowhere was there police to be seen. Our salute, our hats off to the CRPF. They were there
15:01
in patrolling the place. They were occupying posts all along the road and they were the
15:06
one who were instilling confidence in the public. They were very nice people and they
15:11
were up and about alert. But local police, sorry.
15:17
This is the army that you're referring to, sir?
15:20
I'm talking about CRPF.
15:22
CRPF, okay, sir.
15:23
The army was not deployed. The CRPF is manning the place.
15:27
Because I think they made sure that army is kept away now from and placed only on the
15:34
line of control.
15:35
That's right. That's right. The CRPF is responsible for the internal security and they are doing
15:41
a fabulous job and one could see them at every place, on every major artery, major road.
15:47
They were there with their vehicles patrolling the place, even in Red Square, they were there.
15:52
But local police and local tourist staff or tourist department or the government officials,
15:59
it appeared that the state government had abdicated its responsibility totally. They
16:03
had left the tourists at the mercy of the mafia. And I was telling you, like, imagine
16:10
they were trying to talk and calling it the heaven on earth. When we went in that two
16:16
and a half, three hours drive from Aru Valley to Bita Valley to so-called Chandanwadi, which
16:23
is just about one kilometre from Bita Valley, we did come across a single facility, single
16:28
toilet, single, what do you call, shelter. If the weather backs up where the tourists
16:34
will stand, what will they do? And the worst was I have put up a photograph to the state
16:39
government. I said, these are the boulders at Bita Valley, behind which most of the ladies
16:44
were going in a queue for toilet. I mean, what a shameful and disgraceful thing to call
16:51
it a Bita Valley. You have thousands of people playing around, frolicking in water there,
16:57
beautiful, clean water, but not a single facility and you left the tourists go behind the boulders.
17:04
Sir, it only reflects firstly what things were like prior to the abrogation of D70 and
17:17
that nothing has been done to improve on that. And of course, from what you said, it's very
17:25
clear that the state government officials or operatives who are, you know, those who
17:34
are responsible for various tasks, they are, their mindset has probably not changed much,
17:43
sir. We keep hearing, you know, from time to time, statements from the government that
17:52
there's a great change, there's a great change. But I'd say that even for the insurgency
18:01
terrorism, it may certainly have improved, sir, but it's still disturbing enough to have,
18:11
you know, incidents which last up to a week. Just imagine four to five or six terrorists,
18:23
they hold down a battalion or a brigade. Still.
18:31
That is one part. But as I said, the CRPF is trying to do its best to make sure that
18:40
the tourists remain safe. But what hurt the most was, tourism, Anil, you'll agree with
18:47
me, is a very, very, very sensitive industry. Once the tourism industry, if an area gets
18:55
a bad name, people will start shunning it. Because once they know that this is not a
19:00
safe place, they know that you'll be looted, you'll know that you cannot be helped. People
19:05
will stop shunning it. My aim of putting up these points to the government, to the public
19:12
was primarily to, let's say, persuade the state government to take up the responsibility
19:18
that it is their due. If you are inviting tourists, you are duty bound to make sure
19:24
that the people are comfortable.
19:27
You sent feedback on this to, I think you wrote to the Prime Minister, sir?
19:35
I sent it to the Prime Minister and I got a call from the Sonmarg Development Authority
19:42
saying, sir, you are unhappy. So can we return those 2000 rupees that the hotelier charged?
19:49
I said, what a foolish statement to make. I don't even know who the lady was. And the
19:53
aim is not that she was charged 2000 rupees. The point was that it was an unfair way of
19:59
treating a tourist.
20:00
Actually, let me also tell you, Anil, the economy is thriving in that area. You can't
20:08
imagine the number of vendors. You can't imagine the number of shops. You can't imagine the
20:13
number of khokhas that have come up. You go to any place on the roadside, the people are
20:18
selling sarso ka saag, makki ki roti, I mean, things which are unheard of. So we stopped
20:25
at a place. So I asked that lady who was makki ki roti on a small little thela, I said, isse
20:30
pehle kya karte the aap? Jab tourist nahi the, kuch nahi, kaise khana paate the? Ek bacha
20:38
hai, wo 500 rupee le aata tha pathar phekne ke liye. Aur bakki ka kaam ek choti si kheti
20:44
hai, jo bhi usme se ho jaye, pehda ho jaye. Aur abhi, abhi maine seekha hai, yaha pe hamare
20:50
gharon mein toh koi saag ki, makki ki roti banata nahi, lekin maine seekha hai taake
20:54
main nakari kar, so main kuch kama saaku paisa. So she was making rotis, very nice rotis we
21:00
had with her, gave her a tip also, because she was hardworking. And her husband was serving,
21:07
standing close by. So what I'm trying to say, there is a sort of growth of economy, there
21:13
is as if the sort of sky has, the opportunities have opened up for them.
21:20
Windfall for them, sir. No doubt. But it's very, very revealing, sir, whatever you brought
21:30
out that she had a son who was earning by throwing stones at the army and security forces.
21:42
And that's how the money was coming.
21:45
That's how we got it out for him. Har ke bhi khana toh chalta hoga nahi, sab koi bache ko
21:48
beta tha, toh chup kar gayi, maine kya patthar paing rahen ki leh pe chup kar gayi, toh
21:52
bolo bolo haan, kuch kaam de dete. What I'm trying to say is that the economic boom is
21:59
unprecedented. Believe you me, there are lakhs of tourists landing up there, the hotels are
22:06
fully booked, the airport is choked, every road, the people are Indian tourists, they
22:12
are foreigners also, but lesser number. Indian tourists for them, it is something, you know,
22:18
a mystery which they wanted to see. What is… they have never been to Karnataka.
22:24
No doubt, sir. And there's absolutely no doubt about the fact that the center here
22:32
needs to take a very serious view and ensure that all actions are taken to ensure that
22:45
these such elements cannot have their own way.
22:50
But they seem to be having the blessings of the government. These mafias seem to be thriving
22:54
only. Take the case of Gulmarg. Gulmarg has got the best gondola in the world. It's
23:00
in two phases. It's out of this world. I mean, it's an experience. I have commanded
23:05
my regiment in Siachen even then I was fascinated by the expanse of the glacier. It is so beautiful.
23:12
But can you believe it? The tickets are opened online and within seconds all the tickets
23:17
disappear. Nobody knows who buys them. All of them disappear. And they say, the tour
23:23
operator says, there is a thriving black market in that. When we went to Gulmarg, again, first,
23:29
a terrible experience. Our own vehicle is standing there, which we have paid for, which
23:35
we are hired. They say, sorry, sir, you cannot use it. You have to hire our Krista, Innova
23:41
Krista to visit the palace, to visit another place and all that, two, three places. You
23:46
cannot use your own vehicle. So, you have to pay double.
23:50
They don't take you to your destination. They leave you. They stop for five kilometers or
23:55
so before that, which in that terrain is not funny, sir.
23:59
It's not funny. Not only that, the vehicle which we had taken from Srinagar, which dropped
24:05
us at the hotel and then he walked out. He said, sir, if I keep the car here, they will
24:10
take me. I will go back to another village and stay there. And this is the mafia. The
24:17
sad part is they have the best gondola in the world. I mean, no gondola can match even
24:22
in Switzerland and that. But yet, will you believe it? There was a two and a half hour
24:28
long queue to get into the gondola. And in that, there was not a bench. There was not
24:35
a shelter. There was not a railing. There was not a seating arrangement. There was no
24:41
toilet. Three hours, middle-aged people standing there. They had not even cleared the snow.
24:47
The people were skidding and falling. I myself fell down there. We had to hold each other's
24:51
hand to negotiate that queue. I mean, it's, I mean, I just can't imagine that these people
24:58
are ignorant about it. Same is the case when you go into the gondola, you go up, you don't
25:03
find a single facility, single infrastructure. You know, Dull Lake has its own charm. Staying
25:10
in a houseboat and taking a ride in the Shikaras, everybody wants to experience. Houseboats
25:17
are nice. They have been done up. They are being renovated. But houseboats in Dull Lake,
25:24
the surrounding area are filthy. There is no authority who's checking them up. If you
25:29
put your hand in while sitting in the duck boat, you may land up picking up filth in
25:34
the water. There is growth all around. There's no cleanliness. There's no hygiene. However,
25:41
houseboats and Nagin Lake are comparatively better. But what surprised me most as a SEPA
25:49
officer was the fact that in that sort of water environment, not a single houseboat
25:56
or a Shikara had a safety life jacket. Not even one. The jetties from which the Shikaras
26:05
were receiving the tourists were all broken. There were no railings. They were slippery.
26:11
The tiles had got uprooted and it was difficult. It was really a challenge for the middle-aged
26:17
people to step out of the stair steps and get into the house in the Shikara. And they
26:25
had to be helped there. And what worried me most was when I saw a couple passing on their
26:33
baby to the Shikara chap to put in the Shikara. I mean, God forbid, if the baby slips or anything
26:42
of that sort happens, there are no jetties worth the name. There is no precaution taken
26:47
there. No one is... I mean, it is as if a tragedy is waiting to happen there. And it's
26:54
filth all around as far as the houseboats are concerned, especially in the Dal Lake.
27:00
So I would request the government to make sure that we do not have any tragedies, we
27:04
do not have accidents, loss of life. Dal Lake is quite deep. So they ought to have certain
27:12
precautions, like life jackets should be made available to the people, even if they are
27:19
not wearing at least the Shikaras must have, the houseboats must have. It is in sheer abrogation
27:29
of all responsibility, abdication of all responsibility by the state government. It is totally left
27:36
to the people, to the mafia, to manage whether the Shikaras or the tourist spots or the taxi
27:42
stands. It was a very unpleasant experience and let me say disappointing experience. In
27:48
my article, I have written that despite all my nationalist feelings and despite my love
27:55
for the Kashmir Valley, I do not feel the Kashmir Valley is at present ready to receive
28:02
tourists the way they are rushing in. There is no facility, the government has to undertake
28:08
certain amount of responsibility. We all know that in high altitude areas, the weather can
28:14
turn for the worse at no time. They do not have anyone to rescue the people. They have
28:19
no first aid posts, they do not have oxygen cylinders, they have no medical help, anything
28:26
anywhere available. It is free for all, all is fine as long as it remains safe. But the
28:34
day something happens, then the government perhaps will wake up. That was the aim. And
28:39
second aim is they must make the people, the taxi people, the this thing, sensitive to
28:45
the requirement of the tourists. You cannot go on looting them for how long can you act
28:52
as vultures and for how long can they keep coming back to you as preys.
29:00
Thank you very much, sir. Thank you very much for some very important inputs that you've
29:04
given which were not known much. And I think it's high time that the central authorities,
29:19
they ensure that the state government is functioning in all aspects to make tourism, not only tourism,
29:29
to keep the valley, keep the valley and to keep all places safe. Otherwise, that means
29:38
that the mindset of people has not changed.
29:44
Right, absolutely right.
29:47
One indication is that. That niyat nahi badli. Anyway, let's hope for the best, sir, because
29:56
the abrogation of 370 is one very major task, one very major aim achieved, but it remains
30:11
unachieved, you know, if all these, if all, you know, if the state is not functioning
30:21
in all aspects. Thank you very much, sir. All the best.
30:27
Thank you, Anil. Thank you. Goodbye.
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Maj Gen Prabir Chakravarty (Retd.) Additional Director General, Artillery and Advisor, BrahMos Aerospace speaks with Col Anil Bhat (Retd.) on the drone war in the recent Indo-Pak conflict | SAM Conversation
South Asia Monitor
7 months ago
30:51
Ashok Sajjanhar, former Indian ambassador speaks with Col Anil Bhat (retd.) on Quad and its future | SAM Conversation
South Asia Monitor
1 year ago
27:43
Lt Gen Kamal Davar (Retd.) former DG, Defence Intelligence Agency & President, Delhi Forum for Strategic Studies speaks with Col Anil Bhat (Retd.) on Israel-Iran war’s impact on India | SAM Conversation
South Asia Monitor
6 months ago
19:53
Cmde C Uday Bhaskar (Retd.) speaks with Mugdha on Pakistan Army chief, Gen Asim Munir’s elevation to Field Marshal rank and its implications | SAM Conversation (Hindi)
South Asia Monitor
7 months ago
33:41
Srinagar-born, Mumbai-based Kashmiri writer-filmmaker Mehak Jamal speaks with Mayank Chhaya | SAM Conversation
South Asia Monitor
11 months ago
35:13
Vikram Jit Singh, journalist and author of Flowers on a Kargil Cliff that narrates powerful human stories of love and loss in the 1999 Kargil War, speaks with Col Anil Bhat (retd.) | SAM Conversation
South Asia Monitor
1 year ago
24:13
Cmde C Uday Bhaskar (Retd.) speaks with Mayank Chhaya on Pakistan Army chief Asim Munir’s elevation as field marshal | SAM Conversation
South Asia Monitor
7 months ago
29:43
Lt. Gen. Kamal Davar (Retd), former Founder DG, Defence Intelligence Agency and President, Delhi Forum for Strategic Studies speaks with Col Anil Bhat (Retd.) on political turmoil in Pakistan, Af-Pak hostilities and impact on India | SAM Conversation
South Asia Monitor
11 months ago
34:11
Dr. Harinder Sekhon, Distinguished Fellow, CUTS International and former Intelligence Analyst, National Security Council Secretariat, speaks with Col Anil Bhat (Retd.) on the need to review India-US relations | SAM Conversation
South Asia Monitor
6 months ago
29:43
Lt Gen Kamal Davar (Retd.), former founder Director General of Defence Intelligence Agency and President of Delhi Forum for Strategic Studies, speaks with Col Anil Bhat (Retd.) on future of India-Bangladesh relations | SAM Conversation
South Asia Monitor
10 months ago
34:38
Former Indian Ambassador Dilip Sinha speaks with Col Anil Bhat (retd.) on his recent book “Imperial Games in Tibet: The Struggle for Statehood and Sovereignty”| SAM Conversation
South Asia Monitor
1 year ago
29:46
Lt Gen Kamal Davar (Retd.), President, Delhi Forum for Strategic Studies and the first Director General of the Defence Intelligence Agency, speaks with Col Anil Bhat (Retd.) on the Delhi blast and the rise of white-collar terror | SAM Conversation
South Asia Monitor
4 weeks ago
32:25
Dr Samudra Gupta Kashyap, former Northeast Correspondent, former State Information Commissioner, Assam and currently Chancellor, Nagaland University, speaks with Col Anil Bhat (retd.) on Bangladesh's political turmoil and its impact on India's northeast,
South Asia Monitor
4 weeks ago
32:05
Lt Gen Vinod Bhatia (Retd.), former DG, Military Operations, Indian Army and Director, Centre for Joint Warfare Studies, New Delhi speaks with Col Anil Bhat (Retd.) on growing anti-India activities in Bangladesh and Pakistan-China intel collusion | SAM Co
South Asia Monitor
6 weeks ago
23:00
Frank Islam speaks with Prof Mohan Munasinghe, Sri Lanka's pre-eminent voice on sustainable development, climate change, energy and environment | Washington Calling
South Asia Monitor
6 weeks ago
34:24
Dr Anugyan Nag, who teaches Film, Media and Cultural Studies at Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi, speaks with C Uday Bhaskar on legendary Indian filmmaker Ritwik Gatak whose birth centenary is on Nov 4 | SAM Conversation
South Asia Monitor
7 weeks ago
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