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Dizzy28 wrote:Western media calls Modi a dictator
Meanwhile the Indian electorate keeps giving him a bigger and bigger mandate each election cycle. The BJP has won the Delhi local election moving from 8 seats to 48. Majority Muslim districts went to the BJP. Neck beards on Tuner think India is a hellhole for Muslims under the BJP.
The Muslims in India think otherwise Screenshot_20250209-090028.jpg
sMASH wrote:The puppets cutting the strings .
Pakistan is strong with belt and road. India was supposed to be part of the competitor in the transarabian line.
Iran recently got it first goods shipment from China via rail.
India prolly seeing the evolution of world order of economics and power and saying , time to switch up.
IMG_20250723_074839.jpg
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday (July 23, 2025) left on a four-day visit to the U.K. and the Maldives, expressing confidence that this will boost India's ties with the two countries. In his departure statement, Mr. Modi said India and the United Kingdom share a comprehensive strategic partnership that has witnessed significant progress in recent years.
He noted that the collaboration between the two countries spans a wide range of sectors, including trade, investment, technology, innovation, defence, education, research, sustainability, health and people-to-people ties.
The religions of peace, i see...Dizzy28 wrote:Two Buddhist nations fighting over a 12th century Hindu temple. The 2020s had been quite a ride!!
Buddhists still would have a better time in airports around the globe than a bearded fellow wearing a gown and pants too short.sMASH wrote:The religions of peace, i see...Dizzy28 wrote:Two Buddhist nations fighting over a 12th century Hindu temple. The 2020s had been quite a ride!!
OhmnavashiRATATATATATATA
Becusee of decades of zionists propaganda and establishment npc populations who listen to establishment talking points.Dizzy28 wrote:Buddhists still would have a better time in airports around the globe than a bearded fellow wearing a gown and pants too short.sMASH wrote:The religions of peace, i see...Dizzy28 wrote:Two Buddhist nations fighting over a 12th century Hindu temple. The 2020s had been quite a ride!!
OhmnavashiRATATATATATATA
sMASH wrote:Becusee of decades of zionists propaganda and establishment npc populations who listen to establishment talking points.Dizzy28 wrote:Buddhists still would have a better time in airports around the globe than a bearded fellow wearing a gown and pants too short.sMASH wrote:The religions of peace, i see...Dizzy28 wrote:Two Buddhist nations fighting over a 12th century Hindu temple. The 2020s had been quite a ride!!20250724_121609.jpg
OhmnavashiRATATATATATATA
All zinist except for jammat, thst was pnmDizzy28 wrote:sMASH wrote:Becusee of decades of zionists propaganda and establishment npc populations who listen to establishment talking points.Dizzy28 wrote:Buddhists still would have a better time in airports around the globe than a bearded fellow wearing a gown and pants too short.sMASH wrote:The religions of peace, i see...Dizzy28 wrote:Two Buddhist nations fighting over a 12th century Hindu temple. The 2020s had been quite a ride!!20250724_121609.jpg
OhmnavashiRATATATATATATA
Yea nah...Jamat Al Muslimeen, Boko Haram, Taliban, ISIS, PLO, Hamas, Muslim Brotherhood, 9/11, 7/7, Madrid, Mumbai, Nice, Bataclan, MILF.
Zionists don't need to do squat when the fundamentalists do quite a job advertising the true religion of peace
More than 40 people were killed in an attack by an Islamic State affiliate in north-eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, the UN and the military said. Most of them were worshippers taking part in a night vigil at a church in the town of Komanda when they were attacked by Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) fighters. Nine of those killed were children, the UN peacekeeping mission said.
Nearby shops and businesses were looted and set on fire. The ADF emerged in Uganda in the 1990s, accusing the government there of persecuting Muslims, but is now based over the border in DR Congo, where it regularly attacks civilians of all religions, as well as in Uganda. It has since become part of the Islamic State's Central African Province, which also includes a group in Mozambique. According to research by BBC Monitoring, nearly 90% of IS operations are now carried out by affiliates in Africa.
The attack claimed at least 43 people, including 19 women, 15 men and nine children, the UN peacekeeping mission, Monusco, said. The Congolese military said "about 40 people were surprised and killed with machetes and several others were seriously injure
It don't make sense haveing a wholllle other thread when it not going to have that much changing. And both regions will be worked on simultaneously by the same powers.Dizzy28 wrote:Didn't realize this thread also had Africa in the title. That forgotten continent where one would think everything was hunky dory as compared to say the Middle East.More than 40 people were killed in an attack by an Islamic State affiliate in north-eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, the UN and the military said. Most of them were worshippers taking part in a night vigil at a church in the town of Komanda when they were attacked by Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) fighters. Nine of those killed were children, the UN peacekeeping mission said.
Nearby shops and businesses were looted and set on fire. The ADF emerged in Uganda in the 1990s, accusing the government there of persecuting Muslims, but is now based over the border in DR Congo, where it regularly attacks civilians of all religions, as well as in Uganda. It has since become part of the Islamic State's Central African Province, which also includes a group in Mozambique. According to research by BBC Monitoring, nearly 90% of IS operations are now carried out by affiliates in Africa.
The attack claimed at least 43 people, including 19 women, 15 men and nine children, the UN peacekeeping mission, Monusco, said. The Congolese military said "about 40 people were surprised and killed with machetes and several others were seriously injure
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c3ezjg34lw4o
sMASH wrote:The religions of peace, i see...Dizzy28 wrote:Two Buddhist nations fighting over a 12th century Hindu temple. The 2020s had been quite a ride!!20250724_121609.jpg
OhmnavashiRATATATATATATA
U tired fix pothole whole morning , so taking a rest to comment on foreign problems?timelapse wrote:sMASH wrote:The religions of peace, i see...Dizzy28 wrote:Two Buddhist nations fighting over a 12th century Hindu temple. The 2020s had been quite a ride!!20250724_121609.jpg
OhmnavashiRATATATATATATA
You see anywhere it says Hindus fighting over anything?Two Buddhist sects fighting over a Hindu temple is what it says.
The first word revealed in the Quran is "Iqra" (اقْرَأْ), which translates to "Read"
sMASH wrote:U tired fix pothole whole morning , so taking a rest to comment on foreign problems?timelapse wrote:sMASH wrote:The religions of peace, i see...Dizzy28 wrote:Two Buddhist nations fighting over a 12th century Hindu temple. The 2020s had been quite a ride!!20250724_121609.jpg
OhmnavashiRATATATATATATA
You see anywhere it says Hindus fighting over anything?Two Buddhist sects fighting over a Hindu temple is what it says.
The first word revealed in the Quran is "Iqra" (اقْرَأْ), which translates to "Read"
Check the 1990 coup thread.sMASH wrote:Not local problem that requires fixing, what's urs?
Cambodia and Thailand agreed to a ceasefire on Monday, set to start at midnight local time, after attending talks in Malaysia aimed at ending a 5-day border dispute that has left dozens dead.
The ceasefire came after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened both countries with higher tariffs if the fighting continued, and amid pressure from China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. However, even as the talks in Kuala Lumpur were underway, fighting was reported to be ongoing.
How did this border conflict start?
Cambodia and Thailand have long had a dispute over part of their shared border, which has resulted in sporadic eruptions of fighting from time to time — most recently in 2011. Part of the problem dates back over a century to when French colonial powers mapped out the borders of the two nations. Both countries claim ownership of Preah Vihear, an 11th century Hindu temple on the border. In 1962, the International Court of Justice ruled that Preah Vihear fell within the sovereignty of Cambodia. Thailand rejects that, despite the ICJ repeating the ruling in 2013 and ordering Thai forces to leave the area. It's a heated topic for both Thai and Cambodian nationalists.
The latest bout of fighting flared up when a mine explosion on the border last week killed five Thai soldiers. In the past five days at least 35 people have been killed and thousands displaced. Each side blames the other for the escalation, with Thailand accusing Cambodia of firing rockets, while Cambodia accuses Thailand of carrying out airstrikes.
sMASH wrote:Possibly Philippines or Australia might start to star out in a month of so...
No info, just random guess.
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