Discover the Perfect Blend of Style and Performance with KTM RC 125
November 5, 2023 – KTM India, a trailblazer in the world of motorcycles, has unveiled an exclusive Diwali offer on the much-coveted KTM RC 125. With a mere down payment of Rs 25,000, enthusiasts can now relish the prospect of owning this sports marvel with an affordable EMI of Rs 6,534 per month. This special offer is designed to make the dream of owning a KTM RC 125 a reality for riders across India.
KTM RC 125: A Marvel of Design and Performance
The KTM RC 125 is distinguished by its modern aerodynamic body panels, distinctive bubble-type visor, and redefined fairing and fuel tank. This visual spectacle captures the hearts of riders of all ages, making it a true standout in the world of sport biking.
KTM RC 125
KTM RC 125: Performance That Commands Respect
At the heart of the KTM RC 125 lies a powerful 124.7 cc BS6 single-cylinder, liquid-cooled engine. It churns out an impressive 14.34 bhp at 9250 RPM and a torque of 12 Nm at 8000 RPM. With a 6-speed manual transmission, it promises a seamless and exhilarating ride, catering to both seasoned riders and those seeking to embark on their sport biking journey.
KTM RC 125
Advanced Features
The KTM RC 125 boasts a fully digital instrument cluster, ensuring enhanced visibility and convenience. The integration of Bluetooth and smartphone connectivity elevates the riding experience to a new level. With a built-in navigation system, every journey is simplified, adding an extra layer of convenience.
KTM RC 125
Safety meets Style
Equipped with a single-channel ABS and an anti-locking braking system, the KTM RC 125 prioritizes rider safety. The 320 mm disc brake on the front wheel and 230 mm disc brake on the rear wheel ensure reliable stopping power.
A spokesperson from KTM India emphasized, “The KTM RC 125 is a testament to our dedication to delivering top-tier, performance-driven motorcycles to our cherished customers. With this special Diwali offer, we aim to make the dream of owning a KTM RC 125 a reality for more riders across India.”
Specifications:
Feature
Description
Engine
124.7 cc BS6, Single-Cylinder, Liquid-Cooled
Maximum Power
14.34 bhp @ 9250 RPM
Maximum Torque
12 Nm @ 8000 RPM
Transmission
6-Speed Manual
Weight
160 kg
Fuel Tank Capacity
13.5 liters
Mileage
Approximately 40 km/liter
Front Suspension
Inverted WP Forks
Rear Suspension
Monoshock
Front Brake
320 mm Disc
Rear Brake
230 mm Disc
ABS System
Single-Channel ABS
Instrument Cluster
Fully Digital
Connectivity
Bluetooth and Smartphone Connectivity
Navigation System
Yes
With its combination of style, performance, and affordability, the KTM RC 125 presents an irresistible option for both seasoned riders and newcomers to the world of sport biking. Don’t miss out on this exclusive Diwali offer – visit your nearest KTM showroom today.
KTM RC 125
Conclusion:
KTM India rolls out a special Diwali offer, enabling riders to own the KTM RC 125 for just Rs 6,500 per month.
The offer includes a down payment of Rs 25,000 and an 8% interest rate over a 3-year tenure.
The KTM RC 125 features a potent 124.7 cc BS6 engine, delivering 14.34 bhp of power and 12 Nm of torque.
Modern features include a fully digital instrument cluster, Bluetooth and smartphone connectivity, and an integrated navigation system.
Safety features comprise single-channel ABS and an anti-locking braking system for enhanced rider security.
Dr Vatsa and Valli have unscientific understanding of religions.
I recently saw this interview of Dr Aviral Vatsa, who is a medical practitioner living in Scotland, by Valli Bindana, a film maker who lives in California. Both are of Indian origin.
Dr Vatsa and Valli are both self proclaimed atheists ( as I am too ). However, there are two kinds of atheists, viz scientific atheists and unscientific atheists, and to my mind Dr Vatsa and Valli both belong to the second category. In other words, while they condemn religion, they have no scientific understanding about it, and the views they expressed in this interview are superficial, and lacking in any depth.
I have briefly expressed my views about religion in the articles below :
The first question that arises is how did religion come into existence ? Dr Vatsa attributes it entirely to fear and anxiety, and he rightly condemns ‘Babas’ who play on people’s anxieties and fears, and politicians who exploit religion for getting votes.
However, that is an oversimplification. No doubt fear and anxiety played a part in creation of religion, but one has to go deeper into the matter.
Religion arose initially as nature worship, and came into existence when humans evolved from lower creatures.
Animals do not have religion. But what differentiates a human from an animal is the faculty of reasoning. The early humans were surrounded by forces of nature, e.g. the sun, wind, fire, rain, etc which they could not understand. Hence they started believing they were supernatural beings e.g. Surya, Indra, Agni, and the other Vedic gods ( and similar nature gods in ancient Greece and Rome, among native Americans, who were earlier called Red Indians, etc ), These natural forces could benefit people, or harm them. Hence they had to be propitiated.
It is true that all religions are superstitions and unscientific, and obstruct critical thinking. But even today, despite all scientific advance in the world, most people are still religious. Why ? Let me explain.
Even today perhaps 75% people of the world, particularly in underdeveloped countries, are poor. Poor people need religion as a psychological support, as their lives are so miserable that they would go mad without this psychological support.
And even most of the better off people are also religious because the chance factor is still very powerful in their lives. They plan something, but very often something else happens. For instance, a businessman can start an enterprize, but despite all his planning it may fail ( due to a variety of reasons ). In other words, we often cannot control our lives.
The chance factor is powerful because of the low development of science even today, compared to what it will be in say 100 years from now. Then science will have developed so tremendously that poverty will have been abolished, and we will able to largely control our lives, and then there will be no need of religion.
Dr Vatsa says that if one is religious he/she has a licence to be immoral. I do not know how he has come to this conclusion. I know a large number of religious people who are also highly moral.
However, there are more fundamental objections to religion.
In his famous novel ‘The Brothers Karamazov’ the great Russian writer Dostoevsky asks ( through one of his characters ) if there is a God, why do so many children in the word suffer ?
If there is a God who is all powerful, merciful and all good, then why do millions of children in the world suffer from hunger, cold, lack of shelter, disease etc ? Why does God, who is said to be merciful, not have mercy on them and give them food, clothes, shelter, medicines, etc ?
Why is there so much poverty, unemployment, malnourishment, sickness etc in the world ? If God is powerful and merciful, why does he not abolish these and give everyone a decent life ?
When 6 million European Jews were being sent to gas chambers by the Nazis, why did God not save them ? Religious people have no answer.
As regards the dispute between creationists and evolutionists, I have already dealt with it in my article above. Religion is based on faith and divine revelation, science is based on observation, experiment and reasoning. Religion says there is a supernatural being called God, who is permanent and immortal. Science does not believe that there are any supernatural beings, and does not believe that anything is permanent. Science believes that the only reality is matter ( or rather matter-energy, as Einstein proved by his formula e=mc2 ), which is in different forms, and is in motion, in accordance with certain laws which can be discovered by scientific research. If one asks where did matter come from, the answer is that matter came from matter, in other words it always existed. If it is assumed that everything must have a Creator, then God too must have a Creator, i.e. a super God, and he too must have a Creator i.e. a super super God, and so on. This is known as the fallacy of the infinite regress.
Religion will disappear when the social basis which gives rise to religion, i.e. poverty, ignorance and exploitation of man by man, disappears. But that is still a far way off.
Though a confirmed atheist, I read books like Mahabharat and Ramayan not as religious books but as sociological ones. For instance Draupadi had 5 husbands ( the Pandava brothers ), which proves the existence of polyandry at that time. Now Draupadi is a respected lady, but when her ‘cheer haran’ was taking place publicly in the durbar, Karna says there is nothing wrong in disrobing her since she is like a prostitute, having 5 husbands.
This shows that at that time society was passing through a transitional stage, since polyandry is a feature of matriarchal society, but is abolished in the subsequent patriarchal society, which has polygamy ( i.e. a man can have many wives, but a woman can have only one husband ). So when that portion of the Mahabharat was written ( Mahabharat was evidently written over centuries by many persons, collectively known as Vyas, which only means a writer ) remnants of matriarchal society still existed, though it was rapidly being transformed into patriarchal society. So social values were clashing ( as they are today ).
I have also explained that Ram was a human, not a god, in the original Ramayan of Valmiki, but becomes a god 2000 years later in Tulsidas’ Ramcharitmanas. Unfortunately most people have not read the former, which is in Sanskrit, which most people do not know, and have only read the latter.
This shows how religion evolves according to people’s needs.
To give another example, Indra was a war god, and was the most important god in the Rigveda, which was written probably when the Aryans were entering India as warriors, and Indra was their chief. Later, he became a rain god, when Aryans had settled in India, and agriculture, not war, became their main activity. Indra then became a minor god, the more important becoming Ram, Krishna, Hanuman, Kali and Durga ( in Bengal ) and Murugan ( in Tamilnadu ), none of whom find mention in the Rigved
I conclude by showing how I am a confirmed atheist and yet a Hanuman bhakt
Thereafter there was an attack on a Pakistan Air Force base in Mianwali in central Pakistan destroying/damaging some aircraft, for which a new militant organisation called Tehreek-e-Jihad has claimed responsibility
More such attacks on the Pakistani military and soldiers are bound to follow, as I had foreseen. For what else can the Pakistani people do when thousands of their compatriots, kith and kin have been arrested, tortured, and incarcerated in jail in horrible conditions on trumped up, concocted charges, and many just ‘disappeared’ by the Pakistan Establishment ( which principally means the army ) after the events of 9th May ( which many believe were scripted and stage managed ), and the mouths of the people gagged by fear ?
I had written that since the Pakistan military has tried to silence the Pakistan people by terrible atrocities, and are seeking to impose the hated Nawaz Sharif on them, keeping the immensely popular former Prime Minister Imran Khan in jail in inhuman conditions since early August, a people’s guerilla war is bound to arise against the army, and Pakistan will be turned into another Vietnam or Afghanistan. Wherever there is oppression there is resistance.
A contributory factor is the order by the Pakistan government to Afghan refugees who have been living in Pakistan for 4 decades or more, to get out and go back to Afghanistan.
More than 1.7 million undocumented Afghans living in Pakistan have been told by the Pakistan authorities to leave Pakistan by November 1st, a decision which the Afghanistan Govt has called unacceptable.
Most of these Afghans who came to Pakistan came as poor refugees fleeing from a war torn country, which had been invaded by the Soviet Union, and thereafter by the Americans, and occupied for decades. Against the invaders the Afghans bravely fought a guerilla war, but millions with their families had to flee to Pakistan, with only their clothes on their backs.
Many of the Afghans living in Pakistan have been living there for 40-50 years, and some of them, by hard work, built businesses and acquired property. They no doubt came without visas or other documentation, but how could poor refugees be expected to have them ? To now ask them to leave, and without their properties, is inhuman. Where will they live, and what will do in Afghanistan ? Except for sentimental affinity, they may be having no roots there, having migrated a long time back. Many may not even have been born there.
It is like asking Bangladeshi immigrants who came into Assam 40-50 years ago without documentation to leave Assam. Or like asking millions of Mexicans who came into USA decades ago without documentation to leave.
People who say that those who came illegally should leave must understand that this is not a legal issue but a humanitarian one, as explained in this article
Evidently the Pakistan authorities forgot that they are dealing with a people who had defeated Alexander the Great, the Mughal Empire, the British Empire, the Soviet Empire, and the American Empire, and turned Afghanistan into a graveyard of invaders.
The thick headed, harebrained, moronic Pakistani generals will only understand when a lot of bodybags containing bodies of soldiers start piling up, amidst howling and wailing of their relatives, as it happened to Americans in Vietnam, or the Russians in Afghanistan.
“The lady doth protest too much, methinks” is a line from the play Hamlet by William Shakespeare. It is spoken by Queen Gertrude in response to the insincere overacting of a character in the play to prove Hamlet’s uncle’s guilt in the murder of his father, the King of Denmark.
The phrase is used in everyday speech to indicate doubt of someone’s sincerity, especially regarding the truth of a strong denial.
This line accurately describes TMC MP Mahua Moitra who is accused in a cash for query scandal for asking questions in Parliament to benefit a businessman Darshan Hiranandani, who was a business rival of Gautam Adani, against whom she asked 50 questions.
Mahua Moitra allegedly received numerous costly gifts from Hiranandani for this.
When summoned by the Ethics Committee of the Indian Parliament Ms Moitra appeared, but later stormed out of the meeting shouting and screaming that she had been asked ‘filthy questions’ and playing the victim card. Evidently she subscribes to the the dictum that the best defence is offence.But this seemed just a drama and charade, by a person having a long history of theatrics and grandstanding, to avoid answering relevant, but uncomfortable, questions.
The allegations against her were that she had a connection with Darshan Hirananandani from she allegedly received many costly gifts and other favours ( like paying for her frequent foreign travels ), and with whom she had shared her parliamentary login account and email password. How was it unethical to ask her how many times she had travelled to Dubai to meet Hiranandani, and to other foreign countries, and on what dates ? How was it ‘Draupadi’s cheer haran’ as alleged by BSP MP Danish Ali ? How was it rude, ‘behuda’ and ‘besharam’ to ask such questions?
Mahua Moitra was asked questions as to who funded her foreign travels, etc. What was wrong in that ?
It has been revealed that Mahua Moitra’s Lok Sabha portal was logged in 47 times from Dubai, where Hiranandani lives, and who has now given an affidavit supporting the complainant Nishikant Dubey..
One can understand an MP sharing his/her parliamentary login account and password with a secretary, PA, or intern. But why should he/she share them with a businessman unless it is for some material benefits ? ” Something is rotten in the state of Denmark ”, said Shakspeare in Hamlet. And something seems rotten in this whole episode.
The question is whether they will be free and fair ?
Presently 90-95% of Pakistanis support former Prime Minister Imran Khan and his PTI party ( as all opinion polls indicate ), and if free and fair elections are held the PTI will sweep the polls.
However, the Pakistan army, which is the real ruler of Pakistan, is determined not to allow Imran Khan to become the Prime Minister again, and has incarcerated him in jail, and seems determined not to let him come out alive
This means that the army is determined not to permit free and fair elections, and for this it will either not permit the PTI to contest at all, or will rig the elections heavily.
The army has brought back former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif with great fanfare to Pakistan, and is evidently determined to foist him as the next Prime Minister, though he is hated by the vast majority of Pakistanis, who regard him and his family corrupt ( as the Panama Papers and other evidence proves ).
In this situation it seems to me obvious that since the people have been denied all rights, and a reign of terror has been unleashed against them by the Pakistan army, a people’s guerilla war against the army is inevitable, as it happened in the early stages of the American War of Indepence, in Spain during Napoleonic rule, in Vietnam during French and American rule, in Afghanistan during Soviet and later under American rule, in Algeria during French rule, and in France ( by the Maquis ) during Nazi occupation, etc. Wherever there is oppression, a resistance is bound to arise.
An army can fight another army, it cannot fight the masses. A tiger can kill a prey, it cannot kill a swarm of mosquitoes. The army officers who are presently trampling over the Pakistani people do not realise they are playing with fire.
An angry populace, whose kith and kin have been murdered or tortured and jailed, once aroused can go to any lengths, and then the conventional rules of warfare will be thrown to the winds.
The army officers may feel safe in their guarded houses, but their families are bound to be exposed, by the wives coming out for shopping, social visits etc and the children going to school or college, etc, and then they may be targets of people seeking revenge.
Former Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan was deposed in April 2022, and later arrested, and has been confined since early August in a tiny, dingy cell in jail with few amenities.
About 180 criminal cases have been foisted against him, so that if he is acquitted in one, he will be rearrested in another, the intention being not to let him come out of jail alive throughout his remaining life.
And what are his crimes ? Ostensibly it is alleged that he took toshakhana gifts without paying fully for them, that he was involved in a cypher crime, etc.
But his real ‘crimes’, for which he is being punished, are very different. It is a long list.
1. After the 9/11 attack on the Twin Towers in 2001, US President Bush decided to invade Afghanistan, and declared ” Those who are not with us, are against us ”.
At that time Gen Musharraf was the ruler of Pakistan ( having staged a military coup in 1999 ), and to save his own skin he supported the US invasion, though Pakistan had friendly relations with Afghanistan, and the Afghans had never done any harm to Pakistan.
Imran Khan strongly opposed Pakistan support to the US invasion of Afghanistan, saying this was not our war, and that Pakistan paid a very heavy price for it. 70,000 Pakistanis were killed in this war, and Pakistan’s fragile economy suffered a loss of a staggering 150 billion dollars.
3. While he was Prime Minister he went to Russia to get a deal on import of oil, when the war against Ukraine was going on. This naturally angered the Americans, who were strongly supporting Ukraine.
All this has antagonised the US Govt, and the Pakistan army which follows instructions from the former, has accordingly incarcerated Imran Khan on various trumped up charges.
It may be mentioned that the real ruler in Pakistan is its army, but the senior Pakistan army officers are all beholden to USA and do its bidding. Apart from direct financial gratification which they might be getting secretly, their children are having high paying jobs in the World Bank, IMF or some multinational corporation, or given admissions with full scholarship in Ivy League Colleges like Harvard or Yale.
Antagonising the USA is the real ‘crime’ of Imran Khan, for which he is paying the price confined in Adiala jail in wretched conditions, and time alone will tell whether a ZA Bhutto will be done to him
The Indian Supreme Court by its verdict delivered on 17.10.2023 in Supriyo vs Union of India has rejected the petitions claiming recognition of same sex marriages
In this connection I may refer to an incident in California.
When I was there I was invited by two Judges of the Federal Appellate Court of California, one of whom, Judge John Breyer, was the younger brother of US Supreme Court Stephen Breyer, who was then a sitting US Supreme Court Justice, but has recently resigned as he had become too old ( US Supreme Court and Federal Court Judges have a life tenure but can resign on full pay ).
While sitting with them in the Federal Appellate Court building in San Francisco, I criticised the US Supreme judgment in Obergefell vs Hodges, 2015 ( in which Justice Stephen Breyer was part of the 5-4 majority ) which had directed all states in USA to recognise and register same sex marriages.
Now some liberal states like California and New York had by legislation recognised such marriages, while others, particularly the southern conservative states, had not. Now by this judgment even the latter were directed to recognise them.
I said that the US Supreme Court verdict was wrong as it amounted to judicial legislation. Judges should excercise judicial restraint, and not be over activist. Laws could be made by the legislature, not by judges. There was separation of powers in the Constitution, and one organ of the state could not encroach into the domain of another. Making laws was the job of the legislature, not of judges.
In this connection I referred to my judgment in Divisional Manager, Aravali Golf Club vs Chander Haas, 2007 ( see para 17 onwards ), in which I said that Judges should know their limits, and not behave like Emperors.
However, such relationships did not create any rights.
On the other hand, a marriage creates certain rights e.g. a partner to the marriage has the right to inherit the property ( or part of the property ) of the other partner on the latter’s death, claim maintenance on separation or divorce, etc.
Legal rights can only be created by the legislature, not the courts.
Hence the Supreme Court rightly dismissed the petitions, saying that it was not for courts to recognise same sex marriages, and the petitioners should approach parliament or the state legislatures for getting a law passed recognising same sex marriages.
The hearing of the case by a 5 member bench took a marathon 10 days, and the verdict was reserved for 5 months. I respectfully submit that the case should have been dismissed quickly by a short order the same day saying that judges can not legislate, and the petitioners should approach the legislature for relief.
Ever since Israel declared itself a sovereign state on 14th May 1948, Israelis, knowing they have the backing of Western powers, have been kicking around the Palestinians, as if the latter were dogs.
Earlier, over 90% people living in the territories of Israel were Arabs. After creation of the state of Israel, many of them ( including women and children ) were killed, and most fled in panic and fear, and now only about 20% population of Israel is Arab. Those who fled are still living in horrible and squalid conditions in Jordan, the West Bank, Gaza, Lebanon, etc.
I had a long talk about the present Israel Hamas conflict with a friend living in UK. These are the points we discussed
1. He said that Israel had a right to defend itself if attacked.
I replied that if someone forcibly occupies my house after throwing me out, and I fight to get it back, will you support me, or the person who forcibly occupied my house in the first place ?
2. He then said that Jews in Europe and elsewhere were always longing to go back to Palestine. I said this was rubbish, and I referred him to my two articles, given below :
The Holocaust was not perpetrated by the Palestinians Arabs but by Germans and their European collaborators. So why should the former be punished for the fault of the latter ?
3. He then said that the Jews have converted a desert into a green, blooming paradise.
I replied that if you forcibly occupy my house and throw me out, how does it matter to me that you have converted my house into a luxurious mansion ? I am still living on the road.
The Jews who came into Israel were mostly Europeans, who brought their advanced technical skills with them. This made the desert bloom, and was like the European immigrants pouring into North America from the 17th century onwards, bringing with them their technical skills, which led to rapid development of North America.
But this does not resolve the plight of Palestinians rendered homeless, and living in horrible conditions, just as it does not resolve the plight of the native Americans, who were displaced by European immigrants, and many of whom are still living in reservations in bad conditions.
4. He then contested my thesis that Israel was created by Western powers to control and safeguard the oil supplies for Western industries from the Middle East region. He said that the Israeli army has rarely invaded other countries near Israel which have huge oil deposits.
I replied that armies everywhere in the world are rarely fighting all the time. But they have yet to be maintained, just in case a need arises at a particular time.
The situation in Arab countries is that though the people are mostly anti-Western, the rulers are pro-Western ( in fact Western puppets ). So there is no need of sending the Israeli army into the oil producing countries, because even without that the rulers of these countries ensure oil supplies to the West. When Iranian Prime Minister Mossadegh nationalised the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company in March 1951 he was promptly deposed by the CIA, and the puppet Shah Reza Pahlavi installed.
5. He then said that many Arab countries have recognised Israel, and Saudi Arabia is about to do so.
I replied that the rulers of Saudi Arabia and most Arab countries are Western puppets, and so is Israel. So this was only to be expected. But has the wish of the peoples of these Arab countries been taken into account ?
6. He lastly said that Israel has a right to exist. I said that I am not against Jews, and I am not in favour of expelling Jews from Israel. After all, the Jews presently inhabiting Israel are not immigrants ( like their grandparents or great grandparents ) but were born and brought up in Israel.
But I believe that the only just solution to the conflict is creating a secular, democratic, State of Palestine, uniting Israel, Jordan, the West Bank, Gaza, the Golan Heights, and Lebanon, where Arabs, Jews, Christians, etc can all live peacefully, amicably and in harmony.
There is no other way, and unless this is accepted there will be no peace in the region.
Many people, particularly in Western countries, are calling for total elimination of Palestinian Arabs, which implies women and chioldren too. But they do not go deeper and try to understand what motivated Hammas in launching the attack. The truth is that it was a result of decades of horrible oppression and atrocities on Palestinians by Israeli forces. Newton’s Third Law of Motion says that every action has an equal and opposite reaction. This applies to human affairs too. Wherever there is oppression there will be resistance
The sudden attack by Hamas on Israel reminds one of the well known Tet offensive in South Vietnam in January 1968, which caught the American occupying forces completely off guard, and was a complete failure of US intelligence, just as the Hamas attack caught the Israelis off guard and was a complete failure of Israeli intelligence.
Many people call Hamas savages, and regard people living in Gaza as animals. It is probably true that Hamas soldiers may have committed some atrocities in Israel. But this was only a reaction to over 75 years oppression and atrocities on Palestinians committed by Israelis, backed by some Western powers. The Hammas soldiers who entered Israel probably knew they were going on a suicide mission, like the Japanese Kamikaze pilots towards the end of the Second World War. Yet they did not flinch from this mission, with their anger pent up over decades seeing the atrocities on their people
And what about the retaliatory killing by Israelis of thousands of people, including women and children living in Gaza, by the Israeli forces, which was, and still is continuing, several times worse than the Hamas attack, whole apartment buildings with their occupants being obliterated, food, water and electricity being cut off, and the 2 million people of Gaza being effectively blockaded and deprived of subsistence ?
Before Israel was created 90% people living there were Arabs. Later most of them fled in fear and panic leaving their homes behind, after many were killed by israelis, and most of them are still living in horrible conditions in Gaza, the West Bank, Jordan and in Lebanon. There will never be peace in the region until justice is done to them, and they are properly rehabilitated.
A selective campaign has been launched by Western political leaders, including US President Biden, as well as the Western media, blaming Hammas for all that has happened, calling them vicious animals. It is time now to know the whole story and the truth
Imran Riaz Khan is a well known Pakistani journalist who was arrested by the Pakistan police on 11th May, 2023, and ultimately released on 25th September
There was wide speculation in the media about his disappearance for over 4 months, and some even feared he was dead.
He was interviewed by many persons after his release, and he appeared to have become a totally changed man– old, weak and haggard–a shadow of what he earlier was. He was also not disclosing anything about his captors ( probably out of fear that this may lead to another arrest ), but the general opinion is that they belonged to Pakistan’s ISI ( the military intelligence ). From his physical appearance it seemed he was subjected to brutal third degree methods during his captivity.
Why was he kept in custody and treated brutally for 4 months ? Nobody has answered this question but I will hazard a guess.
Everyone knows that the real ruler of Pakistan is its army ( though there may be a figleaf of civilian rule ). Criticism of the army is highly dangerous in Pakistan, and most Pakistanis avoid talking about it.
However, Imran Riaz Khan was often highly critical of the Pakistan army, and he was made to pay the penalty for this, both to silence him, and also to set an example for others.
There is a story of a man who told his friend that his father was a very brave man, who once fought with a tiger. His friend asked what happened thereafter ? The man replied ” What could happen ? The tiger tore him up and ate him up ”.
The moral of the story is that one should know his limits. Zyaada rangabaazi karna theek nahi hai.
I do not mean to say that one should not criticise wrongdoings. But one should not do so directly with a stronger enemy. Instead, one should use guerilla tactics, that is to say, one should not criticise directly but indirectly, by allusions, suggestions, metaphors, hints, etc, the way many Urdu poets like Faiz Ahmed Faiz, Josh Malihabadi, etc did ( see Faiz’ poem ‘Hum Dekhenge’ ).
Evidently Imran Riaz Khan forgot this, and paid the price