War Danish Siddiqui: Indian Photojournalist Killed in Afghanistan (14 hours ago) (2 Viewers)

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enji17

Rookie
What sort of response are you aiming to get from this sort of comment you big gay necro-faecal nutter lol?

Finger fucking a dead man’s anus that’s covered in the shit he voided when his muscle tone vanished upon death. Lovely jubbly.

I’d approve if you said you were going to finger paint a radical mosque afterwards. Kind of like a poopy turd Sistine Chapel done by a retard. Or returd lol.
😜
 

Rabidface

Forum Veteran
They're engaged with China aren't they kinda?

India will soon out number the Chinese-ees.

They maybe a poor nation in many regards but, I'd rather the Indians than the Chinese. They are a kinder people imo. Chinese are mean. 😒
China is having beef with India?? I didn't know. I know India and Pakistan have wanted to atom bomb each other for years.
Indian curry is nicer than Chinese too.
Indian people are far nicer I agree
 

Monster138

Any hole is fuckable if your brave enough.
“Hold up, hold up, hold up Mr Haji! You may not see the blue PRESS vest and know I have a Pulitzer Prize, but, yea, I do. That’s right, go ahead and put those AK’s away. To think you thought you could shoot me. Thank you come again”
 

Chief Queef

Last of the Mohicans
Oh the irony. I find the press to be a bigger threat than the actual insurgents. Good thing they pretty much wear a bullseye when out on assignment....
 

jaydol

Well Known Member
Pulitzer Prize-winning Indian photojournalist Danish Siddiqui has been killed in Afghanistan, said the country's ambassador in Delhi. The 41-year-old, who was chief photographer for Reuters news agency in India, was on assignment when he died. He was embedded with a convoy of Afghan forces that was ambushed by Taliban militants near a key border post with Pakistan, according to reports. It is unclear how many others died in the attack. Afghanistan's ambassador to India, Farid Mamundzay, said he was deeply disturbed by the news of "the killing of a friend". Based out of Mumbai, Siddiqui worked with Reuters for more than a decade.

In 2018, he won the Pulitzer Prize in feature photography. He won it alongside colleague Adnan Abidi and five others for their work documenting the violence faced by Myanmar's minority Rohingya community. Recently, his photos of mass funerals held at the peak of India's devastating second wave went viral and won him global praise and recognition. "While I enjoy covering news stories - from business to politics to sports - what I enjoy most is capturing the human face of a breaking story," Siddiqui had told Reuters. Siddiqui was covering the clashes in Kandahar region, as the US withdraws its forces from Afghanistan ahead of an 11 September deadline set by President Joe Biden. The Taliban - a fundamentalist Islamic militia - controlled Afghanistan from the mid-90s until the US invasion in 2001. The group has been accused of grave human rights and cultural abuses. With foreign troops withdrawing after 20 years, the Taliban are rapidly retaking territory across the country, sparking fears of a potential civil war.


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Did they kill him for his camera?
 

NiSiocháinGanSaoirse

This user was banned
Pulitzer Prize-winning Indian photojournalist Danish Siddiqui has been killed in Afghanistan, said the country's ambassador in Delhi. The 41-year-old, who was chief photographer for Reuters news agency in India, was on assignment when he died. He was embedded with a convoy of Afghan forces that was ambushed by Taliban militants near a key border post with Pakistan, according to reports. It is unclear how many others died in the attack. Afghanistan's ambassador to India, Farid Mamundzay, said he was deeply disturbed by the news of "the killing of a friend". Based out of Mumbai, Siddiqui worked with Reuters for more than a decade.

In 2018, he won the Pulitzer Prize in feature photography. He won it alongside colleague Adnan Abidi and five others for their work documenting the violence faced by Myanmar's minority Rohingya community. Recently, his photos of mass funerals held at the peak of India's devastating second wave went viral and won him global praise and recognition. "While I enjoy covering news stories - from business to politics to sports - what I enjoy most is capturing the human face of a breaking story," Siddiqui had told Reuters. Siddiqui was covering the clashes in Kandahar region, as the US withdraws its forces from Afghanistan ahead of an 11 September deadline set by President Joe Biden. The Taliban - a fundamentalist Islamic militia - controlled Afghanistan from the mid-90s until the US invasion in 2001. The group has been accused of grave human rights and cultural abuses. With foreign troops withdrawing after 20 years, the Taliban are rapidly retaking territory across the country, sparking fears of a potential civil war.


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🤣🤣🤣 Dumb fuck.
 

Swedish

KALI YUGA
damn, and I was asking myself what the fuck a danish Siddiqui was, yeah he had nothing to do with Denmark
 

OneSickOne

Kinky as a twisted chain
No sympathy at all. The press shows no sympathy to members of the military yet want sympathy and accolades when they are killed. Fuck, at least they had the choice NOT to go.
 

jaydol

Well Known Member
Pulitzer Prize-winning Indian photojournalist Danish Siddiqui has been killed in Afghanistan, said the country's ambassador in Delhi. The 41-year-old, who was chief photographer for Reuters news agency in India, was on assignment when he died. He was embedded with a convoy of Afghan forces that was ambushed by Taliban militants near a key border post with Pakistan, according to reports. It is unclear how many others died in the attack. Afghanistan's ambassador to India, Farid Mamundzay, said he was deeply disturbed by the news of "the killing of a friend". Based out of Mumbai, Siddiqui worked with Reuters for more than a decade.

In 2018, he won the Pulitzer Prize in feature photography. He won it alongside colleague Adnan Abidi and five others for their work documenting the violence faced by Myanmar's minority Rohingya community. Recently, his photos of mass funerals held at the peak of India's devastating second wave went viral and won him global praise and recognition. "While I enjoy covering news stories - from business to politics to sports - what I enjoy most is capturing the human face of a breaking story," Siddiqui had told Reuters. Siddiqui was covering the clashes in Kandahar region, as the US withdraws its forces from Afghanistan ahead of an 11 September deadline set by President Joe Biden. The Taliban - a fundamentalist Islamic militia - controlled Afghanistan from the mid-90s until the US invasion in 2001. The group has been accused of grave human rights and cultural abuses. With foreign troops withdrawing after 20 years, the Taliban are rapidly retaking territory across the country, sparking fears of a potential civil war.


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Alright, who took the camera ! Fess up
 

enji17

Rookie
What sort of response are you aiming to get from this sort of comment you big gay necro-faecal nutter lol?

Finger fucking a dead man’s anus that’s covered in the shit he voided when his muscle tone vanished upon death. Lovely jubbly.

I’d approve if you said you were going to finger paint a radical mosque afterwards. Kind of like a poopy turd Sistine Chapel done by a retard. Or returd lol.
I love to do it 😍🤪
 
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