“With my prized edition with me, I can say with full conviction that those who bought it from online/offline stores will enjoy reading it to the core. what values they teach to the youngsters. Cannot imagine how these unethical & unscrupulous pirates face their children and grandchildren. He wrote, “Thank you sir for your support. Unfortunately, it is not taken seriously by law enforcers yet.” To this, the KJS Dhillon replied and thanked him for his support. Piracy of books is yet another crime and curse. Here’s how people reacted to the tweet:Īrmy veteran Ved Malik dropped a comment and wrote, “You have many like me in company. The share has also received a plethora of comments from netizens. Since being shared on March 25, the tweet shared by the Army veteran has gathered more than 3.9 lakh views and the numbers are quickly increasing. Gen KJS Dhillon and the team, all of who have worked so hard on his brilliant book and do not deserve this injustice.” Watch the video below: Penguin India re-shared his tweet and wrote, “Penguin India stands by Lt. Throughout the video, he switches from one placard to the other and requests people to ‘put an end to piracy!’ The video captures Lt Gen KJS Dhillon (retd) holding up several placards. Jai Hind.”Īlso Read: Class 9 English question paper has a question on Virat Kohli Will never give in to these unscrupulous, unethical, unlawful thieves stealing other people's property. He replied to his own tweet and added, “I have always taken all challenges head on, including Pulwama. Jai Hind,” wrote Lt Gen KJS Dhillon (retd) while sharing a video. It’s being unethically & unlawfully pirated affecting the lives of 10,000 people, including salespersons across stores. wrote a book spending 8760 hours, 236 people worked on printing more than 1,10,00,000 pages (numbers increased since recording). The image, taken from the video, shows Lt Gen KJS Dhillon (retd) holding up a placard. This pained the Army veteran to the core who took to Twitter to share a heartfelt video asking people to say ‘no to piracy’. Encashing this opportunity, people started ‘unethically & unlawfully’ printing copies of the book and circulating its PDF versions, affecting the ‘lives of 10,000 people’. The book was published by Penguin Random House India and gained the tag of ‘National Bestseller’. Lieutenant General Kanwal Jeet Singh Dhillon (retired) spent almost a year writing Kitne Ghazi Aaye, Kitne Ghazi Gaye, a book based on 40 years of his service in the Army.
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