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Thursday, February 14, 2008

[vinnomot] Re: [khabor.com] Two Bangladeshi shot dead by Indian Border Security Force (BSF) again ,13.2.2008 Why so cruel they are?

What our BDR force doing to protect our civilians from the attack of IndianBSF?

Are they sleeping ?

Indian BSF killings must be answered by BDR, otherwise such force should be replaced from our border.

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[vinnomot] Carry your world with you … see these cheapest Laptop

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[vinnomot] Fwd: sexy lady in rocks … [Award winner photo]

Are you able to recognize a lady in rocks.....?
 
Just see.....Really fantastic photo.


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[vinnomot] Don’t Do That……plzz see this Pic then Decide

 
Hey friends! Just have a look at this pic…..what do you think…should we do like that..??


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[ALOCHONA] “AL must apologize to people for its past wrongdoings”

"AL must apologize to people for its past wrongdoings"
 
by Prakash Gupta
 
"AL does not practice what it preaches. It talks against the fundamentalists, but does not mind to forge alliance with Khelafat Majlish for winning elections. It strongly opposes autocracy but then forms alliance with them for the same reason – to win elections. Though AL is now demanding trial of the war criminals they did not do anything when they were in power. For all these AL will have to apologize to people," says General Secretary of Workers' Party Saiful Haq who is also the convener of the Democratic Left Alliance comprising 11 leftist political parties to Probe.
Haq points out that there is no qualitative difference between AL and BNP except that of the language. BNP criticizes India for vote, so does the AL against war criminals not because they really believe so but because they think such position goes well with the voters. Jamaat-e-Islami is a well-organized party and does have a vote bank, so AL is demanding trial of war-criminals only to make sure that BNP cannot make alliance with Jamaat.
Haq however believes that if AL agrees to apologize in public people might forgive them.  The leftist parties are discussing the matter. However seeking apology is not enough. We want to see its actions reflect its promises, Haq emphasizes. The Left Democratic Alliance is composed of BSD, Workers' Party, Samyabadi Dal, eight leftist parties and Sramojibi Mukti Andolon. Haq says that if the proposed dialogue between the government and the political parties is to be successful the emergency should be lifted and a favorable environment for elections will have to be created.
 


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[ALOCHONA] How to fix India's troubled north-east

How to fix India's troubled north-east
 
 
Kaushik Basu
By Kaushik Basu
Professor of economics, Cornell University
 
 

Tucked away between China, Burma and Bangladesh, and linked to the rest of India by a sliver of north Bengal that arches over Bangladesh, India's north-east is a region of amazing grace - charming people, ancient cultures and bountiful nature.
 
 
 
Tribals in north east India
The eight states of the north-east comprise a region of diversity
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
As any shrewd observer of the world would deduce from this, it is a region of contested claims, strife and anarchy.
The eight states of the north-east comprise a region of diversity - multiple religions, dialects and tribes, each with its distinctive culture and history.
 
In Mizoram there are the Bnei Menashe, who claim to be Jews, descendants of the ancient tribe of Menasseh.
Then there are groups from as near as Bihar, such as the Adivasis who came to work in the Assam tea gardens and stayed on.
Their claim to special rights, granted to "original inhabitants", is contested by the local people, who argue that they lost that status by their move, for they are not original to Assam.
 
 
 
 
If we do not act soon, there is every possibility that the region will erupt into internecine warfare of a kind not seen in India before

Some of these contests acquire a farcical dimension, such as when China welcomed but refused to give visas to some delegates from Arunachal Pradesh on the grounds that China considered parts of that state to be Chinese.
India meanwhile insisted that China must insist on visas.
Copying Kapuscinski
 
 
Of all the states of this region, the most troubled is Manipur.
I flew into Imphal, Manipur's capital, by a short Indigo flight from Guwahati on the morning of 8 January.
 
Ryszard Kapuscinski is known to be the great travel writer of our times, but he was more than that. He was a philosopher, an astute and compassionate observer of the human condition.
 
 
 
Imphal street
There are few signs of the famous Indian economic boom here
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
When Kapuscinski journeyed to remote lands, he carried with him the greatest travel book of antiquity, Herodotus' Histories. Out of this experience came his own masterpiece, Travels with Herodotus. I am doing what Kapuscinski did, but at one remove - I am travelling with his book.
 
I arrive in Imphal with a blinding headache and flop down in bed in my artlessly large room in Hotel Nirmala. I try to read, but fall asleep.
When I wake up, the winter sun is streaming in through my open windows.
 
From my balcony I can see the chaos of Thangal Bazar - tarless streets, unkempt roof-tops, half-cemented buildings, the anarchy of low-hanging electric wires criss-crossing in different directions and tapped from below by small shops with rusty tin roofs.
 
Collapsing economy
The flashes of colour come from the women, in their stunning phaneks - sarong like wrap-arounds - and shawls. They seem to be endowed with an effortless grace.
 
There are few signs of the famous Indian economic boom here.
This is a region of a collapsing economy, huge unemployment, and interrupted power supply. I was assured that at most times it was safe to touch those exposed wires.
 
 
At night I go for dinner to the home of an old Manipuri friend.
Rebels in Manipur
Insurgent groups routinely extort money in Manipur
It is a picturesque three-hundred year old house, with a quaint courtyard, mysterious stairways, muslin curtains and melodious wooden floors.
To get there one has to drive over a rock-strewn and dug-up road. It has been under repair for four years. When we reach the house, there is a power outage and we sit by lanterns and candles.
 
 
 
On the way back there is not a soul in the streets - life is too insecure for that - and my hotel has pulled down shutters from the ceiling which are bolted to the floor with padlocks.
 
The people of the north-east have high human capital - Mizoram's literacy rate is second only to the state of Kerala's. And it has a history that goes back 2,000 years.
 
Ratan Thiyam's Manipuri theatre is famous internationally.
An 11-year old boy, Honey Kenao, plays the tabla like a grand master. He is a prodigy - we will without doubt see more of him.
At various institutes and universities where I speak, the discussion is lively and engaged.
 
 
Threat of war
But beneath this, the region is simmering.
North-eastern family
The vast human potential of this region risks being wasted
Insurgent groups routinely extort money from bureaucrats, shopkeepers and professors. Kidnappings are frequent.
Trucks on highways are often stopped by competing local powers and either have their cargo confiscated or are allowed to pass after paying a "tax".
Hardly any new industry worth its name is moving into the region.
There are three immediate measures that the Indian government needs to take.
  • Improve law and order
    India has to clamp down on extortion and make it clear that the collection of taxes and exertion of force is a prerogative of government. As Max Weber had reminded us, the state must have a "monopoly of violence" - meaning, if anybody has the right to use force, it is the state.
  • Invest in infrastructure
    Roads, railways, financial services and electricity provision all need more money and all lag behind other points of India.
  • Improve interaction
    If the region remains cut off from the rest of India, there is every possibility that it will erupt into internecine warfare of a kind not seen in India before. And that will be extremely unfortunate for a region that has so much potential.

    Here is a selection of your comments
    I completely agree with the writer's viewpoint. I had a chance to travel to North East and noticed the same thing. There definitely has been some apathy from the government which has led to the current situation.
    Gautam Gauri, India
    The real problem is lack of understanding from the mainland of India of what these groups want. The central government is meeting force by equal or more force instead of skilful negotiation, more development funding and creating more opportunities. India should try to unite the seven states into one unit which will stop the current divisiveness.
    Rabin Mahanta, USA
    It's a shame that for many decades India's government, politicians and statesmen continue to ignore the NE states. I have worked and lived in North-Eastern India for about 7 years and having worked with the locals, I felt that the fruits of economic development never reached these people. These people, in my view, were always treated as second-class citizens. All the stakeholders involved should put in concerted efforts in addressing the major concerns of the people and work towards a sustainable and meaningful solution which will help all sections of the society. In this day and age, when pollution is strife in rest of India, this beautiful North Eastern region could be a show piece from eco-tourism perspective for foreign tourists.
    Reddy S Mandala, Melbourne, Australia
    Things do not improve in the North-eastern part of India because of corruption, both official and unofficial. Each competing force of lawlessness is blaming the finger at the other.
    Chandru Narayan, USA
    Rule of law is a concept which most Indian politicians at the state and federal level privately scoff at once they get elected to positions of power. Even today, basic law enforcement is a challenge to the ordinary police officer for most part of the country owing to lack of support from the government. Lack of or absence of the rule of law cripples India and keeps it as a third world country despite rich natural and human resources. The Indian political apparatus needs heavy investment in rule of law in letter and spirit for economic and socio-political advancement of the whole country.
    Balagopal K Raleigh, United States
    The north east states of India have been neglected historically by successive governments and due to linguistic/racial/ethnic identity & diversity, the NE people have also been late in assimilating with the mainstream. The only way to bring the region to focus is through direct highways through Bengal to those states and investment in industries.
    Maulik, USA
    Mr Basu's analysis into the troubles of the North-Eastern States is quite remarkable in its refusal to legitimate the demands of the peoples in that region. That is, Mr. Basu, like so many other Indian writers, regards the militant groups as mere miscreants bent on extorting money, and no attention is paid to the alienated masses of the region who have for over fifty years suffered under the brutal yoke of a thick and omnipresent Indian military occupation. Mr. Basu's remedies for the region are woefully inadequate so long as he continues to deny consideration to the legitimate aspirations for self-determination amongst the peoples of the North-East. The troubles in the North-East cannot be solved by investment and interaction from New Delhi if the people of the region wish to cut themselves off from the centre.
    Ridwan, USA
    Excellent commentary from Prof Basu. The sad part is that the three measures mentioned by Prof Basu have been so obvious already for so many years that the real question is why has the situation on these fronts not become significantly better?
    Dr Bhavender Paul Sharma, USA
    First of all, I am very pleased to see an article on this from the BBC. The NE region of India has been left neglected for many decades. The Indian government ignored the region as the states do not constitute enough vote power in parliament but have subsidised the states to keep the local politicians happy and the region limping along. It also does not help that the local insurgents, in the name of freedom movement, are tearing the state apart instead of promoting entrepreneurship and growth. My heart bleeds every time I visit my state. I was born in Manipur but, as often is the case in 'war'-torn regions, left many years ago. My wife is not an Indian citizen and when we went to get married in Imphal, the Indian government refused to issue her a Restricted Area Permit, a permit compulsory for all foreigners travelling to the state/region. She was issued a permit after I challenged the then Chief Secretary to give me a good reason why I should feel part of India when I can't even get married in my own home state. You tell me!
    Nanao Sharma, France/UK
    The only news one gets of North East is insurgency. That border regions need special attention, should be part of the geopolitical policy and reality. I have watched for a north eastern face in Hindi movies - it is prominent by its absence. North East is not on India's psyche. This should be the first step. it is a step that both government and the NGOs need to take. I must congratulate Kaushik Basu having brought to light a vital issue for people of India .
    Ashwin Ghatalia, USA
    Having been born and brought up in the North East (Assam and Meghalaya), I agree completely with this article. India needs to wake up to the plight of its citizens in that troubled region if it has any claim to being a democratic country with the good of its people at heart.
    Navneet, India/ USA
    You have stated "interaction" to be one of the solution for such disharmony. But let me tell you about the story of any North-eastern person who have interacted with the rest of India. First and foremost, The Indian Government needs to educate the rest of India about the existence of the North-eastern states. At our school geography books we have just 1 or 2 pages mentioning about the diverse cultures of the North-east. And the average Indian student just skip through that page. You may wonder, that will not be harmful. But it is. People from the North-east are sick and tired of being asked if they are from China or which country Mizoram or Manipur belongs to. There is always that level of insecurity among every north-eastern student you see in India, the way they are excluded from any group and the way they are racially discriminated. People from the North-east can never have that "sense of belonging" with India when they are treated so differently by the rest of India, even if they really try to. And these same people go back to their respective states telling their kindred about the discrimination they faced in Mainland India. And they in turn have a preconceived notion about India that they will not be welcomed. The root of the problem lies with education.
    Kima, Mizoram, India
    I agree wholeheartedly. I recently travelled through rural and urban Assam and it is disheartening to see the disproportional development going on. Since I was on a self-guided wildlife tour of India, the tourist facilities available in Assam were minimalistic and out of touch with the realities of a booming Indian tourist industry. While that suited my budget-travel student needs, local development cannot be sustained without considerable investment of resources by the government of India to make sure the north-east does not suffer the over development that has ruined ecosystems around India. But it should ensure that the north-east undergoes sustainable and eco-friendly development as a model for the rest of the world.
    Arvind Badrinarayanan, St Kitts and Nevis (Indian Citizen)
    I completely agree with the Author. Most of Indians don't know much about these north-eastern states, (i wonder some times, does the government know ??) often called as sister states. There are so many conflicting reports and stories about Arunachal Pradesh and Meghalaya, one would wonder how the government is going to answer the public concerns.
    Mahendar, India
    Well written article. From my experience, I think that the government should also advertise more of North-East to the rest of India so that people feel that its also part of India and there is also more than just extra land. If you really ask people, I bet that they hear about North-East only from people who are in the military because they are posted everywhere.
    Atul, New York, US
    Thanks for the observations. I have travelled quite a few north eastern states (infact I was born in Meghalaya). The solutions are pretty obvious to any literate observer and I am sure our government hires enough(may not be percentage wise) of them. But instead of providing these, could you maybe give more insight on why this hasn't been happening for such a long time and even though the efforts you mention are ongoing, why are they easily disrupted by the insurgents.
    Pritam Ganguly, U.S.A
    After a long time I have seen someone raising this issue. This should become a big movement and India needs to save those states from being taken away. We are not using our resources to the full
    Leena Ektare, USA
    I have lived in the North-East for many years. More money from the government of India has flown into this region per capita than to any other part of the country. Politicians, insurgents and government officials have helped themselves to this largesse. There have acquired lots of estate and other assets in the North-East, other parts of India and even abroad. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh visited one of the states in the North-East last week and announced more goodies. No doubt politicians and insurgents will feel happy.
    Hilary Pais, India
    Appreciate that you have taken the pain to visit and learn the cause why North East India is so backward. I happen to come from Shillong. I totally agree to the measures you suggested. But before that the local people should open themselves from the fear of cultural destruction. Being Indian myself, I need to take special permit to visit part's of my own country. If someone tries to do something for the people of the state vested interest will try to pull it back. What can a government do when people of the states refuses to implement any projects.
    Nilanjan Choudhury, London, United Kingdom
    Kaushik Basu writes as if he is ignorant of the life of a common Indian man or woman. Save some flashy places and people here and there, India continues to reel under utter lack of basic infrastructure. Outage of power, scarcity of water - drinking or not, bad road are ubiquitous. Extortion and ransom are also not uncommon in places like Bihar and eastern Uttar Pradesh. A visit to Bihar would be suffice to reveal a similar if not identical situation to Manipur. Manipur cannot be isolated, rather its situation may be generalized to most of the northern India.
    Param Dubey, USA
    This is an excellent article but it fails to point out something obvious - namely, India is too big and diverse to rule and manage from New Delhi. Just as the old Soviet Union discovered that it could not hold on to its vast empire, India will have to come to terms with an independent array of states on its north east border.
    Raghu Poduval, UK
    It seems Mr. Basu is looking at the region through an Indian perspective and being prescriptive in the same vein. But, me born in Assam and having close association with the indigenous people across the region through my human rights work have come to understand that the indigenous inhabitants do not accept the region as North East of India. Although majority of them find it difficult to give a name to carry what they wish to mean, I have come across references that the region is being identified now a days as East South Asia; which perhaps is quite appropriate as they see this region is apart from India. India's violent campaign to oppress most of this region has been on going from adopting of British drawn Armed Forces Ordinance of 1942 to prevent independence of India into the Indian Statue book as the Armed Forces special Powers Act (Assam and Manipur). Mr Basu may not have time to interact at length to realise that under the blanket of little said or unsaid things the stark realisation of the indigenous inhabitants is that only way they can survive with their special identities is by restoration of sovereignty of the nations which were colonised by the British India administration and later the region ending up inside the Indian union. I believe they do have the right to self-determination as enshrined in the United Nations charter and India should honour it.
    Dr M Hazarika, UK
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7232114.stm


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[ALOCHONA] Arsenic Poisoning: Millions at risk

50 crore (500 million ) people of subcontinent at risk of arsenic poisoning :Reduce dependence on underground water, urges arsenic workshop

 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Experts and prominent members of the civil society on Wednesday emphasised the need to make the government and the lending agencies pro-active to provide safe drinking water across the country by reducing dependency on underground water to protect 100 million people who are at risk of arsenic poisoning.They also urged the authorities concerned to ensure the transparency and accountability of the organisations working on ways to stop or mitigate arsenic contamination.

These observations and demands were made at an international workshop on arsenic contamination of underground water in which a 10-point Dhaka Declaration was adopted. The declaration included a call to update and implement the National Arsenic Mitigation Policy 2005 and its action plan, after taking into account the risk, affordability and sustainability.

The other declarations include initiating large-scale programmes for rain-water harvesting at the national level, particularly for drinking and cooking; taking measures to ensure reliable access to water that is free of microbial, chemical and physical contamination; and asking the government and the lending agencies and countries and other support organisations to mobilise resources for treatment and rehabilitation of arsenicosis patients.

'The government and the donor communities should become pro-active to ensure supply of safe drinking water to the masses by reducing dependency on underground water,' said the Dhaka Community Hospital's chairman, Professor Quazi Quamaruzzaman.He warned the audience that arsenic contamination would hamper the national economy and society as about 100 million people are at risk of arsenic poisoning.

Urging the authorities concerned to ensure accountability in the field, he said, 'The big problem is that a huge amount of money has been made available here. Four billion dollars have already been spent for arsenic mitigation projects in the country. But the people are still suffering from arsenic contamination. We need to assess how much support we are really providing to the people who are at risk.'

The Dhaka Community Hospital's coordinator, Professor Mahmuder Rahman, suggested that there should be third party audit of the quality of the water of all deep tube-wells installed by government and non-government agencies in all the high-risk upazilas.

Dr Atiq A Rahman of the Bangladesh Centre for Advanced Studies suggested that a holistic approach should be adopted to address the problem of water contamination.Professor Mahmuder Rahman said that the World Health Organisation's approved level of arsenic contamination is 0.01mg/l, but Bangladesh is still maintaining the level at 0.05mg/l which is five times higher.

It is estimated that 30 per cent of the 10 million tube-wells of the country are contaminated with a high level of arsenic. But if 0.01mg/l is the upper limit then the percentage may be about 70 to 100 in some of the arsenic-contaminated areas.

Professor Feroze Ahmed of the Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology emphasised the need for introducing the water safety framework of the WHO to improve the safety level of underground water.

Professor Mujibur Rahman of BUET said harvesting rain-water could be a low-cost and technologically viable option for supply of safe drinking water in the arsenic-affected areas with the appropriate back-up of community sources of water for 2-3 months in the dry months of the year.

The Daily Star's editor, Mahfuz Anam, emphasised the need for creating a social movement to make the people, in general, and the policymakers, in particular, aware of arsenic-related problems. He also suggested preparation of a time-bound work plan to tackle the arsenic problem.

Professor Dipankar Chakraborti of the Jadavpur University, India, said that 50 crore people of the region, which includes Bangladesh and the neighbouring states of India, are exposed to arsenic contamination.

Professor Allan H Smith of the Berkeley University, USA, said the real problem in addressing the problem of drinking water contaminated by arsenic is the level of awareness in the decision-makers.Dr Meera Hira Smith of the same university warned against faulty installation of tube-wells.Farida Akhter of UBINIG said the arsenic problem is a women's health issue as they are most vulnerable to contamination.

The New Age's editor, Nurul Kabir, said the subsequent governments have failed to understand the level of arsenic contamination and the magnitude of the problem. Emphasising the need for making the people aware, he suggested launching of a concerted move by the electronic and print media — both Bangla and English.

It was the seventh international conference on arsenic contamination of underground water and its mitigation held at the Dhaka Community Hospital.

Babar Kabir of BRAC, Khaled Shams of Grameen Telecommunications, Richard Johnson of UNICEF, Abdul Motaleb of the water and sanitation programme of the World Bank and Sharmeen Murshed of Brotee, among others, participated in the discussion moderated by Professors Mahmuder Rahman and Ahmed Kamal.


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[ALOCHONA] Pakistan: Using Bhutto for Imperial Gain

Using Bhutto for Imperial Gain


Benazir Bhutto led the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) as "chairperson for life" until her death. She was the privileged daughter of former Pakistan President and Prime Minister, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, who was hanged in 1979 at the likely behest of Washington and replaced by military dictator General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq. He later outlived his usefulness and died in a "mysterious" plane crash CIA may have arranged that allowed Bhutto to become Prime Minister in 1988.

She sought the post to avenge her father's death and twice held it as the first ever woman PM of an Islamic state - first from 1988 - 1990, then again from 1993 - 1996. In the end, she was too clever by half and it cost her. She lost out thinking she'd cut a binding deal with the Bush administration to return her to power a third time as Pervez Musharraf's number two and fig leaf democratic face in the scheduled January 8 elections, now postponed. On November 6, she may have been right when she returned from self-imposed exile. Like now, the country was in turmoil, and Washington arranged a power-sharing deal (so it seemed) to restore stability in the wake of this series of events:

-- Musharraf suspended Pakistan's Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry in March, falsely accused him of "misconduct and misuse of authority," and used that excuse to remove a key official likely to block his plan for another five year term as President while illegally remaining chief of army staff (COAS) where the real power lies.

-- The response was outrage from opposition parties, lawyers organizations and human rights groups. They called the action unconstitutional and publicly rallied against it.

-- On October 6, Musharraf held a bogus election like all others in a country where democracy is a joke. It was stage-managed by the military, clearly unconstitutional, and Musharraf won all but five parliamentary votes and swept the Provincial Assembly balloting.

-- Afterwards, Pakistan's Supreme Court said no winner could be declared until it ruled if Musharraf could run for office in his joint COAS capacity. Constitutionally, he can't, protests erupted, the country has been in turmoil since, and Musharraf lost all credibility;

-- That was Bhutto's chance to return, again serve in the post she twice before held, and she thought her Washington allies arranged it. Maybe yes or maybe not. It didn't matter that she was being used - to be a democratic face and fig leaf adjunct to Musharraf's dictatorship, but whatever was then clearly changed by December 27 without Bhutto's knowledge. Now she's gone, and Musharraf nominally transferred his army chief post to close ally General Ashfaq Kayani last November. He also lifted a six week long state of emergency in mid-December ahead of the scheduled January 8 elections, now postponed after Bhutto's assassination until February 18 as of this writing.

Today, she's bigger in death than life, spoken of reverentially as a populist, and her 19 year old son, Bilawal (in school at Oxford), now heads the PPP as its figurehead leader and third generation family dynasty standard-bearer with his father, Asif Zardari, co-party chairman and de facto chief. More on him below.

Who Was Benazir Bhutto and Why Is She Important

Who was this woman, why the worldwide attention, and why another article with so many written and more likely coming? Bhutto was an aristocrat, privileged in every respect, and raised in opulence as the Harvard and Oxford-educated daughter of a wealthy landowning father who founded Pakistan's main opposition party (Pakistan Peoples Party - PPP) that Bhutto headed after his death.

While in office, she was no democrat in a military-run nation since its artificial creation in 1947. Elections, when held, are rigged, and the army runs things for Washington as a vassal state in a nation called a military with a country, not a country with a military. Its Army strength is 550,000, its Air Force and Navy 70,000, and 510,000 reservists back them with plenty of US-supplied weapons for the "Global War on Terrorism."

Today, FBI agents freely roam the streets, the Pentagon operates out of Pakistan military bases, and it has de facto control of its air space as part of the Bush administration's permanent state of war "that will not end in our lifetime." Pakistan is a client state, but what choice does it have. Post-9/11, Deputy Secretary of State Armitage warned Musharraf to comply or be declared a hostile power and "bombed back to the stone age." He got the message and a multi-billion dollar reward as well.

Bhutto knows the game, too, and the New York Times explained that she "always understood Washington more than Washington understood her" in a feature December 30 article called "How Bhutto Won Washington." Her relationship began in the spring of 1984 on her first "important trip" to the Capitol. At the time, she tried to persuade the Reagan administration it would be better served with her in power, but to do it she had to overcome her father's anti-western reputation. With considerable help she succeeded by assuring congressional members she was on board and supported Washington's proxy war on the Soviet Union in Afghanistan.

Faults aside, she had her attributes, and The Times called her "completely charming," very beautiful, and a woman "who could flatter the senators," understand their concerns, and better serve US interests than the man who hanged her father, General Zia-ul-Haq. At the same time, she began working with the Democratic National Committee's Executive Director, Mark Siegel, who later lobbied for her government when she was Prime Minister. Early on, he walked her through the halls of Congress, helped her develop relationships, and made her understand that to get along she had to go along.

She caught on fast, and it made her Prime Minister in December, 1988 after she ran for the post, won a plurality but not a majority, and got Reagan administration officials to arrange with Pakistan's acting President to have her form a government. According to a Washington insider, it was the "direct result of her networking, of her being able to persuade the Washington establishment, the foreign policy community, the press, the think tanks, that she was a democrat," a moderate, and that she backed the US Afghanistan agenda against the Soviets. Public rhetoric aside, she was on board ever since, but she paid with her life by not understanding how Washington operates: like other rogue states - using leaders and aspiring ones, then discarding them.

In the end, it didn't matter that she twice survived dismissal from office on corruption charges or that she managed to co-exist with her country's military and intelligence service (ISI) that deeply mistrusted her. Until her luck ran out, she maintained ties to Washington and key members of the press. She politicked well and "understood the nature of political life, which is to stay in touch with (key) people whether you're in or out of office" and let them know you back them.

Like others of her stature, she also relied on a PR firm to arrange meetings with the powerful and had plenty of resources to do it. She "kept up her networking," but she paid with her life. She tried to convince Washington that Musharraf's "war on terrorism" failed, she could do it better as a loyal ally, and she would eliminate extremist elements (meaning the Taliban and Al-Queda) by a determined effort to maintain pressure.

It sounded good but was risky and dangerous. Pakistan's army opposes it, especially in the ranks; a stepped-up effort assures a huge public outcry; disrupting the Taliban benefits India; and trying and failing might embolden their forces as the US occupation learned in Afghanistan. In the end, Washington and Pakistan's ISI may have concluded Bhutto was more a liability than an asset and had to go. Things came to a head on December 27, she's now a martyr, and larger than life dead than alive.

It wasn't that way as Prime Minister, however, when her tenure was marked by nepotism, opportunism, scheming, corruption, poor governance and selling out to the West. Her early popularity faded, especially when word got out about her businessman husband's dealings. Asif Zardari was known as "Mr. Ten Percent" (by some as "Mr. Thirty Percent") because he demanded a cut from deals as the Prime Minister's spouse and in some cases wanted more.

He was also reportedly into drugs trafficking and was investigated for it. With his wife in power, he amassed billions including what he stole in public funds that was even excessive by Pakistan standards and enough to get the country's President to sack Bhutto after 20 months in office. Whether personally culpable or not didn't matter. As Prime Minister, she made her husband a cabinet minister, gave him free rein to dispense favors in return for kick-backs, had to know about them, there was no evidence she objected, and she enjoyed the riches in office and thereafter.

In spite of it, Bhutto got a second chance. She returned as Prime Minister in 1993 for another three years, but was again dispatched on even greater corruption and incompetence charges than in her first term - this time by President Farooq Leghari, a member of the PPP and someone she thought was an ally. He certainly had cause as the amount stolen earlier was prologue for the fortune she and her husband (as Minister of Investment) amassed in her second term.

It was enough to get Transparency International, an independent watchdog group, to name Pakistan the second most corrupt country in the world in 1996 (Bhutto's last year in office). It also got her convicted in Switzerland of money laundering and bribe-taking and made her a fugitive with charges pending in Spain, Britain and her native Pakistan. That was until Musharaff signed a US-brokered "reconciliation ordinance," absolved her of all outstanding offenses, and allowed her to run for Prime Minister a third time as part of a power-sharing deal with her as number two.

Bhutto's earlier tenure had another notable feature as well. It was when Pakistan's military and ISI established the Taliban with covert CIA help. The link still exists, and at a September, 2006 Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing, General James Jones, former NATO Supreme Commander (who oversaw US-NATO Afghanistan operations), testified that it was "generally accepted" that Taliban leaders operated out Quetta, Pakistan, the capital of Baluchistan province bordering Afghanistan and Iran.

Musharraf and other Pakistani officials deny it, but there's no hiding the facts or that nothing of consequence happens in Pakistan without Washington's knowledge and/or consent. It's also no secret that Pakistan's ISI is a CIA branch, and their regional activities are closely linked. Bhutto was on board, but what choice did she have.

All along, she was a daughter of privilege, acted like one, and enjoyed the good life the way billions allow. Today, the major media lionize her, but omit her dark side: as Prime Minister, she lusted for power, was arrogant and contemptuous, ignored the poor and Pakistani women, allowed outrageous laws to be enforced, gave the Army free reign including over nuclear weapons, and considered Pakistan her personal fiefdom. Her home was a $50 million mansion on 110 acres, and she ruled like a feudal overlord. The family still owns a 350 acre UK estate complete with helipad and polo pony stables, a mansion in Dubai, two Texas properties, six in Florida, more homes in France and large bank accounts strategically stashed around the world, including in the US and France.

From the time of her father's death to her own, Bhutto had close ties to Washington, the CIA, Pakistan's military, its ISI, as well as to the Taliban (established in her second term), "militant Islam" and Big Oil interests. She was a servant of power and pocketed billions for her efforts. In the end, she lost out and paid with her life on December 27.

Who Killed Bhutto and Why

Bhutto's now dead, shot in the back of the head by one or more assassins at close range, plus the effects of a suicide bombing that killed two dozen or more and wounded many others tightly packed around her. It happened in Rawalpindi, "no ordinary city" as Michel Chossudovsky explains. It's the home of Pakistan's military, its CIA-linked ISI, and is the country's de facto seat of power. Chossudovsky adds: "Ironically Bhutto was assassinated in an urban area tightly controlled and guarded by the military police and the country's elite forces."

Rawalpindi and the country's capital, Islamabad, are sister cities, nine miles apart. They swarm with intelligence operatives including from CIA, and Chussodovsky stresses that Bhutto's assassination "was (no) haphazard event." Blaming Al-Queda misses the point, but that's how these schemes work. They're also clearer when convincing video is broadcast as UK's Channel 4 did on December 30. It debunked the official story and exposed Musharraf as a liar - that Bhutto died from a fractured skull "when she was thrown by the force of the (explosion's) shock wave (and) one of the levers of (her car's) sunroof hit her."

The video contradicts this. It shows a clean-shaven man in sunglasses watching close by with a concealed gun and the suspected suicide bomber behind him dressed in white. The gunman then approaches Bhutto's car and at point blank range fires three shots. Immediately after, the suicide bomber detonates his device, killing and wounding dozens nearby.

The question then is - not who killed her, but who ordered her killed and who profits from it? Musharraf quickly named the usual suspect - Al-Queda but ignored what William Engdahl observed in his January 4 Global Research article called "Bhutto's Assassination: Who Gains?" He notes how well protected political leaders are so it's no simple task killing them. "It requires agencies of professional intelligence training to insure the job is done" right, and no one can reveal who ordered it or the motive.

Engdahl also states that naming Al-Queda serves Musharraf and Washington. It increases public fear, revs up the "war on terror," and provides justification for it to continue. It also reinforces the Al-Queda myth as well as "enemy number one" bin Laden, and ignores the evidence that the CIA created both in the 1980s for the war against the Soviets in Afghanistan. It's just as silent on the possibility bin Laden is dead, killed (as Bhutto told David Frost last fall) by Omar Sheikh whom the London Sunday Times called "no ordinary terrorist but a man who has connections that reach high into Pakistan's military and intelligence elite and into the innermost circles" of bin Laden and Al-Queda.

If true, a dead bin Laden disrupts Washington's national security doctrine that needs enemies to scare the public, eliminates "enemy number one" as the main one, and exposes strategically released bin Laden tapes as made-in-Washington frauds. Today, we're told that bin Laden-led Islamic terrorists endanger the West, but at the same time we use them for imperial gain as we did against the Soviets, in the Balkans and now do in Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and elsewhere. If Al-Queda operatives killed Bhutto, it means Pakistan's ISI and CIA were involved, and what's more likely than that. Forget a lone gunman theory, a lose cannon terrorist or a sole anti-Bhutto assassin. Consider "Cui bono," examine the evidence, and it points to Washington and Islamabad.

Today in Pakistan, intrigue abounds, and the country is destabilized as Michel Chossudovsky observes in his December 30 Global Research article called "The Destabilization of Pakistan." Assassinating Bhutto contributes to it, and Chossudovsky sees a US-sponsored "regime change" ahead. Musharraf is so weak and discredited "continuity under military rule is no long the main thrust of US foreign policy." Musharraf's regime "cannot prevail," and Washington's scheme is "to actively promote the political fragmentation and balkanization of Pakistan as a nation."

From it, a new political leadership will emerge that will be "compliant," have "no commitment to (Pakistan's) national interest," and will be subservient to "US imperial interests, while concurrently....weakening....the central government (and fracturing) Pakistan's fragile federal structure."

It makes perfect sense as part of Washington's broader Middle East-Central Asia agenda. Pakistan is a key frontline state, a "geopolitical hub," with a central role to play in the "Global War on Terrorism." It includes "balkanizing" the country Yugoslavia-style the way it's planned for Iraq, Afghanistan and Iran - a simple divide and conquer strategy. Chossudovsky adds: "Continuity, characterized by the dominant role of the Pakistani military and intelligence (that worked up to now) has been scrapped in favor of political breakup and balkanization." The scheme is to foment "social, ethnic and factional divisions and political fragmentation, including the territorial breakup" of the country.

It's a common US strategy with covert intelligence support, and consider The New York Times article on January 6 called "US Considers New Covert Push Within Pakistan" to exploit Bhutto's death. It states that senior national security advisers (including Dick Cheney, Condoleezza Rice and Joint Chiefs Chairman Admiral Michael Mullen) may "expand the authority of the CIA and the military to conduct far more aggressive covert operations in the tribal areas of Pakistan" against Al-Queda and the Taliban to counteract their efforts and "destabilize the Pakistani government."

The article states that Musharraf and the military are on board, gives the usual boiler plate reasons, but omits what's really at stake even as it admits Musharraf is unpopular and a US intervention could "prompt a powerful popular backlash against" both countries.

Chussodovsky fills in the blanks and explains that US strategy aims to trigger "ethnic and religious strife," abet and finance "secessionist movements while also weakening" Musharraf's government. "The broader objective is to fracture the Nation State....redraw the borders of Iraq, Iran, Syria, Afghanistan and Pakistan" and replace Musharraf in the process. He's unpopular, damaged goods and has to go.

Bhutto was an unwitting part of the scheme but not the way she planned. She thought Washington needed here, and she was right - not as Prime Minister but as a martyr to destabilize the country and break it up if the plan works. It may as internal secessionist elements are strong, especially in energy rich (mostly gas) Balochistan province, and "indications" are they're supported by "Britain and the US." The idea is a "Greater Balochistan" by integrating Baloch areas with those in Iran and southern Afghanistan.

Chossudovsky explains that it was not "accidental that the 2005 National Intelligence Council-CIA report predicted a 'Yugoslav-like fate' for Pakistan" through internally and externally manufactured "economic mismanagment." Remember also that the country split before in 1971 when East Pakistan became Bangladesh following months of civil war and against India that took a million or more lives. Pakistanis may face that prospect again as US plans unfold.

Future Outlook Remains Uncertain

Big questions remain, and key ones are will breakup plans work, who'll emerge with enough popular support to lead it, and will the public go along. They've got no incentive to do it once anger over Bhutto's death subsides, and recent polling data show overwhelming public opposition to US or other foreign intervention that's very much part of the scheme. In the end, their views don't count, and it may happen anyway through political intrigue and Washington-led brute force.

Reports prior to Bhutto's assassination point that way. They suggest US Special and other forces already operate in Pakistan, and head of US Special Operations Command, Admiral Eric Olson, arranged with Musharraf and Pakistan's military last summer and fall to substantially increase their numbers early this year. Involved as well is what The New York Times reported in November that the "US Hopes to Use Pakistani Tribes Against Al Queda" in the country's "frontier areas."

The scheme is similar to the effort in Iraq's al-Anbar province with bribes and weapons to seal a deal apparently now finalized. US Central Command Commander Admiral William Fallon alluded to it in a recent Voice of America interview by saying we're ready to provide "training, assistance and mentoring based on our experience with insurgencies," but he left out the bribing part that's part of these deals.

Where this will lead is speculation, but consider a feature Wall Street Journal January 8 article. It's headlined "Bhutto Killing Roils Province, Spurring Calls to Quit Pakistan" and calls Bhutto's native Sindh province (second largest of Pakistan's four provinces) the "Latest Fault Line In a Fractured Country; Like Occupied Territory."

Mourners filed past Bhutto's grave chanting "We don't want Pakistan," and in the wake of her death "Sindh has been swept by nationalist rage." Many in the province are "calling for outright independence," and support for separation has grown among rank and file PPP members. There's even talk of an "armed insurgency" as anger is directed against neighboring Punjab, the largest province, and home of the military, ISI and government.

The Journal quotes Qadir Magsi, head of the nationalist Sindh Taraqi Passand movement saying...."Bhutto was the last hope (for unity). Now this Pakistan must be broken up." The article continues saying what's happening in Sindh is already in play in the Northwest Frontier province where central government authority withered in recent years. In addition, Pakistan's Army has been embroiled in Baluchistan's insurgency for the past few years adding to overall instability. The theme of the Journal article is that calls for unity are falling on deaf ears, and one PPP veteran sums it up: "What we need is separation."

That suits Bush administration officials fine, they're likely stoking it, and one thing is clear. US forces are in the region to stay, and Washington under any administration (Democrat or Republican) intends to dominate this vital part of the world with its vast energy reserves. The strategy appears similar to the divide and conquer one in Yugoslavia. There it worked, but the Middle East and Central Asia aren't so simple. Stay tuned as events will likely accelerate, the media will highlight them, and it looks like stepped up conflict (and its fallout) is part of the plan.

Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com


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