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Sunday, March 9, 2008

[mukto-mona] Fighting against terrorism for democracy

Dear Editor,
 
Hope you are doing well and thanks for publishing my previous write-ups
 
This is an article about "Fighting against terrorism for democracy". I will be highly honoured if you publish this article. I apprecite your time to read this article.
 
Thanks
Have a nice time
 
With Best Regards
 
Ripan Kumar Biswas
New York, U.S.A
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Fighting against terrorism for democracy
 
Ripan Kumar Biswas
 
"Whoever kills an innocent soul, it is as if he killed the whole of mankind, And whoever saves one, it is as if he saved the whole of mankind [The Quran, 5:32]." So, why the new brand of terrorism, based on a narrow interpretation of the great religion of Islam?
 
What is happening in some countries from the shedding of the innocent blood and the bombing of buildings and ships and the destruction of public and private installations is a criminal act against humanity. Those who carry out such acts have the deviant beliefs and misleading ideologies and are responsible for the crime. Terrorist's act may be intended to achieve political or religious goals. But obviously it's a criminal act and should be dealt as such.
 
While the US designated Harakat ul-Jihad-i-Islami-Bangladesh (HUJI-B) as a Foreign Terrorist Organization and a Specially Designated Global Terrorist including 36 others under Executive Order (E.O-13224) on March 6, 2008, Bangladesh government firmly assured that the intelligence agencies and lawmen are keeping watch on them so that the extremist organization cannot resume its operation as government banned all of its operation since October 17, 2005.
 
Passing that order, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice further mentioned that US applaud Bangladesh's efforts to fight terrorism and are committed to further strengthening this partnership as US redouble its efforts to counter HUJI-B and other terrorist organizations around the globe.
 
Terrorism will be a way of life and the choice commodity of export. The resultant impact will bring down the system of economic and social inter-dependence the world has created in the last 50 years. Successes of the terrorists only create templates that can then be replicated in other situations thereby breaking down international law and order. Terrorist's act may be intended to achieve political or religious goals. But obviously it's a criminal act and should be dealt as such.
 
HUJI's objective is to establish Islamic rule by waging jihad. It is the largest international terrorist organization, which is created by Islamic militants group in Pakistan. There is little information about its exact origins and date of founding. However, it had a significant involvement in fighting the Soviets alongside the Afghan mujahideen, which indicates that, perhaps, it was founded sometime in the 1980s. In 1985, the outfit split into two groups, with the splinter group calling itself Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM). Both groups continued to thrive even after the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989. HUJI was designated a "Foreign Terrorist Organization" by the U.S. State Department in "Other Terrorist Groups" category on April 29, 2004.
 
In 1992, the Bangladesh unit of HuJI – HuJI-B – was established with direct support from al Qaeda. The unit was involved in recruiting Bangladeshi Rohingya (Myanmarese) Muslims and students from madrassas, with several others of which it has very close links. By 2005, the outfit had spread its tentacles to almost 24 countries, including the Philippines, Malaysia, Fiji, Iran, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Chechnya, United Kingdom, the United States, Ireland, and parts of Africa. In February, 1998, Harakatul leader signed the fatwa sponsored by Osama bin Laden that declared American civilians to be legitimate targets for attack.
 
In every annual reports titled "Patterns of Global Terrorism" of the US State Department have repeatedly referred to the activities of the HUJI from Bangladeshi territory. Since September 11, 2001, there have been persistent reports from secret as well as open (the United States' Time magazine and the Far Eastern Economic Review, for example) sources that at least 200, if not more, survivors of al-Qaeda and other components of the Islamic militants groups, many of them originating from Southeast Asia, have shifted to Bangladesh and have been given sanctuaries there by the HUJI-B and other jihadi terrorist organizations.
 
The goal of HUJI-B, like other terrorist groups in Bangladesh, is to establish Islamic rule in Bangladesh, primarily through targeted violence. To achieve that, it has estimated cadre strength of more than several thousand members who are dedicated to kill anyone and destroy government, public or private properties. HUJI-B was accused of stabbing a senior Bangladeshi journalist in November 2000 for making a documentary on the plight of Hindus in Bangladesh.
 
Mufti Abdul Hannan, who claimed himself to be the amir (chief) of HUJI-B and carried sabotage across the country resulting in deterioration in law and order, was found involved in the August 21, 2004 grenade attack on Awami League rally. He was arrested on October 1, 2005 while another kingpin Mufti Abdur Rouf was arrested on August 2, 2006 including other 64 militants of HUJI-B in where 41 of them had been sentenced to life imprisonment. But still they are regrouping themselves and having financial supports from different terrorist groups and individuals throughout the world amidst government's strong vigilance.
 
In recent years, there seems to be a big surge in terrorists' activities in Bangladesh. Tension between secularism based on Bengali language and culture and terrorism rooted in the primacy of religion, has resulted in a steady drift towards Islamic hegemony. An important element of the terrorist mindset is the rejection of democracy. Terrorism is incompatible with democracy while Bangladesh is about to set a cherished vibrant democracy as democracy is based on the belief that people with radically different beliefs and cultures can live together in peace if they respect each other's right to disagree.
 
But all the terrorists in Bangladesh have one aim in common –– to replace the country's secular laws with sharia laws, which should be interdicted.
 
 
March 10, 2008, New York
Ripan Kumar Biswas is a freelance writer based in New York


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[mukto-mona] Historical Analysis of Islam {Bangla}

http://www.mukto-mona.com/Articles/nastiker_dharmakatha/analysis_of_islam.pdf


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[mukto-mona] Crossfire, torture in remand should be made punishable offence

 
 
 

Crossfire, torture in remand should be made punishable offence


 
Cox''s Bazar, Mar 9: Participants at a consultative meeting on the proposed police reforms ordinance here today strongly suggested for making crossfire and inhuman torture in police remand a punishable offence, reports UNB.
About a hundred people drawn from different sections of the society took part in the meeting, presided over by DIG of Chittagong Range AKM Shahidul Haq. Part of similar meetings across the country it was intended to assimilate popular views for incorporating in the proposed reforms, changing the age old police law of 1861.
RAB, an elite force comprising Police, Ansar, BDR and Army personnel, has been practicing crossfire since its birth in March 2004 to stem the rising terrorism and criminal activities across the country. Since then scores of have been killed in the crossfire.
Most of the participants viewed crossfire is against the existing laws and also an act not permissible in the eyes of religion. Despite that such heinous and inhuman killing has been continuing.
They held that the political party in power would tend to take advantage of the barbarian act of crossfire if not halted by bringing it under the punishable offence.
Similarly, the inhuman torture in police remand for extracting confessional statement as desired by the police should also be brought under punishable offence.
The participants also suggested revoking section 54 of CrPC and detention under the Special Powers Act that violated the basic rights of the people guaranteed by the Constitution.
They lauded the government move to reform the age-old law and urged for making the police force friendly to the people.
The News Today
Dhaka, Monday, March 10, 2008
 

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[mukto-mona] Press Conference with Willium Sloan

William Sloan talking in a press conference in NY on Saturday 8th March, 2008

REPORT OF IADL OBSERVER MISSION TO BANGLADESH

FEBRUARY 16-23, 2008

 

"The Army is not a good school for democracy"

                                    Pierre Elliot Trudeau

 

As a Canadian lawyer in private practice since 1984, specializing in Asylum and Immigration, I have traveled many times as a human rights observer since 1987, mostly in the Americas. I visited Bangladesh from February 16 -23 2008, invited by exiled Bangladeshis concerned about the Human Rights situation in their country since the Declaration of Emergency on January 11, 2007 (1-11). I had a mandate from the International Association of Democratic Lawyers (IADL). The IADL is a human rights organization founded in 1948 that advocates for socio-economic and cultural rights, as well as civil and political rights.

 

I have previously visited Bangladesh in February 2002 and August 2005. On all three occasions I have met with lawyers, journalists, professors, human rights activists, parliamentarians and political leaders from various parties. I have extensive knowledge of the situation in Bangladesh from documentary sources, as well as from my two previous visits.

 

Throughout the visit I was under overt surveillance by the intelligence services, from my interrogation on entry at the airport to my detention for 10 hours in my hotel room and police escort to the departure gate. For example, when I left Shahriar Kabir's home after dining there, it was almost comical to see the motorcycle and two cars start up to follow me back to the hotel. If I had been a Bengali, it would not have been comical, as I would probably have spent time in a Joint Forces interrogation cell.

 

On February 19th, I attempted to visit the Special Court on the Parliament grounds where former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina is on trial. I was allowed inside the security perimeter but denied access to the Court by Police.

 

As I exited the security perimeter I was faced with a wall of television cameras, microphones and photographers. I made a brief statement concerning the necessity of public hearings for due process. This was widely reported the next day in the newspapers, but TV stations were forbidden by intelligence agencies to run the audio of my statement. 

 

Contrary to what appears to be suggested, when I appeared at the door of the building where Sheikh Hasina is on trial it was not a surprise for the authorities. On the previous morning, I met at my Hotel with Major Zakir of the DGFI, who assured me that as long as I stuck to due process issues, they had no problem with my presence or activities.

 

I planned to hold a press conference at the Sonargaon Hotel on the 22nd with the Bangladesh Democratic Lawyers Association, the local IADL affiliate. Two hours before the conference, we were informed by hotel management that the authorities had cancelled the conference. A group of lawyers already present was expelled from the lobby, police escorted me to my hotel room and a police line prevented media access to the hotel.

 

The most obvious concern raised by these events is restriction of Freedom of the Press. ODHIKAR is the foremost human rights NGO at this time in Bangladesh. In their latest Press Release, February 1, 2008, the first concern they express is of media control by the Directorate General Forces Intelligence (DGFI). I must note that the DGFI has "he who shall not be named" status in Bangladesh – such is the fear that they generate, much like the Shah's SAVAK or Pinochet's CNI.

 

Another related concern raised by ODHIKAR in their 2007 Human Rights Report is the repression  of human rights defenders. In May 2007, their acting Director, A.S.M. Nasiruddin Elan received death threats from Naval Intelligence at Naval Headquarters after he wrote reports on two deaths of local politicians in Naval custody. In December 2007, their Kushtia based observer was beaten in the local police station.

 

The following concerns are addressed in this report:

 

  • Breakdown of the internal constitutional order;
  • Violation of due process rights;
  • Violation of right to counsel;
  • Judicial independence;
  • Abuse of Emergency Rule to repress workers and farmers rights, students and professors;
  • Impunity for human rights violators in the police and military

 

 

Minus Two Scenario

 

In August 2005, while Katrina was destroying New Orleans, I had conversations in Dhaka with an MP and a newspaper editor who told me about what they called a "minus two" scenario that they described as follows:

 

  1. In the run-up to the 2007 elections, street violence, which is always present during election campaigns in Bangladesh, would be used to justify canceling the elections. The decision would be taken by the "Caretaker Government" charged with running the country during the three month election campaign.
  2. A State of Emergency would be declared and the Armed Forces would in effect take control.
  3. An anti-corruption drive would be initiated to extract "the two Begums", Khaleda Zia and Sheikh Hasina, from the political scene.
  4. The political landscape would be redrawn before the holding of elections, with a "new" political leadership more acceptable to the US State Department.

 

It appears that my interlocutors had crystal balls. The scenario has played out as written, with explicit public support from the US-UK-Canada diplomatic corps which seems to have assumed a 21st Century "White Man's Burden" of remodeling political life in Bangladesh. There is of course a disturbing parallel with US support for General Musharraf in Pakistan and the exclusion of Bhutto and Sharif.

 

During the few days I was in Dhaka, top man General Moeen was on the front page of the daily papers every day, calling for "honest men to come forward", announcing that the Westminster parliamentary system is not for Bangladesh, publishing his book on a new Bangladesh, distributing boats and nets to the Cyclone Sidr hit coast.

 

Following military rule from 1975 to 1990, Bangladesh experienced parliamentary democracy from 1991 to 2006, with Mrs. Zia as PM from 1991-1996 and 2001-2006, Sheikh Hasina 1996-2001. Both of them were placed under house arrest during the Emergency, then jailed in July (Hasina) and September (Zia). Both women are in their 60's, neither is charged with a violent crime, yet both are detained without even access to bail.

 

While on the one hand the government has formally decreed the separation of the judiciary and the executive, it has on the other hand created a Special Court with Special Rules and Powers to try both women for acts purportedly committed long before the Emergency was declared, and for events unconnected to the Declaration of Emergency. Mrs. Zia has yet to be charged, 6 months after her arrest, though there is much talk about numerous cases. Sheikh Hasina now faces 2 charges, though there is talk of perhaps two dozen more.

 

The Constitutionally mandated maximum duration of a state of Emergency in Bangladesh is 120 days, which expired in May 2007. The decision by the de facto government to prolong the Emergency has led them into a no-man's land where the only authority supporting their actions is the force of the Military.

 

We will of course leave to the Courts the determination of guilt, but police methods in gathering evidence raise serious concerns. Abdul Awal Mintoo, 58, a US-Bengali businessman was detained in Dhaka in May 2007 on the vague charge of "destabilizing", and held for 6 months. After his release and escape to the USA he told the press that he had been interrogated mostly about how he might give evidence against Sheikh Hasina. (NT Times 26-Nov-2007)

 

While I was in Dhaka, a proposal for a "Truth Commission" was floated in the daily papers, whereby businessmen could avoid prosecution by denouncing politicians for corrupt deals. Several persons popularly suspected of corruption appear to have thus far avoided arrest and prosecution by publicly supporting, even joining the government.

 

A shining example is the former BNP Minister of Local Government, Abdul Mannan Bhuiyan, whose ministry was identified by Transparency International - Bangladesh as the most corrupt one in the out-going government. He has no apparent problems holding political meetings to split the BNP, when such meetings are banned under the Emergency Rules. Strangely, neither has he been prosecuted.

 

ODHIKAR notes that reform of public institutions has thus far consisted principally in replacing civilians with military personnel. One of these, Lt. General Hassan Mossud Choudhury, Chairman of the Anti Corruption Commission, was Army Chief of Staff during the previous government. As Commanding Officer, he is responsible for dozens of deaths by torture in Army custody during Operation Clean Heart in late 2002.

 

The banning of political, trade union and similar activity has been violently enforced, resulting in nearly 200 extrajudicial killings in 2007, including 30 reported deaths by TORTURE in custody in 2007. Two more deaths by torture were reported in January 2008, among 8 extra-judicial killings.

 

An example is the April 23, 2007 death of Abdur Rahman Munshi, pump operator for 27 years at the Platinum Jubilee Jute Mills in Khulna, injured the previous day during a police attack on the "mill colony" where the workers live. A second raid on his home during the night led him to flee through a grilled window, causing further injury. His family took him to a private clinic, fearing that the soldiers posted at the Hospital during the night would kill him. The clinic refused to treat him as his family had no money. After daylight his family felt safe enough to take him to the Khulna Medical College Hospital, where he died a few hours later. He was three years from retirement.

 

Military authorities have not provided necessary medical attention to detainees, resulting in at least one death. BNP member Abdul Qayyum Khan, an elected City Councilor in Dhaka, was arrested on January 12, 2007. After a year-long battle in the Courts, he was released on bail on January 10, 2008. Police re-arrested him at the prison gate on a new charge. He had complained that his heart condition was not adequately treated in the jail. He collapsed in jail and died on February 8, 2008.

 

Right to Counsel

 

The importance of the right to retain and instruct counsel of one's choosing cannot be underestimated. Accused persons, especially those detained, depend totally on counsel to protect their Constitutional due process rights. Restricting or refusing access to counsel in effect leaves the detainee helpless, both psychologically and legally.

 

Defense lawyers have reportedly been threatened, including with detention, if they did not withdraw from cases. Some were pressured to go over to the prosecution side. Some lawyers who are members of a political party have been threatened with "or else" if they represent their party colleagues.

 

Sheikh Hasina has seen particular treatment. During the first six months of her detention, her senior counsel were allowed only three visits, though they sought many more. Mid-level counsel was allowed only one visit between October 29, 2007 and January 18, 2008. On a day when she was to appear in Court to answer charges, she was denied access to Counsel before actually standing up in Court. On one occasion she was interrogated by the military/police Team without prior notice and without the presence of Counsel. Such violations of such a fundamental right are reminiscent of Guantanamo Bay.

 

Imagine for a moment if ex-Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney were subjected to such treatment ! And Mr Mulroney admits having received hundreds of thousands of dollars in undeclared cash payments from an arms dealer, while in office.

 

Abuse of Emergency Rule powers

 

Farmers demonstrating for better access to fertilizers, jute-mill workers protesting privatization and closure of the mills, garment workers striking for unpaid back-wages, and even Cyclone Sidr victims protesting mismanagement of relief funds –  thousands of people have been arrested and charged with violating Emergency Rules. The lists of detainees have not even been made public. Yet when it comes to assuring that government subsidized rice is delivered to the poor people in Dhaka to whom it is destined, half of the rice disappears from the government distribution scheme into the Black Market. From 7 Taka/kilo at the gov't price a year ago, workers are now paying 40 Tk./K. on the open market.

 

Campus repression

 

Dhaka University has been at the heart of many of the political movements in Bangladesh history. When Emergency was declared on 1-11-07, the Army occupied the campus, setting up an Army camp based in the D.U. gymnasium. About 14,000 full time students-in-residence depended on the Gym to blow off steam. There are no bars, no dance halls, no pool rooms in Dhaka.

 

During a soccer game on the campus between two faculty teams on August 20, 2007, a verbal altercation resulted in a scuffle and three students were beaten by soldiers. A spontaneous demonstration came out of the residences calling for justice. Police smashed the demonstration with riot sticks and tear gas. Many students were hospitalized, several were arrested.

 

The next day (21st), at an emergency meeting of the Dhaka University Teachers Association (DUTA), attended by 250 professors, resolutions were passed calling for:

 

  • Army withdrawal from the campus
  • End to Emergency rule (over the 120 days mandated in the Constitution)
  • Dismissal of the Inspector General of Police because of the police action on campus
  • Compensation for student victims of police brutality
  • Restoration of fundamental rights of citizens

 

The following morning (22nd), professors marched on campus in a silent procession to press their five demands. After the march, several professors were visited in their campus residences by the DGFI for interrogation and threats. That afternoon, demonstrations broke out everywhere in the streets of Bangladesh, with many other sectors joining the students in the streets. A curfew was declared in 6 cities.

 

After midnight, on the 23rd, police arrested two leaders of the DUTA and 8 teachers at Rajshahi University. Prof. Anwar Hossain is Dean of Biology, President of DUTA. He states that he was physically tortured by his interrogators during the several days he spent in their custody. Prof. Harun-or-Rashid is Dean of Social Sciences at Dhaka U. He spent 12 days in remand custody, held in a death-penalty cell without a bed, subjected to sleep deprivation, 24 hour bright lights, blindfolding during interrogation, psychological torture and threats. Particularly disturbing is the fact that Prof. Rashid was twice brought before a Magistrate during that period, and twice sent back to the police cells. After this uplifting experience they were transferred to a new jail building for the next four months, where they were treated somewhat better.

 

The teachers were charged with inciting the students and damaging vehicles. Street vendors were coerced into testifying against them in what the Professors qualified as a kangaroo court. In January 2008, all the teachers and the Dhaka U. students were sentenced to 2 years imprisonment, but all were pardoned by the President the same day, though they had made no application for clemency. Apparently diplomatic pressure was brought to bear.

 

Students arrested at other universities have not yet been tried, are still detained, most without charge. One Dhaka U. student, Chatra League Gen. Sec. Mahfusal Haider Choudhury, has been detained without charge since January 2007 in Dhaka Central Jail under the Special Powers Act (1974).

 

After these incidents, the Army left the campus, but has been more aggressive since then, appearing to develop a siege mentality, according to some of the persons interviewed.

 

Judicial independence

 

Bangladesh's lower court system has been roundly criticized for its lack of independence, as the magistrates were civil servants under the Home Ministry, subject to the whims of politicians and senior bureaucrats, and to transfer to other civil service jobs. The present government has decreed that they are now under the Law Minister, which will hopefully be an improvement. Unfortunately, it has also decreed that all the corruption cases will be tried before a Special Court, with Special Rules and no Constitutional guarantees.

 

The Supreme Court is split into two divisions – the High Court which hears habeas corpus and other applications for constitutional remedies, and the Appellate Division. The High Court has long had a reputation for independence, regularly bracing whichever government is in power. The High Court judges have lived up to their reputation during the Emergency, declaring over 150 detention orders illegal since 1-11.

 

Almost all these orders have been stayed by the Appellate Court, some ex parte without a hearing, some after a five minute hearing. Over 100 habeas corpus appeals are pending in the Appellate Court, some since March 2007. The detainees remain detained. Justice delayed is justice denied, especially for persons deprived of their liberty.

 

Military Officers in uniform often "observe" hearings in the Appellate Court. There have been publicly acknowledged visits to appellate court judges by both prosecutors and law enforcement agencies. Such actions are in flagrant violation of the rule of law, as modern democracy depends on the independence of the judiciary. Justice must not only be done, it must be seen to be done.

 

On February 6, 2008, two courageous judges of the High Court, Justice Shah Abu Nayeem Mominur Rahman and Justice Shahidul Islam rendered a judgment quashing one of the indictments against Sheikh Hasina. They found that the Emergency Power Rules (EPR) 2007 can not be used to prosecute for events having occurred before the Emergency was declared, that the EPR have no retrospective/retroactive effect, that penal provisions in the EPR are unconstitutional (ultra vires), especially the provisions removing the right to bail, and that the High Court retains the power and authority to guarantee fundamental rights enshrined in the Constitution, notwithstanding the Declaration of Emergency. It further found that the Attorney General had improperly applied the EPR 2007 basing himself on the personality of the accused rather than the nature of the alleged crime.

 

The government applied for an ex-parte stay, as usual, but was faced with a protest meeting by the Bangladesh Supreme Court Bar Association in front of the Appellate Court, proposing to repeat the exercise every day if the Court did not put an end to its rubber stamping of government applications. The Appellate Court decided to order the government to file a regular appeal. I was not able to attend the hearing of the stay application because it was postponed, but media reports that on February 26, 2008, the Appellate Court ordered both a stay of the judgment and a stay of the criminal proceedings before the Special Court, until it hears the Appeal itself on March 16, 2008. The media report nothing concerning the issue of detention.

 

By staying the multiple Orders of the High Court, without ruling on the merits of those cases, all involving detained persons, the Appellate Division has in effect rendered nugatory the protection of fundamental rights and freedoms guaranteed by Bangladesh's Constitution, avoiding its own constitutional responsibility to assure the Rule of Law.

 

Impunity

 

What ever his intellectual capacities, the choice of Lt. General Hassan Mossud Choudhury to head the ACC sends a terrible message to the population. Not only will he not be held responsible for the crimes committed by the men under his command during Operation Cleanheart, he is placed at the head of the body that will decide which politicians to prosecute.

 

One of the amendments that has been discussed is to ban from political office all persons who have committed war crimes or crimes against humanity. While this proposition is worthy of support, it is an empty one if there is no prosecution of those criminals, including those whose crimes were committed in 1971, or in later years. The South African model of Truth and Reconciliation Commission is worth studying as an alternative to prosecution.

 

 

 

RECOMMENDATIONS

 

The de facto authorities have painted themselves into a corner, with no legal exit. They must at least implicitly admit their error and return the country to the Rule of Law. That means lifting the state of Emergency, restoring Constitutional Rights, immediately setting the date for a Parliamentary election. The fallacy that a picture ID card will prevent fraudulent elections ignores Bangladeshi reality, where election fraud often occurs kilometers away from the polling booth, when Hindus are prevented from traveling to vote, or when violence prevents a party from campaigning. Election monitors are probably useful in the month preceding the vote, as well as on voting day. And last, stop trying to keep human rights monitors out of the country as though they were part of the problem.

 

Montreal, March 6, 2008.

 

William Sloan

 

 

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This was read in a press conference organized by Federation of Organizations against Bangladesh War Criminals, USA on March 8, 2008 in NY.

 

 

 


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[mukto-mona] Sloan's Press Conference


Saturday 8th March Press Conference in NY with Attorney William Sloan, written statement attached.

[mukto-mona] Atten : Mr Faizul Latif

 
Dear Mr Latif:
Apology for wrong spelling of your first name.

I am fully with you on Sibnarayan Ray.

Two scholars are eminently suitable to write on him - Prof Amlan Dutta and Prof Sobhanlal Dutta Gupta. SNR, an ardent follower of Mn Roy, didn't spare Roy on certain points. That's the Marxian way - ' doubt everything' ( to fathom and help evolution of thought). When I first read Moumachhitantra, I was very critical, given my endocrination as a card-carrying communist. But I started thinking anew of him after reading his self-critical appraisal of Rabindranath Tagore as a painter. In 1946, he virtually refused to recognise Tagore's genius as a painter. When I read it, I was a bit annoyed as there is little doubt that Tagore's portrait ( in crayon) is unsurpassed in drawing, composition and force. Perhaps he edged out all western masters. Myself being an art critic in those days, I assumed that SNR might have an unreasonable chagrin towards Tagore who had sympathy for the Soviet Union and his last words (told to Prof P C Mahalanabis) was his firm believe that the Soviet Union would win in the war. But when I read SNR's spell-binding second piece in Desh, I thought how wrong I was in assessing such an intellectual.
Communist intellectuals praised his bold stand on secularism after the demolition of Babri Masjid in 1992. That was the beginning of a friendly relation between the CPI/CPM and SNR.

Latif Saheb, kissu jai asena jodi sei sawb buddhijeebira ( janra Sibnarayan Eay-ke totapakhir moto aure, dalali-dhange communist-birodhita kore, American consulate-er suparishe USA ghurte jeto) SNR samparke na lekhe. Sibnarayan-er monisha oder kalush-sparsha theke noy durei thaklo. Tanr communism (bisheshato sarkati communism)-er samalochona chhilo pandityopurno, matadarshogata. Kintu Marx-ke tini sarbada reyat korechhen. Seitai amader pronam tanr charanjugale.
Sankar Ray

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[mukto-mona] Explanation for each poem

Dear Kamrun Nahar,

I visited your write-ups out of curiosity. I was surprised to see all the explanations you have put at the bottom of each poem. I think your poems are not very difficult to understand as they are written in simple words. So, it was not very essential to explain each poem at the bottom. Even if it is difficult to understand, why don't you leave it on the readers. It is not too bad for a poem to have multiple meanings, at least explained by the readers in a multiple ways.

Good luck with your writings. Hope you were not upset reading my mail.
Cheers!

Milton

Dr. Abul Hasnat Milton
MBBS, M.Sc (Epid), PhD
Senior Lecturer
Centre for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics (CCEB)
The School of Medicine and Public Health
Faculty of Health
The University of Newcastle
Room Number: 347
Level 3 David Madisson Building
Callaghan, Newcastle
NSW 2008, Australia.

Tel: 61 2 4913 8200 (off), 61 412141971 (cell)
Fax: 61 2 4913 8148
e-mail: milton.hasnat@newcastle.edu.au

>>> <"Kamrun Nahar"@newcastle.edu.au> 9/03/2008 3:41 pm >>>
Ranadipam Basu


Thanks for your comment.
Now-a-days I feel, we should write for people.
Despite all hazards, I am struggling for keeping my writing.

I also wish you good luck and success.

Kamrun Nahar

My Homepage Address

http://www.mukto-mona.com/Articles/kamrun_nahar/index.htm

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[mukto-mona] UPA ;devastating criticism

 
 
`Loan Waiver euphoria will end in a month`

Q&A: N C Saxena

Sreelatha Menon / New Delhi March 09, 2008 (http://business-standard.com/common/news_article.php?tab=r&autono=316166&subLeft=3&leftnm=5)
National Advisory Council member N C Saxena tells SREELATHA MENON the farm loan waiver scheme will be disastrous and a non-starter.

Does the UPA government's last Budget disappoint you, as it was its last chance to redeem the Common Minimum Programme promises?
No, it just makes me cynical. Expectations were high.

Education and health were supposed to get six and three per cent of GDP, according to the Common Minimum Programme. But there is barely an attempt to reach there.
The funds for education are now 0.6 per cent of GDP and if they were to be even 1 per cent, the allocation would be Rs 53,000 crore. The allocation for health is just 0.25 per cent. Mid-day meal funds have gone up by just 9.2 per cent. Where is the money to cover an additional 34 million children if the scheme is to be extended to secondary schools? If you announce something, you should provide funds for it.

What about Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) and its target of having anganwadis for every 80 children?
The allocation for ICDS has gone up by 32 per cent but that is primarily due to salaries of the workers. It was to go up by 50 per cent but the Ministry for Women and Children is fighting with the government over centralisation of food supplies. It does not want hot cooked meals for children aged below three. And so the money is stuck.

You have been critical of the National Rural Employment Guarantee Programme (NREGP) and the decreasing allocations for wage employment, which helps the poorest of the poor.
There are three problems with NREGP. Allocation is the first problem. It has come down following withdrawal of the food component from wage employment. That was the expensive part. Therefore, the government now wants to universalise it because it does not cost that much. But universalisaton is the second problem I have with NREGP. It is going to places where there is no demand. And where there is demand, the work should be done after preparing the community. For development works in a village, you need a four to five years perspective. Implementation problem is there, but the more important problem is that of conception. Not enough groundwork has been done. NGOs can be used for this but there is not enough money for all that.

The National Advisory Council (NAC) was there to suggest all this. Do you think it is defunct now after the exit of Sonia Gandhi? Will it be dissolved after March 31?
It is difficult to say if it has been futile. But I don't think it will go beyond March 31. It will most probably come to an end this month.

What has gone wrong with ICDS? Why is it that anganwadis are unable to raise nutrition levels of children and India still has half its children underweight?
ICDS has to shift focus to babies, children who are under two years. And the focus also must shift from anganwadi centres to families on the pattern followed in Thailand where there is one trained honorary worker for every 20 families. The number of underweight children below three years dropped from 50 per cent to 25 per cent there in just 10 years from 1980 to 1990. The problem in India is we are too inward-looking. We don't know what happens in Bhutan or Thailand, and we don't want to learn from others.

Social security measures have been limited to health insurance. Do you think it will have an impact?
Health insurance for the poor is a bad idea. The government says it will pay for the poor. If I have 100 cars, should I insure all of them? I will have to pay Rs 8,000 a year per car. That is Rs 8 lakh a year. It makes no sense. The probability of an accident is very little. With that money, I can buy two cars a year. What the government should do is provide free medical treatment for BPL category of people and pay the bills as and when they come.

Maybe it can target just the aged?
Gujarat, in fact, has done that. Under its Chiranjeevi programme, it has provided free medical treatment to all women reaching maternity. Treatment is free for every delivery. In six months, institutional delivery in the state has seen a big jump in tribal areas like Sabarkantha and Banaskantha. Doctors get between Rs 300 and Rs 400 per delivery from the government. It is much better than the Aam Admi Bima Yojana.

Will smart cards help improve the public distribution system (PDS) and ensure that the right people get their entitled amounts of grains?
It is a good idea. But smart cards alone won't suffice. There is no targeted PDS now. It is available for all who have ration cards. If all are entitled to 35 kg of foodgrains, then we need 85 million tonnes. But the government is distributing only 25 million tonnes. So large numbers are not getting anything.

Is there a solution?
The top 20 per cent of the income brackets should be kept out. And the ration should be reduced to 25 kg from 35 kg to all. It is known that 50 per cent of the BPL category people have no cards. Nevertheless, the BPL category must continue. What you need is another category which is just above BPL.

Why has the food security position worsened?
We are at the same level as 1970. The Economic Survey has acknowledged it. The consequence is decrease in consumption levels. In Vietnam, the per capita figure is lower but the consumption is higher at 20 kg per month, whereas ours is 12 kg per month. Exports must stop immediately, or if we give one million tonnes of basmati rice we must get in exchange 3 million tonnes of ordinary or broken rice.

Are you happy with the loan waiver?
Not at all. Farmers won't be happy too. It will be disastrous and a non-starter. The euphoria will end in a month. Those who have borrowed from moneylenders have been ignored. Besides, those who have paid off feel cheated. The co-operative banks will refuse to recognise the waiver. Banks will say that the government must pay them first. But they won't be able to recover the money too. Even those with more than 5 acres land will refuse to pay now. The government should have instead given pensions to widows, and free treatment for farmer families through an MoU with some hospitals under PPP.




__._,_.___

*****************************************
Sign the Petition : Release the Arrested University Teachers Immediately : An Appeal to the Caretaker Government of Bangladesh

http://www.mukto-mona.com/human_rights/university_teachers_arrest.htm

*****************************************
Daily Star publishes an interview with Mukto-Mona
http://www.mukto-mona.com/news/daily_star/daily_star_MM.pdf

*****************************************

MM site is blocked in Islamic countries such as UAE. Members of those theocratic states, kindly use any proxy (such as http://proxy.org/) to access mukto-mona.

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Mukto-Mona Celebrates 5th Anniversary
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/5_yrs_anniv/index.htm

*****************************************
Mukto-Mona Celebrates Earth Day:
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Earth_day2006/index.htm

*****************************************
Kansat Uprising : A Special Page from Mukto-Mona 
http://www.mukto-mona.com/human_rights/kansat2006/members/


*****************************************
MM Project : Grand assembly of local freedom fighters at Raumari
http://www.mukto-mona.com/project/Roumari/freedom_fighters_union300306.htm

*****************************************
German Bangla Radio Interviews Mukto-Mona Members:
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Darwin_day/german_radio/


Mukto-Mona Celebrates Darwin Day:

http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Darwin_day/index.htm

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               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190




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