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Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Re: [mukto-mona] Aparthib's quantum analogy and racial discrimination.

WRT: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mukto-mona/message/48021

It seems that we are on the verge of learning about paradoxes!

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

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Daily Star publishes an interview with Mukto-Mona
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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

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

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Kansat Uprising : A Special Page from Mukto-Mona

http://www.mukto-mona.com/human_rights/kansat2006/members/


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MM Project : Grand assembly of local freedom fighters at Raumari

http://www.mukto-mona.com/project/Roumari/freedom_fighters_union300306.htm

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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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[mukto-mona] Free Dr. Binayak Sen!

Dear Friends,

Please find below and attached an appeal for
organizations to endorse an international day of
solidarity action for Binayak Sen on May 13, marking
one year of his unjust imprisonment. We are a broad
coalition of organizations and individuals based in
different countries and hope to put up a massive
collective effort aimed at the embassies as well as
the press to exert pressure for his release. His trial
begins on the 30th. There is a lot being planned in
India as well.

As you may know, one of the contacts for Indian
coordination : Satya Sivaraman - satyasagar@gmail.
com

APPEAL TO OBSERVE ONE YEAR OF DR. BINAYAK SEN'S UNJUST
DETENTION

On May 13th/14th, 2008 Dr. Binayak Sen, an activist
with a lifelong commitment to the issues of community
health and human rights, will complete his first year
of unjust imprisonment at the Raipur Central jail in
Chhattisgarh. Organizations across the globe will be
holding events on the evening of May 13th, 2008 to
mark one year of his imprisonment. We appeal to your
organization to hold rallies, candlelight vigils or
lectures against his unconstitutional detention.
Please let us know at freebsen@gmail. com if your
organization would endorse this appeal.

Dr. Sen's life has been focused on providing
healthcare to the most marginalized sections of the
society. By setting up the unique Shaheed Hospital,
the community-driven work of Rupantar and his broader
involvement with Jan Swasthya Abhiyan – the Indian
circle of the People's Health Movement, Dr. Sen has
made healthcare available to people who have been
ignored by government or private systems.

As the State Secretary of People's Union for Civil
Liberties of Chhattisgarh and the national Vice
President, Dr. Sen has uncovered human rights
violations by the state and other armed groups. He has
highlighted starvation deaths, dysentery epidemics,
poor conditions of under trial prisoners, custodial
deaths and extra judicial killings. Dr. Sen has also
worked on the issues of right to food, work, health
and education. He has been amongst the most vocal
opponents of Salwa Judum, a private militia movement
armed by the Chhattisgarh Government to combat Maoist
insurgency – that has contributed to a spiraling
increase in violence and displacement of thousands of
tribals. Even the Supreme Court of India has issued a
strong disapproval of the Salwa Judum, citing concerns
similar to those raised by Dr. Sen.

On May 14th, 2007 Dr. Sen was arrested in Raipur under
the repressive Chhattisgarsh Special Public Security
Act, 2005 (CSPSA) and the Unlawful Activities
(Prevention) Act 2004 (UAPA) on charges of sedition,
conspiracy to wage war against the state and
conspiracy to commit other offences. The continuing
detention of an activist committed to non-violence and
social justice is a mockery of justice itself. He now
remains imprisoned for a year without trial or bail,
including a cruel spell of solitary confinement.

Dr. Sen is victim to an increasing trend of arresting
human rights activists in India for challenging state
authority. Lachit Bordoloi, a human rights activist
from Assam; Prashant Rahi, journalist from
Uttarakhand; Govindan Kutty, editor of People's March
in Kerala; Praful Jha, a journalist from Chhattisgarh;
Vernon Gonsalves, an activist from Nasik; Arun
Ferreira, Ashok Reddy, Dhanendra Bhurule, Naresh
Bansode, activists from Vidarbha have all been charged
under the UAPA and kept under prolonged detention
without bail.

We appeal to the international community to speak out
against the stifling of pro-poor and democratic voices
such as Dr. Binayak Sen's. The international community
has already shown its appreciation by bestowing the
Jonathan Mann award for public health and human rights
on him. In addition, the UAPA and the CSPSA must be
repealed, and the Chhattisgarh government should stop
its support for Salwa Judum.


Endorsed by:

Association of India's Development (www.aidindia.
org)

Alliance for a Secular and Democratic South Asia, MIT
(www.alliancesouthas ia.org)

Friends of South Asia: FOSA (www.friendsofsoutha
sia.org)

International South Asia Forum: INSAF, NYC
(www.insaf.net)

Peoples Health Movement, USA (http://www.phmoveme
nt.org/cms)

Campaign to Stop Funding Hate: CSFH
(www.stopfundinghate .org)

Sanhati (http://sanhati. com)


For more information, please see:

* A petition to free Dr. Sen: http://www.petition
online.com/ Binayak/petition .html
* Statement of solidarity with Dr. Sen from
internationally renowned intellectuals:
http://monthlyrevie w.org/0607sen. htm
* Announcement of the Jonathan Mann Award for Dr.
Sen: http://www.globalhe alth.org/ news/article/ 9833
* Statement by Human Rights Watch http://hrw.org/
english/docs/ 2008/04/29/ india18681. htm
* Resources on Dr. Sen and the status of the
trial:
o http://www.freebina yaksen.org/
o http://www.savebina yak.ukaid.
org.uk/index. html
* An article on Dr. Sen's imprisonment in the
context of the political economy of Chhattisgarh:
http://mrzine. monthlyreview. org/amr140607. html
* Medico Friend Circle Brochure on Dr. Binayak
Sen:

http://www.mail- archive.com/ greenyouth@
googlegroups. com/msg03256. html

* An analysis of Dr. Sen's case from the PUCL
website: http://www.pucl. org/Topics/ Human-rights/
2007/sen- case-analysis. html
* Background information on the Chhattisgarh
Special Public Security Act, 2006 http://oldcontent.
newswatch. in/news-analyses /attacks- on-scribes/
3893.html
* Background information on the Unlawful
Activities (Prevention) Act, 2004 from Human Rights
Features: http://www.hrdc. net/sahrdc/ hrfeatures/
HRF106.htm
* Information on other activists under the UAPA,
2004:
o Amnesty International on journalists
Prashant Rahi, Govindan Kutty and Praful Jha:
http://www.amnestyu sa.org/document. php?lang=
e&id=ENGASA200032008
o Frontline Defenders on Lachit Bordoloi of
MASS: http://www.frontlin edefenders. org/node/ 1360
o Background on the arrest of Vernon
Gonsalves, Shridhar Shrinivasan and Adv KD Rao:
http://www.lawyersc ollective. org/content/ letters-0
o Background on Arun Ferreira
http://in.news. yahoo.com/ hindustantimes/ 20080411/
r_t_ht_nl_ general/tnl- naxal-prisoners-
protest-torture- in-n-7244580. html

Information about Salwa Judum: When the State Makes
War on its Own People—A report from human rights
organizations in India, 2006 http://www.pucl.
org/Topics/ Human-rights/ 2006/slawajudum. htm

·

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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

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

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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

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

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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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"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
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[mukto-mona] Obama closing in on Clinton's advantage among superdelegates [AP]

Obama closing in on Clinton's advantage among superdelegates

By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press Writer1 hour, 17 minutes ago
Barack Obama is closing in on Democratic presidential rival Hillary Rodham Clinton's advantage among superdelegates, building on his lead in the primary race even as he faces troubled times.
Party leaders are encouraging superdelegates to pick a side by late June to prevent the fight from going to the national convention in August, and it seems some are listening as the race enters its final five weeks of voting.
Chelsea Clinton got a superdelegate for her mom while campaigning in Puerto Rico on Wednesday, just as Obama press secretary Bill Burton sent out a statement announcing the support of Rep. Lois Capps. The statement didn't mention the personal connection — Capps is Burton's mother-in-law.
Clinton had a big jump start among superdelegates, many of whom have ties to the Clintons and backed her candidacy early on. But most of the superdelegates taking sides recently have gone for Obama, who has won more state contests.
Obama trails Clinton by just 21 superdelegates, 243-264, cutting her lead in half in less than two months. This week, he picked up seven delegates to her four.
The superdelegate chase is a key piece of good news for Obama in what has been a bad week. The Illinois senator is coming off a big loss in Pennsylvania, steeped in controversy surrounding his outspoken former pastor while Clinton fares better against Republican likely nominee John McCain in the latest Associated Press-Ipsos poll.
But the problems aren't stopping his ability to win support from superdelegates who are likely to cast the deciding votes in the Democratic race.
Rep. Bruce Braley of Iowa said he decided to endorse Obama even though his former pastor, Rev. Jeremiah Wright, has been creating waves by making controversial statements and suggesting that Obama secretly agrees with him. Obama denounced Wright in a news conference Tuesday and said the pastor does not speak for him.
"That's been one of the most frustrating things about this prolonged campaign, is we seemed to have gotten away from the critical issues that started this campaign during the Iowa caucuses and now it's more about the side spectacle than the issues that voters really care about," Braley said. "I'm confident that he has taken this issue head-on. He has addressed it in a thoughtful and enlightened way."
Superdelegates are nearly 800 elected leaders and Democratic party officials who aren't bound by the outcome of state contests and can cast their ballot for any candidate at the national convention. They are especially valuable in this race since neither Clinton nor Obama can get enough delegates to win the nomination through the primaries and caucuses held across the country.
Obama now leads in the delegate count overall 1731.5 to 1598.5 for Clinton. A candidate needs 2,025 delegates to win the nomination. About 230 superdelegates remain undecided, and about 60 more will be selected at state party conventions and meetings throughout the spring.
Clinton had stalled in drawing their support as Obama won more states than she, but Clinton won Pennsylvania last week and has been able to announce a new supporter every day this week — two on Wednesday.
The Clinton campaign said Luisette Cabanas, vice chair of the Democratic Committee in Puerto Rico, came on board while the candidate's daughter Chelsea was campaigning on the island. Cabanas cited Clinton's policies, especially on health care, as "the best by far of any candidate in history."
"Today I endorse Hillary Clinton for president because of her strong win in Pennsylvania," Cabanas said in a statement. "She has shown a firm conviction and the character needed to lead the nation."
Capps said it wasn't an easy decision to pick between Obama and Clinton. She has family ties to both candidates — Obama's spokesman is married to her daughter, Laura Burton Capps, who also worked in the Clinton White House.
Lois Capps filled the congressional seat held by her late husband, Walter Capps, when he died suddenly 10 years ago. Bill Clinton had campaigned for Walter Capps and presided over his congressional memorial service.
Capps said Hillary Clinton would be a great president and fill a dream for those who have fought for women's rights. But she said Obama's call for a change in Washington was the most important factor in winning her support.
"Walter once said that 'we are strongest as people when we are directed by that which unites us, rather than giving into the fears, suspicions, innuendoes and paranoias that divide,'" she said in a statement. "For years I have been waiting for a president that speaks to that vision. I believe Barack Obama may very well be that rare leader."
Two of the most important superdelegates to sign on this week come from the states that vote next — North Carolina and Indiana, which hold primaries on May 6 and are the largest states left to vote. Obama got the support of Rep. Baron Hill of Indiana, while Clinton won the backing of North Carolina Gov. Mike Easley even though Obama is expected to win the state.
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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

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

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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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[mukto-mona] Re: News No. 71/2008 - Sajek news update: investigative team returns



Sajek news update: investigative team returns

chtnews.com
News No. 71/2008, April 30, 2008


A 13-member investigative team of progressive Bengalis, which visited the place of occurrence in Sajek, came back to Dhaka yesterday.

Jointly led by Ms Moshrefa Mishu, a veteran leftist leader and convenor of Biplobi Okyo Front, and Mr. Manos Chowdhury, teacher of Anthropology Department, Jahangirnagar University, the team reached Sajek on 28 April.

One of the team members told chtnews.com that they were halted by Major Kabir at Dighinala and were not allowed to speak freely with the victims.

"We were boarded their army vehicle and driven to the place of occurrence. During the visit we were not allowed to talk to the Pahari (Jumma) victims and to visit their burned houses." he said.

"It was a guarded and restricted visit, and wherever we went we were flanked by military personnel." said Ricoh Chakma who accompanied the team members.

The team members are expected to hold a press conference on their Sajek visit.

Memo to Debashish Roy
Victims of Sajek arson attack, who held a press conference in Dhaka on 27 April, submitted a memorandum to Barrister Debashish Roy, Special Assistant to the Chief Adviser and in charge of CHT Ministry, on 28 April demanding adequate compensation to the victims and punishment to those responsible for the attack.

Moeen U Ahmed's visit: an eye wash
Army chief Moeen U Ahmed visited Sajek yesterday and blamed "a section of the population there" who is "always involved in terrorist activities in an effort to sabotage the area's development".

Asked to comment on his visit, Mithun Chakma, General Secretary of the Democratic Youth Forum, said, "the visit of Moeen U Ahmed is nothing but an eyewash, a damage control exercise."

He said the objective of his visit was quite clear and it was to save the culprits like Lt. Col. Sajid Md. Imtiaz and businessman Golam Mowla, the masterminds behind the brutal attack.

"It is a big question as to why the government had decided to send Gen. Moeen instead of Barrister Debashish Roy, who is in charge of Chittagong Hill Tracts Ministry." he said.
..............................
chtnews.com is an independent and voluntary online news service dedicated to projecting and analyzing the current events in the Chittagong Hill Tracts from the perspective of the Jumma people's struggle for right to self-determination. For further information please contact at: chtnewsonline@gmail.com

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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

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

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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

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

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


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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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[mukto-mona] Are we losing focus as regards the goal of the recent political dialogue?

When will Bangladesh rise to the occasion and when will Bangladeshi politicians, bureaucrats and law enforcers free up corruption and nepotism from their spider web? For Bangladesh to be truly the land of milk and honey, we need to get beyond corruption, political unrest and third party interference and think how we can free up nation. Once freed, it can do to Bangladesh what Bangladesh's different sectors and industry have done. The country had moved from being a food surplus state to a food deficient state.The common man is the biggest victim of the gross mismanagement of the food economy. We just don't need politicians on our lands please! 
 
From past experience it became obvious that for having a government to deliver good governance we need to reform our whole political structure. The existing political culture failed to deliver as per expectation of the people. It has been agreed by all concerned that we need reform of our political parties to make them more transparent and people-oriented by cultivating democratic values.

There should be reforms in political activities and institutions to ensure free and fair election, an effective parliament, a government accountable to the people, strong state institutions, receipt of fair justice, curbing of corruption and violation of human rights, right to information, etc. How could this agenda of the people be fulfilled through this dialogue? Are we losing focus as regards the goal of the recent political dialogue?
 
Gopal Sengupta
Canada
 
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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

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

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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

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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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"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190




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[ALOCHONA] Restoring Democracy in Bangladesh

Restoring Democracy in Bangladesh

Asia Report N°151
28 April 2008
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Bangladesh is under military rule again for the third time in as many decades. Although the caretaker government (CTG) insists its plans to stamp out corruption and hold general elections by December 2008 are on track, its achievements have been patchy, and relations with the major political parties are acrimonious. Efforts to sideline the two prime ministers of the post-1990 democratic period have faltered (though both are in jail), and the government has become bogged down in its attempts to clean up corruption and reshape democratic politics. Even if elections are held on schedule, there is no guarantee reforms will be sustainable. If they are delayed, the risk of confrontation between the parties and the army-backed government will grow. There is an urgent need for all sides to negotiate a peaceful and sustainable return to democracy.
The army's intervention on 11 January 2007 was widely welcomed for preventing a slide into extensive violence. Activists of the opposition Awami League had stepped up street protests against efforts by the outgoing Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP)-led government to rig elections. Clashes had led to some 50 deaths by the end of 2006, and there was no compromise in sight. The CTG, headed by technocrats but controlled by the military, quickly ended street violence and raised hopes of political change, promising to tackle the corruption, nepotism and infighting that had crippled fifteen years of elected governments. It used wide-ranging emergency powers and argued that the exceptional situation, not envisaged by the constitution, legitimised its extended tenure and ambitious program. Its goals attracted support from key international backers.
Some progress is evident. The creation of a new electoral roll, with photographic voter identity cards, is underway; the government has begun to separate the judiciary from the executive; and it has reconstituted the Election and Public Service Commissions – essential preliminaries to more extensive reforms of the electoral system and the bureaucracy. Its anti-corruption drive has targeted powerful politicians and their protégés. Debilitating hartals (general strikes) that sapped business confidence and disrupted daily life have been banned.
However, despite some continued support from civil society and the international community, the government's honeymoon is over. There is now fear the government is undermining the very democratic institutions it set out to rescue. In its first year in power, the government made some 440,000 arrests ostensibly linked to its anti-corruption drive, creating a climate of fear in the country. Its poor handling of the economy and natural disasters has aggravated underlying scepticism over its real intentions. The continued state of emergency and efforts to undermine popular politicians and split their parties have left many questioning its sincerity. Former Prime Ministers Khaleda Zia and Sheikh Hasina weathered clumsy attempts to force them into exile. They are both under detention facing corruption charges but still dominate their parties, and their popularity may get a boost if their prosecutions are seen as unfair.
The Directorate General of Forces Intelligence (DGFI), the military intelligence agency and the engine of military government, has been careful to avoid being front and centre, but serving and retired officers have been placed in critical positions, from the Election Commission to the National Coordination Committee heading the anti-corruption drive. Senior officers assert that the army has no desire to get its hands dirty and would rather stay out of politics altogether. They remember the messy collapse of past military regimes and are concerned about their and their army's international reputation and peacekeeping role. Still, there have been persistent signals that the army would like to institutionalise a degree of continuing influence after elections. In any event, it will have difficulty extricating itself from politics with its prestige intact, unless it can negotiate a graceful exit strategy with the parties.
There is an immediate need for dialogue between the government and the main parties. Any viable roadmap for elections and a smooth return to democracy has to be agreed by all major actors. The first step must be to address mistrust between the two sides, as well as the acrimonious relations between the Awami League and BNP. Ideally, a new consensus would not only cover how to hold elections but also develop commitments on post-election behaviour (including sustaining institutional reforms and anti-corruption measures) and democratic functioning (including safeguarding human rights and political pluralism).
Failure to negotiate would invite confrontation. Student unrest in August 2007 showed how quickly frustration with military rule can boil over. Two floods, a devastating cyclone and rising food prices have left many Bangladeshis hungry and the CTG struggling to assert that the politicians it imprisoned on corruption charges would be equally unable to handle the food crisis. If the government cannot bring the politicians along to help it cope with soaring food prices, the parties are likely to channel popular discontent into street protests. This would carry the immediate risk of violent clashes; it would also increase the advantage militant Islamists are already quietly taking from the situation.
International actors who have too placidly accepted the government's rationale and supported its agenda should recognise that the priority is to maintain pressure for timely and credible elections. They should also be prepared to act as a possible guarantor to facilitate a delicate transfer of power and to support a longer-term program of sustainable reforms to put the country's democracy back on track.
RECOMMENDATIONS
To the Caretaker Government (CTG) and the Military:
1.  Lift the state of emergency, including complete cancellation of the Emergency Power Rules (EPR), at least two months ahead of any elections to create conditions conducive for free and fair contests.
2.  Carry out the following steps ahead of elections:
(a)  immediately rescind the emergency ban on all political party activity and freedom of association, as well as press restrictions, and repeal Section 16(2) of the EPR granting immunity from prosecution to the Joint Forces;
(b)  continue good faith efforts to adhere to the election roadmap for parliamentary elections by the end of 2008 at the latest, by setting a specific election date and keeping in mind Islamic holidays to ensure full participation;
(c)  begin discussions immediately with the main political parties on core political issues not addressed in talks between those parties and the Election Commission;
(d)  refrain from using coercive measures to induce and expedite political party reforms and allow sufficient time for party leaders to build support for internal reforms at all levels; and
(e)  desist from anti-corruption arrests without warrants or sufficient evidence.
3.  Disavow the "minus two" policy as part of the political reform process, and in regard to the trials of Sheikh Hasina and Khaleda Zia:
(a)  refrain from interfering and allow them to be held in open court;
(b)  conduct them before the general election;
(c)  ensure they are speedy and verdicts are delivered in time for the accused to stand for late 2008 parliamentary election if found innocent; and
(d)  respect the High Court or High Court of Appeal's verdicts.
4.  Identify and encourage non-partisan national observers to monitor all elections outlined in the roadmap and invite international election observation missions to monitor elections, in consultation with the parties.
To the Parties:
5.  Demonstrate a willingness to reciprocate goodwill gestures by the CTG (such as removal of the ban on party activity) by promoting internal party democracy, rejecting those convicted in corruption cases as candidates and forging consensus on an election code of conduct.
6.  Promote internal party democracy by:
(a)  holding regular elections for all leadership posts at all party levels;
(b)  rewarding committed and effective party workers with greater opportunities to rise through the ranks, including running for office, gaining access to funds and other resources for their candidacies and winning promotions to important committees;
(c)  selecting candidates to stand for elections who enjoy the confidence of their local party workers; and
(d)  determining a quota, in consultation with the Election Commission, for ensuring women's representation at all levels.
7.  Do not boycott the elections, and if they are deemed free and fair by credible observers, accept the results.
To Both the CTG and the Parties:
8.  Seek to ensure a smooth transition to democracy and a credible parliamentary election by December 2008 by entering into a dialogue, with a clearly defined agenda from the start, that aims broadly to:
(a)  achieve a common minimum commitment on sustaining institutional reforms such as the independence of the judiciary, maintaining a non-partisan public service commission and refraining from political interference in police and army promotions and assignments;
(b)  agree on how to ratify actions of the CTG, whether by approving ordinances (which might mean amending current ordinances to make them more acceptable), by a constitutional amendment or by other means;
(c)  ensure a smooth transfer of power after elections, with safeguards against retaliatory prosecutions, demotions or transfers of CTG officials and military officers for administering routine ministerial, government and security functions and formulating and implementing institutional reforms such as the Anti-Corruption Commission, Public Service Commission, judicial and other reforms necessary for strengthening democratic functioning, but without foregoing the state's responsibility under domestic and international law to investigate and prosecute civilian and military officials who have ordered, condoned or directly participated in human rights abuses to enforce the state of emergency;
(d)  consider mechanisms for institutionalising pluralism and empowering opposition voices in parliament such as creating a bicameral legislature; repealing Article 70 of the constitution, which imposes rigid party discipline in the parliament; and ensuring meaningful bipartisan participation in parliamentary committees and working groups; and
(e)  intensify efforts by the next government to: reduce space for radicalism, cooperate in dismantling terrorist groups and tackle any linkages between violent extremists and state institutions, political parties and politicians, and members of the business community, as well as between violent extremists and organised crime or other sources of domestic and international funding.
9.  Include in any agreement a common reiteration of commitment to all fundamental rights, including concrete promises for action in areas such as extrajudicial killings, torture and illegal detention, and protection of minority rights, women's rights and refugee rights.
10.  Hold, upon conclusion of the talks, several roundtable discussions with a wide range of civil society organisations in the six division capitals so as to forge a broader national charter for post-election governance and respect for human rights.
To the International Community, especially Australia, Canada, the European Union, Germany, India, Japan, the UK, UN and U.S.:
11.  Maintain pressure on the CTG to hold timely and credible elections, as well as technical support for the electoral process and unity in public and private messages to the main political actors.
12.  Consider official visits to Bangladesh in the upcoming months at foreign minister or under-secretary-general level to remind the CTG that its legitimacy depends on meeting its elections target, and the army that its international reputation rests on assisting a smooth transfer of power and remaining outside of politics, and ensure that senior visitors also meet with leaders of the main political parties.
13.  Encourage strongly an inclusive dialogue both between the CTG and parties and among the parties, stand ready to assist the resumption of talks if they breakdown and give public support to any agreement reached.
14.  Support non-partisan national election monitoring mechanisms, prepare to send electoral observation missions and agree on benchmarks for credible elections, which likely should include:
(a)  participation by all major parties;
(b)  lifting of the state of emergency at least two months before the elections, including the end of all restrictions on fundamental rights;
(c)  minimal pre-election violence; and
(d)  minimal candidate and voter intimidation by either the CTG, the military or the parties.
15.  Emphasise to the CTG its responsibility to uphold both domestic and international human rights standards, including investigating and holding to account past and present human rights abuses, particularly those committed by the security services, and be prepared to offer technical and financial assistance to Bangladesh's human rights commission.
Dhaka/Brussels, 28 April 2008

http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id=5408&l=1


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[ALOCHONA] ACC Indicts Hasina and Khaleda

ACC indicts Hasina, Khaleda,
18 others in two Niko cases
Courtesy New Age 1/5/08

The Anti-Corruption Commi-ssion on Wednesday approved submission of charge-sheets against the two detained former prime ministers — Sheikh Hasina and Khaleda Zia — and 18 others, including a bureaucrat still in service, in two cases for corruption in signing contracts with a Canadian oil company, Niko Resources, that caused a huge loss of Tk 23,630.50 crore to the national exchequer.
   In addition to the two former premiers, the ACC will press charges against three former ministers, seven retired bureaucrats, four former and current BAPEX officials, an incumbent government official and a Niko official.
   The ACC’s meeting, held in the morning, approved the submission of the charge-sheets against the 20 accused people. The charge-sheets will be submitted to the court next week after the completion of some pending official work, said its spokesman, director-general Hanif Iqbal, at a news briefing on Wednesday.
   Awami League president Hasina, former state minister for energy in her cabinet Rafiqul Islam, former principal secretary SA Samad, former energy secretaries Toufiq-e-Elahi Chowdhury and M Akmal Hossain, former secretary of the Economic Relations Division AKM Moshiur Rahman, the then Petrobangla chairman Mosharraf Hossain, its director Syed Anwarul Haque, and Niko’s South Asia vice-president Quasem Sharif will be indicted for causing a loss of Tk 13,630.50 crore to the state.
   Moshiur Rahman and Anwarul Haque were not named in the First Information Report of the case, lodged by ACC’s deputy director MM Shabbir Hasan with the Tejgaon thana on December 9, 2007.
   The ACC’s task-force has so far arrested Hasina, Rafiqul and Toufiq.
   Former law minister Moudud Ahmed and former state minister for energy AKM Mosharraf Hossain of Khaleda’s cabinet, former principal secretary Kamal Uddin Siddiqui, Petrobangla’s joint secretary and director (finance) CM Yousuf Hussain, Bapex’s former secretary Shafiur Rahman, its former general manager Mir Mainul Haque, the then acting energy secretary Khandakar Shahidul Islam, One Group’s managing director Giasuddin Al Mamun, International Travel Corporation’s chairman and managing director Selim Bhuiyan and Quasem Sharif of Niko will be indicted along with Khaleda Zia, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party’s chairperson, for causing a loss of Tk 10,000 crore to the state by signing the Niko deal.
   Among the persons accused above, the ACC’s task-force has arrested Khaleda, Moudud, Mosharraf, Shahidul, Mamun and Selim, who are now in jail. The names of Kamal, Yousuf, Shafiur, Mainul, Mamun and Selim were not mentioned in the FIR of the case.
   Both the cases were lodged under the Penal Code, but the ACC placed the cases under the Emergency Powers Rules.
   ACC’s assistant director Shahidur Rahman, also the investigation officer of the case against Khaleda and others, on March 13 submitted the investigation report to the ACC, recommending submission of charge-sheets against 14 persons, including the five accused initially.
   On March 20, investigation officer SM Shabbir Hasan, who is also a deputy director of the ACC, submitted the probe report to the ACC, recommending the filing of charge-sheets against the persons named in the FIR in the case filed by him.
   Hasina and others will be indicted for criminal breach of trust under Sections 409 and 511 of the Penal Code, criminal misconduct under Section 5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act 1947 and abetment of the offence under Section 109 of the Penal Code.
   The offences are non-bailable and punishable with imprisonment for 10 years under Section 409, for five years under Section 511, and seven years under Section 5(2). The punishment for abetment is similar to the punishment for the offence.
   Khaleda and ten others also face non-bailable charges under Sections 409 and 109 of the Penal Code and Section 5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act.
   The First Information Report against Hasina and others stated that Niko Resources Bangladesh Ltd was declared incompetent by the technical and financial evaluation committee after the company participated in the second round of bidding in 1997 for oil and gas exploration.
   The company again submitted a proposal to the energy ministry on June 28, 1998 for digging development wells and extracting gas in Kamta, Chhatak, Bianibazar and Fenchuganj gas-fields, showing them as marginal and non-producing fields. A framework of understanding was signed between the Bangladesh Petroleum Exploration Company and Niko for conducting a joint study of those fields.
   The then prime minister Sheikh Hasina on June 14, 2001 approved a system of developing marginal and abandoned gas-fields, ignoring the opinions of the technical experts of Petrobangla, Bapex and Sylhet Gasfield Ltd.
   Accordingly, at the fag end of the Awami League’s regime, three gas-fields — Kamta, Feni and Chhatak
   — were declared marginal and abandoned and the authorities concerned were directed to finalise a joint venture agreement to allow Niko and Bapex to extract gas from the three fields.
   By declaring the gas-fields marginal and abandoned and allowing Niko to extract gas without following due process, Hasina and six others caused loss of Tk 13,630.50 crore to the state exchequer, said the FIR.
   The FIR against Khaleda and four others stated that after the change of the government, Niko sent a letter to the then state minister for energy, AKM Mosharraf Hossain, on November 17, 2001 to finalise the joint venture agreement prepared at the fag end of the AL government.
   When he was asked by the energy ministry to give his opinion, the then law minister Moudud Ahmed on March 17, 2003 opined that Chhatak (east) gas-field should be incorporated in Chhatak Gasfield.
   The FIR said Moudud was Niko’s legal adviser and his opinion was similar to that of Niko’s legal adviser’s opinion given on August 10, 2002.
   The proposal for signing the joint venture agreement, incorporating the Chhatak (east) Gasfield in the Chhatak Gasfield, was sent to the then prime minister Khaleda Zia on September 7, 2003.
   The state minister on October 8, 2003 wrote a note on the file stating that the prime minister had ordered the ministry to sign the agreement.
   Accordingly, the agreement was signed on October 16, 2003, allowing Niko to extract gas from Chhatak and Feni gas-fields, causing a loss of Tk 10,000 crore to the state exchequer, said the FIR.

 

 

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[mukto-mona] Don't need politicians

When will Bangladesh rise to the occasion and when will Bangladeshi politicians, bureaucrats and law enforcers free up corruption and nepotism from their spider web? For Bangladesh to be truly the land of milk and honey, we need to get beyond corruption, political unrest and third party interference and think how we can free up nation. Once freed, it can do to Bangladesh what Bangladesh's different sectors and industry have done. The country had moved from being a food surplus state to a food deficient state.The common man is the biggest victim of the gross mismanagement of the food economy. We just don't need politicians on our lands please! 

Gopal Sengupta
Canada
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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

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

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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

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

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


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

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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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Some FAQ's about Mukto-Mona:

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VISIT MUKTO-MONA WEB-SITE : http://www.mukto-mona.com/

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"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190




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[mukto-mona] Interview: Prof. Wasey on Madrasa Reforms in India

Professor Akhtarul Wasey is the head of the Department
of Islamic Studies at the Jamia Millia Islamia, New
Delhi. He also edits the journals Islam and the Modern
Age (English) and Islam Aur Asr-e Jadid (Urdu). In
this interview with Yoginder Sikand he reflects on
various aspects of madrasa education in contemporary
India.

Q: How do you look at the vilification of madrasas as
'dens of terror'? What do you feel about the recent
spate of conferences organized by various Indian ulama
organizations seeking to denounce terrorism and
stressing that Indian madrasas have nothing to do with
it?

A: I think the anti-madrasa campaign is a carefully
orchestrated exercise on the part of influential
sections of the media, in which sections of the state
apparatus and intelligence agencies that provide false
reports are also closely involved. And at the global
level, one has to understand this in the context of
the offensives of the neo-imperialist forces.

Undoubtedly, we do have some unwanted elements, but
the media has created a mountain of a molehill. But we
must, at the same time, also recognize that the
molehill does actually exist, instead of seeking to
deny it. However, that molehill is certainly not the
madrasas. The former Indian Prime Minister I.K.Gujral,
and the present Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, have
acknowledged that Indian madrasas have nothing to do
with terrorism. Even the senior BJP leader L.K.Advani,
while serving as India's Deputy Prime Minister and
Home Minister, went on record as saying that his
government had not been able to identify any madrasa
in the country serving as a training ground for
terrorists.

Now, as far as the response of the ulema to these
charges of terrorism in the form of the series of
conferences that they have been organizing is
concerned, I feel that there is no need to defend
anything beyond what is necessary. Why should the
ulema be forced to become so defensive? I don't quite
agree with this approach. Fine, they have made the
point that madrasas have nothing to do with terrorism.
Let them state it and leave it at that instead of
repeatedly stressing it. Let the government now prove
or disprove its claims or let the media do this,
instead of madrasas trying to explain themselves. But
today the situation is such that madrasas are being
branded as guilty and are themselves being forced to
prove their innocence, while actually it should be for
those who accuse them to prove their charges against
them.

Another issue about these anti-terrorism conferences
that various ulema groups are organizing is that they
are being held in Muslim localities and are being
attended almost wholly by Muslims. What use does that
serve? Instead, the ulema should be organizing such
meetings and dialogues with non-Muslim opinion makers,
such as social and political activists, journalists,
lawyers, etc.. Let them not invite only secular
non-Muslims, but even right-wing non-Muslims and
dialogue with them, too. And they must also seek the
help of Muslim professionals in this regard and
include them in their dialogue efforts. This sort of
intra-Muslim dialogue must go hand-in-hand with
dialogue with people of other communities. Sadly,
neither of these two is happening on any significant
scale.

While some ulema groups have started some sort of
dialogue work with non-Muslims, this has been limited
only to those who are already convinced of the cause
of the Muslims. Let them not be content with that. To
think that the mindset of everyone who is anti-Muslim
to some extent or the other cannot change is wrong, as
very often such prejudice stems simply from ignorance
and lack of interaction. So, there should be more
interaction with people of other faiths, irrespective
of their political stances, and then automatically the
stranglehold of stereotypes will begin to weaken.

Q: What about the role of certain state governments in
harassing young Muslims, including madrasa teachers
and students, and arresting them on charges of
terrorism, which have generally later proven to be
false?

A: The worst state governments in this regard, I feel,
are the Congress governments in states like Andhra
Pradesh, Karnataka and Maharashtra, where numerous
such cases have occurred. Andhra Pradesh and
Maharashtra are becoming hunting grounds for Muslim
youth even for states like Gujarat. The National Human
Rights Commission must enquire as to how many Muslim
youth have been arrested on charges of terrorism, how
many have been then charged, and how many have then
been freed because the charges against them have been
trumped-up. The number of such fake cases is now
enormous. These innocent youth must be compensated and
the Government of India must apologise for demeaning
an entire community in this way.

Q: In recent years there has been talk in some circles
about the need for setting up a Government-sponsored
Central Madrasa Board. How do you look at this
proposal?

A: Some ulema have rejected this proposal outright,
but I feel that it isn't wise to reject something
without first having investigated it properly. In the
last sixty years, Indian Muslims have become so used
to losing things, including their rights, their
properties, their dignity and even their lives, that
they do not realize the value of something when they
get it because that has become so rare. That principle
might operate behind the outright rejection of the
Board proposal on the part of some. Further, large
sections of the ulema are justifiably concerned as to
why the Government, which appears to have no interest
at all in the welfare of the Muslims, is suddenly so
concerned about madrasas. As the Urdu saying goes:

Unki Mahfil Main Kab Ata Thha Mujh Tak Daur-e Jam

Saqi Ne Kuch Mila Na Diya Ho Sharab Mai!

(When would the cup of wine ever reach me in his
parties?

And now that it has, perhaps the cupbearer has mixed
something in the wine!)

So, obviously, there is some reason for the ulema to
react to the proposal in the way that many of them
have. After all, the Government has done little, if at
all, for Muslim education right from 1947 onwards,
and, instead of opening schools in Muslim areas, it is
setting up more and more police stations there. And if
there is some literacy among the Muslim masses, it
owes much to the efforts of the ulema, who, despite
facing numerous hardships, provide free education to
literally millions of poor children through the
madrasas. Despite the efforts of the Government to
wipe off Urdu, it is the madrasas that have kept the
language alive. So, the point is that it is quite
understandable that the proposal of the Board has not
been greeted with much enthusiasm on the part of many
ulema.

That said, I would advise that before rejecting the
proposal outright, let the ulema carefully study what
it is all about. If they don't agree with any part or
the whole of it, let them tell them government so and
explain why. If the government listens to what they
have to say and, accordingly, modifies the structure
of the Board, good enough. And then, affiliation with
the Board will not be compulsory. Madrasas will not be
compelled to join it against their will. Those
madrasas who don't want to join the Board can remain
independent as they now are.

Q: But what do you see as the possible advantages of
having a Board like this?

A: Muslim families who send their children to the
madrasas are also tax-paying citizens of India, and
have as much right to government programmes as others
do. Why should they be left out? If the Government's
Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan for primary education is joined
with maktabs and junior madrasas, it will help provide
madrasa students basic knowledge of important subjects
such as Hindi, local languages, Mathematics, Science
and so on, which is really very important today. All
this while we have been complaining that the
Government ignores Muslims, but now that it might be
offering us something we want to run away from it!
This isn't quite the right attitude.

The proposed Board might also lead to greater
accountability on the part of the managers of the
madrasas, who, at present, for the most part, are only
accountable to themselves. I feel that the opposition
of at least some of the madrasa managers to the
proposed Board stems from the fear that it might
undermine their hegemony and control.

Q: Some critics of the proposed Board cite the
instance of madrasas affiliated to the state madrasa
board in Bihar, where such madrasas are said to have
been rendered dysfunctional because their teachers,
now being paid government servants assured of a
regular salary, don't take their teaching work
seriously. They use this as an argument to oppose the
proposed Board. How do you look at this argument?

A: I don't agree with this logic at all. Look at the
Jawaharlal Nehru University or the IITs. They are
Government-funded educational institutions and still
their academic standards remain high. The quality of
education and the work of the teachers in any
educational institution do not depend on whether it is
in the private or public sector but on the personal
commitment of the teachers. But, if there is this fear
that the teachers of madrasas affiliated to the
proposed Board might not take their work seriously,
surely there are means to get around the problem,
instead of using this as an excuse to reject the Board
outright. For instance, the teachers' contracts could
be time-bound, and renewable depending on their
performance. Or, they could be provided
performance-based promotion and other benefits, so
that the problem associated with the Bihar Board
madrasas does not arise.

Q: How do you look at on-going debates about madrasa
curricular reform?

A: These debates, and most of the issues that form
part of the debates, are not new. They are more than a
century-old. Shibli Nomani raised precisely the same
issues in the 1880s. Maulana Azad did so half a
century later. And today we are talking about many of
the same questions! This itself shows that the pace of
reform has been slow. This has to do with many issues,
a major one being a certain reluctance on the part of
many madrasa managers and teachers to come up to new
standards of excellence, to learn new ways of teaching
and new subjects, fearing that if the importance of
all these is conceded others might take over. Many of
them are scared of reform and think that this might
dilute the particular identity that they have come to
assume. So, while many fancy buildings are being
constructed by many madrasas across the country,
fundamental questions as to curricular reform are
still not getting the importance they deserve. If I
may add, it always happens that when buildings
associated with any institution become more grandiose
the passion and commitment of those who manage it
decline. Sometimes, such grand structures come to
serve as graves of knowledge and wisdom. I wish we had
the same passion for knowledge and wisdom as we have
for setting up such buildings!

Q: Some ulema would argue that non-ulema really do not
have the right to advise them on matters related to
their institutions. How do you respond?

A: I believe that it is for the ulema themselves to
choose and decide. We cannot bring about any change
from without. In contrast to what some ulema claim,
however, people like myself are not calling for the
secularization of madrasas. We are not saying anything
new to the ulema. We are only pointing out that the
sort of reform that we are talking about is not an
unprecedented innovation, and that, in fact, if
accepted, it would take the madrasas back to their
glorious past, where, in addition to religious
subjects, other subjects were also taught. In an age
when there was no Harvard or Cambridge or Oxford
University, it was the madrasas that provided the best
architects to the world, people who designed the Taj
Mahal and the Qutb Minar. Great scholars like
Avicenna, mathematicians like Omar Khayyam,
philosophers like Al-Kindi and Al-Farabi and the
father of modern Sociology, Ibn Khaldun, all studied
in madrasas. Why cannot we revive that tradition
today?

That said, I wish to reiterate that the reform of the
madrasa curriculum is a task for the ulema of the
madrasas to undertake themselves. We do not have the
right to decide for them, but, surely, we have the
right to ask questions of them, and this we shall
continue to do. Outsiders like us can only help them,
but that is only if they ask us to. It is for them to
take the initiative. It is crucial that they should
bridge the artificial divide between religious and
worldly knowledge, which is not an Islamic way of
conceiving knowledge.

Q: Perhaps several madrasas do wish to include a basic
of 'modern' subjects, but maybe they simply cannot get
the teachers to do so.

A: I recognize the problem, particularly that of
limited resources of the smaller madrasas, but here is
where community effort and assistance has to come into
play. Of course, teachers cannot be procured all at
once. Take the case of the Prophet Muhammad, whose
life provides us with two models of education. The
first model is represented by the Suffa, the platform
outside the mosque in Medina where the Prophet used to
teach those of his companions who would gather there,
the Ashab-e Suffa. The second model is represented by
those Meccan prisoners of war who fought the Muslims
in the Battle of Badr whom the Prophet released
provided they taught a certain number of Muslims. Now,
these were all not just non-Muslims but also people
who were dead against Islam. Obviously they did not
teach the Muslims the Quran. They taught them,
possibly, literacy or numerical skills. Just think of
it! The Prophet of God instructed his enemies to teach
his companions on this occasion!

So, how can one forbid this thing that the Prophet of
God has allowed for? Does it not mean that Muslim
children can also study from non-Muslims, particularly
since these non-Muslims, unlike the Quraish captured
in Badr, are not enemies of Islam? Why can't we have
qualified non-Muslims to teach our children in the
madrasas subjects such as English and Mathematics and
so on if getting Muslim teachers for these subjects is
difficult? After all, the Prophet is reported to have
said that wisdom is the lost property of the believer,
and wherever he finds it he should acquire it.

Q: Presumably, some ulema would argue that non-Muslim
teachers or Muslim teachers who are not ulema
themselves might negatively impact on the faith or
culture of the students.

A: I don't agree with this argument. If one's belief
is firm, nothing can weaken it. Did the non-Muslims
who became prisoners of war and then taught Muslims
cause the faith of those Muslims to weaken? Obviously
not. The case of the prisoners of Badr clearly
suggests the principle that one should consider a
teacher's skill and capability, not his or her
religion.

Q: You earlier spoke about the need for intra-Muslim
dialogue. In this regard, what do you have to say
about the fact that numerous madrasas are, in fact,
the backbone of sectarianism and intra-Muslim rivalry
based on sectarian differences?

A: Here I think the example of Shah Waliullah, whom
all the various Sunni groups in India respect, is
crucial. He sought to bring about reconciliation or
tatbiq of the different Sunni schools of
jurisprudence, between proponents of the two main
Sufistic schools—advocates of Wahdat al-Wujud ('Unity
of Being') and Wahdat al-Shuhud ('Unity of
Witnessing'), between those who stressed the shariah
and those who gave more importance to the tariqa or
Sufi path. His magnum opus, Hujjatulla ul-Balagha, has
near consensus among the Sunni ulema in South Asia.
Unfortunately, we all take Shah Waliullah's name but
do not follow his approach.

Another example I can cite in this regard is that of
Imam Shafi, who, when he visited the grave of Imam Abu
Hanifa, prayed in the Hanafi fashion, much to the
surprise of his own students. When asked to explain
his behaviour, he replied that he did this out of
respect for the deceased Imam. The noted scholar, the
late Dr. Hamidullah, remarks in this connection that
Allah so loved the ways of the Prophet that He made
them all immortal in some or the other school of
Muslim jurisprudence. So, some Muslim schools believe
that the word ameen be recited aloud in prayers while
others recite it silently. Some hold their hands
around their chests while praying and others around
their waists. Instead of squabbling about which group
is right in this regard, as often happens today, Dr.
Hamidullah's advice was that all these practices are
proven from the Prophet's life and thus are equally
acceptable. I think if this sort of approach is
adopted, many of the minor issues that some sectarian
leaders rake up in order to garner support for
themselves, some even using these to brand other
Muslim groups as outside the pale of Islam, can easily
be solved.

That said, I must also add that sectarian or maslaki
differences, if kept within decent limits, are not
wholly objectionable and are, in fact, to some extent,
understandable as they reflect differences of
interpretation of the Islamic textual tradition. In a
sense, this is also a reflection of the democratic
character and structure of Islam. Differences of
opinion are or can be a blessing for the community, as
the saying goes.

After all, what is democracy? Basically, it is a
product of scientific empiricism where an element of
doubt is always working. So, the majority might have a
certain view, but the person in a minority of one
might well be correct, but all have the same right to
hold their own views. Islamic scholars, who issue
fatwas or write Quranic commentaries, always end their
works by adding the line that while what they have
written is their own considered opinion, God knows
better what is correct (Wallahu Alam Bis Sawab). This
reflects what I referred to as the scientific
empiricism that demands an element of doubt, which is
also present here. Hence, no scholar can regard
himself as the final authority. This is a very big
thing, a reflection of intellectual democracy.

So, I would say, one should not see differences of
opinion between the different sects as necessarily a
bad thing, but at the same time one realizes that the
ways in which these differences are often expressed
are not proper.

Q: To come back to an issue that you had briefly
referred to earlier, what role do you see the ulema as
playing with regard to inter-community dialogue in
India today?

A: Dialogue must move beyond discussions about
religious beliefs and practices to centre on issues of
common concern that afflict us all, questions such as
poverty, social injustice, the ecological crisis, war
and peace and so on. Our own religious approach to
people of other faiths should be as the Quran lays
down—that each of us is entitled to follow our own
religion and that there can be no compulsion in
religious affairs. This is not because we are a
minority in India or because of local compulsions, but
precisely because Islam mandates this approach for us.


The ulema must take the leadership to promote genuine
inter-community dialogue and harmony. In this regard,
a classic instance is that of Maulana Azad. His
commentary on the opening verse of the Quran, the
Surah al-Fatiha, can well be considered a manifesto
for inter-faith understanding. If we are the ''best of
the communities', the Khair ul-Ummah, as we often
refer to Muslims as, we should take the initiative in
promoting inter-community dialogue and not wait for
others to do it. It is our Quranic mandate to work for
solving the manifold problems that not just Muslims
alone but the whole of humanity is faced with. Of
course we cannot do this alone, and we need an
inter-faith alliance with a common minimum programme.

In this respect, as in every other, we have a guide in
the Prophet Muhammad. Even before he declared his
prophethood, he was associated with a group of fellow
Meccans, all of them non-Muslims, in the form of the
Hilful Fudhool, which provided help and succour to the
distressed. Later, when in Medina, at a time when he
and his followers were faced with relentless threats
from the Meccans, he announced that if the Meccans
invited him to join an alliance like the Hilful
Fudhool he would do so.

So, if the Prophet could be willing to enter into an
alliance with those opposed to Islam for the sake of
human welfare, why should not we enter into similar
alliances with people of other faiths, particularly
those who are well-meaning and are in no way inimical
to us and our religion? Honestly, I don't see Muslims
getting anyway ahead unless they take up this task
seriously and in a major way.

I don't mean to sound pessimistic, but the fact
remains that till we could produce grand edifices for
the world like the Taj Mahal and the Qutb Minar we
mistakenly thought of ourselves as 'shadows of God'
(zill-e ilahi), but today the situation is so dismal
that far from contributing anything for others, we
only take from them, and that too we do not even know
the proper way of taking.

As Maulana Muhammad Ali Jauhar once poetically
remarked:

Hadd Hai Pasti Ki Ke Pasti Ko Bulandi Jana

Ab Bhi Ahsas Ho Iska To Ubharna Hai Yehi

(The height of degradation is to think of degradation
as exaltation

But if one is even aware of this, it is a sign of a
possible reawakening).

Prof. Akhtar ul-Wasey can be contacted on
wasey27@gmail.com


Sukhia Sab Sansar Khaye Aur Soye
Dukhia Das Kabir Jagey Aur Roye


The world is 'happy', eating and sleeping
The forlorn Kabir Das is awake and weeping


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

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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

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MM Project : Grand assembly of local freedom fighters at Raumari

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