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Friday, August 8, 2008

[ALOCHONA] Sheikh Hasina’s happy day : The shape of post-military politics begins to emerge

Sheikh Hasina's happy day : The shape of post-military politics begins to emerge

IT HARDLY seemed like a significant event. On August 4th, just 1.5% of Bangladesh's voters were permitted by the army to go to the polls in the first round of local elections. The vote was held under a state of emergency. Candidates could not compete under party labels. One party leader was in jail, another in exile.

But these were also the first polls held since the army installed a civilian government in January 2007. Fears that the military would rig the result proved unfounded. The election commission purged 12m duplicate, deceased or bogus names from voter rolls. For the first time, Bangladeshis saw a voting system that seemed to deliver a fair and credible outcome.
In this case, the outcome was a decisive victory for candidates backed by the Awami League (candidates had to run as independents but could be supported by parties). It won 12 of 13 mayoral races. The League is led by Sheikh Hasina, a former prime minister who remains in exile in America following the government's decision to release her from prison in June on two months' medical parole. The day after the poll, the government extended Sheikh Hasina's bail for another month.

The vote made clear that the army has lost, or given up, the ability to influence the parliamentary election scheduled for December. That election now seems likely to go ahead (it was postponed last year), although the government refuses to set a date and the election commission took this week's polls as evidence that there was no need to lift the state of emergency. Talk of setting up a national security council, to formalise the army's role in politics after the vote, has not died down.

But three things make a return to civilian rule more likely. One is the confidence of the Awami League itself. Having been cut off from the public purse for 20 months, its politicians are desperate to get their mitts back on it again.

The next is a split in the League's main rival, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), led by Khaleda Zia, the other "battling begum", who is in jail on corruption charges. Mrs Zia called on her party to boycott the local poll but the party has split in three. At least one faction, no less desperate to return to power than the Awami League, is likely to defy her call to boycott the general election, too.

The BNP is now trying to get the Awami League to join it in a movement against influential military figures, invoking 1990, when in a rare moment of harmony the battling begums united to oust the then dictator, Mohammad Ershad. Instead, the League has chosen to join hands with him, probably to keep him out of the BNP camp.

Third, the interim administration is running into problems. The army-backed technocrats who run the country are drifting, unable to take big decisions. Last week Tata, an Indian conglomerate, pulled the plug on a proposed $3 billion foreign investment, the largest ever in Bangladesh. The costs of uncertainty are speeding up the return of an elected government.
 
http://www.economist.com/world/asia/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11900607&CFID=16145767&CFTOKEN=23900449
 

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[Nagorik_Shokti] Earn $5000 for reading emails , 8/10/2008, 12:00 am

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[mukto-mona] Two building structures in the horizon of Dhaka that still stand as a sign of di

Two building structures in the horizon of Dhaka that still stand as a sign of disrespect to rule of law
BGMEA building and Rangs building - both should make their way to the public interest. If you left out these important signs of corruption and at the same time go out of your way to setup TAC, people will start questioning your motive. By this time, government should have learned that managing the public perception is very important.
 
Its appalling to see that both of these above mentioned structures still stands defying public interest.
 
Both should go down or make their way for the greater good of the public.
 
The first one, the BGMEA building seems like survived the Hatirjheel-Begunbari project, even though it has been reported how BGMEA people has shown disrespect to the law of the country with corrupt practices of the Rajuk people. Even though the alleged malpractice was done by one of the main business association of the country, they should not be given a free pass. This highly publicized corruption should give its way to the greater public interest. Government may give them some other land to build a new BGMEA building.
 
What do we want to do with this building? Tear down this one?
 
If that is creating major problem with the road construction, then yes, tear it down.
 
If road construction is not hampered by the presence of this building, then we have a better idea for this one.
 
Let us take this building and create a high-rise public place out of this building. It can be turned into a mix of different things to create an urban getaway for the citizens - a food court, an indoor sports zone for kids, a video games corner, a public parking, a spot for Dhaka city viewing through installed binoculars. Turn this into a tourist cum civic spot. Several of the floor can also be turned into the first Industrial Museum of Bangladesh. All these facilities, among others, will be run for-profit basis, or may be the space can be leased out to private entrepreneurs for doing the above-mentioned things in return of a yearly rent. The income can be given to the association of garment workers welfare fund or can be used to run a chain of low cost schools for the children of garment workers. That would be a much better way to handle the public interest. We hope that BGMEA leadership will heed to this.
 
For the second one, the Rangs building - the fate is already decided. It is in the process of going down, to make way to create an important intersection that is expected to help reduce the problem of traffic jam. However, the speed at which the work is progressing does not look good. RAJUK's highup people should have been held responsible for this mess at the very beginning. But the government hasn't touched those culprits yet. And it seems that something is cooking with the building, again. They are using a time-pass strategy hoping to find a favourable wind again - it seems.
 
If the government doesn't know how to handle the job, here is some tip. All the Rajuk highups (chairman /engineer / management) should be brought out of their office and tied in poles in front of Bijoy Shoroni island until they complete the taking down of the building. Once that is done, you will see how they find a quicker way to dismantle this sign of tyrranny which started with Ershad chora and grew up and/or lived throughout the period of Khaleda and Hasina. This one should go down now without any further delay.
 
If you thought some of the ideas are worth of your reading time, please forward it to others. If you have an ear to the columnists in regular traditional media, please forward it to them. If you have an ear to the journalists and news editors of the electronic media, discuss it with them. Hope they would look at the suggestions and give due diligence.

Thanks for your time,
Innovation Line
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[mukto-mona] Solzhenitsyn

 
A conservative angle on Solzhenitsyn
SR

Russia's ignorant still hate Solzhenitsyn by Owen Matthews 6 Aug 08 (http://www.spectator.co.uk/the-magazine/features/880626/russias-ignorant-still-hate-solzhenitsyn.thtml)
Owen Matthews says that the great literary prophet has been attacked on the internet by Russians who associate him with the collapse of the Soviet Union. The truth still hurts

In Russia, writers are more than just writers. Russians look to their literary heroes not simply for beauty and entertainment, but for a philosophy of life. Writers do more than simply tell the truth to the temporal power — they are Russia's spiritual legislators. The stern old God of Orthodoxy provides an immutable baseline of good and evil. But it is in the works of Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy and Pushkin and Chekhov that Russians find their universal truths, the nuts and bolts of people wrestling with freedom and oppression.
Russians look to their writers not just to think but to live more deeply than ordinary mortals; the best ones end up crucified on crosses of their own weakness, or of the state's disapproval. This was certainly true of Alexander Solzhenitsyn. Not only did he, in the pungent Russian phrase, experience the horrors of the Russian century 'on his own hide', but he was possessed with an overwhelming moral imperative to record what he saw and felt. The impulse was so strong that while he was in the Gulag he memorised thousands of lines of his own poetry and prose when there was no paper to write on; the rest he scribbled on pieces of cement and scrounged scraps of paper.
When Solzhenitsyn died, Vladimir Putin came to pay his respects at his lying-in-state at the Academy of Sciences, and President Dmitry Medvedev bowed to his grave at the Donstkoi monastery. Thousands of people — many of them older members of the intelligentsia, in shabby clothes and thick glasses — had queued in pouring summer rain to see his body and lay flowers. But though Russia's new masters had bowed their heads to Russia's greatest dissident, in truth Solzhenitsyn was largely ignored in the new Russia when he was alive. Television has, as is now customary, taken its lead from the Kremlin's respectful line, and Russia's newspapers are written by the intelligentsia who respected Solzhenitsyn the most. But dig a little deeper into the hinterland of Russia's internet and there is a deep and ugly groundswell of vitriol. On mail.ru, Russia's most popular free email site, users posted 233 comments below a wire story about Solzhenitsyn's death; almost every one was viciously critical. 'Good riddance: He shouldn't have worked for the West,' wrote DimaM; 'He wasn't a writer, he was a traitor,' wrote Vlad; 'Glory to Stalin, Glory to the Soviet Union,' wrote KlanZh.
Why do the users of mail.ru hate Solzhenitsyn so much? Simple: they associate him, rightly, with the collapse of the Soviet Union. Indeed, even Mikhail Gorbachev said that his writing 'showed the truth of the regime to the world', and 'helped make our country freer and more democratic'. Solzhenitsyn's classics on life in the Gulag showed Russians the truth of the Soviet Union's greatest crimes — a system of state repression which was to kill nearly 60 million Soviet citizens in man-made famines, deportations, forced labour and executions. Solzhenitsyn's prose was briefly published in Russia under Khrushchev, personally approved by the General Secretary because the editor of the Novy Mir literary journal, Alexander Tvardovsky, persuaded him that it would help his attack on Stalin's cult of personality. But the regime was never able to limit the damage to just Stalin's legacy; for millions of Soviet citizens who first glimpsed the world of Ivan Denisovich, Solzhenitsyn's fictional Gulag inmate, the legitimacy of communism itself was demolished.
The truth Solzhenitsyn told helped make Russia free — or so the two generations of dissidents and passionate anti-communists in Russia and abroad believed. But Vladimir Putin spoke for the vast majority of ordinary Russians when he called the collapse of the Soviet Union 'the greatest geopolitical tragedy of the 20th century'. For that majority, Solzhenitsyn will always be reviled for his association with the liberals who brought the evils of democracy and capitalism down on their heads; as former prime minister Viktor Chernomyrdin put it, the free market had trampled and burned most Russians' lives 'like [the Tatar] Khan Mamai'. Solzhenitsyn's legacy is no less great because he attracts the hatred of the ignorant — but it tells us something about Russian patriotism that so many of his countrymen consider him a traitor for contributing to their country's humiliation.
It's a profound irony that Solzhenitsyn himself also hated the new Russia which emerged from the old. 'I know I am coming back to a worn-out, discouraged, shell-shocked Russia which has changed beyond recognition and is wandering about in search of itself,' he told crowds in Vladivostok on his return to his homeland in 1994 after two decades in exile. Solzhenitsyn hated the crimes of the Soviet regime, but he despised the chaos of freedom almost as much. He embraced Russian Orthodoxy and authoritarianism. He praised Putin and brushed aside his KGB past, saying that 'every country must have an intelligence service'. In many respects, modern Russia has followed the ideals of Solzhenitsyn's confused and mystical later writings. Russia is staunchly nationalist, ruled by a new Tsar supported by the Orthodox Church which has become almost an appendage of the state; it is respected (but mostly feared) by its neighbours. The anarchic party system of Yeltsin's Russia which Solzhenitsyn so hated is gone, replaced by something very close to the old system of non-partisan indirect democracy which Solzhenitsyn — and Tolstoy before him — claimed was deeply rooted in the traditions of the Russian village and advocated as the only way Russia could be run.
But ultimately the delusions of his old age don't detract from Solzhenitsyn's towering achievement: he revealed not just the horror but the perverse logic behind authoritarianism. He caught the true, dark genius behind Stalinism — not simply to put two strangers into a room, one a victim, one an executioner, and convince the one to kill the other, but to convince both that this murder served some higher purpose. It is easier to imagine that such acts are committed by monsters, men whose minds had been brutalised and rendered different from our own by the horrors of war and collectivisation. But the fact is that ordinary, decent men and women, full of humanistic ideals and worthy principles, were ready to justify and even participate in the massacre of their fellows. 'To do evil, a human being must first of all believe that what he's doing is good,' wrote Solzhenitsyn in his epic 'literary investigation' of the Great Terror of the 1930s. 'Or else that it's a well-considered act in conformity with natural law.' This can happen only when a man becomes a political commodity, a unit in a cold calculation.
The questions Solzhenitsyn raised were devastating and unanswerable: Who were the executioners? 'Where did this wolf-tribe appear from among our own people?' he asked. 'They were not aliens, not foreigners, but men, Russian men, made of the same tissue and fed by the same blood.... Does it really stem from our own roots? Our own blood? It is ours.'
Anna Akhmatova, the great poetess who also suffered unimaginably under Stalin, described Solzhenitsyn as 'a bearer of light' and said his story should be read by 'every one of the 200 million citizens of the Soviet Union'. She was right, because she shared Solzhenitsyn's fundamental belief that a society must learn from its history. 'It's not just the West that doesn't know our history; we ourselves have lost it,' he told the BBC in 1974, just after being bundled on to a plane and forcibly exiled from the Soviet Union. 'Events have been wiped out. The documents have been burnt, the witnesses killed. So I have been working to reconstruct the truth, all the truth about my own country and this is what I have done primarily for our own people's benefit.' In today's Russia, where schoolbooks are being rewritten — with the Kremlin's blessing — to gloss over Stalin's legacy, Russia has never needed its literary prophet more.

Owen Matthews is the author of Stalin's Children, published by Bloomsbury.


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[mukto-mona] Odhikar report challenges 'crossfire' killings

Odhikar report challenges 'crossfire' killings
Fri, Aug 8th, 2008 9:55 pm BdST

Dhaka, August 8 (bdnews24.com) — The recent deaths of militant outfit leader Abdur Rashid Malitha, also known as Dada Tapan, his companion Nasima Aktar Rikta and JCD leader Moshiul Alam Sentu did not occur during any 'shootouts' or 'exchanges of gunfire', as RAB and police have claimed, says rights body Odhikar.

In a probe report, published Thursday and quoting 'eye-witnesses' and relatives, the human rights watchdog concluded members of the Rapid Action Battalion killed them purposely.

Sentu's as.

The mother of Sentu, president of Jatiyatabadi Chhatra Dal Barisal city unit, was quoted as saying saying that an army officer had tipped her off that her son was in the line of fire, whereupon she had bribed the officer Tk 3 lakh to save her son.

bdnews24.com attempted to contact the army officer named by Sentu's mother, but to no avail.

However, Rab additional director general Col Gulzar Ahmed told bdnews24.cm: "We have already issued official clarifications on these three deaths. There is nothing else to say about the matter."

Tapan's brother speaks before his own death

Leader of the outlawed 'Janajuddho', 48 year-old Dada Tapan, and his companion Rikta, were killed on June 18 in Baradi village, Kushtia.

Shortly after the incident, RAB gave a statement claiming that the two died in a 'shootout' between RAB personnel and members of the outlawed group.

RAB gave a similar statement after the death of Sentu.

Tapan's brother Golam Hossain Akash had rejected RAB's statement to Odhikar, shortly before he died in similar circumstances.

"RAB personnel raided Tapan's house at dawn and shot him dead at close range," Odhikar quoted Akash as saying.

"They shot Rikta in the head and feet who was also in the house, leaving her dead at the scene.

Akash—who himself died some days later in an alleged 'exchange of fire'—alleged to Odhikar, during his detention before his own death, that RAB personnel picked him up on June 18 and tortured him brutally.

"Rab personnel knocked my door around 2.00am. As I opened the door, they kicked me hard and I fell on the ground. They hit me in the ribs with the gun barrel and finally their booted feet trampled and broke my left leg," Akash told Odhikar through the medium of a court inspector, the report said.

Akash admitted that Tapan would often leave arms, banned political pamphlets and other illegal goods in his care.

Azmeri Ferdousi Akhi, wife of Akash, told Odhikaar that Akash had handed over a pistol, 1,500 bullets, around 5,000 monthly bulletins of Janajuddho and a computer to RAB after facing torture.

Akhi said her husband had given her the news that RAB personnel shot Tapan and Rikta.

Aleya Begum, mother of Rikta, said her daughter was involved in the business of readymade garments and sarees. She had been living with two more girls in Kushtia.

There was no case against her with any police station, Rikta's mother said, adding her daughter's body bore bullet wounds to the head and feet.

Ansar Ali, a village policeman, said Rikta's dead body also bore evidence of struggles with her persecutors.

Tapan had six bullet injuries in the chest and left arm, Ali said.

Kushtia Sadar police chief Babul Uddin Sardar told Odhikar on Rikta's death: "Well, at times it happens like that…ten innocent people might get killed while we try to nab one notorious terrorist."

Odhikar quoted captain Mahmud of Rab-12 as saying, "Rab had to get to Tapan at any cost. We had no way out but to kill 10 innocent men in the process."

JCD leader Sentu's story

Sentu's mother told Odhikar that Major Mamun of RAB-8 in Barisal had informed her, through an intermediary named 'Sultan', that Sentu would be killed in a 'shootout'.

She then paid Mamun Tk 3 lakh through the same intermediary, around June 20, but could not save her son.

Syed Manzurul Islam, who studies political science at Dhaka University, said he was with Sentu when the JCD leader was arrested on July 15.

Manzurul said RAB members shot Sentu in the leg as soon as he got down from a rickshaw near Nilkhet, before his arrest.

Morzina Begum, a resident of Bilwobari area of Kashipur in Barisal, where Sentu was allegedly killed, told Odhikar that she had witnessed the killing of Sentu on July 16.

Morzina said she had seen up to 15 RAB members and three vehicles standing near her home in the early morning.

She heard up to three shots and saw five RAB members taking something out of a car, carrying it to a paddy field, firing further some gunshots and returning from the field, Odhikar said in its report.
Morzina went to the field with a pitcher pretending to fetch water and saw a dead body.

RAB personnel asked her if she knew the dead man. As she replied no, they told her that it was Sentu.

"When I first saw the body, there were no weapons lying beside Sentu's body. But later, the RAB men placed a number of arms beside the body," Morzina was quoted as saying by Odhikar.

Odhikar quoted other villagers, including retired army officer 'Mahtab', who had claimed to have witnessed the incident.

Mahtab said: "It was apparent that all the bullets were fired at very close range. His neck bore signs of brutal mauling and the left arm looked fractured."

Sub-inspector Swapon, of Barisal Kotwali Police Station, in an initial inspection report on Sentu's corpse said: "Two bullets pierced Sentu's chest and rifled out through his back and another bullet entered his thigh muscles and remained there."
 
bdnews24.com/snd/gna/wz/my/rah/2149hours
 
source:
Odhikar challenges RAB 'crossfire' deaths
Bangladesh News 24 hours (subscription), Bangladesh - 52 minutes ago
Morzina Begum, a resident of Bilwobari area of Kashipur in Barisal, where Sentu was allegedly killed, told Odhikar that she had witnessed the killing of ...
Odhikar calls for probes
Independent-Bangladesh, Bangladesh - Aug 2, 2008
An Odhikar report, published Friday, said extrajudicial killings had taken a serious turn in July. "From July 1 to July 31, a total of 16 persons became ...

The Daily Star
Top outlaw Dr Tutul killed in 'crossfire'
The Daily Star, Bangladesh - Jul 27, 2008
Human rights group Odhikar yesterday demanded independent judicial inquiry into the killing of Dr Mizanur Rahman Tutul, a top leader of Purbo Banglar ...
Why Bangladesh Should Not Be Audited By International Bodies
CounterCurrents.org, India - Jul 10, 2008
In its "Human Rights Report 2007," local watchdog Odhikar has written flatly: "Human rights situation deteriorated sharply in Bangladesh in 2007. ...
PDF]

Odhikar Report on Human Rights Violation situation in Bangladesh

File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML
Odhikar reports that a total of 639 women and children. were raped in 2006. Among them, 126 were killed after rape, 13 allegedly committed suicide after the ...
www.iccnow.org/documents/Odhikar_IWD_PR_08mar07.pdf - Similar pages

Judge, Jury, and Executioner: Torture and Extrajudicial Killings ...
Judge, Jury, and Executioner. Torture and Extrajudicial Killings by Bangladesh's ... Appendix: Human Rights Watch Questions for the Government of Bangladesh ...
www.hrw.org/reports/2006/bangladesh1206/ - 14k - Cached - Similar pages
 

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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:
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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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Some FAQ's about Mukto-Mona:

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




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[mukto-mona] Uralgadya-83 (Thu Thu Gokhro)

http://www.mukto-mona.com/Articles/J_Quazi/Uralgadya-83.pdf

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[ALOCHONA] Kuwait: Back to reality for Bagladeshis in Jleeb

Dear Alochoks

 

This piece will give you a flavour of realities for Bangladeshis in Kuwait and their Kuwaiti hosts.

 

Regards

 

Ezajur Rahman

Kuwait

 

 

 

 

Back to reality in Jleeb

Published Date: August 01, 2008
Courtesy Kuwait Times By Ben Garcia, Staff writer


After almost a week of struggle, Bangladeshi workers are now back to normal and everyday life has resumed in Jleeb. I don't want to elaborate on why they are on strike as that could just add more to their anguish. Enough! Thank God their complaints were heard (though not solved - as yet), but their concerns have been the subject of interest to many expatriates, labor sectors, human rights groups and are now even the subject of heated debate in the Kuwaiti Parliament. But, back to reality, as I said!

Have you been to Jleeb area, fondly called Hasawi by many? Of course you have heard of and probably visited this place many times. Many of us knew and labeled this place as a center of prostitution, (I am sorry, but this has been known for some time), as well as other illegal activities. I based this known fact on daily reports from several Kuwaiti media outlets, including this one. Some labeled this place (Jleeb) as impoverished, dirty and filthy, a country within the country. But we have to be fair, it's
not all about Jleeb. It's said that the crime and all illegal activities going on here are mostly associated with the under-paid Asians. Authorities should perhaps take note of this sad truth.

When I visited the place to cover the laborers' protests, I noticed the heap of trash and it seemed a far dirtier place than ever. This was, as they say, the immediate effect of the absence of street cleaners and garbage collectors.
I wonder if others have noticed their poor living conditions as well. I happened to put them down in writing and published this in the Kuwait Times July 23 issue.

This time, I'll get you a quick tour of the surrounding areas of Jleeb. A long queue of buses and 4X4 pickup trucks awaiting passengers welcomes you as you enter Jleeb from the Sixth Ring Road or the extension of Muhammad Bin Kazeem Street. I can't imagine how much time they spent just to wait to fill their buses to capacity at that particular spot. "Hours and hours!", passengers claimed. As a result, heavy traffic jams are caused. And the intermittent police road blocks to check for illegal residents also
add to the unimaginable traffic congestions here.

Let's move forward to several residential streets. In many places, you will notice the old and dilapidated buildings, the dirty surroundings, the different-sized banners and commercial posters draped on many walls and across building entrances.

Do you notice the people loitering around? That is normal by the way! But some of these people contribute to the grimy surroundings when they spit a red-colored liquid out from their mouth from chewing what's known as 'paan' in Hindi, also known as betel leaves, a habit like smoking, but in the case of paan, rather than being smoked, they are chewed like bubble gum.

Have you seen the spread of dirty inscriptions (vandalism) on walls of both residential and commercial buildings. They are common here. Observe the side streets. Can you imagine doing business in this neighborhood where there is not enough room to park a car and no place to stop or even rest. The narrow streets which I believe were originally designed to be two-way have become one-way nowadays. Undisciplined drivers park their cars wherever they fancy, even in the middle of the road. That is Jleeb.

Would you mind going deeper into the area? Yes, deeper in a literal sense as you may experience endless road renovations and encounters so many vehicles are damaged by ever larger and wider street holes. Good luck to your car! Have you spotted the sudden disappearance of the makeshift market stalls at the roadside in Jleeb? This was the result of endless campaigns which prevented some Bangladeshis from selling fruit and vegetables in an attempt to augment their pitiful wages of only KD18 per month which their deceitful employers withheld.
Want more? Better visit or should I say, better stay away from Jleeb instead!

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Re: [mukto-mona] Re: CEMB Oct Conference: Political Islam, Sharia Law, and Civil Society

WRT: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mukto-mona/message/49319

I do agree that it's not very clear, what does this ex-Muslim mean?
What's their current position? Have they accepted any other religion?
Have they declared themselves as non-believers through any legal system?
How are their funerals going to be held after their death?
Emdad

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[ALOCHONA] Kuwait papers report Dhaka's anger

Dear Alochoks

 

The two leading English dailies in Kuwait are actually reporting that Dhaka is actually angry with the labour situation in Kuwait! Perhaps the message is getting through. In any case, it is pleasing that Dhaka's `anger' is reported seriously – I am sure this is the first time that Dhaka has ever expressed any anger on anything regarding Kuwait.

 

Regards

 

Ezajur Rahman

Kuwait

 

 

 

Deportations anger Dhaka

Courtesy Kuwait Times Published Date: August 07, 2008

http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=MTcwMzcyMjQw

 

DHAKA: Bangladesh accused Kuwait yesterday of unjustly and cruelly deporting some of its expatriate workers after recent labor unrest in the state. Kuwait said at the weekend it had deported about 1,000 Bangladeshis following violent protests over pay and conditions. "It is in our common interest that such incidents do not recur," Bangladesh foreign minister Iftekhar Ahmed Chowdhury said in a letter to the Kuwaiti government. "For the faults of a few, many are being mercilessly deported empty-handed," he s
aid, urging an investigation.

The letter was sent as scores of workers deported from the kingdom told Bangladeshi television that they were tortured in police custody. Workers showed blood-stained shirts and injury marks on their bodies, and said they had not been paid the money promised by their Kuwaiti employers. Hundreds of Bangladeshi workers held demonstrations in Kuwait last week to demand better pay and living conditions.

The protests, some of which turned violent, lasted several days, with riot police using batons to break up one rally. Impoverished Bangladesh relies heavily on its expatriate workers, who in the past fiscal year sent back eight billion dollars, propping up the country's shaky balance of payments. About 200,000 Bangladeshis work in Kuwait, mostly as cleaners and in other low-paid jobs.

Thousands have gone on strike in recent months, complaining that their wages were not paid and that they had to endure inhuman working conditions. Kuwait has warned it will not tolerate violence, but said it was also determined to crack down on agents who recruit Asian labor and violate employment contracts once the workers are in country. - AFP

 

Dhaka angry … Strike at Chest Hospital but patients eat

Courtesy Arab Times 8/8/08

http://www.arabtimesonline.com/arabtimes/

 

KUWAIT : Despite the strike on Wednesday by some of the working staff at the Chest Diseases Hospital, the distribution of meals to patients went smoothly, after substitute staff were recruited for that purpose, says an official. Ibrahim al-Abdulhadi, assistant undersecretary for quality control at the ministry of health, told KUNA that the substitute staff were fortunately scrambled quickly after the hospital officials became aware of a strike by the original staff. On a differenet story, he said a patient in intensive care had to be wisked off to a quarantine room because it was discovered that he had contracted a contagious virus and required immediate isolation. The case, he assured, was fully under control, dismissing rumors about the spread of the disease to others, just because the hospital was evacuated immediately on the discovery of the case.

 

Meanwhile, Bangladesh accused Kuwait on Wednesday of unjustly and cruelly deporting some of its expatriate workers after the recent labour unrest. Kuwait said at the weekend it had deported about 1,000 Bangladeshis following violent protests over pay and conditions. "It is in our common interest that such incidents do not recur," Bangladesh Foreign Minister Iftekhar Ahmed Chowdhury said in a letter to the Kuwaiti government. "For the faults of a few, many are being mercilessly deported empty-handed," he said, urging an investigation. The letter was sent as scores of workers deported from the kingdom told Bangladeshi television that they were tortured in police custody. Workers showed blood-stained shirts and injury marks on their bodies, and said they had not been paid the money promised by their Kuwaiti employers.

 

Hundreds of Bangladeshi workers held demonstrations in Kuwait last week to demand better pay and living conditions. The protests, some of which turned violent, lasted several days, with riot police using batons to break up one rally. Impoverished Bangladesh relies heavily on its expatriate workers, who in the past fiscal year sent back eight billion dollars, propping up the country's shaky balance of payments. About 200,000 Bangladeshis work in Kuwait, mostly as cleaners and in other low-paid jobs. Thousands have gone on strike in recent months, complaining that their wages were not paid and that they had to endure inhuman working conditions. Kuwait has warned it will not tolerate violence, but said it was also determined to crack down on agents who recruit Asian labour and violate employment contracts once the workers are in the country.

 

In another development, Bangladeshi workers of some cleaning companies are being compelled to pay their health insurance fees, according to a Bangladeshi embassy official who has received complaints from these workers. Some unscrupulous companies are deliberately delaying stamping residencies of their workers, thus forcing workers to pay for their own health insurance, according to the workers' complaints. It may be recalled that the Ministry of Social Affairs and Labour has set a minimum wage of KD 40 without any deduction for cleaners and KD 70 for civilian security guards, even as the Cabinet Minister, Faisal Al-Hajji warned that companies which fail to honour the new minimum wage rules will be prosecuted. 

 

"We have received complaints from Bangladeshi workers that the companies are delaying stamping their residencies and the workers are told to pay for the health insurance before their residencies are stamped. The workers are left with no choice but to pay the fees because if they delay, then they are afraid that their residencies may expire and as a result they will have to pay the fine," he explained.

Dwelling on other complaints of the workers, the official added that supervisors of some cleaning companies falsely implicated some innocent workers in the violent demonstrations and had them arrested.  The workers are also anticipating more arrests, even as cleaners of some companies have informed the embassy that their supervisors have drawn a list of workers to be deported, he added.

 

"In their complaint, the workers of a company said that about eight of their colleagues were arrested after their company informed the authorities they were involved in the labour unrest. The workers say their arrested colleagues have nothing to do with the incidents and as such they should be freed. They also said that some workers were picked up from their workplace."  The official reiterated that the embassy has already requested the authorities not to arrest any more workers and that "the authorities have assured the embassy no innocent worker will be deported." It was earlier reported that some 1,000 cleaners were arrested by the authorities for allegedly taking part in the labour unrest at Mahboula and Jleeb Al-Shyoukh and that about 300 workers were later released.

 

Referring to the workers of the three companies who had earlier threatened to go on strike, the official added that talks are in progress between the workers and the representatives of the companies and that the "workers have yet to be convinced by the solutions offered by their companies." Touching on some of the demands of the workers, the official added that some cleaners are demanding a KD 50 salary and that the company should allow them to take vacations every two years; they are also asking for at least three month's leave and a return plane ticket. To a question whether the workers had given their companies a deadline to resolve their problems, the official said "no deadline has been set but the workers have requested the embassy to settle their problems as soon as possible."

 

"We have also sought the assistance of the Labour Department to resolve the grievances of the workers. We want an amicable solution and we are exhausting all the means in this regard. Certain issues need time to be resolved." Quashing reports that a Bangladeshi worker arrested in connection with the unrest had died at the Deportation Center, the official affirmed that the embassy got a call from the relative of a worker saying that he had died in the jail, even as the embassy sent its representative to the deportation to check on the worker.  He added that the embassy found that the said worker was "fit and fine." "We don't know who is spreading such rumors but we have requested our workers not to fall prey to any false reports." The official added that the embassy will send its representatives to the labour camps in the next few days to ensure that the cleaning companies are complying with the latest decisions of the ministry.

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[ALOCHONA] Competent, honest men not elected in local polls:Observer group launches report

Competent, honest men not elected in local polls : Observer group launches report

 
Political leaders, academics and civil-society members disagreed with an observer group''s view that competent and honest candidates were not elected in the just-held local-body polls, reports UNB.

"It''s enough for the qualification of candidates being honest and competent. Ph.D.-holders are not necessary in the elections," said Professor Dr Abul Barkat, general secretary of Bangladesh Economic Association.

He made the observations at the launch of the report titled ''City and Pouro Election Observation: Findings and Future Implications'' of Brotee, a Samaj Kalyan Sangstha, at the DRU auditorium Thursday.

He said despite some negative aspects, there were some positive signs of the test polls, including high voter turnout, increased participation of women and minority voters, decrease in terrorism and least money games seen in the August 4 elections.

Awami League leader Col (retd) Farook Khan said candidates'' educational qualifications are the expectation of country''s voters. "What they want is the qualification of the candidates," he said, adding that honesty and competence of candidates could be determined only by the voters and the courts in the country.

He observed the bid for "de-politicization" in Bangladesh has gone bust through these local-body polls. "It is proved that the people of the country don''t want the de-politicization," he said.

Speaking at the function, Brotee''s chief executive officer Sharmin Murshid noted that Monday''s elections for four city corporations and nine municipalities were held with greater voter turnout, huge participation of women and minorities, less fake voting and violence, and improved law-and-order situation.

She said Brotee observers identified some negative issues like concealment of information, excessive election expenditure, unexpected educational qualifications of the candidates and so.

"It was expected that honest, competent and uncontroversial candidates should contest the polls. But that expectation didn''t come true," the election-observer group''s chief told the function about their findings over the first voting exercise since the 1/11 changeover in the country''s political scenario.

Former caretaker government Adviser Hafizuddin Khan, AL leader Dr Dipu Moni and Dhaka University professor Dr Asif Nazrul, among others, also spoke at the function.

http://www.newstoday-bd.com/frontpage.asp?newsdate=8/8/2008#14150

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