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Saturday, November 8, 2008

[mukto-mona] Reading Obama's Victory Speech

[It is highly instructive that in his victory speech
Obama elected to narrate modern American history in
terms of the experiences of a Black woman suffering
discrimination on both the counts of being a woman and
a Black and flagging the milestones on the way to
Change, highlighting the need to go much further -
reminding the audience of the long way ahead and the
steepness of the climb.
He also pointedly drew attention to the oppressive
history of slavery.

The ringing signature tune was of course: Yes, We Can!
(Yes, We've Done! Yes, We're To Do So Much More!)]


http://theboard.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/11/07/savoring-the-undertones-and-lingering-subtleties-of-obamas-victory-speech/

November 7, 2008, 4:55 pm
Savoring the Undertones and Lingering Subtleties of
Obama's Victory Speech
By Brent Staples
Like many great orations, Barack Obama's victory
speech on Tuesday night was deceptively simple. As
powerful as it was to hear, the hidden complexities
and import of the president-elect's words surface only
after we re-read the text and think back on the
moment.
A confirmed fan of Abraham Lincoln, Mr. Obama drew on
another flawless speech, the Gettysburg Address (pdf)
("a government of the people, by the people and for
the people has not perished from the earth"), while
also celebrating both the inherited majesty of the
Democratic process and his own achievement — the broad
coalition that elected him.
He echoed Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. ( "the arc of the
moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice'')
when he praised the electorate for rejecting the
rhetoric of fear and for " put[ting] their hands on
the arc of history and bend[ing] it once more toward
the hope of a better day.''
But this remarkable speaker had more on his mind than
classical citations. Woven through his address was
nothing less than an attempt to broaden the meaning of
America's founding documents - and its living
democracy - by expanding the list of the people who
come to mind when Americans think of "the Founders.''
This mission is evident in the opening stanza:
If there is anyone out there who still doubts that
America is a place where all things are possible, who
still wonders if the dream of our Founders is alive in
our time, who still questions the power of our
democracy, tonight is your answer.
By this he meant to include the many men and women —
Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Sojourner
Truth, Ida B. Wells, Frederick Douglass, Martin Luther
King — who have worked and sometimes died in the fight
to extend the full rights of citizenship to people
(African-American and female) who were initially
denied them. He implicitly credited these women's
rights and civil rights giants with working to create
a more perfect union.
In other words, he was including the white fathers —
but not only them.
The speech recognized Thomas Jefferson and the framers
of the Constitution. It leaned heavily on Lincoln, who
orchestrated a second founding by reuniting a sundered
nation through the Civil War and pointing the country
toward the abolition of slavery.
Still, Mr. Obama knows full well that neither
Jefferson nor Lincoln ever "dreamed" of an America in
which a person of African descent would ascend to the
highest office in the land.
Jefferson, like many of his most influential
contemporaries, hewed to the idea that black people
would be forever set apart from their fellow citizens.
Had it been in his power, black slaves would have been
trained, set free, and sent to live apart in Africa or
the West Indies.
Virginians took this notion seriously. Seven years
after Jefferson's death, for example, the state
legislature conducted a special census to determine if
free people of color would agree to leave the state
and be resettled in Africa. Among the Negroes who
declined to go were Jefferson's long-time slave and
lover Sally Hemings and Jefferson's two Negro sons,
Madison and Eston Hemings.
Paradoxically, Sally, Madison and Eston Hemings had
more white than black ancestry — and had actually been
counted as free white people in a previous census. But
like many people of color in that period, they found
that membership in the majority was tenuous and easily
revoked. Leaving Virginia for Ohio after their
mother's death, Madison and Eston found their rights
as citizens increasingly curtailed.
Lincoln, too, believed in colonization. Speaking to a
group of black dignitaries in 1862, he argued that
blacks and whites could never live together
harmoniously and said: "If this be admitted, it
affords a reason at least why we should be
separated.'' He argued for colonization in a
preliminary version of the Emancipation Proclamation,
which began circulating that same year. But the
passage was dropped from the final version after
Lincoln failed to find political support for it.
The proclamation was a tactical military document,
forged in heat of the Civil War, that was intended to
improve the Union's chance of winning. It ended
slavery in the states that were in rebellion, while
preserving it the border states that had sided with
the Union and other areas that were under Union
control. Even so, the final document (pdf) allowed
that emancipation was "an act of justice, warranted by
the Constitution.''
Slavery was abolished with the ratification of 13th
Amendment in 1865. But it took another 100 years — and
more work by a subsequent set of Founders — before
black Americans and women could fully claim the rights
articulated in the founding documents.
That claim had yet to be fully exercised in the summer
of 1963, when Dr. King delivered the "I Have a Dream
Speech" at the March On Washington.
As Dr. King said at the time:
When the architects of our republic wrote the
magnificent words of the Constitution and the
Declaration of Independence, they were signing a
promissory note to which every American was to fall
heir. This note was a promise that all men, yes, black
men as well as white men, would be guaranteed the
"unalienable Rights" of "Life, Liberty and the pursuit
of Happiness." It is obvious today that America has
defaulted on this promissory note, insofar as her
citizens of color are concerned. Instead of honoring
this sacred obligation, America has given the Negro
people a bad check, a check which has come back marked
"insufficient funds."
Some listeners heard hints of grandiosity in Mr.
Obama's assertion that this election proved that "the
dream of our Founders is alive in our time.'' But he
was clearly referring to the founding ideals as they
were improved upon and transfused through subsequent
generations of founders who, like King, worked toward
the "more perfect union" that Lincoln himself had
talked about.
Mr. Obama's moment would not have been possible
without the interventions of those latter-day
founders.



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[ALOCHONA] A Conversation with Tariq Ali

Excellent backgrounder for those interested in the region


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FFDcGnupj8E&feature=PlayList&p=69BC976B004F94F0&index=5

Conversations With History - Tariq Ali
Duration 57 min:22 sec
"Pakistan"
Tariq Ali,
Editor, New Left Review
Recorded September 26, 2008

Host Harry Kreisler welcomes writer and journalist Tariq Ali for a discussion of Pakistan and it relations with the United States. He places the present crisis in its historical context exploring the origins of the Pakistani state, the failure to forge a national identity, the inability and unwillingness of Pakistani leaders to address the country's poverty and inequality, and the role of the military in the country's spiral toward violence and disunity. In this context, Tariq Ali highlights the significance of the U.S. relationship throughout Pakistan's history and he analyzes current US policy and it implications for stability in the region.

In these lively and unedited video interviews, distinguished men and women from all over the world talk about their lives and their work. Guests include diplomats, statesmen, and soldiers; economists and political analysts; scientists and historians; writers and foreign correspondents; activists and artists. The interviews span the globe and include discussion of political, economic, military, legal, cultural, and social issues shaping our world. At the heart of each interview is a focus on individuals and ideas that make a difference.

Harry Kreisler is executive producer and moderator of the series, which is produced at the Institute of International Studies at the University of California at Berkeley.


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[mukto-mona] A Conversation with Tariq Ali

Excellent backgrounder for those interested in the region


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FFDcGnupj8E&feature=PlayList&p=69BC976B004F94F0&index=5

Conversations With History - Tariq Ali
Duration 57 min:22 sec
"Pakistan"
Tariq Ali,
Editor, New Left Review
Recorded September 26, 2008

Host Harry Kreisler welcomes writer and journalist Tariq Ali for a discussion of Pakistan and it relations with the United States. He places the present crisis in its historical context exploring the origins of the Pakistani state, the failure to forge a national identity, the inability and unwillingness of Pakistani leaders to address the country's poverty and inequality, and the role of the military in the country's spiral toward violence and disunity. In this context, Tariq Ali highlights the significance of the U.S. relationship throughout Pakistan's history and he analyzes current US policy and it implications for stability in the region.

In these lively and unedited video interviews, distinguished men and women from all over the world talk about their lives and their work. Guests include diplomats, statesmen, and soldiers; economists and political analysts; scientists and historians; writers and foreign correspondents; activists and artists. The interviews span the globe and include discussion of political, economic, military, legal, cultural, and social issues shaping our world. At the heart of each interview is a focus on individuals and ideas that make a difference.

Harry Kreisler is executive producer and moderator of the series, which is produced at the Institute of International Studies at the University of California at Berkeley.


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

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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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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

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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] The New Face of Terror? - Tekelka


From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 5, Issue 45, Dated Nov 15, 2008
 
CURRENT AFFAIRS  
Counter Terror
Bajrang Dal. VHP. Abhinav Bharat. The names of ultra right-wing outfits are increasingly cropping up as investigators wake up to a new form of terror. RANA AYYUB tracks the dangerous trend
THE TERROR alert had been sounded two years ago. Investigations into the killing of two persons in Nanded, who had blown themselves up while trying to assemble bombs in the house of a RSS worker, had pointed squarely in the face of a new kind of terror. Terror, which was not being exported from across the borders, but being packaged indigenously. Terror that was being spurred by religion as its incendiary trigger. The accused had revealed it all; they had conceived a new tit for tat terrorism because, according to them, "bomb attacks outside mosques was the only way of safeguarding Hindutva."Because otherwise, they would be, "treated like hijras." Counter-attacks, according to them, are the only way of aven - ging terror attacks. The accused were no self-styled novices. They specifically named Maharashtrabased members of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and the Bajrang Dal as being their motivators.
The recent arrests of Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur and her associates in connection with the September 29 Malegaon blasts has once again focussed attention on the ugly face of right-wing fundamentalist terror modules which have been expanding their network across the country. The blast, which occurred outside a mosque on the eve of Id and killed four people, has revealed links to various extremist outfits of the Hindu right that have been planning systematic attacks on Muslims, a revelation first made by TEHELKA in an investigative report in 2006 (vol. 3, issue 51), naming Hindu organisations like the Bajrang Dal, the Vishwa Hindu Parisahad (VHP) and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) as the chief perpetrators. The TEHELKA story, which was based on the reports of the narco-analysis tests conducted on the 2006 Nanded blast accused as well as the chargesheet the Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) filed in the same case, had revealed similar facts as have been discovered during the investigations into this September's Malegaon attack.
TEHELKA (December 30, 2006) had scooped the narco analysis reports which showed that individuals associated with the RSS, VHP and Bajrang Dal were developing terror modules. Two recruits died assembling bombs in Nanded.
The report revealed that the
accused were supported by
Nanded-based VHP leader Govind Puranik, and Abhay Madhukar and Atul Vinodrao Kamtekar of the RSS and the Bajrang Dal. The three had given Tuptewar, one of the injured, Rs 45,000-50,000 to trigger the blasts.

The four accused underwent
training to make IEDs under
Mithun Chakraborty in Pune.
His name has surfaced once again in the current Malegaon investigation.


The Nanded explosion had
exposed the phenomenon of tit for tat terrorism in the name of
religion. The Maharashtra ATS had filed a chargesheet that lay in cold storage till the recent arrests, which once again point to ultra right-wing terror modules.
The 2006 investigation had thrown up the names of the VHP and the Bajrang Dal, and in an indication of the fact that the new face of terror is expanding its ideology of violence, the 2008 probe has thrown up names like the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad, the BJP's student wing, the Hindu Jagran Manch and the Abhinav Bharat. Thirty-seven-yearold Pragya Thakur — an influential figure in saffron circles and a member since the mid-1990s of various right-wing organisations — who is now in judicial custody, is speaking a language not very different from the Nanded accused who avenged counter attacks. The prime accused Sadhvi — according to the ATS which has a taped conversation between her and another accused in the blast case, Ramji Kalsagre, who is still absconding — is supposed to have said, "Meri gaadi se blast kiya to itne kam log kaise mare? Gaadi bheed mein kyun nahi lagayi (if my vehicle was used for the blast, how come so few people died, why didn't you park it in a crowd)?" Kalsagre has been quoted as replying: "Bheed mein khadi karne nahi diya (they didn't let me park it in a crowd)."
The names of people arrested are a clear indication that terrorism perhaps has a new face, a dangerous face in fact, because the new Molotov cocktail is shaken and stirred with religion as its main combustion and revenge as its trigger. Amongst those arrested recently are Abhinav Bharat member Sameer Kulkarni and a Pune-based retired Major Ramesh Upadhyay, who is alleged to have helped in procuring RDX. The others arrested — Shyam Sahu, Shiv Narayan Kalsangra, Jagdish Mhatre, Rakesh Dattaram Dhonde, Ajay Rahirkar — are all members of various ultra rightwing fundamentalist outfits from different parts of Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh. All those arrested were also suspected to have been behind the blasts at Modasa in Gujarat that occurred the same day as the one at Malegaon.
The Nanded blast of April 6, 2006, was the first to open up a glimpse into the activities of the country's saffron terror modules. It took place at the residence of RSS worker Lakshman Rajkondwar, a retired irrigation department engineer, and was apparently an accident, occurring during the preparation of bombs meant to be placed outside a mosque in Aurangabad after Friday prayers. The accident had, importantly, been fuelled by a need to uphold 'Hindu' honour. The aim, then, was to avenge the 2005 blasts in Delhi and the 2006 blast in Varanasi, by engineering explosions in Muslim-dominated areas in central Maharashtra and killing at least 300 to 400 Muslims in each incident. This was also the intention of the blasts at Parbhani, Jalna and Purna, all of which occurred outside mosques between 1.30 and 2 in the afternoon, to ensure as many casualties as possible.
coverstory
Everyday terror The aftermath of the Nanded bomb blasts in 2006
THE ROLE in these attacks of the Nagpur-based Bhonsla Military School was exposed after Upadhyay's arrest last month, but, as this magazine reported, it had also come up during the 2006 Nanded probe. The narco-analysis test on a Nanded accused had revealed that the VHP workers had received explosives training from one Mithun Chakraborty in Sinhagad in Pune. The group, it was learnt, had also been addressed on at least one occasion by VHP leader Pravin Togadia. ATS officials do not, however, have any leads on Chakraborty, apart from a suspicion that he is also an ex-army man. The ATS chargesheet also mentioned a statement by one of the school's teachers, Sanatkumar Raghuvittal Bhate, describing a training session it held in May 2000 that was attended by 100 to 115 people from all over the country. Instructions were imparted, Bhate said, in karate, navigating obstacle courses, and the use of gelatin sticks and weapons; ex-army men and a retired intelligence officer gave training in firearms.
AREPORT BY ACP Anil J Tamaychekar, then with the ATS, clearly states that the Nanded accused were influenced by Sangh Parivar ideology and would use festivals like Gudi Padwa, Vijaydashmi, Ganeshotsav and Ram Navami to stir up anti-Muslim sentiment. Sanjay and Himanshu Panse were joint owners of a gym called Power, which was used as an explosives storehouse and a meeting point for young men being recruited for the terror cause. The report also gave insights into the fact that the accused were prepared with their defence in advance. Tamaychekar's report stated, "They were aware of the danger involved and had a firecracker theory read. The accused had illegally stockpiled a large quantity of firecrackers. They had prepared two IEDs from the explosives at their disposal, which were to be used for terrorist activities to inflict maximum casualties."
However, no action was ultimately taken against anyone from the rightwing fundamentalist parties implicated in the Nanded explosion. The case faded from public memory and would have been forgotten had it not been for the arrests made in last month's Malegaon blast. KPS Raghuvanshi, who was the ATS chief during the Nanded investigation, said the agency had done its work but the CBI, which had taken up the case, did not press any further action on its findings (see interview). The CBI, in fact, dropped cases against some of the accused, among them Lakshman Rajkondwar, who owned the house where the bombs were being made. In the end, the ATS also dropped cases against 11 accused, citing lack of evidence. "The charges against them were not proved," Raghuvanshi said, "and we could not arrest someone just because their residence had been used." His statement, however, contrasts sharply with the way the police have been detaining people in other blasts cases. Former Bombay High Court judge BG Kolse- Patil, who is also a member of the factfinding committee that brought the Nanded blast case to the public eye, said he was disappointed with the way the police had handled not just the Nanded case but also the current Malegaon case. "I have a problem not only with the police but also with the media. In previous cases, whenever a blast happened, the ATS held press conferences and every possible detail of the accused's life was given out in a day. What's happening now? On other occasions, the media would also announce the hand of Muslim militant outfits right after an attack, whether there was any truth in it or not. Why are they silent over this case?" he asks. Kolse-Patil also has questions about a powerful explosion that took place at a bakery — again in Nanded — in 2007, killing two people, one of whom was a Sena Vibhaag Pramukh.
The Malegaon case arrests have come in the wake of a concerted effort by intelligence agencies and ATS officials, who have been identifying right-wing organisations for their role in terror activities. A couple of months ago, the Mumbai ATS arrested members of the Sanatan Sanstha and the Hindu Jagran Manch for their role in blasts at Thane and Panvel. The arrests have, predictably, angered VHP and Bajrang Dal workers across the country. The Sanatan Sanstha is not the only organisation under surveillance, though. According to a state intelligence officer, many small-time right-wing outfits have come up over the past two years in Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, with backing from mainstream political parties. This year's riots in Orissa's Kandhamal and Maharashtra's Dhule and Burhanpur are manifes-tations of these outfits' growing presence. According to intelligence officials, most of the new parties that are coming into prominence for their role in terror attacks are formed by hardliners from across the right-wing spectrum, looking to forge a new identity. These outfits have quickly become popular and have been carefully expanding their base, attracting cadres in the name of combating a perceived threat to Hinduism. Among the Hindu fundamentalist groups whose role has emerged as instigators of terror and rioting are: the Durga Vahini, the Bajrang Dal's womens wing; the Hindu Raksha Samiti, which played a key role in instigating the Dhule riots and is known to be affiliated with the Shiv Sena; the Rashtriya Jaagran Manch, an offshoot of the RSS, believed to be behind the Modasa blasts, and the Abhinav Bharat, to which most of those arrested in connection with this year's Malegaon attack are affiliated. Abhinav Bharat is headed by Himani Savarkar, the niece of Mahatma Gandhi's assassin, Nathuram Godse, and is married to the nephew of his mentor, Veer Savarkar. Himani also came out in support of Thakur and, in a show of solidarity, stood outside the Nashik court where she had a hearing this week.
WHILE THE facts regarding the growing network of these organisations are alarming, what is also equally alarming is the access they have to sophisticated equipment and explosive material such as RDX and ammonium nitrate. This is where the involvement of defence personnel becomes critical. Major (retd) Ramesh Upadhyay, who is alleged to have trained Thakur and her associates, worked as a military intelligence officer and was living in Pune. Access to RDX would not have been a problem for him. The Bhonsla Military School, believed to be the conspirators' training ground, is run by ex-army officers. Its website provides a summary of its philosophical foundation with a translation of a shloka on its homepage: "A person having four vedas (knowledge) in front (to guide him), a bow and arrows (power) at his back (to back him), has a combination of Brahmyam and Kshatram and hence he is capable of defeating the enemies either by Shap (Power of Knowledge) or Shar (Knowledge of Power)."
When contacted by TEHELKA, a key school official who is not in the country at present and is reportedly under the police scanner, said, "I have no clue about the training you are talking about. It's a military school and we impart the training that we should be giving to our students." Various key right-wing party members have been known to give training at the Bhonsla Military School. A Bajrang Dal state head said he was a regular there, and had taught selfdefence techniques, in which, he said, there was nothing wrong.
THE INCREASING cluster of smalltime extremist Hindutva outfits has put parties like the Shiv Sena and the BJP in a dilemma. The
coverstory
Bloodied town Malegaon faced terror in 2006(above) and again after two years in 2008 Photo: REUTERS
BJP's association with Pragya Singh Thakur landed it in considerable embarrassment after it first distanced itself from her and was then compelled to come out in her support. Speaking of her detention, party spokesperson Ravi Shankar Prasad said, "the investigation lacked fairness and transparency and may suffer the tag of a sponsored investigation".
The Shiv Sena and other parties have also come out in Thakur's support and have offered her legal help. Bajrang Dal leaders in the state are, however, incensed over the Sena's show of support and say they don't want the party to look at the case in terms of political gains. The VHP and the Bajrang Dal have not been very vocal, though, on Thakur's behalf and have kept publicly a safe distance from her; VHP workers claim, on condition of anonymity, that they are doing everything possible to help her behind the scenes. A delegation of top Sangh Parivar leaders has also met to discuss the issue. Pamphlets and newsletters, copies of which are with TEHELKA, have been distributed, calling the media biased. In an effort to provide an appearance of credibility, fake details have been provided of various news organisations alleged to be receiving funds from foreign agencies, most of them Saudi Arabian.
With elections around the corner, not just the BJP, but the Congress too is trying to play it safe. Minority groups are already deeply mistrustful after the way the Nanded blasts were handled. A clean chit in this year's Malegaon case could do the Congress great electoral damage. As Justice Kolse-Patil pointed out, "We have seen the way investigations happen in this country and the biases attached to them. It just seems to be a gimmick for the Congress before the elections to get minority votes. For all you know, the accused will all be exonerated, on the claim that there was a lack of evidence.
For now though, going by the way the investigations are proceeding, it looks like the law enforcement agencies have finally woken up to a new form of terror which, if not nipped now, could assume dangerous proportions. What is also required at this point is a thorough reinvestigation with an unbiased approach of other blasts that have happened in the country. Unlike BJP President Rajnath Singh, who has coined the phrase 'cultural nationalism' to defend the Sadhvi, the party's prime minister designate, LK Advani, is walking the straight line saying, 'take action against those found guilty.' The Malegaon investigation will test both, the new face and the politics that now so surrounds violence. •
From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 5, Issue 45, Dated Nov 15, 2008
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With Regards

Abi

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[ALOCHONA] Myanmar building up troops on border

irony of fate. china may be the major (or sole may be) consumer of any gas myanmar robs from this disputed sea area (belong to bd). why would they take any measure. may be china green signaled myanmar behind the screen.
 
also, india has natural gas investment in myanmar, bd did not allow gas transmission corridor to india. trying to un settle us by myanmar.
 
now we have tension with both neighbors.


--- On Sun, 11/9/08, Isha Khan <bd_mailer@yahoo.com> wrote:
From: Isha Khan <bd_mailer@yahoo.com>
Subject: [dhakamails] Myanmar building up troops on border
To: rehman.mohammad@gmail.com, mahmudurart@yahoo.com, farhadmazhar@hotmail.com, shahin72@gmail.com, zoglul@hotmail.co.uk, rezwansiddique@yahoo.com, premlaliguras@hotmail.com, dhakamails@yahoogroups.com, khabor@yahoogroups.com, alochona@yahoogroups.com, bdresearchers@yahoogroups.com, bangla-vision@yahoogroups.com, sayantha15@yahoo.com
Date: Sunday, November 9, 2008, 10:54 AM

Myanmar building up troops on border

Tension between Bangladesh and Myanmar intensified Friday as Myanmar started reinforcing border troops after talks in Myanmar over disputed waters in the Bay of Bengal failed. This also drove Bangladesh Rifles (BDR) to be on alert at strategic points in Bandarban and Cox's Bazar districts.According to sources in BDR, BDR troops have been put on alert in Rezu, Chakdhala, Asadtali, Fultali, Lebuchhari, Dhumdhum, Amtali, Tamru and Ukhia border areas in Bandarban and Cox's Bazar districts.

Bangladesh Navy intelligence gathered information Thursday that Myanmar has begun mobilising ground troops near the Naff river and the mobilisation was not visible. The Navy alerted the BDR. BDR sources yesterday said since Myanmar continued reinforcing troops along its border with Bangladesh, Bangladesh has also taken appropriate steps as a precautionary measure.Local sources said BDR also alerted people living in the border areas apprehending untoward incidents. A number of schools in the areas were vacated and BDR troops have taken position there.

The dispute emerged after Myanmar started oil and gas exploration last week in a stretch of sea claimed by Bangladesh. Bangladesh deployed naval ships to the area and simultaneously sent a diplomatic team to Myanmar seeking to resolve the issue through negotiations.

Officials claimed that the meeting ended without any resolution but Bangladesh notified Myanmar authorities its claim on the territory. Bangladesh was in good terms with the Myanmar authorities until this dispute emerged.

In 1991, Myanmar had driven more than 250,000 Rohingyas into Bangladesh creating a war-like situation between the two countries. Bangladesh gave shelter to the Rohingyas and through diplomatic moves made Myanmar agree to take them back. The repatriation remains slow and Bangladesh still has several thousand refugees on its soil.

Our Bandarban correspondent quoting Naikkhangchhari UNO Nowab Aslam Habib reports: Tension built up as Myanmar forces mobilised along the border. No untoward incident in Naikkhangchhari was reported, he said.

A defence source said BDR is unable to keep a close watch on 173km-long remote and hilly border area. BDR has only five watchtowers in that long stretch of border. Following the 1991 incident with Myanmar, BDR recommended increasing the number of towers there but there was no follow up.

Locals alleged that the Nasaka, border force of Myanmar, shot four Bangladeshis dead near the border last Sunday. Agitated people on Friday captured two Myanmar citizens, Mohammad and Azizul Haq, at Rezu-Amtali border areas. They are now under BDR's custody.

To review the situation, an eight-member high-level BDR team led by Chittagong Sector Commander Colonel Akhtar visited Lembuchhari and Chakdhala border areas of Naikkhangchhari.

Meanwhile, sources said the situation in the Bay of Bengal remains unchanged. There was no exploration activities for the second day yesterday but the Myanmar ships remain anchored 55km southwest at 227 degrees from St Martin's Island.

The Myanmar ships started exploration activities on November 1 ignoring Bangladesh Navy warnings of trespassing on Bangladesh waters. The area is well within Bangladesh's territory and marked as deep-sea blocks 8-13. Bangladesh officially lodged protest before Myanmar ambassador last Sunday. Myanmar also protested before the Bangladeshi ambassador in Myanmar the same day.

Bangladesh later on requested North Korean government to ask Daewoo, which is conducting the exploration for Myanmar, to stop its activities in the Bay. Bangladesh also requested Myanmar's closest ally China to ask Myanmar to quit Bangladeshi waters till the maritime boundary is marked as per the UN guideline.

On Thursday, China suggested that Bangladesh and Myanmar settle their dispute through friendly negotiations, apparently stepping back from taking any measure.

"We hope the countries will settle it through equal and friendly negotiations and maintain a stable bilateral relationship. As their friend, China will contribute in an appropriate manner," said Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang at a press conference, reports Xinhua.

http://www.thedaily star.net/ story.php? nid=62526


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RE: [ALOCHONA] Saudi Cleric lectures Muslim men on how to discipline their wives:

ill-educated saudis + fanatic pakistanis + few militant Bangladeshi muslims, dont represent Islam/the muslim world.
 
Young muslims in western countried should appreciate that and learn about islam from the appropriate, moderate, flexible, humourous,
educated, balanced muslims. People misusing religion for varieties of reasons IS NOTHING NEW, those who want to get inspiration + guidance
from Islam, will continue to do so, by the blessings of Allah.
 
we should condemn violation of women's rights and let others know that wise, educated, non-violent, friendly muslims exist too.
 
 
dr. maqsud omar
sydney








To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
From: turkman@sbcglobal.net
Date: Wed, 5 Nov 2008 18:46:19 -0800
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Saudi Cleric lectures Muslim men on how to discipline their wives:

If no reform in Islam takes place, our coming generation in the Western countries would start feeling ashamed of being Moslim.

--- On Tue, 10/28/08, Farida Majid <farida_majid@hotmail.com> wrote:

    Yet another violation of rights of women due to ignorance of the very precepts of the Holy Qur'an that attempt to restore women their rights as Allah's 'best creation'.
     It comes from the Land of Jahiliya, otherwise known as the KINGDOM of Saudi Arabia.
     Mired in jahiliya they cannot even sense the unintended humor!
 
[Consider this: In the rest of the world, it is people who are named after the name of the land of their origin (or 'asli' in Arbi) -- thus people from Germany are called Germans, people from China are called Chinese, people from Bengal or Bangla are called Bengali or Bangali, etc. Where in the modern world is a country that is named after the personal name of a family?]
 
             Farida Majid





Date: Mon, 27 Oct 2008 11:29:59 -0400
Subject: "Beat her like a Lady" :: Saudi Cleric lectures Muslim men on how to discipline their wives:


Saudi Cleric lectures Muslim young men on how to beat their wives

BEAT HER  LIKE A LADY

From a television program aired last year in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait during which cleric Muhammad al-'Arifi advised young men on how to discipline their wives. 


Translated from the Arabic by the Washington-based Middle East Media Research Institute.

http://www.memritv. org/clip/ en/1594.htm

 

"Men beat women more often than women beat men. Allah created women delicate, fragile, supple, and soft because they use their emotions more than they use their bodies. While a man may use beating to discipline his wife, she sometimes uses her tears to discipline him. For men, women's emotions may be fiercer than the strike of a sword.

 

"Before you beat a woman, first admonish her—once, twice, three times, four times, or ten. If this doesn't help, you must turn to the teaching "refuse to share their beds." Thus, a husband distances himself from his wife in bed and in conversation. If a husband comes to eat a meal and his wife asks him, "How are you? Do you want anything?" he must not answer. The husband should not sleep with his wife. He should sleep in another room.

 

"If this does not help, then the husband's third option is to beat his wife lightly so it will not leave a mark. He must not make her face ugly. Beating in the face is forbidden. Even if you want your camel or donkey to walk faster, you are not allowed to beat it in the face. If this is true for animals, it is all the more true for humans. If a man is angry with his wife—if he says to her, "Watch out, the child has fallen next to the stove," and she says, "I'm busy"—then the husband should beat his wife with a toothpick or something like it. He should not beat her with a bottle of water, a plate, or a knife. Notice how gentle the toothpick used for beating is—this shows you that the purpose is not to inflict pain. When you beat an animal, you intend to cause it pain so that it will obey you, because a camel would not understand if you said, "Camel, come on, start moving." A donkey understands nothing but beatings, but to a wife, a light beating conveys,  "Woman, you have gone too far."

 

"A husband should not beat his wife like he would a child, slapping it right and left. Unfortunately, many husbands beat their wives only when they get angry, and when they start the beating, they use both hands and sometimes their feet, as if they are punching a wall. Remember, brother, this is forbidden; your wife is a human being.





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RE: [ALOCHONA] Obama's Victory Ushers in a New America (Joe Klein, the TIME)

another excellent article by Faisal Salahuddin, from USA:
 
dr. maqsud Omar
==============================================================================================================
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
Committed to PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO KNOW
Sunday, November 9, 2008 08:56 AM GMT+06:00  
 
Point Counterpoint

AMID a breezy fall campus night when old leaves were falling in the wind, new hopes rising and students cheering, I watched Obama moving America to tears as he gave his victory speech. We all have been moved by the poetry of his improbable journey and the melody of his symbolic victory.

Amid swelling inspiration, oddly enough, I felt a tinge of jealousy book-ended by sadness. Jealous of the Americans for having Obama's promise of inclusive tomorrow and sad for us Bangladeshis lacking recent leaders who have offered us such confidence.

In the wake of alternating emotions, I felt some premature longing for Bangladeshi Obamas -- young Bangladeshi leaders who can inspire our youth to believe that we all can live beyond us -- for each other and for the country.

No, I am not completely naïve or delusional. I know the distance and the difference between the US and Bangladesh. In my own defense, I would just say that longing does not harm, cynicism does.

We have a very fertile cottage industry of cynicism, especially when it comes to politics. The ritual is to first get angry, then apathetic and finally cynical. But these often are just lazy emotions to support easy excuses for not getting involved.

Obama's victory raises an immediate but wishful question: How long will we have to wait for our political leaders to inspire and unite us and then govern the country?

A more introspective and responsible question is: What are our individual responsibilities to perfect our shared destiny as a nation? How long should we harbour hope unbacked by action?

Obviously, I don't claim to know the answers, but I know that the choices facing our young generation are stark: to sit back, wait for Great God to come from the heavens (to paraphrase the late, great Bob Marley) to fix our politics or to get involved in our own small capacity both in and from wherever we can.

Alexis de Tocqueville once wrote: "Among democratic people, every generation is a new people."Since change takes place generationally, the burden of responsibilities is heavy on Generation Bangladesh who are born around the time of Independence and are 100 million strong. As someone who has not been very involved with the political process I acknowledge that responsibility with guilt.

Each generation has to take its responsibility. Our earlier generation did not have independence handed over to them. Independence was their dream and they snatched it from Pakistan. Power does not cede easily.

If our generation wants a different political culture, we have to participate in the culture. Not just hope or whine about it as passive onlookers. If our generation wants newer faces in politics, we need to stand up. Not hide behind the stale veil of excuses.

I argued in April 2008 Forum that we have some of the ingredients to have our own Obamas: a young, connected and politically aware demography in a society that is undergoing rapid urbanisation and industrialisation in today's globalised world. This group is tired of old politics and hungry for change.

True, political change takes time. We are not going to have one big Obama tomorrow. Many small ones for now will do. From the small ones, will emerge the bigger ones. That's how leaders should emerge -- not through the family-sponsored dynastic hatcheries, be at home or abroad.

What are some key highlights of the Obama phenomenon and lessons for us?

The Obama Phenomenon
Obama used several powerful instruments and harnessed several emerging trends in American society. He built a bottom-up grassroots movement using modern technology to form, organize, and fund his campaign. He started a political process that began with a smaller group of committed individuals. He gave people genuine hope and inspiration.

Lessons for our political parties
Groom young and bottom-up national leaders who have made (are making) it on their own and retained their integrity (no Picchi Hannan or Lomba Hazari please!)

Nominate young leaders. Given our demographic destiny, it is not only the right but also the smart thing to do. It will be a low-cost high-return winning strategy for the parties over the next 10 years.

Whoever comes to govern Bangladesh after December election should appoint some inspiring honest young leaders in the cabinet. I refuse to believe that the existence of such leaders is nil.

Whoever loses the election should learn some grace from McCain's concession speech and the winner could learn some unity from Obama's victory speech. We are tried of seeing after elections greedy hands waving "It's all mine!" when they win and pouty lips whining "I don't want to play now!" when they lose.

Lessons for Generation Bangladesh
It may be a cheesy cliché but we need to believe that individuals can make a difference. A committed group of individuals together can make a big difference.

We need to be involved in our own village or community by leveraging modern technology. We need to go beyond the op-eds or concerts. We can now travel faster and look further than any earlier generations. It is now much easier to organize and contribute to any movement from home or abroad.

Let's remember the simple calculus of hope. If you double a dream every hour, you will have more than a million dreams by the end of the day. Don't trust me? Just verify with a calculator. We have to double our hopes and halve our cynicism. That's how the infectious mathematics of optimism works.

We also have to remind ourselves that politics always and everywhere in the world is messy because life is. As in life, when moderates avoid politics, it gets only messier. The best way to clean dirty politics to get all of our hands dirty in it. Many hands make the work light and clean.

We need to be hopeful but remain patient. Both life and hope share the same rhythm and they need work. The journey of life begins in a single cell in mother's womb. The journey of hope begins in small increments in our soul when we share a common faith in our future wrapped in individual sense of responsibility.

Only then we can bend time, shape culture, and compose our own generational history.

Faisal Salahuddin, a macroeconomist, writes from Princeton University (faisal.salahuddin@gmail.com)
 








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CC: charbak_bd@yahoo.com
From: worldcitizen73@yahoo.com
Date: Wed, 5 Nov 2008 17:35:05 -0800
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Obama's Victory Ushers in a New America (Joe Klein, the TIME)

"Those who say Obama won because of the financial crisis are telling only half the story. He won because he reacted to the crisis in a measured, mature way. He won because...."

Joe Klein: Obama's Victory Ushers in a New America

Eleven months ago, I attended a John Edwards speech in the little town of Algona, Iowa. It was a Sunday afternoon, and Edwards had drawn a large crowd of mostly uncommitted voters to a local factory that made wind-turbine components. Two things soon became apparent as I interviewed a dozen or so Algonans before the speech. The first was that there were a fair number of Republicans present, a phenomenon I was beginning to notice all over Iowa. They were not yet committed to voting Democratic, but they mentioned their disappointment in George W. Bush, their frustration with the war in Iraq and their dismay with the right-wing religious drift of the state Republican Party. The last time I'd seen so many crossovers was in 1980, when Democrats - angry at Jimmy Carter and their party's leftward drift - made their presence felt at Republican meetings, heralding the onset of the Reagan era.



The other phenomenon was a person. I was talking to a local businessman named Bill Farnham, who wasn't yet sure whom he was voting for, "but I'm really impressed with the organizer Obama sent out here. His name is Nate Hundt, and he's really become part of the community." As he spoke, several other Algonans gathered around and began recounting tales of the young organizer who had come straight to Algona after graduating from Yale six months earlier. Hundt had opened a campaign headquarters in the H&R Block office downtown, joined a local environmental group, shown up for the high school football games. He was a constant presence at civic events. Eventually, Hundt became so much a part of the community that the town leaders asked him to stay on after the caucuses and run for city council. But Hundt had other work to do. The Obama campaign sent him to Colorado, Ohio and North Carolina during the long primary season, then back to Colorado Springs for the general election. "I'm still in touch with my friends from Algona," Hundt said. "In fact, a few of them have come out here to help canvass. But I'm not unique. There are a lot of us who had similar experiences."



Indeed, there are - an army of them, untold thousands of young organizers operating out of more than 700 offices nationwide. And they have delivered a message to Rudy Giuliani, who sneered during the Republican National Convention that he didn't even know "what a community organizer is." This is who they are: they are the people who won this election. They were the heart and soul and backbone of Barack Obama's victory. They are destined to emerge as the next significant generation of American political operatives - similar to the antiwar and antisegregation baby boomers who dominated the Democratic Party after cutting their teeth on the Bobby Kennedy and Eugene McCarthy campaigns of 1968, similar to the pro-life, antitax Reaganauts who dominated the Republican Party and American politics from the election of 1980 ... until now. They are a preview of the style and substance of the Obama Administration.



Obama's decision to expend so much effort on a field organization was quietly revolutionary and a perfect fit for the larger political philosophy that he described when I spoke with him a few weeks ago. Obama insisted that while creating a new energy economy was his No. 1 priority, "we can't divorce the energy issue from what I believe has to be the dominant political theme underlying everything - the economy, health care, you name it. And that is restoring a sense that we're growing the economy from the bottom up and not the top down. That's the overarching philosophical change that we've got to have."



That was the substantive heart of his campaign and of this election. It was a stark difference between the candidates. Unlike many elections I've covered where the stakes were small and the differences between the candidates were minor, this was a big election, with big differences between the candidates. It was a referendum on the Reagan era. Try as he might to dissociate himself from the Bush Administration, John McCain remained a classic Reaganite. He believed in the unilateral exercise of American power overseas, with an emphasis on military might rather than diplomacy. He believed in trickle-down, supply-side, deregulatory economics: his tax plan benefited corporations and the wealthy, in the hopes that with fewer shackles, they would create more jobs. Obama was quite the opposite. Unlike Bill Clinton, whose purpose was to humanize Reaganism but not really challenge it, Obama offered a full-throated rebuttal to Clinton's notion that "the era of Big Government is over." He was a liberal, as charged. But the public was ready, after a 30-year conservative pendulum swing, for activist government.



Although McCain gave a gracious concession speech, the old fighter pilot understood that his argument was a loser - perhaps he even understood that the Reagan revolution had run its course - and so his strategy was to make a big election small. He attacked Obama relentlessly, often foolishly, sometimes scurrilously. The public didn't buy it. This was never more apparent than during the three presidential debates, which probably clinched the election for Obama. McCain was starting from a disadvantage. He had developed a bad case of Washingtonitis; he spoke Senatese, a language of process and tactics that sometimes approached incoherence. In 2000, McCain spoke with a bracing clarity. "The reason why we don't have a patients' bill of rights," he would say, "is because the Republican Party is in the pocket of the insurance industry and the Democrats are in the pocket of the trial lawyers." In the 2008 debates, he skittered from attack to attack, lacking the vision and patience to explain what he would actually do as President. Obama's best moments were when he patiently explained what he would do about the economy, health care, education. Those who say Obama won because of the financial crisis are telling only half the story. He won because he reacted to the crisis in a measured, mature way. He won because in the second debate, he explained to a gentleman named Oliver Clark, in terms that anyone could understand, the financial collapse and the need for a federal bailout.



But this election was about much more than issues. It was the ratification of an essential change in the nature of the country. I've seen two others in my lifetime. The election of John Kennedy ratified the new America that had emerged from war and depression - a place where more people owned homes and went to college, a place where young people had the affluence to be idealistic or to rebel, a place that was safe enough to get a little crazy, a sexier country. Ronald Reagan's election was a rebellion against that - an announcement that toughness had replaced idealism overseas, that individual economic freedom had replaced common economic purpose at home. It was an act of nostalgia, harking back to the "real" America - white, homogeneous, small-town - that the McCain campaign unsuccessfully tried to appeal to.



Obama's victory creates the prospect of a new "real" America. We can't possibly know its contours yet, although I suspect the headline is that it is no longer homogeneous. It is no longer a "white" country, even though whites remain the majority. It is a place where the primacy of racial identity - and this includes the old, Jesse Jackson version of black racial identity - has been replaced by the celebration of pluralism, of cross-racial synergy. After eight years of misgovernance, it has lost some of its global swagger ... but also some of its arrogance. It may no longer be as dominant, economically or diplomatically, as it once was. But it is younger, more optimistic, less cynical. It is a country that retains its ability to startle the world - and in a good way, with our freedom. It is a place, finally, where the content of our President's character is more important than the color of his skin.

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[mukto-mona] Is Sharia consistent with the U.S. Constitution?

 
 
Is Sharia consistent with the U.S. Constitution?
The following link will lead to a transcript of a debate sponsored by The Harbour League on the subject, "Islam: a Religion of Peace? Is Islamic Law ("Shariah") Consistent With A Religion Of Peace – And The U.S. Constitution?" Eli Gold, president of The Harbour League, introduced the participants. Moderating was Mark Hyman; for the affirmative was Suhail Khan and presenting the negative was Frank Gaffney, president of the Center for Security Policy.
 
The Harbour League was founded in 2005 as an organization to promote conservative and free market dialogue on the state level. In looking at this question, "Is Islam a Religion of Peace?" the League wanted specifically to look at whether Islamic law, Shariah, is consistent with a religion of peace and with the US Constitution.
 
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[mukto-mona] Is Barack Obama a Messiah for Muslims?

Two things can happen when a severe desperation grips a person or a community. Any ray of hope can multiply into a wild fire or it can create more desperation. That is what happening with the Muslims after Barack Obama got elected as the new president of the United States of America. A simple truth will be enough to explain that. The position of any US president in the world affaires is a very profound one. He being the leader of the free world can't be swayed by emotion. To keep his nation in its right place he has to play a very special role. He represents a predominantly Christian nation this is a fundamental truth. He will never do anything which will question his dedication and upright patriotism to his nation. I understand why the Muslims are so happy to see Obama because of his Muslim ancestry. It will be stupid on the part of Obama to show any kind of special love for the Muslims. There are many people in his nation who are still not reconciled with his Kenyan Muslim connection. The high calorie election debate which has ended in a surprise for many sceptics is really a kind of unprecedented peaceful revolution in the United States. There was a frustration among the voters who saw a decline in the role of a super power. They want their glory back with their economic supremacy re-established. Obama is very much aware of these aspirations of his nation and he will not deviate from this exalted mission and will do everything possible to prove himself worthy of his office. The president of the United States is not a dictator in any way. No US president can afford to become a dictator. Therefore he is bound to work under the traditional framework of the constitution. If the Muslims think that a pullout from Iraq and Afghanistan by president Obama will make the Muslim world an abode of peace and prosperity, they are wrong.

 

The conflict with the west started not with of 9/11 alone. There was religious fundamentalism in Islam and that was only galvanized by the establishment of Israel in 1948. Even if Obama is successful to bring a peaceful resolution of the Israeli Palestinian conflict that is not going to pour cold water in the current issues faced by the Muslims. That must be sorted out by Muslims themselves. Obama has no role to play in this fundamentalist chaos. Islam as a faith is standing in the edge of time. This is a decision time. Shall the Muslims accept changes or they will still worship the dogmas? Are they ready  to declare supremacy of man over religion? Muslims must be able to identify their position in the ever changing time. This faith should not be a prisoner of the illiterate mullahs. This faith must be liberated from the clutches of the vicious dogmas. Barack Obama is not an answer to all these crucial questions.

 

Akbar Hussain




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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
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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 
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MM Project : Grand assembly of local freedom fighters at Raumari
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