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Wednesday, November 19, 2008

[mukto-mona] Signs of dark matter found? (World Science e-newsletter)

* Woolly-mammoth genome decoded:
Biologists report that they have for the first time
unraveled nearly the whole genetic code of an
extinct animal.

http://www.world-science.net/othernews/081119_mammoth


* Signs of dark matter found?:
Telltale residue may have turned up from a
mysterious and invisible substance that pervades the
universe, astronomers say.

http://www.world-science.net/othernews/081119_darkmatter


* Earliest known " nuclear" family reported 
unearthed
:
Four ancient skeletons unearthed in Germany in 2005
seem to have been united in death as they were in
life, researchers say.

http://www.world-science.net/othernews/081117_nuclear


* "Super-aged" brains reveal secrets of sharp 
old-age memory
:
Tiny tangles may make the difference between a
declining brain and lasting mental acuity.

http://www.world-science.net/othernews/081117_aged-brains


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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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


Mukto-Mona Celebrates Darwin Day:

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

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




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[mukto-mona] Hindu Terrorism

Very much like "Muslim terrorism" or "Islamic
terrorism", the term
"Hindu terrorism" is highly objectionable.
It falsely suggests that (i) this brand of terrorism
has the sanction,
if not an automatic and inevitable product, of Hindu
religion and (ii)
it has the sanction of the bulk, if not all, Hindus.
That's of course ridiculous and also
counter-productive.
It is counter-productive in two ways.
One, it'll unnecessarily, and of course unfairly,
irritate a large
number of Hindus who have got nothing to do with these
terrorists and
at no point of time endorsed such acts.
Two, it straightway plays into the hands of the gang
of terrorists by
deepening and widening the fault line separating
"Hindu" and "Muslim"
identities and foregrounding the religious identities
overshadowing
all other multitude of identities so very necessary
for the
actualisation of the Hindutva project.

So use of this term is either plainly stupid or just
fiendish.
Not for nothing the Saffron Brigade is trying to foist
this term on
the collective discourse in the name of countering it.

As opposed to "Radical Islamist terrorism", "Hindutva
terrorism" or
simply "terrorism of the Hindutva Brigade" appears to
be far more
appropriate.

Sukla

On 11/19/08, Countercurrents
<editor@countercurrents.org> wrote:
>
>
> http://www.countercurrents.org/raina191108.htm
>
> Hindu Terrorism
>
> By Badri Raina
>
> 19 November, 2008
> Zmag
>
>
> Epigraph:
>
> "underlying these religions were a common set of
beliefs about how
you treat
> other people and how you aspire to act, not just for
yourself but
also for
> the greater good"
>
> (Obama in his interview about Religion given to
Cathleen Falsani,
> March,27,2004; cf. to his mother's teaching about
the validity of
diverse
> faiths and the value of tolerance.)
>
> I
>
> So, now, India is home to "Hindu" terrorism.
>
> Departing from the more usual banner-appelation,
"Saffron Terror", I
wish
> the fact to be registered that saffron is drawn from
the stamin of a
> delicate and indescribably pretty mauve flower grown
exclusively in
my home
> valley of Kashmir, and exclusively by Muslims. My
inherited memories
of it
> are thereby sweet and secular to the core.
>
> Also, saffron when used to grace milk products,
Biryani, or to brew
the
> heavenly Kehwa is a thing of the gods truly.
>
> It is only when it is coerced against the use of
nature to colour
politics
> that it rages against the sin. Then, don't we know,
what gruesome
> consequences begin.
>
> I think it proper, therefore, to stick with the more
direct and
honest
> description "Hindu" terrorism, since, much against
their grain, even
India's
> premier TV channels are now bringing us news of
"Hindu" terrorism, so
> compelling the materials gathered by the
investigating agencies thus
far.
>
> This despite the fact that in my view the term
"Hindu" trerrorism is
as
> erroneous as the term "Muslim" terrorism. Even
though not a religious
man
> myself, I am able to see that being Hindu or Muslim
by accident of
birth has
> no necessary connect with how one's politics turn
out to be in adult
life. A
> plethora of specific contexts and shaping histories
are here provenly
more
> to the point.
>
> II
>
> It was way back in 1923 that Savarkar, never a
practicing Hindu
(indeed a
> self-confessed atheist) had first understood that
from this benign
term,
> "Hindu," could be drawn the toxic racial concept
Hindutva, and made
to serve
> a forthrightly fascist purpose. That Brahminism had
always been a
socially
> toxic form of Hinduism was of course an enabling
prehistory to the
new
> project.
>
> He it was who established Abhinav Bharat in Pune
(1904), that
theoretical
> hotbed of twice-born Brahminical casteism against
which low-caste
social
> reformers such as Phule, Periyar, and Ambedkar were
to struggle their
whole
> lives long.
>
> Such casteism was made the instrument of communalist
politics to
serve two
> major objectives: one, to overwhelm and negate the
specific cultural
and
> material oppressions of the low-caste within the
Hindu Varna system ,
and
> two, to elevate the low-caste as a warrior of a
common "Hindutva"
army
> against the chief common "enemy," the Muslim.
>
> Such an army has been seen to be needed to salvage
the "real" nation
from
> this so-called common enemy who continues to be
represented to this
day by
> the RSS and its hydra-headed "educational" front
organizations as an
> "invader" still bent on seeking to convert India
into an Islamic
theocratic
> state.
>
> Aided in these mythical fears and constructions by
the British during
the
> crucial decades leading upto Independence, India's
majoritarian
fascists
> continue thus to keep at bay all consideration of
secular oppressions
based
> entirely in the brutal social order of Capitalist
expropriation.
>
> Savarkar thus counseled how a resurgent nation could
result only if
> "Hinduism was militarized, and the military
Hinduised."
>
> Clearly enough, the serving army Colonel, S.P.
Purohit and the other
retired
> Major, one Upadhyay, who the Mumbai ATS
(Anti-Terrorist Squad) tells
us, are
> at the centre of the Malegaon terrorist blasts of
September 29, 2008,
> alongwith Sadhvi Pragya and the rogue-sadhu,
Amreetanand—and very
possibly
> complicit in half a dozen other blasts as well—seem
to have heeded
> Savarkar's advice to the hilt.
>
> Indeed, in his Narco-test confessions, Colonel
Purohit, sources have
told
> some TV channels (Times Now), admits to his guilt
and justifies his
actions
> as retribution for what he thinks SIMI (Student's
Islamic Movement of
India)
> have been doing. He is understood to have further
indicated that the
rogue
> sadhu, Amreetanand, nee Dayanand etc., has been the
kingpin and chief
> coordinator and devisor of several other blasts
carried out by this
cell,
> including the blasts at the revered Ajmer Dargah
(Mausoleum of the
12th
> century Sufi saint, Chisti, which to this day draws
devotees across
faiths
> the world-over), and at Kanpur.
>
> The ATS are now busy exploring the routes through
which huge sums of
money
> have been brought into the country for such
terrorist activity as
Hawala
> transactions, and whether the RDX, suspected to be
used in the
Malegaon
> blast, was procured by Colonel Purohit through army
connections. It
is to be
> noted that Purohit has been in Military
Intelligence, and serving in
Jammu &
> Kashmir, where it is thought he made contact with
the rogue sadhu,
> Amreetanand.
>
> (Indeed, as I write, news comes of the ATS claiming
that Purohit
actually
> stole some 60 kilos of RDX which was in his custody
while doing duty
at
> Deolali, and that in his Narco-test confession he
admits to passing
it on to
> one "Bhagwan" for use in the blast on the Samjhauta
Express train in
> Feb.,2007.)
>
> Needless to say, that alongwith the courts, we will
also require that
the
> ATS is actually able to obtain convictions rather
than merely pile on
> evidence which may not be admissible in law.
>
> To return to the argument:
>
> As I suggested in my last column, "Notions of the
Nation" (Znet,
Nov.,4),
> Hindutva militarism since the establishment of the
Hindu Mahasabha
and the
> RSS has been inspired by the desire to emulate and
then better Muslim
> "aggressiveness" seen as a racial characteristic
that defined
"Muslim" rule
> in India, and rendered Hindus "limp" and "cowardly."
>
> Thus, if Savarkar established Ahninav Bharat,
Dr.Moonje, an avowed
Mussolini
> admirer who in turn inspired Dr.Hedgewar to
establish the RSS on
Vijay
> Dashmi of 1924 (victory day, denoting the
liquidation of the
Dravidian
> Ravana by the Aryan Kshatriya warrior, Ram)
established the Bhondsala
> Military Academy at Indore (1937). It now transpires
that this
academy has
> been playing host to the Bajrang Dal for militarist
training routines
etc.,
> and its director, one Raikar, has put in his papers.
>
> Unsurprisingly enough, both these institutions are
now under the
scanner.
>
> III
>
> Over the last decade, terrorist blasts have occurred
in India across
a wide
> variety of sites and in major cities and towns.
>
> Many of these blasts have taken place outside
mosques and known
Muslim-
> majority locations, as well outside cinema halls
that were thought to
be
> showing movies inimical to Hindu glory.
>
> Briefly, these sites are: cinemas in Thane and Vashi
in Maharashtra,
Jalna,
> Purna, Parbhani, and Malegaon towns, again all in
Maharashtra—and all
areas
> of high Muslim density, in Hyderabad outside a
famous old mosque, and
in
> Ahmedabad and Surat in Gujarat.
>
> Curiously, in the Surat episode, some sixteen odd
bombs were found
placed
> along the main thoroughfare in tree branches, on
house-tops, on
electric
> poles and so forth. Not one of them however
exploded. This was
thought to be
> the result of defective switches. Curious
circumstance that; besides
the
> wonder that Ahmedabad's Muslims could find such
sprawling access to
such
> strategic locations without Modi knowing a thing.
>
> Yet, regardless of where the blasts have taken
place, almost without
> exception the Pavlovian response of state agencies
as well as, sad to
say,
> media channels has been invariably to point fingers
of suspicion and
> culpability towards one or the other "Islamic"
outfit.
>
> Often, young Muslims men have been rounded up in the
scores and held
for
> days of brutal questioning without the least prima
facie evidence.
Nearly in
> all such cases, however reluctantly, they have had
to be let off.
>
> The most recent case is that of some fifteen young
Muslims picked up
after
> the Hyderabad blasts. Tortured with electric shocks,
they have
nevertheless
> been found to be innocent and let go.
>
> Indeed, after the gruesome blasts in the Samjhauta
Express—a train
service
> of reconciliation and confidence-building between
India and
Pakistan—in
> which some 68 people were burnt to cinders, 45 of
them Pakistani
citizens,
> fingers were immediately pointed towards the SIMI.
>
> Yet, the ATS of Mumbai now suspects that this may
also be the doing
of the
> "Hindu" terrorists in custody. These speculations
have been raised by
the
> circumstance that the suitcases that held the bombs
had Indore labels
on
> them.
>
> Just as the ATS now suspects that more than half a
dozen blasts (the
two at
> Malegaon, in 2006 and 2008, at the cinemas in Thane
and Vashi, at
Jalna, at
> Purna, at Parbhani, provenly at Nanded and Kanpur)
have all been the
> handiwork of "Hindu" terror groups.
>
> IV
>
> For some years, reputed civil and human rights
organizations, and
individual
> members of civil society that have included
journalists, judges,
lawyers,
> writers, artists, teachers, students, and labour
organizations,
besides
> organized Muslim fora and Left parties, have been
cautioning both
state
> agencies and media conglomerates to:
>
> -- desist from the Pavlovian haste with which some
one or other
Muslim group
> is immediately named and labeled literally within an
hour of the
occurrence
> of a blast, thus contributing to the maligning of
the entire Muslim
> community;
>
> --to consider the possibility that groups other than
those involving
Muslims
> could be involved;
>
> --to refrain from covering up prima facie evidence
which points to
such
> possibilities; indeed, where such evidence seems
conclusive, as the
> complicity of the Bajrang Dal at Nanded and Kanpur;
>
> --to ponder the question as to why Muslims should
effect blasts
within their
> own localities or outside their mosques;
>
> --to weigh the consequences for the Muslim psyche of
the failure of
the
> state to prevent repeated pogroms against them, and
to find or punish
the
> guilty; not to speak of active state connivance in
those pogroms
(Moradabad,
> 198o; Nellie, 1983; Hashimpura, 1987; Bhagalpur,
1989; Mumbai,
1992-93;
> Gujarat, 2002, to cite just the more recent ones);
>
> --to permit transparency in the matter of police
investigations with
due
> regard for the Constitutional rights of those held
in custody—such as
> visitation, access to legal defence, norms of the
recording of
confession
> and other evidence etc.,
>
> --to respect the obligatory presumption of innocence
until anyone is
> juridically found guilty;
>
> Time and again these cautions and rightful
prerogatives have been
trampled
> under foot.
>
> Aided by the loud biases of the corporate media
which have tended to
reflect
> the predilections both of free-market imperialism
and comprador urban
middle
> class sentiments in India's metropolitan towns,
India's state
agencies and
> that "all-knowing" species, the Intellegence expert,
who seems ever
present
> to reinforce anti-Muslim prejudice, have tended to
feed massively
into the
> politics of the Hindu right-wing.
>
> For years on end, India's chief malady has been
sought to be seen to
reside
> in "Islamic" terrorism, and in the complicit refusal
of the
secularists to
> allow draconian preventive laws to be brought back
on the books. Not
in
> poverty, malnutrition, disease, absence of health
care or clean
drinking
> water, or lack of steady work among the urban poor,
or the ousted
tribals,
> disenfranchised farmers, chronic failure of primary
schooling and so
forth
> among some 75% of Indians. And most of them
belonging to the Muslim,
Dalit,
> and Tribal communities.
>
> And to repeat for the nth time, this three-fourths
of Indians able to
spend
> just or under Rupees Twenty a day, all according to
the governments'
own
> Arjun Sengupta Committee Report.
>
> Not to speak of the venomous communalization of the
polity, the
alienation
> and ghettoisation of the minorities, and the state's
failure or
> unwillingness to carry through schemes that could
redress these
maladies.
>
> As to new terror laws, the government of the day may
protest that it
has all
> the laws it wants, and more; as well as the fact
that the worst
terrorist
> attacks took place when laws like the dreaded POTA
(Prevention of
Terrorism
> Act) was on the books during the tenure of the NDA
regime led by the
> ultra-"nationalist", BJP. Small dent is made by any
regime of
> empirically-founded facts, or fair-minded arguments
on the right-wing
> fascists and their fattened constituency.
>
> V
>
> Now, of course, a radically transformed milieu is
unraveling.
>
> Photos and Videos are doing the rounds that show the
"Hindu"
terrorists
> currently under investigation in close and intimate
proximity to top
leaders
> of the RSS, the VHP, and the BJP as well.
>
> Had POTA indeed been on the books today, such
evidence would have
authorized
> the police to put them all behind bars on the charge
of associating
with
> those under investigation for "terrorism." And all
that without any
recourse
> to bail either.
>
> Predictably, nonetheless, after some days of
dumbfounded
crestfallenness
> (remember that the main electoral plank of the BJP
in the elections
now
> under way in several states and in the
soon-to-be-held parliamentary
polls
> is the failure of the Congress to eradicate
"terrorism" because of
its
> "minority appeasement" policies), the right-wing
fascists are back to
brazen
> form.
>
> Even as the projected Prime Ministerial candidate,
Advani (the
high-point of
> whose career remains the successful demolition of
the Babri mosque),
party
> hard-liners have taken to peddling outrageous
theories.
>
> As a complement to the well-known Pavlovian hunch
that "all
terrorists are
> Muslims," we are now told by the likes of Rajnath
Singh, the party
> President, that "no Hindu can be a terrorist," that
is to say even
when he
> or she is found to be one.
>
> This for the reason that what the ordinary man calls
"terrorism" is
infact
> "nationalism" where any Hindu be involved. Live and
learn.
>
> Other than that, it is both interesting and
laughable that spokesmen
and
> women of the BJP are today reduced to gurgitating
every single
argument that
> Muslims and civil rights organizations have to this
day voiced:
>
> --presume innocence until found guilty;
>
> --desist from the "political conspiracy" to malign a
whole community;
>
> --do not let enemies of the Hindu -right propagate
fake evidence
against
> them, since all evidence against them must be fake
in principle;
>
> --and most outlandishly, do not communalise
terrorism; that from
India's
> rank communalists who have done nothing but
communalise terrorism
ever since
> we remember!
>
> VI
>
> Even as these new developments point to a
potentially mortal combat
among
> "Hindu" and "Muslim" terror groups, I venture to
think that the
situation
> also offers opportunities of far-reaching redressal
for all three
axes that
> matter: the state and its agencies, the
party-political system, and
the
> polity generally.
>
> First off, if, as has been the case, the Congress's
secular
credentials have
> consistently been vitiated by, willy nilly, playing
second-fiddle to
> Hindu-communalist appeasement, the denuding of the
Hindu- right
offers it
> the opportunity of a lifetime to assert the
supremacy of the
Constitutional
> scheme of things, without fear or favour.
>
> It is indeed a circumstance that can now help the
Congress and other
secular
> parties to come down like a ton on communalism of
all shades that
underpin
> the fatal subversion of the secular republic without
the need for
apology.
>
> In this endeavour, its greatest inspiration must
come from two
factors on
> the Muslim side of the issue:
>
> one, that over the last year every single major and
influential
Muslim
> cultural and religious organization has publicly,
and repeatedly,
denounced
> through speech, act, and fatwa "terrorism" as
un-Islamic and a
rightful
> candidate for punishment under law;
>
> and, two, that without exception they have pleaded
only and ever for
fair
> and just treatment at the hands of the authorized
instruments of
state, both
> when victimized by pogroms and suspected as
culprits; and for
credible
> pursuit of those that persecute them.
>
> Not once has any Muslim organization worth the name
suggested that
Muslims
> have any claims that override the Cosntitutional
regime of laws and
> procedures pertaining to all citizens of the
Republic.
>
> All that in stark contrast to the refusal, however
camouflaged or
> strategised, of the RSS and its affiliates to accept
either the
secular
> Constitution or the notion of secular citizenship.
>
> It is to be recalled that the RSS tactically
acquiesced to
acknowledging the
> primacy of the national flag over its own saffron
one in 1949 as a
quid pro
> quo to its release from the ban imposed on it after
Gandhi's murder.
>
> To this day it seeks to overthrow the Republic as
Constituted by law
and to
> replace it by a theocratic Hindu Rashtra wherein the
prerogatives of
> citizenship will be determined not by secular,
democratic equality
but
> racial difference among Indians (all that brutally
codified in
Golwalker's
> two books, We, Our Ntionhood Defined; and, the later
Bunch of
Thoughts which
> explicitly designates Muslims as the nations's
"Enemy Number One" in
an
> exclusive chapter.)
>
> However Hindu cultural politics may have come to
infect sections of
the
> fattened urbanites, the Congress must show the
conviction that none
of these
> in this day and age would be willing to back what is
explicitly
"terrorist"
> activity, indistinguishable from any other, once the
matter is
proven.
>
> This then is a fine moment to release a new
energetic politics that
> recharges the conviction and inspiration of the
non-discriminatory
humanism
> that informed the leaders of the freedom movement,
and thus to
disengage
> whatever popular base the Hindu- right has built
over the years since
the
> demolition of the Babri mosque from its fascist
leaderships and
cadres.
>
> Just as, infact, many BJP supporters are busy
thinking whether they
are
> indeed willing to carry their love of Muslim-haters
quite to the
point where
> those other dreams of Indian super-powerdom are
seriously jeopardized
by a
> war of competing terrorisms.
>
> It is also a golden opportunity for the Congress-led
UPA, should it
come
> back to power, to take a hard look at the
communalist virus that has
> infected law-enforcement agencies over the decades,
and to make bold
to
> effect reforms of a far-reaching character, such as
include the
recruitment
> of Muslims and other "minorities" in due proportion
to the forces,
and not
> just among the lower ranks.
>
> Speaking of the army, some 3% Muslims are today
among its ranks—some
sixty
> years after Independence. And I won't make a guess
as to how abysmal
might
> infact be its share among the officer core, colonel
and above. And
wouldn't
> I dearly like to take a peek into what sort of
Indian History is
taught
> India's future officers at Khadakvasla and Dehradun.
Truly; and who
does the
> teaching as well.
>
> VII
>
> As to the BJP: it has another opportunity as well;
namely to
reconstitute
> itself as a secular party on the right, bearing full
allegiance to
the
> Constitution in letter and spirit (remember now that
among other
things on
> the street-level, the NDA regime led by the BJP did
constitute a
> Constitution Review Committee—an ominous enough move
that,
thankfully, was
> duly aborted in course), and shunning once and for
all its
enslavement to
> the RSS and its fascist vision of India, its
history, culture and
state.
>
> Failing to do so, the BJP may succeed in causing
further mayhem; but
it is
> highly unlikely now to attain the sort of ascendance
it seeks through
fair
> means and foul.
>
> Most of all, the BJP must understand that the
Muslims of India, and
> Christians as well, have the inalienable right to
live and work in
the
> country on the terms set by the Constitution, not by
the RSS or the
Sangh
> Parivar.
>
> And, conversely, that the BJP itself is as subject
to those
Constitutional
> stipulations as any another collective of Indians
who practice their
beliefs
> and politics.
>
> Let the BJP notice the epigraph chosen for this
column; it comes from
the
> new President-Elect of the one country that the BJP
adores. Or will
it now,
> with a black man at the helm?
>
> A different voice floats from there.
>
> Time for the BJP to change its langoti, and say "yes
we can" also be
> peaceable and law-abiding citizens of the Republic
of India. And to
prize
> and protect its magnificent plurality like all
sensible and humane
Indians.
>
>
> badri.raina@gmail.com


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

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[ALOCHONA] Poor Bangladesh

Dear Alochoks

This is my reply to a letter in the New Age blaming this CTG for all the political failures in Bangladesh.

Regards

Ezajur Rahman

Kuwait

 

 

20/11/08 Poor Bangladesh http://www.newagebd.com/2008/nov/20/oped.html#3

AKM Mohiuddin (November 18) blames the current government entirely for the condition of the country. Certainly it is to be blamed. But our two main political parties, both elected to government, share the greater blame. It is the stubbornness, selfishness and refusal to change on the part of our politicians that has caused these problems. We can blame the policeman for failing to catch the criminal. We can blame the social worker for not reforming the criminal. But it is the criminal who is ultimately responsible for his crimes —– even more when this criminal is elected to public office. It is not this government that has robbed the nation of hope –— it is our politicians who have robbed the nation of hope. At least we saw this government trying to fight Hasina and Khaleda —– and there is hope to be found in the fact that they even tried.
   Ezajur Rahman
   Kuwait

 

 

18/11/08 Poor Bangladesh http://www.newagebd.com/2008/nov/18/oped.html#3

What a mess the country is in today! There is total confusion and uncertainty in everything and an all-pervasive atmosphere of distrust prevails everywhere. The present government and the Election Commission through a series of ill-conceived and suspicious steps have brought the country to this sorry state. From the beginning they have been totally unrealistic and have displayed shocking arrogance and singular lack of humility. The result is that they have robbed the nation of all hope.
   AKM Mohiuddin
   Via e-mail

 

 


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The information in this email and any attachment are confidential and may also be legally privileged. It is intended solely for the addressee. If you are not the intended recipient, please inform the sender and delete this message and any attachment from your system. If you are not the intended recipient you must not copy this message or use it for any purpose or disclose the contents to any other person.

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[ALOCHONA] Benazir Bhutto's 'Reconciliation': Islam, Democracy, and the West

International Herald Tribune
 
Benazir Bhutto's 'Reconciliation': Islam, Democracy, and the West
 
 
 
Reconciliation Islam, Democracy, and the West By Benazir Bhutto 328 pages. $27.95. HarperCollins.
 
Benazir Bhutto called her 1989 autobiography "Daughter of Destiny," and when she was assassinated in December at 54, she became the fourth member of her immediate family to die violently against the backdrop of Pakistani intrigue and politics: her father, Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was hanged in 1979 on charges of having ordered the murder of a minor political opponent; her younger brother, Shahnawaz, mysteriously died of poisoning in 1985; and her other brother, Murtaza, was gunned down outside his home in 1996.
 
The head of the populist Pakistan Peoples Party, Bhutto was herself a charismatic and polarizing figure, who ran as a representative of democratic hopes, and her death underscored the instability of Pakistan — a nuclear-armed country deemed by many as the most dangerous place in the world — and the precarious state of politics in that nation, which headed to the polls on Monday in a vote that will determine the next prime minister.
 
In Bhutto's new book, "Reconciliation," a volume she finished days before she was killed, she lays out her vision of Islam as "an open, pluralistic and tolerant religion" that she says has been hijacked by extremists, and her belief that Islam and the West need not be headed on a collision course toward a "clash of civilizations."
 
If Bhutto's own life reads like a Greek tragedy, she was nonetheless a very modern politician, and the book she has written is part manifesto, part spin job, part selective history and part term-paper analysis. It shows Bhutto in the many guises the public in both the West and her native Pakistan came to know: an Oxford-educated debate champion, adept at invoking Spengler and T. S. Eliot to make her points; a savvy and self-dramatizing campaigner, adroit at charming members of the Washington power elite as well as the disenfranchised poor in Pakistan, whom she pledged to represent; a determined heir to her father's political legacy, who found duty turning over "years of pain, suffering, sacrifice and separation" into "an all consuming passion."
 
After a privileged childhood and a Western education at Radcliffe and Oxford, Pinkie, as Bhutto was known in her youth, returned home to Pakistan where her father was arrested by General Mohammad Zia ul-Haq in 1977. In "Reconciliation" Bhutto writes: "On the day my father was arrested, I changed from a girl to a woman. He would guide me over the next two years, cautioning me to remain focused and committed and never bitter. On the day he was murdered I understood that my life was to be Pakistan, and I accepted the mantle of leadership of my father's legacy and my father's party."
 
As head of the Pakistan Peoples Party, Bhutto was twice elected prime minister and twice expelled from office under charges of corruption, and she spent many years in exile abroad (in addition to some five years in prison and under house arrest). Her return to Pakistan in October 2007 was marked by terrible violence — at least 134 of her supporters were killed, and some 400 were wounded in bombings — that would prove to be a harrowing foreshadowing of the violence that took her life two months later.
 
It is Bhutto's contention in this book that dictatorship breeds extremism and that democracies — and here, she sounds a lot like President George W. Bush — "do not go to war with democracies" and "do not become state sponsors of terrorism.." She quotes passages from the Koran in support of her argument that Islam preaches tolerance and pluralism ("You shall have your religion, and I shall have my religion"), and she compares Osama bin Laden's "attempt to exploit, manipulate and militarize Islam" to terrorist acts committed by other religious fanatics: "whether Christian fundamentalists' attacks on women's reproductive clinics or Jewish fundamentalist attacks on Muslim holy sites in Palestine
 
Much of "Reconciliation" consists of history lessons, delivered from Bhutto's own unique perspective, about conflicting interpretations of Islamic doctrine, the Shia-Sunni schism and the debilitating legacy of Western colonialism in the Middle East. Bhutto takes the United States to task for its role in helping to overthrow the democratically elected government of Iran in 1953, arguing that this not only undermined the future of democratic government in that nation but also "made generations of Muslims suspicious and cynical about Western motivations."
 
She says that if the United States had not used Afghanistan as merely a "blunt instrument to trigger the implosion of the Soviet Union" and then abandoned it, history in the entire region might well have been very different. And she deems Iraq "a quagmire for the West and a great and unfolding tragedy for the people" of that country — a "colonial war in a postcolonial era" from which America cannot extricate itself.
 
When it comes to Pakistani history and her own role in it, Bhutto's account is considerably more problematic. She asserts that if her government "had continued for its full five-year term, it would have been difficult for Osama bin Laden to set up base in Afghanistan in 1997 when he established Al Qaeda to openly recruit and train young men from all over the Muslim world." Never mind that it was on her watch that the shadowy Pakistani intelligence service began actively promoting the Taliban in Afghanistan and recruiting young Islamic militants for its continuing struggle against India in Kashmir. Grandly equating herself with democracy in Pakistan, Bhutto also writes, "In 1998, two years after my overthrow, Al Qaeda declared war on America," and suggests that "the age of international terrorist war actually coincided with the suspension of democracy in Pakistan."
 
Also sprinkled throughout this book are accusations against the current Pakistani president, Pervez Musharraf, with whom she had reportedly been negotiating a power-sharing arrangement, promoted by the United States. Bhutto blames Musharraf's government for allowing a Taliban resurgence by pulling its own military out from North Waziristan in 2006. She writes that there were reports of "wide-spread rigging preparations" for the 2008 elections. And she accuses Musharraf's supporters of doing little to provide adequate security for her return to the country in the fall of 2007, accusations that would be revived by her supporters in the wake of her assassination.
 
Certainly she knew the risks of returning from exile. "I would have done anything to spare my children the same pain that I had undergone — and still feel — at my father's death," she writes. "But this was actually one thing I couldn't do; I couldn't retreat from the party and the platform that I had given so much of my life to."
 
Her platform, laid out in this volume as democracy in Pakistan and a vision of reconciliation between the Muslim world and the West, was an optimistic one in which globalization promotes tolerance, not resentment, and in which "modernization and extremism are contradictory and mutually exclusive." It was a platform deeply shaken by her own untimely death.
 
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/02/19/arts/bookmer.php

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Re: [ALOCHONA] 3 Bangladeshi killed in Panchagarh by BSF

BSF has killed more Bangladeshi people than the Bongobondhu's Rokhi bahini.

--- On Tue, 11/18/08, Mohd. Haque <haquetm83@yahoo.com> wrote:
From: Mohd. Haque <haquetm83@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [ALOCHONA] 3 Bangladeshi killed in Panchagarh by BSF
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, November 18, 2008, 2:33 AM

We must give blood to pay off our debt accrued in 1971.
 


--- On Mon, 17/11/08, Md. Aminul Islam <aminul_islam_ raj@yahoo. com> wrote:
From: Md. Aminul Islam <aminul_islam_ raj@yahoo. com>
Subject: [ALOCHONA] 3 Bangladeshi killed in Panchagarh by BSF
To: Amra-Bangladesi@ yahoogroups. com, notun_bangladesh@ yahoogroups. com, Bangladesh-Zindabad @yahoogroups. com, alochona@yahoogroup s.com, sonarbangladesh@ yahoogroups. com, WideMinds@yahoogrou ps.com, banglarnari@ yahoogroups. com, dahuk@yahoogroups. com, khabor@yahoogroups. com, vinnomot@yahoogroup s.com, faruquealamgir@ yahoo.com, ayubi_s786@yahoo. com, javediqbalkaleem@ yahoo.com, dreamer_hillol@ yahoo.com, chena_kew@yahoo. com, bdmailer@gmail. com, diagnose@yahoogroup s.com
Date: Monday, 17 November, 2008, 9:33 AM

3 killed in Panchagarh by BSF fire: official
Mon, Nov 17th, 2008 12:45 am BdST
Panchagarh, Nov 16 (bdnews24.com) – An infant, the mother and another Bangladeshi were killed late Sunday night by Indian Border Security Force men on the country's northernmost border, said a BDR official.

"The deceased were identified as 35 year-old Golam Mustofa, 25-year-old Majeda Begum and her one-year-old infant Mamun," Maj. Sheikh Farid, in-charge of Panchagarh-25 Battalion, told bdnews24.com.

At least one other person, Majeda's husband Shahidul, 30, was critically wounded and taken to Rangpur Medical College Hospital.

BSF personnel entered Moyanaguri village of the Majhipara border area in Tentulia, crossing near the frontier's Pillar-435 at around 10.15pm, the major said.

They started opening fire after villagers had intercepted them, he said.

Shahidul, Majeda and Mamun were shot as they lay asleep in their home, said villagers.

Shahidul's neighbour, Alamgir Hossain said: "I was woken by the sound of gunfire and realised it was BSF. I cycled to Matirpara BDR camp for help."

The Indian border guards eventually withdrew. "BDR members with villagers later captured one BSF man, who appeared drunk," the major said.

"Homes, riddled with bullet holes, were deserted as villagers took shelter at the local high school," bdnews24.com' s correspondent reported from the scene around midnight.

"Senior BDR officers are present at the scene. Both BDR and BSF have reinforced their presence along the border," Major Farid told bdnews24.com.



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[ALOCHONA] Ask No Questions

Ask No Questions

Baladas Ghoshal

A new pattern of military involvement in politics is emerging in Pakistan and Bangladesh, which could be called "power without accountability", a trend that bodes ill for their infant and fragile democracies. In Bangladesh, the military intervened ostensibly to correct the mess, to use army language, by propping up its cohorts in the form of a caretaker government.

Policy directions and actions of the new government are determined essentially by the armed forces. The Pakistani army has spread its tentacles in every department of the government and society and continues to exert its power in crucial matters of the state including sponsoring terror networks in the neighbourhood, no matter whether Pakistan remains a failed state and dangerous even for its own people.

The Bangladeshi military is fast imitating the Pakistani model, albeit in a different form, to place itself as an arbiter in each and every aspect of social, political and economic life of the country. Like in Pakistan, the army in Bangladesh does not necessarily have to come directly to power. It can wield effective power even while remaining in the background and constantly destabilise politics and deprive democratic forces the necessary political space.

The military-backed caretaker government took over on January 11, 2007 from its troubled constitutional government after unprecedented violence and political consternation. Since then, Bangladeshis have lived under a state of emergency: their constitutional rights have been suspended, civil liberties limited, and hundreds of thousands - ranging from former prime ministers to ad hoc peddlers - have been arrested under the excuse of "fighting corruption".

Instead of fulfilling a promise to establish better, truer democracy, the unelected government helped the process of the politicisation of the army blurring the lines between military and civilian administration. Islamism is a rising threat in Bangladesh and the present government has not taken any meaningful measures to combat the scourge. Instead of containing Islamism and paving the way for the blossoming of democracy, the current arrangement has not only reduced the space for the more established and relatively more secular parties but also helped to consolidate and strengthen Islamist movements, particularly the Jama'at and its ancillary organisations, which had always maintained close links with the military establishments.

The Bangladeshi jihadi outfit Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HuJI ) is suspected to be involved in last month's blasts in Assam. The HuJI is thought to maintain close ties to the Indian Mujahideen (IM), an indigenous terror group that has claimed responsibility for most of the recent bomb blasts across India.

In Pakistan, the victory of the two major political parties in the last elections and the formation of a civilian government, the exit of Musharraf and the seeming neutrality of the army chief, General Pervez Kiyani, in recent political developments, might have given a temporary respite to the country's fledgling democracy. But, the challenge of exercising civilian supremacy over the military still remains a formidable task, and the prospect of the military taking centre stage again cannot be ruled out as the political parties struggle hard to continue their marriage of convenience.

Even while a civilian government is in power, the army has since long established its supremacy in the political process and in foreign policymaking by its right to suspend an elected prime minister and keeping complete control over certain policy decisions like Kashmir, Afghanistan and nuclear weapons. Its intelligence unit, the ISI, continues to use Islamic terrorism as a foreign and defence policy tool and resists any kind of civilian oversight of its harmful and clandestine activities that have often boomeranged on Pakistan and wrecked its social, political and economic fabric.

The Pakistani military enjoys all the benefits and privileges of power and takes no responsibility for the direction in which Pakistan is headed. At every stage in Pakistan, the military subverted the process of democracy and rule of law, even though the political parties and groups may have contributed their own share in paving the way for the military for having such a critical role through their sheer opportunism and short-sightedness, and in using the military to promote their own goals vis-a-vis other parties.

The armed forces are major players in real estate, agribusiness and several other industries. The empire includes banks, cable TV companies, insurance agencies, sugar refineries, private security firms, schools, airlines, cargo services and textile factories. For instance, the Fauji Foundation is a "welfare trust" run by the defence ministry and spans 15 business enterprises. It provides jobs for retired officers, pays few taxes, and channels profits into a fund that is intended to benefit retired military personnel. And this is just one of the giant military-run foundations set up decades ago.

In Bangladesh, while the local elections were held in August and the Awami League swept the polls, the outcome of the scheduled national elections in December this year is still quite uncertain. If at all the current experiment of social and political engineering by the Bangladeshi military succeeds, though doubtful, it can always take credit for cleaning the mess. The responsibility for the failure can always be passed on to the caretaker government whose civilian facade has been kept deliberately to confuse and hoodwink the domestic constituency and the international community. Such a 'rule without accountability' obviously has both long- and short-term implications for political developments in developing countries.

The writer is visiting senior fellow, Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi.
 

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[ALOCHONA] Psychological impact of violence on Kashmiris in India

Psychological impact of violence on Kashmiris in India

By Kashif-ul-Huda
 
Twenty years of violence between Indian Army and Kashmiri militants has resulted in at least 20,000 deaths and 4,000 displaced, according to the government figures. But the toll is even greater in terms of psychological damage to the population. A recent study that looked at the psychological health found that a third of the study participants had contemplated suicide, a sign of extreme psychological distress.

The study published in the latest issue of peer reviewed journal "Conflict and Health" was conducted by organization Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF)'s, Simon Fraser University of Canada, and Utrecht University of Netherlands.

Study interviewed 510 Kashmiris living in Indian Kashmir. It found over one-third of respondents have symptoms of psychological distress and women show significantly higher level of distress. Feeling of insecurity was a major reason for the higher levels of psychological distress.

Survey was conducted in 2005 and includes 270 males and 240 females. The most striking finding of the study is that one-third of those surveyed had thought about ending their life in the past 30 days of the survey. The survey found that there was a difference in the reasons of psychological distress between males and females. Males who had self-experienced i.e. if they had been arrested, tortured, or abused show higher level of distress. Kashimiri women, on the other hand displayed psychological problem by just witnessing the events.

In the scientific paper the authors explain that "for males, violation of modesty, forced displacement, and disability were all associated with a significantly increased likelihood (three times the odds) of suffering from psychological distress. For women, the witnessing of people being killed or tortured or dependency on outside assistance doubled the odds of suffering psychological distress."

The data tabulated in the paper is very shocking when you consider that 63% of the respondents have seen wounded people. 40% have witnessed people being killed, 67% have seen other being tortured and 13% have witnessed rape.

44% of the respondents experienced being abused and 11% claimed that their modesty was violated.

The level of psychological problem was found to be much higher than similar studies done elsewhere in India and even when the cutoff score was set to a conservative standard. When the cutoff score was lowered to the Indian study the psychological distress was found to be over 71%.

Though one-third reported having suicidal thoughts, it does not always result in a suicide attempt. But according to one estimate about 60,000 Kashmiris did commit suicide, last year.

Withdrawing themselves or isolating themselves was the most preferred way of coping with the psychological problem. About half of them showed aggressive behavior. Many turned to religion as a source of support and finding peace.

Even though Kashmir lacks proper mental health care facility, still, over 60% of the respondents visited the health clinic to seek help. Some visited more than once in the 30 days immediately before the study interview, and women found to be visiting health facilities more than men.

The impact of violence, threat, and alertness has adversely affected armed forces too. Elevated level of psychological problem is seen among Indian Army personnel deployed in Kashmir. Past January, Indian Army hired 400 psychiatrists to help control the high numbers of suicides in its ranks.

Government should spend more money in improving mental health care facilities for the people and the soldiers. Those fighting this battle for Kashmir should stop and see what this battle for land is doing to the people living on this land.

Kashif-ul-Huda
(The author is the Editor of news website: www.TwoCircles.net)
E Mail : ramakantbobby@gmail.com
http://newsfrombangladesh.net/view.php?hidRecord=231848

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[mukto-mona] FW: [TriTioMatra] Fw: Who Is Barack Obama?

Who is this man Barack and where did he come from? A picture is worth a thousand words!


http://www.barackobama.com/downloadsv2/files/posters/obama_i_want_you.pdf http://my.barackobama.com/page/-/MyBO Resource Center/Videos/20070529_IowaHealthCare.mov  http://my.barackobama.com/page/-/MyBO Resource Center/Videos/Oakland_Full-you tube.mp4  http://www.barackobama.com/downloadsv2/files/posters/obama_08.p! df
 



Obama Photo Gallery



 WHERE DID HE COME FROM?


FATHER and  MOTHER


MOTHER and SON


 

FATHER and SON

Barack Obama Sr. poses with his son in the Honoluluairport

during Obama Sr.'s only visit to see his son while he was

growing up in Hawaii. Young Barack was in the 5th grade

when the photo was taken




Barack Obama Sr., a native of Kenya, met his future wife while they were students at the Universityof Hawaii. In 1963, he essentially abandoned his family to continue his studies at Harvard.



Grandparents and Mom



THE DUNHAMS: precocious, self-assured

Stanley Ann (left); her impetuous father,

who named his only child after himself;
her mother, Madelyn, the quiet, firm
influence in the home.



At their home in Jakarta, Ann Dunham poses in this undated photo with her second husband, Lolo Soetoro, their daughter, Maya, and Barack Obama.




Mom, Sister and Barack






WHAT ARE GRANDPARENTS?


 



Barack Obama with his maternal grandparents, Stanley and Madelyn Dunham during a 1982 visit to New York, where Obama was attending Columbia.   (Courtesy of The Obama Family



Barack Obama walks with his grandmother Sarah Hussein Obama at his father's house in Nyongoma Kogelo village, western Kenya, in Aug. 2006.   (AP file)







Barack Obama with his grandmother, Sarah Hussein Obama, in Africa  (Courtesy)





 



In this Obama Family photo ares: (bottom row, from left) half-sister Auma, her mother Kezia Obama, Obama's step-grandmother Sarah Hussein Onyango Obama and unknown; (top row, from left) unknown, Barack Obama, half-brother Abongo (Roy) Obama, and three unknowns.   (Courtesy of the Obama Family)



FATHER


Barack Obama as a toddler.


(Courtesy of Barack Obama)

(



 


Barack Obama as a child.   (Courtesy of Barack Obama)




Barack walks along WaikikiBeachshortly before he and his mother moved from Hawaiito Indonesiato live with her second husband, Lolo Soetoro, in 1967.




Barack poses with his mother, Ann, half
sister, Maya, and maternal grandfather
Stanley Dunham in Hawaiiin the early
1970s after the family returned from I

ndonesia. Neighbors remember the
close relationship between young

Barack and his grandfather
.







 





A page from Barack Obama's senior yearbook features his personalized message to family, friends and teammates. (Photo from The Oahuan yearbook / March 23, 2007)



Barack Obama hugs his younger half sister Maya at his high school graduation





Barack Obama shakes hands during his graduation ceremony from PunahouSchoolin 1979. While in his early teens, Obama chose to stay at the school and live with his grandparents after his mother decided to move back to Jakarta, Indonesia
.


At his high school graduation, Barack Obama gets a hug from his grandmother Madelyn as his grandfather Stanleybeams. His maternal grandparents raised Obama in Hawaiiwhile his mother was living in Indonesia.



Maya Soetoro-Ng, Barack Obama's half sister, teaches her Education in American Society class at the Universityof Hawaii
.



The wedding day of Barack Obama Jr. and Michelle LaVaughn Robinson......   (Courtesy of the Obama Family)









Barack and  first born



THE FAMILY













Quotations


'Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate.
Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure.
It is our light, not our darkness, that most frightens us.

We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, and fabulous?

Actually, who are you not to be?
You are a child of God.
Your playing small doesn't serve the world.
There's nothing enlightened about shrinking so
that other people won't feel insecure around you.
We are all meant to shine, as children do.
We are born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us.
It's not just in some of us, it's in everyone.
And as we let our own light shine,
we unconsciously give other
people permission to do the same.
As we are liberated from our own fear,
our presence automatically liberates others.'




 



Barack and Michelle



       
http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid452323111?KeepThis=true&TB_iframe=true&height=280&width=270 http://link......brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid474445759?KeepThis=true&TB_iframe=true&height=280&width=270



 

   
 

Be sure to share!



OBAMA '08
 





 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 
 



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Daily Star publishes an interview with Mukto-Mona
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Mukto-Mona Celebrates 5th Anniversary
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Mukto-Mona Celebrates Earth Day:
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Earth_day2006/index.htm

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


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

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


Mukto-Mona Celebrates Darwin Day:

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

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Some FAQ's about Mukto-Mona:

http://www.mukto-mona.com/new_site/mukto-mona/faq_mm.htm

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

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




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