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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

[ALOCHONA] A Proven Approach to Make Bangladesh Strong and Invincible

A Proven Approach to Make Bangladesh Strong and Invincible
 
By Dr. David Leffler, USA
 

"All truth passes through three stages.
First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed.
Third, it is accepted as being self-evident."
-- Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)
 
Ex-premier and Awami League President Sheikh Hasina believes in building a "strong and invincible" defense system for protecting Bangladesh's independence and sovereignty. ("Armed Forces Day ," The Daily Star, November 21, 2008). This goal is noble. Bangladesh should strive to become invincible. However, ultimately the only way to become truly invincible is not to have any enemies. If there are no internal or external threats, there are no enemies. No enemies, no conflict.

But how could such an ideal goal be achieved in Bangladesh where tensions are often high? A proven scientifically validated approach is needed to reduce tensions.

Despite its advanced technology and valiant efforts, the Bangladesh armed forces struggle to eliminate violent extremism. Violent extremism is a human problem requiring human solutions. The underlying cause of extremist social violence is accumulated social stress. Therefore, to eliminate such social problems, the Bangladesh armed forces need to reduce the collective societal stress in Bangladesh.

Extensive scientific research indicates that the best way to reduce collective societal stress, eliminate extremism and thereby snuff out war and terrorism, is to adopt an ancient strategy. Maharishi Mahesh Yogi has revived the ancient Vedic technology of Invincible Defence Technology (IDT) in a non-religious manner. It has been quietly and successfully used by members of many faiths to eliminate conflict in the past.

A Prevention Wing of the Military consisting of less than 3% of the military of Bangladesh could achieve this goal. This special unit would be trained in the Transcendental Meditation (TM) and TM-Sidhi programs. The unit would practice these techniques in large groups, twice a day.

Extensive research shows that the size of the group needed to reduce social stress depends on population size. It needs to be at least the square root of 1% of the population. To calculate this number, multiply the population size by 0.01, and then take the square root of the result. For instance, the population of Bangladesh is approximately 146 million. 146,600,000 x 0.01 =1,466,000. The square root of 146,600,000 is approximately 1,211, so a group of at least 1,211 IDT experts is needed. Studies show that when the threshold is crossed, the "Maharishi Effect" takes place.

Crime goes down, quality of life indices go up, and war and terrorism abate. For instance, a Maharishi Effect intervention was studied in the US capital in 1993. Predictions were lodged in advance with government leaders and newspapers. An independent Project Review Board approved the research protocol. Crime fell 23 percent below the predicted level when the group size reached its maximum. Temperature, weekend effects, and previous trends in the data failed to account for changes. Social Indicators Research (1999, vol. 47, 153-201) published the results.

Over 50 studies have shown that IDT works. The causal mechanism for IDT is not completely understood. However, a Journal of Social Behavior and Personality (2005, vol. 17, #1, pp. 339-373) study offers a proposed explanation of causality of IDT in biological terms. Research conducted on the powerful neurotransmitter serotonin shows that it produces feelings of contentment, happiness and even euphoria. Low levels of serotonin, according to research, correlate with violence, aggression, and poor emotional moods. The IDT study showed that higher numbers of IDT experts correlated with other community members having a marked increase in serotonin production. These results were statistically significant and followed the attendance figures. This offers a plausible neurophysiologic mechanism to explain reduced hostility and aggression in society at large.

The Maharishi Effect has also been documented world-wide in a study published in the Journal of Offender Rehabilitation (2003, vol. 36., #1-4, 283-302) using data provided by the Rand Corporation. When large assemblies of IDT experts exceeded the Maharishi Effect threshold for the world during the years 1983-1985, terrorism decreased globally 72%, international conflict decreased 33%, and violence was reduced in other nations without intrusion by other governments.

The military in Mozambique used IDT to end its civil war in the 1990s. Today, The Netherlands, Bolivia, Colombia, Trinidad and Tobago, and Peru have enough practitioners of the TM-Sidhi program to create the Maharishi Effect. The United States of America is close to achieving the requisite number of IDT experts through the Invincible America Assembly in Fairfield, Iowa. And India is working on a global project. These are all civilian groups. The pilot project in Mozambique dissolved after the United Nations broke up the military as part of the civil war treaty. High school students, who will graduate and move on, make up the bulk of the practitioners in Colombia. Limited economic opportunities in Iowa have hindered the development of the group in the USA. Long-term civilian groups may not be reliable.

The armed forces of Bangladesh are responsible for protecting Bangladesh, and are obligated to thoroughly examine realistic, scientifically proven methods for ending war and terrorism.

Since the Bangladesh military is funded and its personnel are paid to perform their duties, it is not subject to the fluctuations of donors, jobs, graduations, and optional activities. Military members are paid to protect the nation. Ultimately, it is the duty of the Bangladesh military to build a Prevention Wing of the Military and make Bangladesh truly invincible.

About the author:
Dr. David Leffler, an eight-year United States Air Force veteran, is now the Executive Director at the Center for Advanced Military Science (CAMS) at the Institute of Science, Technology and Public Policy www.StrongMilitary.org, an organization in the United States that advocates prevention-oriented technologies for the military.E Mail :
dr@invinciblemilitary.org

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[ALOCHONA] Fw: Students Must Learn To Coexist With Others --Asia Post, Dhaka, editorial dated 26.11.08

 
-----

Students Must Learn To Coexist With Others  

Press has repirted that Students of a Dhaka University hall of residence vandalized makeshift tea stalls in front of Dhaka Medical College Hospital following police action on four students during an altercation with a teal stall owner on Monday.   The students of Shahidullah Hall also set a police van on fire after the arrest of their four mates by the law enforcers at Dhaka Medical College Hospital camp.  According to witnesses, four residents of the hall — Hamidur Rahman, Ahmed Saki, Mamun and Ejaj — locked in an altercation with the owner of the tea stall over a trifle matter.  As a plainclothes policeman of the camp interfered, the students picked a quarrel with him. 'Seeing it, other policemen came to the scene and picked up the four students, who were hospitalized after being roughed up by the law enforcers at the camp,' alleged Hedayet, a resident of the hall. Informed, residents of the hall rushed to the emergency unit of the hospital and damaged all the tea stalls on the footpath in front of the hospital. The agitating students set fire to the police van in front of their dormitory. However, police remained silent during the incident. Fire fighters put off the flames.

We have recently noticed that students get involved in fighting with shop keepers, local people or neighboring villages of the educational institutions. We have seen ythis several times between Dhaka college students and nearby shop owners .We have seen this in Rajshahi university  students and villagers around and in many other places. Student intolerance is increasing. They fight among themselves on flimsy ground and now this new development. We ask the parties who control these student organizations to do something about them. They think them above law and also above other sections of society. This is bad and they must know how to co-exist with others.
 

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[ALOCHONA] Ignoring India's 'republic of hunger'

Ignoring India's 'republic of hunger'

The BBC's Soutik Biswas travels to the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, one of six states holding key elections, and asks why malnutrition has not been a major issue with politicians.
 
 
Sanju with his mother
 
 
Villager Tulsa says she cannot breast feed 18-month-old Sanju much "because I have very little milk". Photos: Soutik Biswas

When did baby Richa finally fall silent? Social workers direct the question about the three-year-old girl to an extended family living in a mud-and-thatch hut in the bleak landscape of Jamoda in Madhya Pradesh. It is the country's second biggest state in size and also one of its poorest.
The workers belong to a group that is raising the issue of chronic hunger and malnutrition. "She died recently. She had measles. The quack gave her an injection, but she did not survive," says Kolai Bai, grandmother of the dead girl, matter-of-factly. She is now left with six grandchildren.
MADHYA PRADESH
Date of election: 27 November
Counting of votes: 8 December
Total constituencies: 230
Total voters: 36054717
Total candidates: 3179

In these parts, more and more children like Richa are "falling silent" because of diseases associated with malnutrition and hunger.
 
But their deaths remain cold statistics; they largely escape the attention of political parties battling to win the upcoming state elections. Groups like the Right to Food Campaign insist that malnutrition is chronic in vast swathes of Madhya Pradesh.
 
Some 325 children, they say, have died of diarrhoea, measles and acute respiratory distress - diseases typically associated with severe malnutrition - in just four districts between May and October this year.
More worryingly, they say, the government is in complete denial.
Authorities blame illegal doctors for making matters worse and say the children are dying of diseases common elsewhere in India.
 
 
Jamoda village
Children in the tribal countryside suffer from malnutrition most

However, the first India State Hunger Index (Ishi) this year found that Madhya Pradesh had the most severe level of hunger in India, comparable to Chad and Ethiopia.
 
Even federal health surveys show that 60% of children under the age of six in the state are malnourished - more than 12% of these severely so.
The Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, which rules the state, does not mention the issue in its manifesto. The opposition Congress party takes note of it and promises to make Madhya Pradesh a "malnourishment-free" state if voted into power.
 
Life struggle
Jamoda is one of the 20 villages in Khandwa district where 62 children have died from diseases associated with severe malnutrition in two months alone - September and October - according to investigations by an NGO engaged with the Right to Food Campaign.
 
A child health community centre in Jamdoba
The derelict child feeding centres point to the neglect of children
Many other children are struggling to stay healthy and alive. Eighteen-month-old Sanju Silale is one of them. The boy has bone for arms and legs and has already lost an eye to measles. He lets out a dull, incessant cry from his mother's lap.
 
The mother, Tulsa, says she lost her earlier child, a boy, when he was two years old. The father, Kamal, is away working on a farm in a neighbouring district because work is scarce in Jamoda.
 
"I could not breast feed my boy and he died. These days I cannot breast feed Sanju much because I have very little milk," Tulsa says.
 
In the dark recesses of another village hut, one-year-old girl Drupta weighs merely 2.5kg and coughs incessantly in her mother's arms.
 
"There's not enough food at home to feed an infant. Parents go out looking for work, leaving the children at home who end up sharing a roti (Indian flatbread) between them," says a family member.
 
Tribal decline
Why is there so much hunger and malnutrition in Madhya Pradesh's tribal countryside? It is partly to do with the decline of the tribal way of life in India - the relationship between the animist tribespeople and forests is under threat.
 
Forests are being denuded and laws prohibit tribespeople from hunting and freely growing their crops in whatever is left.
A political party flag atop a hut in Jamdoba
The tribespeople say political parties do little for them
This, say social activists like Prakash Michael, has meant the dietary habits of tribespeople have changed from indigenous coarse cereals and game meat to the more "mainstream" mix of rice, bread and vegetables, which they mostly end up buying from the markets.
 
With farm incomes stagnating because of soaring prices for fertiliser and seed -combined with lower prices for crops - there is less money to buy food. Most families here earn less than 1,000 rupees ($22) a month.
 
To make matters worse, the state-run "ration shops" selling cheap rice and wheat as part of India's notoriously fickle and porous "public distribution system" have cut supplies from 35kg of rice and wheat per family per month two years ago to 20kg.
 
That's not all. The shops - essential to feed the poor - open three days a month these days instead of eight days a month earlier. (Last month, authorities, reacting to the deaths of children, ordered the local shops to open every day).
 
So if you miss going to the shop on the day it opens, you could end up going without food for a week or more. "We should give a serious thought to why malnutrition is rife only among the tribal children in the state," says Prakash Michael.
 
Drupta with her mother
Baby Drupta weighs merely 2.5kg and coughs incessantly
Jamoda offers a few grim clues. They point to the marginalisation of tribespeople in a state where they comprise nearly 20% of the 60 million population.
 
Set in a largely parched and stony countryside, it is home to some 450 families of indigenous Korku tribespeople - they comprise 80% of the 130,000 people living in the district's 147 villages.
 
The nearest government health clinic is 12km (8 miles) away, the nearest hospital 16km away. Most forests in the neighbourhood have been cut down.
 
The derelict state child-care centre, run by community workers, points to India's neglect of its children: the kitchen has no utensils or stove, doors and windows are missing, the roof is creaky and leaking and the unfinished floor is covered with stones and crude tiles.
 
"We give out packed food to 30-40 children here three times a day. We have no utensils to cook. We have to be careful about children who sit on the floor because there is no flooring and poisonous insects come out," says the centre's worker, Sushila Patil.
 
Many tribal children end up in local hospitals with hunger-related diseases.
"There," a local tribesperson says, "many doctors refuse to treat us because they find us dirty and smelly." So who will the people of Jamoda vote for in the upcoming elections - the lotus (the symbol of the BJP) or the hand (Congress)?
 
A BJP tribal candidate has been winning elections in the area for the past few years without any competition, and a few saffron party flags fly weakly atop some of the huts.
 
Village elder Budhia Pati says they will vote for the party their neighbours do. Somebody has even told her that if she votes for Congress she would not be able to sell firewood any longer.
 
"Anyway, I will vote for somebody. Does it really matter? Voting for a party doesn't really bring any gain, does it?," she asks wryly.
 
Map
 
 

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[ALOCHONA] 39 parties get registered with EC

39 parties get registered with EC
 
The Election Commission on Sunday wrapped up registration of political parties declaring 39 parties eligible for the stalled ninth parliamentary elections, showing a sharp fall in the number of participants from the previous four elections since 1991.(The Newage)

The number of parties is less than the previous elections because of their registration, sources in EC said, adding many unfamiliar and 'letterhead-based' political parties would become active before general elections or during political instabilities in the past.

A total of 107 political parties had applied for registration to the EC, which turned down applications of 68. Thirteen of the 68 parties requested for reviewing their applications, but the EC declined to do so before the ninth parliamentary polls, scheduled for December 29.

The 39 parties that get registered with the EC are Bangladesh Awami League, Bangladesh Nationalist Party, HM Ershad-led Jatiya Party, Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami, Communist Party of Bangladesh, Workers Party of Bangladesh, Jatiya Party-JP, led by Anwar Hossain Manju, Bangladesh Jatiya Party-BJP, led by Andalib Rahman, Bangladesh Jatiya Party, led by MA Matin, Liberal Democratic Party, Bangladesh Samyabadi Dal (ML), Krishak Sramik Janata League, Ganatantri Party, Bangladesh National Awami Party, Bikalpadhara Bangladesh, Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal (Jasad), led by Hasanul Huq Inu, Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal—JSD, led by Nur-e-Alam Ziku, Zaker Party, Bangladesh Samajtantrik Dal, Bangladesh Tarikat Federation, Bangladesh Khelafat Andolon, Bangladesh Muslim League, National Peoples Party, Jamiyote Ulamaye Islam Bangladesh, Gono Forum, Gono Front, Progotishil Ganatantrik Dal, Bangladesh National Awami Party-Bangladesh NAP, Oikyaboddho Nagorik Andolon, Islami Front Bangladesh, Bangladesh Kalyan Party, Islami Oikya Jote, Bangladesh Khelafat Majlish, Islami Andolon Bangladesh, Bangladesh Islami Front, Jatiya Ganatantrik Party, Bangladesher Biplobi Workers Party, Khelafat Majlish, led by Mohammad Ishak, and Freedom Party.

Fourteen political parties participated in the 1973 parliamentary polls and all the parties got registered this time. The number rose to 28 in 1986, 75 in the 1991 general elections, 41 in the controversial February 1996 polls, 81 in the June 1996 elections and 54 parties has contested in the 2001 polls.

In the 1991 parliamentary polls, 90 political parties were allocated election symbols and 75 of them nominated candidates. In the last general elections held on October 1, 2001, the number of parties winning symbols rose to 94 and of them 54 parties and alliances participated in the polls.

Parties that exist only on papers never won any seat in parliamentary elections and it has been reported many times that these parties often sell their polling agents to major political parties during elections.

An analysis of the results of three general elections held in 1991, (June) 1996 and 2001 shows a gloomy picture of the strength of smaller political parties. They polled less than four per cent of votes cast in the last general elections against the percentage of votes cast for four leading parties –Awami League, BNP, Jatiya Party and Jamaat-e-Islami.

In the 1996 polls, only three parties (AL, BNP and Jamaat) fielded candidates in all the 300 parliamentary constituencies while JP nominated 293 candidates. None but three of the remaining 115 parties who were allocated election symbols fielded candidates for even one-third of the constituencies.

Number of candidates of most of the parties, excepting for the four major ones, in the previous elections were between 3 and 19.

A total of 2,574 candidates had participated in the June 1996 general elections and 1,730 of them, mostly belonging to small political parties, lost deposits. The percentage of the candidates losing deposit was 69.32.

A total of 1,939 candidates of 54 political parties took part in the October 2001 general elections and 1,259, mostly smaller party candidates, lost deposits. The percentage of the candidates losing deposit was 64.93.

http://www.newagebd.com/front.html#4

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[mukto-mona] Allah Plays with His Souls

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RE: [ALOCHONA] Re: Please pray for Bangladesh

re: gen. shakeel's wife
----------------------------


What happened with this news?
any folow up?
or is it a possibility...a bunch of irresponsible people, are trying to discredit Army + gen. moeen?

dr. maqsud omar







To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
From: m_musa92870@yahoo.com
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 2008 19:03:49 +0000
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Re: Please pray for Bangladesh

To our honorable violent and arrogant chamcha of War Criminal Jamaatis,
Before spreading further lies, can you provide us any proof of your following allegations during AL's 1996-2001 rule?  It is indeed your empress who said, "There will be no Azaan in the Masjid if AL gets elected.  There will be only uloo dhoni from there."  You really now sound like your madam queen. 
Instead of trying to evade a legitimate question of one alochok ,"Do you thing the trial of war criminals is a bad thing?" and making more pechal, why don't you honestly answer that?  Are you scared of exposing yourself further?  To cool down your violent soul, we want to see all the corrupt politicians punished.  That is a big difference between a violent and arrogant person like you and us.  We want to punish all types of criminals.  Just because somebody like your people  deceiving us with beards, jobbas or tupis doesn't mean they will get free pass to do whatever they want.  May Allah make us better human beings first and remove hypocrisy from our hearts. 
"Lo! God changeth not the condition of a folk until they (first) change that which is in their hearts;" (Al Qura'n: Chapter 13: Verse 11)
--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, maqsud omaba <maqsudo@...> wrote:
>
>
> TO: all the dedicated and violent...AL 'chamchas' of this site
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Can you please forecast 10 success stories for AL. in the next 20 years, once Hasina and her desendents
> become PM of Bangladesh?
>
> What you morons will do...when Bdeshi economy will be shattered and the country will be looted by NEW sk. moni, naser, and saeed hossains?
>
> What kind of fun Bdeshis should get....when AL thugs try to abolish simple muslim traditions, manners from the life of an average Bangladeshi.....redicule anybody who prays 5 times a day/ no place
> for "As sala mi alaikum & khoda hafez" / Parliament sessions start + end with Joy bangla....no Bismillah..../ call all the bearded people as " razakars & al-kaeda"/ no place of islamic education for
> young people/ suck the toes of indian friends...as much as possible, to become " Intellectuals & cultured"".
>
> dr. maqsud omar
>
>
>
>
>
>
> To: dahuk@yahoogroups.com; Amra-Bangladesi@yahoogroups.com; notun_bangladesh@yahoogroups.com; Bangladesh-Zindabad@yahoogroups.com; alochona@yahoogroups.com; sonarbangladesh@yahoogroups.com; WideMinds@yahoogroups.com; banglarnari@yahoogroups.com; khabor@yahoogroups.com; vinnomot@yahoogroups.com; faruquealamgir@...; ayubi_s786@...; javediqbalkaleem@...; dreamer_hillol@...; chena_kew@...; bdmailer@...; diagnose@yahoogroups.com
> From: aminul_islam_raj@...
> Date: Fri, 21 Nov 2008 03:22:42 -0800
> Subject: [ALOCHONA] Re: [Dahuk]: Please pray for Bangladesh
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Dear Madam, Many thanks.We passing through a very crutial moments.All conspirtors are united and active against our motherland.Only Allah can protect us.But We all should try to do sometihng. At lest we can pray to allah. We3 dont want to be province of a country which deny all rights of the minorities.Where killing of muslims by the state is dal vat.
>
> Dalia Satter dalia_satter@... wrote: Dear
> Members, You all are aware that our beloved country is going to sink in the sea of long lasting turmoil if the current political problem is not solved. The best result will be an election without wide acceptance and resulting agitation from BNP and its alliances. However, expecting it will be too optimistic. There might be army takeover. The result will be a definite 2/3 majority for Awami League. Our experience is not very good with AL's 2/3 majority. It happened once in our history and the result was disastrous. If it happens this time, AL will try its best to root out the nationalist force. India will not loose this opportunity to dismantle army. The international community will allow these activities if they can be convinced that theses are done to fight Islamists. It will surely drive the country to a civil war like situation. An election with the participation
> of all major parties can only prevent this unwanted situation. The CTG seems to be unwilling to bring BNP into election. BNP is also reluctant to sacrifice. In this situation, we the common people does not have anything to do other than praying to God. I request the members to make special prayer to Allah so that He protects our country. Allah's design overrides everything. Best regards. Dalia Satter
>

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