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Sunday, August 23, 2009

[ALOCHONA] Govt takes on terror socially, politically



Ansar-VDP assigned to monitor militancy at grassroots; imams join campaign

 
Recognising the fact that anti-militant drive is not enough to uproot the evil of extremism from the society, the government has launched a massive socio-political campaign, involving 14 different agencies, to educate people and closely monitor militant activities at the grassroots level.

This campaign heavily involves the 3.5 lakh strong Bangladesh Ansar and Village Defence Party (VDP) for the first time as the networks of the two agencies are spread even to the remotest parts of the country where neither Rapid Action Battalion (Rab) nor police have regular access.

With the state minister for home affairs spearheading the drive, the government has taken up various innovative initiatives to make people aware about the destructive nature of extremism. The initiatives include holding campaigns, screening documentaries, training imams of mosques, organising anti-militancy campaigns at madrasas and others.

Under the initiative imams will be trained to present sermons against militancy prior to Juma prayers. "This has already begun in Dhaka and some other parts of the country," said Home Secretary Abdus Sobhan Sikder.

Another aspect of the drive is to involve unemployed youths in various development work and different trades through small loans. Religious educational institutions will be closely monitored.

The drive is the culmination of initiatives by various agencies that have opined that armed drives against militancy is not enough to uproot or contain militant threats. Following a series of meetings since 2007, the Awami League government formed a high-powered committee on April 20 headed by the then state minister for home Sohel Taj. However, after holding two meetings the committee has remained inactive since Taj's resignation from the ministry.

Now with Shamsul Haque Tuku taking charge as the state minister for home affairs, the committee resumed the drive through a meeting earlier this month. It has been decided that the committee will hold a meeting every month.

Other members of the committee are secretaries of the ministries of home, education, law, religious affairs, social welfare, LGRD and cooperatives, and information, the inspector general of police, chiefs of Directorate General of Forces Intelligence, Bangladesh Rifles, Ansar and VDP, National Security Intelligence and Rapid Action Battalion and the director general of Prime Minister's Office.

Each of these ministries and authorities has been given specific tasks. For instance, the religious affairs ministry will assign the Islamic Foundation to motivate imams against militancy while the LGRD ministry will discuss the issue of militancy at the meetings of district and upazila law and order committees.

The foreign ministry, although not a part of the committee, has been given the task to brief and update the international communities, donors and development partners about the government's positive steps to eradicate militancy.

Explaining why Ansar and VDP have been integrated with the drive, Home Secretary Abdus Sobhan Sikder told The Daily Star, "Each Ansar-VDP team has 36 female and 36 male members. They have been greatly helping the Rab and police in arresting members of Jama'atul Mujahideen Bangladesh and other militants.

"Since Ansar-VDP members interact with villagers very closely, they are the first ones to notice strangers in a village or if newcomers are doing anything suspicious," he said..

The information ministry has prepared a documentary, highlighting the negative impacts of militancy. The ministry will begin screening the documentary at the village level across the country.

"Militancy has now become a social problem that cannot be contained by only Rab or police or journalists," said Rab's intelligence wing Director Commander MAK Azad. "This needs an all-out socio-political drive."

The 9,000-strong Rab has been spearheading the anti-militancy drive following the countrywide explosions carried out by the JMB on August 17, 2005. As of now it has arrested 516 JMB members including 10 top leaders and its chief of information technology. The Rab also arrested six Harkat-ul-Jihad members. Besides it recovered huge arms and ammunition including 452 hand grenades.

Rab's legal and media wing Deputy Director Shakhawat Hossain notes that the country's poor socio-economic condition and religious sensitivity make its people vulnerable to religious exploitations. The exploiters also interpret national interests to best suit their purpose as the nation is also politically sharply divided. In such a situation, the country remains a breeding ground of militancy that needs to be dealt with from various fronts.

"For instance, we need to improve the teaching materials at madrasas instead of ignoring them. At first, we may involve some strategic madrasas. Young minds should be properly enlightened," Shakhawat said.
 



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[ALOCHONA] The state of nuclear in Bangladesh



The state of nuclear in Bangladesh
 
Authorities in Bangladesh continue to plan and prepare to introduce nuclear power, but deny they have reached terms with Russia's Rosatom atomic energy corporation to build the reactor.
 
Mohammed Muzammel Haque, chief engineer at the Bangladesh Atomic Energy Commission (BAEC), claims Bangladesh has opted to build a 1100 MWe plant. But neither the time frame for completion nor the technology supplier for the long-planned plant at Rooppur, western Bangladesh plant have been decided. 
 
"We are still exploring all the options as regards reactor technology," he told World Nuclear News. This appears to contradict suggestions from Russia's Rosatom that it had secured the order to supply reactors to the plant. After a meeting in Dhaka in May, visiting Rosatom deputy director general Nikolay Spasskiy said the Bangladesh government had decided on Rosatom technology, with only payment scheduling left to be negotiated.
 
Russia is the latest of several countries – the others being China, France, India and USA - with whom Dhaka has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) on nuclear cooperation ahead of the hoped-for power plant, which could in theory break ground in just a few years. The year 2010 has been previously suggested by Yeafesh Osman, state minister at the Bangladesh Ministry of Science, Information & Communications Technology, speaking at an April conference in Beijing, China.
  
Much debate has swelled around the technical specifications for a plant at Rooppur, which was first conceived in 1963, with current costs estimated by Osman at $2 billion. But the pressure is now on the Bangladeshi government: candle stubs on the footpaths and staircases of Dhaka's business district Mohtijheel hint at the dire power shortages which have been blamed with losing this country $1 billion a year in GDP. Electricity demand is rising by 6% a year in Bangladesh..
  
Given that alternatives are limited - apart from limited reserves of natural gas and hard-to-mine coal - there appears to be popular and political support for the Rooppur nuclear station. Current prime minister Sheikh Hasina's late husband was a nuclear scientist and leading proponent of Rooppur during his stint as chairman of the BAEC.
  
A government white paper published this summer however also suggests her administration has been exploring alternatives to nuclear energy: the extraction of local coal supplies – long environmentally sensitive – is included in a Ministry of Energy & Mineral Resources plan to have 7000 MWe generation capacity in place by 2014. Smaller coal power stations would contribute 2000 MWe of that.
 
Raising money for a Rooppur plant also remains a worry. Local economists have suggested privatisation of the country's power sector would attract sufficient investment from overseas venture capital and pension funds to complete the nuclear plant. Others point to soft loans from Bangladesh's chief regional patron, China: Dhaka recently requested $2 billion from Beijing for major infrastructure projects, among which was listed a $150 million request for Rooppur.
 
The government's various nuclear diplomacy gambits seem designed to create the kind of pool of expertise that Bangladesh will need to build and run a nuclear plant. A $67,000 International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) grant has been secured to train 40 personnel.
 



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RE: [ALOCHONA] C. Raja Mohan: Jaswant, Jinnah and the South Asian Zero Sum Game




Thank you for sending this to the Forum members. The heart of the discussion will again go back to the same crucial question if the partition of India was a right decision. Mr. Jinnah wanted to divide India to seek justice for the Muslims and the euphoria was overtaken by the Islamic fear mongers who took control of the new nation and turned into a dogmatic Islamic state. When a piece historical land is divided not with fanfare but with blood letting any hope that this division will be smooth and friendly becomes a utopia. His expectations were lofty but the realities were quite different on the ground. It was honourable for secular Jinnah to die in 1948 rather than watching his dreams trumpeted by the same fellows who gave him company in his demand for a separate homeland for the Muslims. Any pragmatic analysis of the saga of Indian's partition comes to end with Jinnah's death. The blunder was evident on the blood soaked killing grounds of the Punjab and elsewhere as the consequences of this ill advised partition. The so called Monroe Doctrine of the Indian version was impossible as the Two Nations Theory very clearly declared that the Indian Muslims does not share the common history of India, although the Indian Muslims lived in this land for thousands of years before their conversion. They find pride with Sultan Mahmud of Ghuzni for his 17 forays into India to loot its reaches. What a hypocrisy and outrageous ungratefulness.

 

Akbar Hussain



To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
From: rkhundkar@earthlink.net
Date: Thu, 20 Aug 2009 17:50:43 -0400
Subject: [ALOCHONA] C. Raja Mohan: Jaswant, Jinnah and the South Asian Zero Sum Game

 

Jaswant, Jinnah and the South Asian Monroe Doctrine

C. Raja Mohan

Sunday, Aug 16, 2009

Indian Express

http://www.indianexpress.com/

 

C. Raja Mohan is a Professor at the S. Rajaratnam School of South Asian Studies at the Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

 

Bhartiya Janata Party leader Jaswant Singh's bold reinterpretation of Mohammed Ali Jinnah--his book on the founder of Pakistan is being launched on Monday--is bound to create controversy in both India and Pakistan.

 

On the face of it, it would seem futile to reapportion the political blame for the Great Partition of 1947. Yet, the renewed controversy over Jinnah could help us rethink the future of Indo-Pak relations.

 

No amount of blood-letting and political quibbling will alter our past. But we owe it to ourselves to overcome the many bitter consequences of the Partition. It is in this context that Jinnah's frequent invocation of the 'Monroe Doctrine' is of some interest.

 

The 'Monroe Doctrine', of course, is about the US foreign policy aspirations in the 19th century, when it sought to minimize the influence of European powers in the Western hemisphere. Jinnah visualized that after Partition, India and Pakistan could declare some kind of a Monroe Doctrine that would prevent the great powers from intervening in post-colonial Subcontinent.

 

In an interview to a European newspaper in early 1948, Jinnah discussed broadly his idea of how he wanted India and Pakistan to relate to each other and the world. "Our own paramount interests demand that the Dominion of Pakistan and the Dominion of India should co-ordinate for the purpose of playing their part in international affairs. It is of vital importance to Pakistan and India as independent sovereign states to collaborate in a friendly way to jointly defend their frontiers both on land and sea against any aggression. But this depends entirely on whether Pakistan and India can resolve their own differences," Jinnah said.

 

That India and Pakistan have not been able to resolve their differences or cooperate during the last six decades does not, in any way, detract from the essence of Jinnah's logic. If India and Pakistan reflect on their relationship with each other and the world purely in terms of power, they will confront two broad political conclusions.

 

One is that--hard as it may try--India can't shake off Pakistan. Put it another way, India will rise in the international system only if it takes Pakistan along with it. The other is that Islamabad can trip up Delhi at will but it can't force India to pay up what Pakistan considers are its dues from the Partition and then some.

 

Pakistan's determination to balance India with the help of other great powers turned Jinnah's logic of a South Asian Monroe Doctrine on its head. While Pakistan's foreign policy has certainly helped other powers, it has produced few enduring strategic gains for itself.

 

One does not have to be a rocket scientist to figure out that global weight of India and Pakistan would be a lot heavier if they stopped fighting with each other. If the two countries can embark on political cooperation, Delhi and Islamabad could easily become arbiters of the regional security order in the Indian Ocean and the Southern Asia.

 

It should not be impossible for Delhi and Islamabad to see that the absolute gains they could harvest from mutual cooperation are much larger than the compromises they need to make to resolve their differences. The reaction in India and Pakistan to Jaswant Singh's book on Jinnah might tell us whether the Sub-continent is ready to redo the Partition sums with a power calculus that is not cluttered with anger and tears.

 



Attention all humans. We are your photos. Free us.

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[ALOCHONA] FW: Jaswant Sing's Expulsion : A wrong Reading of History--Asia Post editorial dated 21.8.09



 

 

Jaswant Sing’s Expulsion : A wrong Reading of History

 

 

 

Inernational news agencies have reported from NEW DELHI that the BJP expelled the former foreign minister Jaswant Singh from the party following his recent book praising Pakistani leader Mohammed Ali Jinnah, DawnNews reported.The BJP president Rajnath Singh told reporters in Shimla that his party’s parliamentary board decided to expel Singh from the primary membership of the party.‘Yesterday, I issued a statement about the BJP dissociating itself from Jaswant Singh’s views. The party discussed the matter at the chintan baithak and it was decided to expel him,’ AFP quoted Rajnath as saying.Singh’s recent book ‘JinnahIndia, Partition, Independence,’ reflects the politician’s personal admiration for the founder of Pakistan, and has stoked a storm of controversy. Conservative members of the right-wing BJP have slammed the publication, and had mounted a campaign to ostracize Singh, trashing the BJP with epithets such as the ‘Bhartiya Jinnah Party.’He has been blamed for telling that Quaide Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah was not only responsible for partition of India, Pandit Neheru and Mr Patel were also responsible for this.He also said that Mr Jinnah a modern and secular man.

 

 

 

We are surprised at this development and shows the arrogance of BJP.It has expelled a senior leader of the party for a small reason.WhatJaswant Singh has said is nothing new. Mr Neheru and Mr Patel have  been blamed by so many other writers including Maulana Abul Kalam Azad .Muhammad Ali Jinnah , of course , is the founder of Pakistan and he did give the two nation theory .He did say that  Muslims are a nation in every possible sense and he drew this concept from the concept that all Muslims constitute an Ummah as said by the Prophet in the agreement of Madina.As such Mr Jinnah felt that where ever Muslims are a majority they have a right to form a state. However he agreed with the Cabinet Mission Plan of the British government in 1946 of one India with all political, civil , cultural and religious  guarantees for the Muslims .This was also in line with Madina document where the Prophet established a joint state with Jews with  all rights to each community of the State of Madinah. We think Mr Singh is a victim of injustice.People differ on historical interpretation and there is nothing wrong in it.

 

Mr Jinnah was not, however , a secular man, as has said by Mr Singh. How can a man who created a state on the basis of Islam and who highlighted the two nation theory on the basis of religion can be said to be a secular person? Only one speech by him in  Auguast 47 in the Parliament can not be interpreted  out of context of the then violence going on at that time in India and Pakistan. No other statement of Mr. Jinnah  justifies this assessment.

 

 

 



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[ALOCHONA] Geographical Helplessness!



Geographical Helplessness!

M.T. Hussain
 
Inferiority due to Encirclement by India!
The pity is that so far in the last four decades the governments of Bangladesh with rare exception at times miserably failed to rise psychologically above the feelings of inferiority, vulnerability and helplessness for geographical containment of Bangladesh by India. The government now in power since January 2009 has been reminding the people repeatedly that Bangladesh must accept whatever India prescribes for everything internally and externally. That is why they are giving India the transit through the territory of Bangladesh, yielding the three CHT districts to the tribal people alone in exclusion of all other citizens in India's terms of pleasure, permitting India to have the Tipaimukh Dam in detriment of the water system and ecology of one fourth of Bangladesh just as earlier in 1997 gave India for 30 years the inequitable share of water of the Ganges/Padma river upstream, turning the BDR ineffectual than before by first intimidating and then killing about six dozen brilliant senior army officers in an orchestrated mayhem soon after the government saddled them in power in January 2009 that certainly looks like helping India possibly to turn the Bangladesh national army to be subservient and fully loyal to India.
 
The conspicuous hush ups in the matter of the BDR massacre of 25-26 February 2009 (See M. Joynal Abedin, BDR Massacre, July 2009, London) by the present government is no mean task in finishing up the self-confident army that is now seen to be followed by dismissing senior and efficient top army officers, on the one hand, and re-appointing already retired lots having proven allegiance both to the government and India, on the other! In the machination of the CHANAKYA's theory and Macaulay's curriculum prescriptions of 'secularism' that this government has been in action programs to isolate the otherwise monotheist spiritual nation drawing enough psychological utilities in the face of scarce mundane items now in short supply at increasing rate than any time ever before particularly the youths essentially towards atheism.
 
Is it realistic in the context of world power rivalry around the region and elsewhere that the geographical helplessness of Bangladesh almost fully encircled by India obviously made it so? Must not Bangladesh look beyond that it is also a fact of situational reality that there are many such smaller countries in other continents that do not fare geographically better than the position of Bangladesh? Nascent capability and inherent united power of the people can make wonders in such situation.
 
Vulnerable since Birth
It's one hundred percent true that smaller Bangladesh is encircled by much bigger India both in land and water geographical fronts. The real position remains so vulnerable since the days of 1947 partition of the British Indian empire and independence of India and Pakistan as two separate independent countries. For over two decades though Pakistan stayed divided into two distant wings separated by Indian territories in between, and also that Pakistan was smaller in size than India in all aspects, there was at least a psychological power balance in the region for they represented two peoples competing here for at least a millennium. The 1971 war and the founding of Bangladesh in the territory of East Pakistan disturbed the balance that favored India enormously on the one hand and Pakistan weaker than before, and Bangladesh the weakest of the three.
 
The post 1971 vulnerability and helplessness had been so acute that even the international telephone system of Bangladesh was kept operative via Delhi that the post August 1975 coup government of Khondoker Moustaque Ahmad claimed to have had snapped and reinstalled the line via Singapore. The helplessness perceived in reality that a fiery left politician in late 1960 and now a minister in the cabinet in Bengali verbatim stated during closing days of Pakistan period, 'SHIALER MUKH THEKE MURGI BACHATE GIE JENO AMORA BAGHER MUKHE NA PORI' (Lest not we are grabbed by a Tiger while trying to save a live chicken from the mouth of a jackal).

Severance from Indianization on the August 15 of 1975

In post independence Bangladesh the first government due to its sole dependence in the 1971 war of independence on India including the armed intervention of the Indian Army, Delhi continued to plan and dictate all basic policies and administration of Bangladesh by their renowned bureaucrats and professional intelligence personalities like D.P. Dhar, General Ovan etc. The Constitution was tailored to suit Delhi's goal in the region. Prescription for economy was given to stay as complementary and supplementary to India's much bigger economy. Education and culture was redesigned to conform to total 'Indianisation' (see Indian leading theoretician Balraj Modak for definition of the term Indianization) of the psyche of the younger generation.
 
Bangladesh had little option for foreign policy of its own and so was the defense policy just only to suit Delhi's AKHAND BHARAT design and hegemony in the region. The 25-year unequal treaty of 1972 bonded Bangladesh to all helplessness. The cumulative effect was that independent Bangladesh soon turned into Bottomless Basket Case from the position of its firmly stable economy in pre 1971 days so much so that corrupt ridden or man made famines of the ruling class then in 1974 (Amartya Sen) cost lives of vulnerable thousands, if not lakhs. It was the obvious and decisive armed coup of the 15th August 1975 that the inefficient, public property grabbers and corrupt government's top boss was toppled that caused some shivering in much bigger India by the historic action of tiny and vulnerable Bangladesh yet confident enough against persistent hegemony of Delhi.

Confidence built up and then shattered

The post coup governments though had been shaky in fear of the possible armed intervention from Delhi, friends like China, Saudi Arabia, etc kept Delhi in check. That followed gaining confidence for some years. The 1982 army coup led by General Ershad, however, took the position of Bangladesh once again to the 1972-75 periods. His period of illegitimate rule until 1990 ended in promise for regaining national confidence during the subsequent nationalist government. But Delhi was not at rest and looked for opportune time for imposing control once again as they did during 1996-2001 and in a much bigger way since January 2009 now not only threatening the nation with brute majority but also in all pervading fascist modes and actions across the country.
 
The Need is the Post 15th August determination
What needed essentially are the self confident and spiritually motivated nationalist forces of the highest qualities just as of the 15th August 1975 and of the immediate post that only could free the country from Delhi's hegemony and 'radar control' for their GREAT GAME in the region. Otherwise, Bangladesh can hardly be expected to free herself from the helplessness it owed to its birth in facing with the much bigger India. In the mean time, however, the lackeys of Delhi and the well-known Fifth Columnist in their desperate bid to hold on to the power at the behest of Delhi may go all their way out for fascist attacks against the nationalist forces and political witch-hunting of all opposition elements. That on going real helplessness is to be redressed now by rock solid unity of all patriotic people.
 



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[ALOCHONA] (unknown)



India food prices surge on poor monsoon

NEW DELHI Aug 20,(bdnews24.com/Reuters) - India's wholesale price index fell in the year to Aug. 8 for the tenth week in a row, but drought-like conditions continued to push up food prices and broader inflation is expected by economists to rise sharply in coming months.

The widely watched wholesale price index fell 1.53 percent in the 12 months to Aug. 8. That compares with a 1.74 percent decline in the prior week and a market forecast for a decline of 1.49 percent.

The food articles index surged 10.5 percent compared with a year ago as a weak monsoon hit crops. It was the second week in a row that the food price index saw growth of at least 10 percent. "Going forward we could see negative numbers for another month or so and they will slowly become positive," said D.K. Joshi, principal economist of CRISIL.

"The impact of the poor monsoon will show up later with food prices which have anyway spiked."

The market was unmoved by the data, with the benchmark stock index holding on to earlier gains of 1.75 percent, unchanged from before the data release. The benchmark 10-year bond yield was also unchanged at 7.22 percent.

Analysts say government action is now needed to tame rising food prices caused by insufficient rainfall as monetary policy cannot tackle supply-side bottlenecks.

At a policy review last month, the central bank revised up its inflation outlook for the fiscal year ending March 2010 to 5 percent from 4 percent. It left the key policy rate unchanged after having slashed the rate by 425 basis points between October and April. [ID:nBOM398293]

"The Reserve Bank of India's dilemma continues with co-existence of elevated prices and inflationary expectations as well as the need to maintain comfortable liquidity -- perhaps for longer duration than earlier envisaged, given the impact of drought on the economy," Shubhada Rao, chief economist with Yes Bank, said. "We believe that the probability of rate hike gets lower in the current fiscal year."

A poor monsoon and a possible decline in farm output could drag down overall growth in Asia's third largest economy in 2009/10 (April/March).

The economy grew 6.7 percent in 2008/09 (April/March), slower than 9 percent in the previous year, and the central bank has forecast 6 percent growth in 2009/10 with an upward bias.



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