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Wednesday, December 16, 2009

[mukto-mona] CAAMB Publication on HR Day [1 Attachment]

[Attachment(s) from CAAMB Kolkata included below]

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Attachment(s) from CAAMB Kolkata

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[mukto-mona] Shabdaguchha Award 2009 has been announced



Dear Friends,
 
It is our pleasure to let you know that the recipient of the Shabdaguchha Poetry Award 2009 is Rahman Henry, who is a significant poet of the 90s and who contributed some of his important poems to Shabdaguchha. On Dec 16 2009, the evening of the 38th Victory Day of Bangladesh, in a ceremony at the Shabdaguchha office in New York, the guest of honor, Prof. Nicholas Birns, a faculty of New School University, announced the award on behave of Shabdaguchha. "Rahman Henry is a poet whose work I know and respect, who is very much occupied the role of Postmodern poetry," mentioned Prof. Birns after announcing the award. He also read a poem of Mr. Henry from the "Poets of Bangladesh"  Shabdaguchha issue for which he was the guest editor. A significant numbers of poets and writers were present during the announcement. The poet will receive $200 and a crest from Shabdaguchha.
 
Rahman Henry, a postmodern Bangladeshi poet and the author of ten collections of poetry, published his Selected Poems in 2008. He is the editor of Poet Tree, a Bengali poetry journal.
 
 
Sincerely,
 
Hassanal Abdullah, editor
Shabdaguchha
 
______________________________________________________________________

Website: http://www.shabdaguchha.com






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[mukto-mona] Chorer Ma -er Boro Gola



see the link
 
 
 



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[ALOCHONA] Rohingyas: Tears Down the Cheeks



Rohingyas: Tears Down the Cheeks
 
By Ahmedur Rahman Farooq

 
With the hope of overcoming all forms of discrimination Ahmedur Rahman Farooq, a Rohingya youth, has made a laudable attempt in presenting the touching and sad events of his people. These are the heartbreaking true tales of human suffering in an age of civil society and technology. Their name and citizenship being negated, they are nameless and stateless, imprisoned within their own country and uprooted all over the world; a human tragedy of our days. Therefore, the Rohingya issue must find a solution both within and without Myanmar


Ahmedur Rahman Farooq
Norway
E Mail : arahman567@gmail.com

--------------------------------------------------
Read The Full article in PDF Format -Click Below
---------------------------------------------------
Read Full Story
  • rohingyas-tears-down-the-cheeks2.pdf
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    [ALOCHONA] Myanmar gas bypasses India, Bangladesh



    Myanmar gas bypasses India, Bangladesh

    Badrul Imam

    IN a conclusive move, Myanmar decided to sell its newly discovered offshore gas to China, dashing Indian and Bangladeshi hopes. It is only recently that Bangladesh showed its interest in reviving the Myanmar-Bangladesh-India tri-nation gas pipeline talk with its neighbours, which perhaps came from the realisation that it would bring economic benefit through transporting gas to India, and also through importing gas from Myanmar.

    But Bangladeshi handling of the tri-nation pipeline proposal, first placed about a decade ago, was initially marked by no decision to delayed decision. And after she decided to get on board, she left the platform in 2005 because of disagreement on some bilateral issues with India. India, on its part, tried to get an alternate route for gas transport from Myanmar but failed to make it economically viable. In the meantime, Myanmar decided not to waste further time on these partners and signed an agreement with China. Commenting on the recent Bangladeshi interest in tri-nation gas pipeline, a western observer commented that the train Bangladesh wants to catch has already left the station.

    Some tend to believe that the tri-nation gas pipeline will not bring much benefit to the country, and that it may have an in-built element of risk of creating conflict between the two nations. Others hold an opposite view, and believe that the tri-nation gas pipeline would bring economic benefit to all the three countries in the same way that the trans-border gas pipelines in many countries of the world have proved beneficial. In particular, for a country like Bangladesh where the present gas shortage will turn into a crisis in future, the tri-nation gas pipeline will bring the option of tapping the gas resource of a neighbouring country. The question is, has Bangladesh missed an opportunity?

    Losing the gas race: The discovery of three large gas fields a few years ago in the Bay of Bengal off the Arakan coast of Myanmar and the willingness of Myanmar government to export the gas brought about the possibility of trans-border gas trade among its neighbours. The three gas fields -- Shwe, Shwe phu and Mia -- were discovered by a Korean oil company, Daewoo International, with two Indian partners. India, has been very eager to buy the gas from the very beginning.

    A private company in Bangladesh, Mohona holding Ltd, placed a proposal before the respective governments for building a tri-nation gas pipeline to transport gas from Myanmar to India via Bangladesh. Bangladesh, for a long time, did not show much interest in the proposal. However, at a later time, all the three countries agreed on principle to go ahead with the proposal. After the ministers of the three countries concluded their meeting with positive notes, the responsibility of drawing up details of the proposal was given to a tri-nation Technical Committee.

    In early 2005, the tri-nation Technical Committee met in Rangoon. Bangladesh proposed some changes in the original proposal, which are: 1) The pipe line will enter Bangladesh via the southern Teknaf border instead of Brahmanbaria border and would proceed towards Chittagong before proceeding toward India, 2) The pipeline would be constructed under the sponsorship of an international consortium instead of Indian sponsorship, 3) The Bangladesh section of the

    pipeline will be operated by a Bangladeshi company -- (GTCL) -- for which it would charge a fee for gas transport, and 4) The pipeline should have open access nature with provision for injection and siphoning of gas by Bangladesh and India at designated intake and off-take points along the line. These points were accepted in principle both by India and Myanmar, subject to further discussion.

    Bangladesh gave India three more conditions: 1) India has to allow Bangladesh a corridor to import hydro-electricity from Nepal and Bhutan, 2) India will ensure unhindered access of merchandise to travel between Bangladesh, Nepal and Bhutan through a corridor, and 3) India will take measures to reduce huge trade deficits of Bangladesh. The Indian side declined to negotiate or accept these points in a tri-nation gas pipeline forum. In response, Bangladesh withdrew from project.

    After Bangladesh backed out, India tried to find an alterative pipeline route bypassing Bangladesh. It considered a route from Myanmar via Mizoram, Tripura and Assam to Siliguri and finally to Kolkata. But this route was 500 kilometres longer than the one proposed via Bangladesh, and an extra Tk.2,500 crore would have to be added to the cost of construction. Furthermore, the security of the pipeline was an issue nobody was comfortable with because of the militant activities of the Assamese and Garo rebels in the area. With little other options in hand, India fell behind other competitors in the Myanmar gas race and was eventually left out.

    The Myanmar government wasted no more time with her westerly neighbours and instead concluded the gas deal with China in late 2008. Daewoo International signed the deal with China National Petroleum Company (CNPC). It will invest $5.6 billion to develop the gas fields. Gas will be supplied to China for 30 years beginning 2013, initially at a rate of 600 million cubic feet per day. Chinese will build the pipeline from Myanmar to Yunan province in China.

    The way ahead for Bangladesh: The energy needs of most developing nations outpace their internal resources, which results in their quest for foreign resources they can possibly share. As the newly discovered gas reserves off the Arakan coast (Myanmar) were put up for sale, Indian buyers competed with China and Bangladesh. India could not produce a blueprint of a pipeline to get the gas and lost the race to China. The recent Bangladeshi request to import the gas from Myanmar was also turned down. However, Myanmar said that Bangladesh could purchase gas from any new gas discovery in future in that area. In the context of the looming gas crisis in medium to long term future, Bangladesh should take this offer seriously and prepare ahead of time, should such an opportunity arrive.

    Bangladesh should keep open the options of a tri-nation (Myanmar-Bangladesh-India) as well as a bi-nation (Myanmar-Bangladesh) gas pipeline for bringing in the gas. In case of a tri-nation pipeline, Bangladesh may earn money on a yearly basis and thus may get at least part of the gas free, in addition to having the gas pipeline infrastructure added for no cost. A bi-nation gas pipeline would be exclusive and dedicated although there would not be any free gas for Bangladesh.

    Bangladesh is yet to realise the severity of an upcoming gas crisis in the mid to long-term future. For this small country with limited resource and a very large population, it is perhaps inevitable that she will look beyond her border for gas to meet the ever-increasing demand.


    Dr. Badrul Imam is Professor, University of Dhaka and Visiting Faculty, University of Regina, Canada

    http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=117987



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    [ALOCHONA] Same enemies; same blunders?



    Same enemies; same blunders?
     
    SHIREEN M MAZARI

    December 16, 1971 and the fall of Dhaka should remind us in Pakistan of the follies of our leaders and the repercussions of unfettered military action against one's own people. It should also be a time to ponder over the role of our neighbour, India, in the dismemberment of our country and the complicity of the major powers, in giving legitimacy to this first break-up of a post-colonial nation since the end of the Second World War. The war in what was then East Pakistan was not the first civil war that had happened, although once India stepped-in it ceased to be a mere civil war, but it was the first war that split up a sovereign member of the UN and this was recognised by the UN. The Biafra case was also there but no one was prepared to grant recognition to this breakaway entity.

    Our rulers' many sins of omission and commission must be highlighted for our future generations to ensure we do not make the same mistakes again - especially in terms of unacceptable "collective punishment" which only creates more enemies amongst one's own people, but what is equally important to understand is the role of India - first covertly then overtly. After all, the surrender of Dhaka was to India not to Bangladesh. At the time the US feigned support by trying to "send in" the Sixth Fleet - but in reality that never happened and the UNSC was not allowed to call for a ceasefire till the Soviet Union, the US and its allies were sure of the loss of East Pakistan.
     
    If we are unable to understand the Indian mindset and its approach to Pakistan, as well as US duplicity towards Pakistan, we will once again find ourselves in a similarly disastrous situation. Luckily for Pakistan, the Two Nation Theory proved its strength and so an independent Muslim nation of Bangladesh was created instead of East Pakistan being swallowed into Indian West Bengal! Again, Bhutto's masterpiece diplomacy through the OIC allowed Pakistan to recognise this new Muslim state and leave India out in the cold.

    However, we should especially recall this traumatic event in our national life so that in times of crisis we know who our enemies are and where we may be committing the same blunders again in terms of military operations and political hardlines. Pakistan's biggest threat today comes from two main sources. First, the total disconnect that exists at all levels of national policy - which is allowing our enemies, be they the non-state actors comprising militants of multiple brands, or India and increasingly the US to do as they please within Pakistan's territory - and a government that is either unable or unwilling to correct this dangerous drift. Second, the unholy Indo-US partnership that is giving aid and succour to Pakistani militants and separatists.



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    [ALOCHONA] Allegation of bibery by PM's son and her Advisor





    --- On Wed, 12/16/09, Nayan Khan <udarakash08@yahoo.com> wrote:
    Here is the full story:
     


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    [mukto-mona] 5m US$ bibery by PM's son and her Advisor !



    Here is the full story:
     


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    [ALOCHONA] Whose children are these suicide bombers?



             A good follow up question to  ask would be: Do all the Jamaati leaders send their children to Madrassahs?
     
    Times of India 13 December 2009

    Interview

    'POOR PAK CHILDREN ARE BEING SOLD TO JIHADIS'

    Pakistani peace activist Karamat Ali disses terrorism-fomenting
    mullahs, pseudo-nationalism and ugly politicians

    by Mohammed Wajihuddin | TNN

    Karamat Ali doesn't want more wars between India and Pakistan.
    And it's not just because he's a committed peacenik. There's also a
    personal reason.

    "My wife, Amrita Chhachhi, is an Indian and lives in Delhi. If I
    happen to be in India and a war breaks out, I will be imprisoned,''
    he deadpans, triggering loud laughter in the audience that's gathered
    at the Mumbai Press Club to hear him speak.

    A senior trade unionist and founding member of the Pakistan-
    India People's Forum for Peace and Democracy, the Karachi-based Ali
    was in the city this week to give away prizes to the winners of an
    essay-writing competition organised by Peace Mumbai and Mumbai
    University. On the sidelines of the award ceremony and a subsequent
    seminar on Indo-Pak relations, the fearlessly outspoken activist took
    potshots at multiple targets, not just in Pakistan but the whole
    South Asian region: the Taliban, marauding mullahs in cahoots with
    "the Washingtonbacked Pakistani army'' and contemporary rulers who
    had "colonised'' their own masses.

    His Marxist ideology and bullin-a-China-shop demeanour colour
    the 64-year-old's every statement. "I am not a practising Muslim. I
    do hold a Pakistani passport, but I don't believe in nationalism.
    Call me a South Asian,'' he declares, adding, "Over 22% of the
    world's population lives in South Asia, and 60% of this population is
    poor. The poor will have to unite and fight.''

    Ali, who's known to maul politicians and babus at debates, has
    been jailed several times but not deported yet ("Well, they may not
    like me, but they can't throw me out just because I question them
    constantly,'' he reasons). He has a clear definition for them: "Don't
    call them people's representatives. They are rulers. And rulers have
    a common interest in keeping subjects hungry and desperate.''
    Rulers everywhere find sanctuary in a skewed interpretation of
    religion, is Ali's firm belief. So have the rulers of Pakistan, who
    misuse Islam when they are caught in a quandary. Ali remembers the
    time when Asif Ali Zardari was attacked in the media for breaching
    the pre-poll pact he had signed with Nawaz Sharif, and had famously
    and shamelessly shot back: "The terms of the pact are not Quranic
    that one cannot breach them.''

    The activist is also uncomfortable with the spirit of Pakistan's
    Constitution which mandates that it is the inviolable duty of every
    citizen to be loyal to the state. "Nothing could be more foolish. Why
    should citizens be loyal to the state? It should be the other way
    round. It is the duty of the state to protect me, and I am free to be
    loyal to my conscience,'' he declares. He also pooh-poohs the
    ludicrous condition the Constitution lays down for the President's
    job: 'at least 45 years old, a male and a Muslim'. "They want a male
    as the President because the army will feel humiliated to salute a
    woman President,'' he laughs.

    Bring up the topic of terrorism, and Ali gets agitated about the
    sense of helplessness induced in both the people and the State by
    suicide bombers who strike suddenly and at targets ranging from
    marketplaces to army and government headquarters. "A minister
    recently said that people were selling their children to be trained
    as suicide bombers at Rs 5 lakh per child,'' he says. "As the
    situation worsens and desperation deepens, they'll become available
    at cheaper rates.''
     
        This dire prognosis is self-explanatory: the
    suicide bomber comes not from the Pakistani elite but the
    dispossessed. Ajmal Kasab, a landless farmer's son and school
    dropout, went to a big city in search of livelihood but ended up in a
    jihadi camp. "Why is it that the children of religious leaders are
    not becoming suicide bombers?'' Ali asks rhetorically, going on to
    denounce fundamentalist mullahs who tell jihadis that they will enjoy
    divine comforts in jannat even if they get blown up.
    But what is Pakistan's civil society doing to check the
    onslaught of the suicide bombers?

     
     "We are not silent spectators. We
    have protested and are protesting. Soon over 100 activists will march
    to Peshawar to sympathise with the terror-affected families,'' Ali says.
    And as an antidote to all sorts of terrorism, including state-
    sponsored, the veteran activist prescribes cooperation between South
    Asian countries where hassle-free visas and intelligence-sharing will
    be part of the practice, not just holy homilies delivered at SAARC
    summits. Then, in Ali's dream, at present a bit of a Utopian chimera,
    a day will come when Ajmal Kasab and his Pakistani masters, including
    the incendiary Hafiz Saeed, will be tried not in India or Pakistan,
    but by a South Asian People's Tribunal, in a neutral place. Maybe
    Kathmandu—no longer capital of the Hindu Himalayan kingdom but of the
    People's Republic of Nepal.
     



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    [ALOCHONA] Fw: .April Fool in December: Bangladesh allows poor India to buy Mobile company





    --- On Wed, 12/16/09, Factification <factia@gmail.com> wrote:
    This is bad news. A desperately poor country like India has no track record on mobile phone technology. It will bring nothing of value to Bangladesh, except to syphon off even more of our foreign exchange. Mark my word most of the obsolete technology will be brought second-hand from Western countries but marked as NEW for tax purposes. It will add to the security nightmare for Bangladesh with listening and monitoring centres based in India (remember what happened in Thailand when their mobile company was sold to Singapore? They bitterly complained that their national security was being compromised.)  Finally, India will have even more of their agents in Bangladesh to help with espionage.
     
    It's humilating to Bangladesh to have India run a mobile company in Bangladesh. I just can't imagine anyone buying a mobile phone service in Bangladesh from an Indian outfit.
     
    Taslima
     
     
     

    Bharti Airtel scopes out Warid

    Md Hasan
     
    Indian telecom giant Bharti Airtel has sought the regulator's approval to buy a 70 percent stake in Warid, the fourth largest mobile company in Bangladesh.
    The value of the deal could approximate $900 million, according to Warid officials.
    The company has also placed a $300 million initial investment plan to Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC), which will be implemented after signing the deal.
     
    The BTRC received Bharti Airtel's letter on Sunday. The commission also got a letter from Abu Dhabi Group, the owning company of Warid.
    "We have received a letter from Abu Dhabi Group that said it wants to sell a 70 percent stake in Warid Telecom in Bangladesh," Zia Ahmed, chairman of BTRC, told The Daily Star yesterday.
     
    However Warid officials declined to give further details of the possible tie-up.
    The BTRC chairman said: "We will soon call officials from both the companies to get details."The issues over the sale of Warid stake were discussed much in the last few months in the industry, as the company is not performing in line with its expectations.
     
    Talks over the sale hot up as another Indian telecom operator, Essar Group, acquired the majority share in Warid's operations in Africa. Essar Group acquired the operations in Uganda and Congo at $318 million.
     
    Earlier Warid officials had said it was on the lookout for a partner to raise fresh capital for investment in its next phase of operations in Bangladesh.
    Warid made its Bangladesh debut as the sixth mobile operator in May 2007 and has roped in 2.79 million subscribers until October. Partnership is crucial to Warid as its investment cost is higher than other operators because of 'discrimination' in frequency allocations, said the officials of the company.
    "We are willing to invite a partner, as a huge investment is required to take our operations to the next level," said Muneer Farooqui, chief executive officer of Warid Telecom, in an exclusive talk with The Daily Star in May.
     
    Several companies, such as SingTel, Vodafone and Etisalat, had also approached Warid to form a partnership in Bangladesh.Among the bottom three operators, Warid is a lucrative option for prospective investors, as the company is the lone owner of the next generation networks. However the company's network expansion plans have been disrupted due to a lack of frequency.
     
    Bharti Airtel is one of the Asia's leading providers of telecommunication services with presence in all the 22 licensed jurisdictions in India, and in Sri Lanka. It served an aggregate of 113,439,670 customers as of September 30, according to the company website.
     
    The company also deploys, owns and manages passive infrastructure pertaining to telecom operations under its subsidiary Bharti Infratel Ltd.




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