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Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Re: [ALOCHONA] It is time for govt to desert subservient foreign policy



The government is not subservient.

Mujib was always an Indian first. Bangladesh was always meant to be a stepping stone to embracing Bharat. His daughter is simply delivering on the bargain he made.

The Agartala Conspiracy is alive and well. We have traitors in power, nakedly surrendering our sovereignty. They have killed an entire generation of army officers and destroyed our border defences.

The biggest mistake in our history was putting a traitor at the head of our Independence movement.

How very Mir Jafar indeed.

Joy Bangla!

Emanur Rahman | m. +447734567561 | e. emanur@rahman.com


From: Isha Khan <bdmailer@gmail.com>
Sender: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sat, 7 Aug 2010 08:04:28 +0600
ReplyTo: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ALOCHONA] It is time for govt to desert subservient foreign policy

It is time for govt to desert subservient foreign policy
 

THE Indian finance minister, Pranab Mukherjee, is scheduled to fly in for a four-hour sojourn in Bangladesh, which by itself perhaps deserves an entry into the Guinness Book of World Record as the shortest state-level visit by any minister anywhere in the world. The short visit has a reasonably long agenda, though. According to a report front-paged in New Age on Friday, Mukherjee will be here mainly to witness the signing of the $1 billion line of credit between the EXIM Bank of India and the Economic Relations Division of Bangladesh, in line with the Dhaka-Delhi joint communiqué released at the end of the India visit of the prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, in January. However, as another report also front-paged in New Age on Friday indicates, he could push for an agreement on waiver of duties on the transportation of over-dimensional cargoes from western India to northeast India through Bangladesh. With one of Hasina's advisers reportedly 'in favour of waiver' and the Awami League-led government having thus far displayed an inexplicable eagerness to grant virtually whatever New Delhi wishes, his visit could add significant momentum towards such an agreement. 

If it so happens, it will be doubly delightful for New Delhi; for, it will ensure that India gets maximum returns on the line of credit offered to Bangladesh. As per the terms of the credit, Bangladesh will have to spend the money on the development of infrastructure, which is aimed at facilitating India's transhipment of goods from its west to northeast. In other words, India will get what it has always wanted but without any expenditure on its part. Moreover, India will get interest on the credit and, if the duty on over-dimensional cargo is waived, it will be all gain and no pain for New Delhi. Simply put, what Bangladesh stands to gain, if anything at all, is inconsequential compared to what India will get.
   
It is just one aspect in the bilateral relations between the two countries whereby Bangladesh has put in more than its share but India has given up virtually nothing. In fact, India has not shown even the slightest willingness to address the legitimate demands and grievances of Bangladesh. New Delhi refuses to do anything about the killing of Bangladeshis by its border guards, equitable sharing of the common rivers, particularly the Teesta, huge trade imbalance, withdrawal of non-tariff barriers to export of Bangladeshi goods, exchange of enclaves, land border demarcation; the list could go on and on. Moreover, it continues to create more irritants for the already strained relations, e.g. repeated incursion into Bangladesh's maritime territory, fencing of borders, planned construction of a dam on the upstream of the trans-boundary river Barak at Tipaimukh, etc. Then, of course, there are instances of India promising humanitarian help and not delivering on it such as reconstruction of several hundred houses in the cyclone Aila-hit areas.

India's selfish exploitation of its bilateral ties with Bangladesh has, of late, been criticised even in its own media. For example, the Indian Express wrote in its editorial on August 3: 'In case after case, the Bangladeshi side has done its bit, laying the groundwork for further agreement, or implementing what was already signed. And in case after case, the Indian side has not reciprocated to any reasonable degree' (See today's Op-Ed page for reprint of the editorial). In other words, the Indian government has made it amply clear that its overarching intention is to squeeze the maximum out Bangladesh in return for virtually nothing.
  
 Hence, it is, perhaps, time that the sympathy and support of the conscious and conscientious sections of Indian society were mobilised so that they may keep pressure on their government to address Bangladesh's legitimate demands and grievances. At the same time, politically conscious and democratically oriented sections of Bangladeshi society need to put pressure on the government to desert its subservient foreign policy vis-à-vis India or, for that matter, any other country, and assertively raise problems that India refuses to address and secure their resolution for national interest.

http://www.newagebd.com/2010/aug/07/edit.html


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RE: [ALOCHONA] Successful traffic management



I think these are pictures of BNP Jamaat Regime 2001 to 2006.
During AL regime(2009 to date) we never seen such traffic jam in Dhaka.
All are conspiracy of BNP.
 
J.A.Chowdhury
 


From: bdmailer@gmail.com
Date: Mon, 9 Aug 2010 06:27:10 +0600
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Successful traffic management



Successful traffic management
 
 
 
 
 
 




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RE: [ALOCHONA] Re: [Dahuk]: MP beats up Sharsha OC



OI OC GHUSKHOR DURNIBAZ SILO. Loging Master (pore chatri bia kore boro lok)Mahmudur Rahman
uttora conspiracy r Nayok. Rajakar der 2 ta ghotona sojjo hobe na. Sorry Rajakar Albodor bhai ra includig Rajakar Faruk Alamgir.


To: dahuk@yahoogroups.com; WideMinds@yahoogroups.com; alochona@yahoogroups.com; anis.ahmed@netzero.net; abidbahar@yahoo.com; moassghar@yahoo.com; sonarbangladesh@yahoogroups.com; serajurrahman@btinternet.com; farhadmazhar@hotmail.com; zoglul@hotmail.co.uk; Bangladesh-Zindabad@yahoogroups.com; udarakash08@yahoo.com
From: faruquealamgir@gmail.com
Date: Tue, 17 Aug 2010 00:23:47 +0600
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Re: [Dahuk]: MP beats up Sharsha OC



Friends

BUT  MAHMUDUR RAHMAN THE "SINGHA MANOB" WAS TAKEN TO CUSTODY FOR OBSTRUCTING POLICE TO PERFORM HOLY JOB WITHOUT ANY JUDICIAL WARRANT N WAS PUT UNDER SEVERAL DAYS REMAND WITH DOZENS OF CASES FILED AGAINST HIM ???

On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 10:24 AM, Isha Khan <bdmailer@gmail.com> wrote:
 

MP beats up Sharsha OC
 
Jessore, Aug 15 (bdnews24.com) – Sharsha police chief Enamul Haque has been severely beaten by ruling Awami League MP Sheikh Afil Uddin. The police official filed a general diary on Sunday afternoon with the police station over the incident against Afil and his cadre Musa Mahmud.

Enamul said that he went to Afil's office in the afternoon as Afil called him with the files of the murder case of one Abdul Hamid, a BNP activist. He said, "Afil slapped me and his man Musa beat me severely afterwards." "Afil threatened to kill me if I did not leave Sharsha," said Enamul.

Sub-inspector 'Asad', who was present during the beating, admitted that Afil beat Enamul. "Musa also tried to hit me as I protested. But I managed to leave the place with Enamul," said Asad.

The Jessore MP, however, denied beating the police official. He said, "I just asked Enamul why he had charged innocent Awami League men in the murder case." Jessore police superintendent Didar Ahmed visited the police station in the evening following the incident. He said, "I have heard about the incident. But I have not heard that it was a beating."







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