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Tuesday, April 5, 2011

[ALOCHONA] Sarkozy to take up Yunus issue with Bangladesh



Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Sarkozy to take up Yunus issue with Bangladesh

French President Nicolas Sarkozy has said his government will closely monitor the developments regarding Prof Muhammad Yunus' removal from Grameen Bank and take up the issue with the Bangladesh authorities in the next few days.

In a letter to Yunus, he also expressed his strong support to the founder of Grameen Bank.

Friends of Grameen, a voluntary organisation established to promote microcredit activities of Grameen Bank and its affiliates, circulated the contents of the letter published in the French press yesterday.

"Please allow me to reiterate, once again, how much your model of a "social business" bank, which has enabled poor people in your country to widely access credit, is admired and respected in France," Sarkozy wrote.

"This has actually done a lot for the prestige and reputation of Bangladesh across the globe: the world needs innovative projects to fight poverty and inequalities, and the creation of the Grameen Bank was an audacious initiative, which has been an ongoing source of inspiration for the international community," he said.

"I know the difficulties you are going through at the present moment. I trust the institutions of your country will find a fair resolution to these. The French government will closely monitor the situation and will definitely address the issue with Bangladeshi authorities over the next few days."

In the same letter, Sarkozy answered to Yunus' proposal to enlarge the composition of G2O group to allow more developing countries to participate in.

"Let me thank you for your proposal of enlarging the G20. As you know, I was in favour, as early as the first meeting of G20, of a broader opening to non-member countries, in particular those less economically advanced…With regards to your country, which you are warmly advocating for, we could consider having Bangladesh (together with other developing nations) participate in specific events organised by the G20 French Presidency, despite the fact we cannot extend an invitation to Cannes."

"I would be happy to welcome you personally to Paris again this year to continue the work of the G20 French Presidency on the issue of poverty and social exclusion, before the Cannes Summit of November 3-4," Sarkozy added.

PRODI FOR AMICABLE SOLUTION
Romano Prodi, former president of European Commission, has written to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, expressing hope she would be able to reach an amicable solution to Prof Muhammad Yunus issue.

In the letter, 71-year-old Prodi voiced support for the Nobel laureate and his visionary work in eradicating poverty from the country, reads a statement of the Grameen Bank.

The letter from the two-time former prime minister of Italy came as several governments including France and Spain have expressed concern about Yunus' removal by Bangladesh Bank from the position of Grameen Bank managing director.

Prodi said along with dedicated institutions like Grameen Bank and a visionary person like Yunus, the prime minister can definitely wipe out poverty from Bangladesh and set examples for the developing world.

He hoped the prime minister's intervention will lead to a solution and Bangladesh will move forward as a prosperous country, according to the statement.



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[ALOCHONA] Successful energy ministry



No gas for new kitchen

Embargo on new connection stays as gas scarcity mounts; bidding for on-shore exploration soon; govt to go ahead with coal development

As the gas crisis continues to remain unresolved, the government is unlikely to lift the embargo on giving domestic gas connection soon, and instead encourage new homeowners to use liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) cylinders for cooking.

"We are encouraging LPG marketing," Energy Secretary Mohammad Mesbah Uddin said at a press conference of Petrobangla yesterday. "In the present budget, we have given incentives to help LPG manufacturers reduce container price. We hope the next budget will give further incentives to cut the prices further."

According to Petrobangla's projection, gas supply shortfall now is more than 500 million cubic feet per day (mmcfd). It is set to double by the end of this year. Petrobangla's gas supplies have remained stuck at a maximum of 2,000 mmcfd from December 2009 due to lack of pipeline infrastructure, compressor station and new sources of gas production.

The government stopped giving new gas connections in Dhaka to domestic and commercial customers from July last year as the authorities are unable to meet the demands of the existing customers. Ever since, around one lakh customers have applied for new connections.

As there is no new gas connection, many have obtained connections illegally which worsened the gas supply pressure situation. Many others have resorted to buying LPG containers for their kitchens. These containers are however much costlier compared to the piped gas supplies, and the demand is much higher than supply.

At the press conference held at Petrobangla auditorium to highlight the government's achievements in the energy sector, the energy secretary noted that production of LPG has sharply gone up in the last two years. The country produced 1,1400 tonnes of LPG in fiscal 2008-9, and this year it is producing 20,000 tonnes. "We are encouraging the private sector to be more involved in this sector. Besides, the government is setting up two more LPG bottling plants in Chittagong and Mongla," he said.

Prime minister's energy adviser Towfiq-e-Elahi Chowdhury and State Minister for Power Enamul Haque also attended the press conference.

Petrobangla Chairman Hussain Mansur presented a gas production increase plan that shows a rise of the supplies by 1,785 mmcfd by mid- June 2013 and another 680 mmcfd by December 2015. This would mean the country's gas supplies would stand at around 4,500 mmcfd in 2015 as against the demand for 4,162 mmcfd.

Of this increase, most would come from three gas fields of Chevron in Bibiyana, Moulavibazar and Jalalabad. And this would be made possible by installing a 190 km pipeline at a cost of 2,074 crore by December 2013. Another 500 mmcfd of this increase would be derived from imported liquefied natural gas (LNG) containers from late next year. Again, this will be made possible by setting up a 115 km pipeline (costing Tk 1,800 crore) to transmit the imported liquid gas from a future terminal in Maheshkhali to Fouzdarhat.

Hussain said that since the Awami League-led alliance assumed power, Petrobangla has added 284 mmcfd through working over the existing gas wells. Petrobangla's affiliates were now undertaking drilling of six new exploration wells and 17 development wells (in existing fields) to increase gas supplies.

The government had emphasised strengthening the national exploration and production capacity by giving Bapex a number of incentives, finances, work programmes and brand new drilling rigs. Bapex now has 13 drilling and work over job to be completed within the next year aiming to increase gas production by up to 340 mmcd.

The Chairman mentioned that through seismic survey, Bapex has pinpointed a large structure in Sunamganj-Netrokona which promises a large find. Drilling of this structure will take place this year.The government was also set to sign a production sharing contract with US company Conoco Phillips over some deep sea blocks, and it will soon float the third round block bidding for on-shore oil and gas exploration.

Besides, Bapex is expected to enter a joint venture with Russian state company Technopromp to undertake diverse drilling programmes. "It is not going to be any deal to explore some blocks," Hussain pointed out.

Towfiq-e-Elahi said problems of the energy sector could not be solved overnight. "We have gone back to the drawing board to find solutions to the problems," he said, explaining why gas supplies were lagging behind the demand. "But no other government had thought of fuel diversification before. Our government is looking at coal as an important resource. Presently, we are planning purchasing and tapping coal from foreign coal mines to develop some large power projects in the country."

Explaining the delay over the decision on coal, he said the government was taking all the responsibilities for developing and using coal. "That's why the initiatives for coal development rest on the government. The Hydrocarbon Cell is working on how best we can tap our local resources. We have deployed the Institute of Water Modelling to prepare a detailed groundwater Model of the northern Bangladesh (where all the coal fields are situated)."

"Acquifer is the main challenge (of coal mining). There is a river underneath 10 feet or more… that we need to utilise optimally through proper understanding of this," he added.  

http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=180629

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[ALOCHONA] Successful health ministry



Medical waste up for sale

Experts raise health alert as hazardous waste come back into market without proper sterilisation



Clockwise from left, A cleaner of BSMMU hospital sells medical waste right at one of its gate. A trader of Old Dhaka gathers used up syringes to make them ready for reselling. A scavenger picks medical waste from a dustbin. These photos were taken recently
 

It is no secret. Anyone walking by the west gate of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University (BSMMU) will see cleaners in red dresses sell medical waste to vendors. During a visit to the university on March 9, this correspondent found a man bargaining with a cleaner by the gate around 11:00am.

Farida, the cleaner, said over the past six years she has been working at BSMMU and doing the trade but never considered it unlawful. She was selling syringes, needles, blood bags along with paper and medicine boxes at Tk 20-30 a basket. Abdur Rahim, the buyer, said he sells the items to factories in Old Dhaka. There the syringes are separated out and washed for reselling. All in new packages and without proper sterilisation, they again come onto the market.

Experts say the trend helps spread infectious diseases like hepatitis B and C, tetanus, tuberculosis, skin diseases, jaundice, cholera and even AIDS.The waste includes pathological materials, sharp objects and chemicals.

Contacted, the BSMMU authorities said they signed a contract with PRISM (Project in Agriculture, Rural Industry, Science and Medicine) to start scientific management of medical waste in mid-April.

"At present most of the waste of this hospital is dumped in dustbins of Dhaka City Corporation," said Brig Gen Abdul Majid Bhuiyan, director (hospital) of BSMMU. The rest are burned down in an incinerator.He claimed his staff are not involved in the waste sale. Some outsourced cleaners are doing it and he would take stern action against them.

In the capital, out of an estimated 1,500 hospitals, clinics and diagnostic centres, only 342 have scientific waste management facilities and very few in rest of the country.

The DCC in association with PRISM has been working on safe disposal of the waste since 2005 but most of the hospitals hardly showed interest."We can go for safe and scientific disposal of one-seventh of medical waste of the capital. But most hospitals don't want to contact us as they earn a considerable amount by selling the recyclable waste," said Bipon Kumar Saha, chief waste management officer of DCC. He also said in the absence of an appropriate law they cannot take any action against the health centres that are yet to adopt a proper waste management method.

But PRISM Coordinator Tarit Kanti Biswas said the Environment Conservation Act 1995 clearly mentions before going into operation, a hospital must be certified by the Department of Environment (DoE) that it has proper waste management system.

The environment department's monitoring is weak and it widens the scope for the unethical practice, he added. Asked, Abdus Sobhan, additional director general of the Department of Environment (DoE), admitted that many of the health facilities in the city do not have that clearance. He said for lack of manpower they fail to properly monitor the centres. "We are recruiting additional staff. A total of six divisional and 21 district offices have also been established to increase vigilance."

According to experts, the standard way of safe disposal of medical waste is to maintain separate bins for different types of waste -- red bins for sharp objects, yellow for infectious items, black for general wastes and green bins for the recyclable waste.

These materials are supposed to go to the sanitary landfill site separately. Then the recyclable parts should be washed and sterilised in an autoclave machine and the rest destroyed in the incinerators and buried, said Tarit Kanti.

http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=180642



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[ALOCHONA] Trigger happy US Forces



THE "KILL TEAM" PHOTOGRAPHS

Posted by Seymour M. Hersh

The New Yorker

110328_soldier-corpse-one_p465.jpg

  • La Mohammed Kalay, Afghanistan, 2010.
  • harman1.jpgAbu Ghraib, Iraq, 2003.
  • my_lai_soldiers.png
  • Soldiers rest just after the My Lai massacre, 1968.
  • My_Lai_massacre.jpgMy Lai 4, Vietnam, 1968.

It's the smile. In photographs released by the German weekly Der Spiegel, an American soldier is looking directly at the camera with a wide grin. His hand is on the body of an Afghan whom he and his fellow soldiers appear to have just killed, allegedly for sport. In a sense, we've seen that smile before: on the faces of the American men and women who piled naked Iraqi prisoners on top of each other, eight years ago, and posed for photographs and videos at the Abu Ghraib prison outside of Baghdad.

It's also the cameras. Der Spiegel reported this week that it had obtained four thousand photographs and videos taken by American soldiers who referred to themselves as a "kill team." (Der Spiegel chose to publish only three of the photographs.) The images are in the hands of military prosecutors. Five soldiers, including Jeremy Morlock, the smiling man in the picture, who is twenty-two years old, are awaiting courts-martial for the murder of three Afghan civilians; seven other soldiers had lesser, related charges filed against them, including drug use. On Tuesday, Morlock's lawyer said that he would plead guilty.

We saw photographs, too, at My Lai 4, where a few dozen American soldiers slaughtered at least five hundred South Vietnamese mothers, children, and old men and women in a long morning of unforgettable carnage more than four decades ago. Ronald Haeberle, an Army photographer, was there that day with two cameras. He directed the lens of his official one, with black-and-white film in it, away from the worst sights; there is a shot of soldiers with faint smiles on their faces, leaning back in relaxed poses, and no sign of the massacre that has taken place. But the color photos that Haeberle took on his personal camera, for his own use, were far more explicit—they show the shot-up bodies of toddlers, and became some of the most unforgettable images of that wasteful war. In most of these cases, when we later meet these soldiers, in interviews or during court proceedings, they come across as American kids—articulate, personable, and likable.

Why photograph atrocities? And why pass them around to buddies back home or fellow soldiers in other units? How could the soldiers' sense of what is unacceptable be so lost? No outsider can have a complete answer to such a question. As someone who has been writing about war crimes since My Lai, though, I have come to have a personal belief: these soldiers had come to accept the killing of civilians—recklessly, as payback, or just at random—as a facet of modern unconventional warfare. In other words, killing itself, whether in a firefight with the Taliban or in sport with innocent bystanders in a strange land with a strange language and strange customs, has become ordinary. In long, unsuccessful wars, in which the enemy—the people trying to kill you—do not wear uniforms and are seldom seen, soldiers can lose their bearings, moral and otherwise. The consequences of that lost bearing can be hideous. This is part of the toll wars take on the young people we send to fight them for us. The G.I.s in Afghanistan were responsible for their actions, of course. But it must be said that, in some cases, surely, as in Vietnam, the soldiers can also be victims.

The Der Spiegel photographs also help to explain why the American war in Afghanistan can probably never be "won," in my view, just as we did not win in Vietnam. Terrible things happen in war, and terrible things are happening every day in Afghanistan, as Americans continue to conduct nightly assassination raids and have escalated the number of bombing sorties. There are also reports of suspected Taliban sympathizers we turn over to Afghan police and soldiers being tortured or worse. This will be a long haul; revenge in Afghan society does not have to come immediately. We could end up not knowing who hit us, or why, a decade or two from now.


http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/newsdesk/2011/03/the-kill-team-photographs.html

http://www.shahidulnews.com/2011/03/the-%e2%80%9ckill-team%e2%80%9d-photographs/


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[ALOCHONA] Re: Dr Moshiur Rahman on transit fee



Dr Moshiur's role


http://amardeshonline.com/pages/details/2011/04/06/75621

On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 11:44 AM, Isha Khan <bdmailer@gmail.com> wrote:
Mitter cautions against high transit fees

Chittagong, Apr 4 (bdnews24.com) — The Indian envoy has indicated his preference for low transit fees and cautioned that high fees might hinder bilateral trade.

While he told journalists that India would certainly agree to Bangladesh's decision, Rajeet Mitter also noted that expensive transit might not bring the desired level benefits, especially in the form of bilateral trade.

Bangladesh exports about a tenth of its imports from India. In terms of money Bangladesh exported about $300 million worth of goods to India but imported just over $3 billion worth of goods from the large neighbour in 2009-10 fiscal.

The Indian high commissioner told reporters on Monday at a discussion in Chittagong that in this regard the Bangladesh government's decision would be the final word.

When asked about the recent comments of the prime minister's economic adviser Mashiur Rahman suggesting that India need not pay any user fees for transit according to global trade rules, Mitter pointed out that the government had already designated a committee for the task. "The committee will fix the charge. Their decision will be final."

On Mar 31, Mashiur said that asking for 'extra benefit' from India for transit would not be correct. The main opposition BNP has been opposing transit ever since the talk started on this issue.

The Chittagong businessmen urged the envoy to ease visa complexities for Bangladeshi businessmen and visitors and remove trade barriers for Bangladeshi products. Indian businessmen are interested to invest in information technology in Dhaka and Chittagong, Mitter said.

He noted that the 'joint communiqué' of the two heads of government in Jan 2010 would be the cornerstone for all initiatives to strengthen economic relations between the neighbours.

While speaking about the Palatana power plant, Mitter said, "If needed Bangladesh could import power it generates." The discussion was organised by the Chittagong Chamber of Commerce and Industries.

http://www.bdnews24.com/details.php?id=191952&cid=4



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[ALOCHONA] Serajur Rahman on foreign interference [1 Attachment]

[Attachment(s) from Isha Khan included below]

Serajur Rahman on foreign interference


http://dailynayadiganta.com/2011/04/05/fullnews.asp?News_ID=270895&sec=6

Attachment(s) from Isha Khan

1 of 1 File(s)


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[ALOCHONA] Fw: RE: Amartya Sen on religion



--- On Tue, 4/5/11, Zoglul Husain <zoglul@hotmail.co.uk> wrote:

From: Zoglul Husain <zoglul@hotmail.co.uk>
Subject: RE: Amartya Sen on religion
To: bd_mailer@yahoo.com

The report of Mahbubur Rahman, and Professor Hasanuzzaman's observation on one or more of Nobel Laureate Professor Amartya Sen's articles relating to religion in 'The Argumentative Indian' shows that Amartya Sen's views on Islam are utterly wrong and absolutely deplorable to say the least. Though I read Amartya Sen's Poverty and Famines and some of his articles many years ago, I haven't read the above book, but Hasanuzzaman's published observations are clear enough. According to the observations, Amartya Sen prescribed to the Muslims to reject 'Quraan and Sunnah' and accept Emperor Akbar's Deen-e-Ilahi, as, according to him, the latter is 'secular' in nature. The prescription is simply outrageous and obviously he himself has not administered the same medicine for himself, as according to him, Hindutvaism is secular! 
 
One needs to be very careful to write about religion, especially in writing anything contentious about other people's religion. In the name of secularism, Amartya Sen, without any doubt, has hurt the religious sentiments of the Muslims, which cannot be supported. On the other hand, Amartya Sen, according to Hasanuzzaman, has surrendered to Hindutvaism, which he claimed to be secular. While being respectful about hinduism and the righteous Hindus, one can ask questions about the 'secularism' of many of the practitioners of Hindutvaists or Hindu fundamentalists. In this regard, Amartya Sen certainly needs to explain the thousands of communal riots perpetrated by many of the 'secularist' Hindutvaists in India. Our position is: We oppose communal riots perpetrated by any religious groups anywhere in the world; we support the principles of equality of human beings irrespective of gender, religion, race, ethnicity, social groupings and culture; and we oppose all imperialist wars, including the recent wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and, especially, the fanning of the flames of Islamophobia in support of these genocidal wars.
 
Amartya Sen supports imperialist globalisation, albeit with some reform to alleviate inequality and poverty. But, we want people's globalisation with the principles of equality firmly established and causes of poverty removed, which is totally a different position than that of Amartya Sen, who, I believe, needs to discern that without inequality, imperialism does not exist. I have similar reservations about his position on poverty and famines - he seems to have glossed over the questions of colonialism, neo-colonialism, exploitation, plunder, etc., which often are the real causes of famine, so that Amartya Sen has really failed to identify the real causes of famines, though his findings about distribution and freedom of the press are useful. This, of course, needs a long discussion.
 
Secularism is a much discussed subject with various and numerous analyses and views, which generally are debatable, including also the views of Hasanuzzaman in the present context. The questions of religion and tolerance and, in a way, of secularism ,exist in the human society from very ancient times, certainly from the Sumerian and Babylonian times. Whatever our standing on the subject, we need to respect each other's beliefs and have tolerance to each other's views, provided these are honest and have not arisen from any ulterior motives or as a result of capitulations to any unjust power.
 
I, however, hope to read the book under reference at some point and have a better purview of Amartya Sen's denunciation of Islam and his not-too-veiled support for Hindutvaism in the name of secularism and agnosticism, in addition to his support for imperialist globalisation, with some reform.
 

Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2011 18:35:51 -0700
From: bd_mailer@yahoo.com
Subject: Amartya Sen on religion
To:

Amartya Sen on religion



Amartya in his 'The Argumentative Indian' has repeatedly mentioned that (Islamic and Muslim) tradition should be rejected and 'rahi aqbal' theory given by Emperor Akbar should be accepted as the main principle. He has even gone to the extent of saying that this demon tradition should and must be fought and rejected by the society.'

Dr Sen says, "Akbar not only made unequivocal pronouncements on the priority of tolerance, but also laid the formal foundations of a secular legal structure and of religious neutrality of the state. ...Despite his deep interest in other religions and his brief attempt to launch a new religion, Din-ilahi (God's religion), based on a combination of good points chosen from different faiths, Akbar did remain a good Muslim himself."

"The pursuit of reason and rejection of traditionalism are so brilliantly patent as to be above the need of argument. If traditionalism were proper, the prophets would merely have followed their own elders (and not come with new messages".

Prof Dr Hasanuzzaman Chowdhury on Dr Amartya Sen's book:

http://www.amardeshonline.com/pages/details/2011/04/05/75481



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[ALOCHONA] Jubo League men burn down temple, vandalise houses



Jubo League men burn down temple, vandalise houses



Activists of Jubo League and Shwechchhasebak League allegedly burnt down a temple and vandalised some houses of the Hindu community in Ukiara village of Manikganj on Tuesday.(The Daily Star)

The attackers also beat up a reporter of a national daily when he went to cover the incident, our correspondent in Manikganj reported.

Biplob Chakrabarty, Manikganj correspondent of the Daily Shamokal, has taken first aid at Manikganj Sadar Hospital."I was under attack at around 10:45am. The attackers confined me for an hour and snatched away my mobile handset and camera," Biplob said.The Shamokal correspondent claimed that the destruction was caused by the men loyal to Jubo League and Shwechchhasebak League."My source told me that the AL men wanted to took possession of a vested property, owned by some late Shyamacharan Mandal in the area," Biplob said.

Gosai Chandra Mandal, a relative of Shyamacharan, and his brother Sharat Mandal have been living in the house for the last 80 years. The temple was also constructed within the property, Gosai told our correspondent."After the death of Shyamacharan, the house was recorded as vested property. So, Sharat and me submitted an application to the deputy commissioner of Manikganj seeking ownership of the land," Gosai said.Being rejected by the deputy commissioner's office, the duo filed a writ on January 20 with the Manikganj District and Sessions Judges' Court demanding temporary stay order.

Following the writ, the court passed an order asking the deputy commissioner, assistant deputy commissioner (revenue), upazila nirbahi officer, assistant commissioner (land) and union land officer to explain why the brothers should be evicted from the place.

"District Jubo League member Jafar and Firoj with 12 to14 others came to the house at around 11:00am Tuesday and threatened us to leave the house immediately," Gosai said.As soon as the brothers refused to do so, the AL wings' men launched the attack on them, he added.


http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/latest_news.php?nid=29226


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[ALOCHONA] 7031 cases for withdrawal: 2 against BNP, all others against Awami League





DHAKA : The government has decided to withdraw 49 more cases on the ground that these were 'politically motivated' cases filed during previous regimes. This recommendations were made at the 28th inter-ministerial meeting on Tuesday to review the politically motivated cases.(The BD Today)

On the latest occasion the committee in its meeting presided by State Minister for Law Advocate Quamrul Islam reviewed a total of 411 cases and recommended only 49 for withdrawal.

With the latest 49 cases , the committee has so far recommended for dropping 7,031 cases after reviewing 10,536 cases filed against the leaders of different political parties . The cases were filed under the Bangladesh Penal Code and the Anti-Corruption Commission Act. Earlier, the 27th inter-ministerial meeting on the withdrawal of political harassment cases was held on March 13 . In total 7031 cases have been selected for withdrawal: including 2 against BNP, 5 JP, 1 lawyers, 5 Proshika and all others against AL. TBT Report

http://www.thebangladeshtoday.com/leading%20news.htm


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Re: [ALOCHONA] Islam turning into an unknown religion in the hands of hooligans

Thanks for your very pragmatic views expressed in the article. So far
I understand a vast majority of Muslims are of the type you suspected.
This is not ignorance alone, there is also fear. This ingredient of
fear instilled in the mind of the Muslims, not by the prophet of
Islam, but by some later over jealous mullahs to maintain their grip
in the community. The brew of ignorance and fear has become a lethal
force in Islam. Look at the hypocrisy when the mullahs claim that
Islam is a faith of peace and compassion but can't castigate those
crazy souls who kill the innocent by killing themselves. Following
your article I went to listen to some of the related YOUTUBE clips of
the mullahs and astonished to see that these fellows are still living
in the dark medieval times. The mountain of ignorance they are still
professing is disgusting. If faith is used to distribute ignorance
among the masses that faith needs serious reconsideration. Pastor
Terry Jones of Gainesville, FL, is a fool and agitator, but killing of
the innocent people to avenge his foolishness is totally unacceptable
especially from the followers of a faith boasted as the perfect faith.
It's lamentable that after 1500 years of existence and followed by
more than a billion people, Islam has come to a stage when its in need
of a renaissance for revitalization.


Akbar Hussain

On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 1:13 AM, Shamim Chowdhury <veirsmill@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> Is Islam turning into militant religion? Probably not yet, however if mass Muslims do not retake hijacked Islam from mullahs then Islam surely will go into militants hand. In most Muslim countries terrorism is a common disease and it is growing like inferno.
>
> Uneducated half cooked mullah and their so called political parties has taken Islam from general mass and making it like something from another planet, so unfamiliar so strange that it is hard to call Islam anymore. A big number of madras no longer producing Aleem but mostly Jaleem who wants to go out with sword in one hand while the other carrying Holly Quran and the body rapped with bombs ready to blast to take life of common people Muslims and Others alike.  Turning Mosque and Madrasa into insulated breading ground for terrorists and future terrorist. Muslim must claim their religion from so called Muslims like Amine who breathe nothing but violence. Free young Madrasa students from Jaleem like Amini and his hooligans.
>
> I must say the numbers of militant Islam follower are small but they prevail as the vast mass is either unaware or excavate their head into sand not to see the incoming express tsunami. Bangladesh today faced the barbaric forces of evil lead by mullah Amini and his so called Islamic Law Implementation Committee (ILIC) against proposed National Women Development Policy 2011, High Court ban on fatwa and the recently-formulated education policy. Mullahs and their political wings are against the Muslim women getting their rightful share of their family property. Amini and his gangs are out there to hijack our mothers and sisters God given equal right to acquire and exercise property right.
>
> Shamim Chowdhury
> Maryland, U.S.A.
>
> Watch this video where Amini says he will rip up the eyes if Police BDR Army or administration even looks upon his people with crooked eye (April 2011)
>
> Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eZtEIbOvNE
>
> Watch this video from April 2008 on same issue: http://www.youtube.com/user/usawamileague#p/u/17/wQ75JQnalBc
>
> News courtesy: khabor.com
> ===================================================================
>
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>
> 11:05 PM | Monday, April 4, 111
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> Awxidyk omþè pkZwl! lwxVËowUwop Ëbmy Aþè pwËZ xbËt kwþæwt dwiwËdw pt iwbÞwow Qw¢Ëbk
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> xhIxgxW, XwKw ËaËK: (iÅ lgwk 5 GxeÞl 2011, 22 ÐP¢ 1417, 30 kxgDo owxd AwDtwl 1432) - Bolwiy AwBd gwþægwtd KxixUk dwËi WwKw pkZwl Ëowigwk xXËlXwlwhwËg ewxlZ pËtËQ„ dwky Ddítd I xmqwdyxZk xgËkwxcZw KËk GB xPxpßZ ciyêt ËMwÅyk WwKw pkZwËl kwRcwdyËZ ËZid eÞhwg dw erËlI XwKwop gwBËkk xgxhdí þÿwËd xgxq® ovNnê, cwItw ewùUwcwItw, e×xlËmk lwxVPwRê I xUtwkËml xdËqËek NUdw NËUËQ„ AwBdmÚáLlw gwxpdyk iwki×Ly AgþÿwËdk KwkËY pwËZËMwdw xZd-PwkxU þÿwd Qwrw pkZwËlk oiaêËd ËKwd xixQl-oiwËgm-xeËKxUv ËbLw jwtxd„ Âc× XwKw ipwdMky ËaËKB Ëbr mZwxcK pkZwl oiaêKËK ËMÞfZwk KËkËQ e×xlm„ XwKwop ËbËmk xgxhdí þÿwËd Awxidyk DMÞ oiaêKkw Xwl xpowËg g×ËK exg¢ ËKwkwd mxkf Ëg^Ëc, MwËt KwfËdk Kwer Ggv pwËZ lwxVop Ëbmyt Aþèmþè xdËt Zw«g I ovNËnê RxrËt eËr„ pkZwl ofl KkËZ KIiy iwbÞwowk ËKwilixZ xKËmwkËbkI gøgpwk KËkËQ Awxidykw„
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> P›MÞwi KøwåUdËiåU ovlMí gwl×Qrw GlwKwt pkZwl oiaêKËbk oËÅ  e×xlËmk gøweK ovNnê pËtËQ„ fxUKQxrk iwBRhw«wk mxkfMwiy mZwxcK Mwxr hwvP×k I GKxU ËeËUÞwl ewËóe AxMíovËjwËMk NUdw NËU„ fxkbe×Ëk GKxU Mwxr e×xrËt xbËtËQ Awxidy oiaêKkw„ L×ldwop Ëgm KËtKxU ËRlwt Mwxr hwvP×k KkËlI AxcKwvm þÿwËd pkZwl ewxlZ dw pItwkI Lgk ewItw ËMËQ„
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> Bolwiy AwBd gwþægwtd KxixU AwpÔZ pkZwËlk oiaêËd oKwl owZUwt KËtK pwRwk iwbÞwow Qw¢ lwxV, kwibw, Ëlwpwk kWop Xwl xdËt XwKw P›MÞwi ipworK AgËkwc KËk„ mxdk AwLrwk owiËd ËaËK xox¦kM™ I dwkwtYM™ xlvK ËkwËWk eÞwt Qt xKËlwxiUwk kwþæwt Zwkw Agþÿwd Ëdt„ kwþæw AgËkwËck KwkËY b×'ewËm jwdgwpd PlwPl gëc pËt jwt„ Adwxgl exkgpËdk eÞwt 20xU gwo I UÞwK xbËt kwþæw gëc KËk Zwkw„ G oit owdwkewk, owBdËgwWê, Ëi#PwK, P›MÞwi ËkwW, h^ÔBNk, dwkwtYM™ xlvK ËkwËW mZ mZ exkgpd AwUKweËr„
> þÿwdyt e×xlm exkxþÿxZ xdtìèËY AwdËZ gøaê pËl dwkwtYM™ ËaËK køwg-11 GKxU BDxdU NUdwþÿËl GËo DexþÿZ pt„ Gkek fZ×Áw, jw¢wgwry I ËWikw awdw e×xlmop xWGixe ËaËK KËtK m' e×xlm NUdwþÿËl RlKwiwdop pwxRk pt„ Ëglw Ëowtw 11Uwk xbËK xgËqwhKwkyËbk Iek RlKwiwd xdËqe I lwxVPwËRêk icø xbËt ÂkØ pt e×xlmy GøwKmd„ G oit pkZwlKwkykw e×xlËmk Iek lwxV, kW I BU xdËt pwilw Pwlwt„ exkxþÿxZ xdtìèËY e×xlm kgwk g×ËlU, †xl, xUtwkËml xdËqe KËk„ GK ekøwËt ovNnê xox¦kM™ I fZ×Áw GlwKwk mwxìædMk, owËpgewrw, xiZwly iwËKêU, gMwBk, xdDUwDd, ow¥wi iwËKêU e×Ëkw GlwKwt ovNnê QxrËt eËk„ e×xlm køwËgk oËÅ  owcwkY iwd×nI iwbÞwow Qw¢Ëbk pUwËZ ËjwM Ëbt„ eÞwY gw^PwËZ pkZwlKwkyËbk AËdËKB xSËlk iËcø Sw^xeËt eËr„ eÞwt AwcwNëUw pkZwlKwkyËbk oËÅ  e×xlËmk ovNnê PËl„
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> ovNnê PlwKwËl e×xlm KdËýUgl BgÞwxpi, kwdw, Ëgwkpwd I køwg oboø ixZDkop AwBdmÚáLlw gwxpdyk Ëgm KËtK oboø AwpZ pt„ Goit jw¢wgwry GlwKwk Awmkwxftw iwbÞwowk Qw¢ Awgb×l LwËlK iwawt kgwk g×ËlUxg¦ pt„ AwpZ Agþÿwt ZwËK XwKw ËixWKøwl KËlR pwoewZwËl hxZê Kkw pËtËQ„ NUdwþÿl ËaËK 23 xeËKUwkËK ËMÞfZwk KËkËQ gËl RwxdËtËQd xox¦kM™ awdwk hwkeÞw® KiêKZêw GoGi gbkØl Awli„ pkZwËlk oiaêËd owBdËgwWê GlwKwk iwKR×l Ébw KIiy iwbÞow, iwbwdydMk iwbÞwow, Awmkwxftw iwbÞwow I Rwxitw BgÞwxpi iwbÞwowop 10xU iwbÞwowk Qw¢-xmqKkw Avm Ëdt„ ZËg jw¢yËbk KwQ ËaËK xdxbêÄ oiËtk ek KËtKxU ËUÞd ËQËr jwItwk Lgk ewItw ËMËQ„ GQwrw ËKkwdyMË™I e×xlm I xeËKUwkËbk iËcø ovNËnê AwpZ pËtËQ 20 Rd„
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> dwiwR ËmËn Bolwiy AwBd gwþægwtd KxixUk ËdZw Awgb×l lxZf ËdRwiy owvgwxbËKk Rwdwd, pkZwl ofl pËtËQ„ pkZwËlk oiaêËd Ëbmgwoy gøweK owrw xbËtËQ gËl bwxg KËkd xZxd„ Zw^k AxhËjwM, okKwk AMYZwxìèK eìÿwt pkZwl ewlËd gwcw xbËtËQ„ gÅ gëc× GøwxhxdDk AwItwiy lyM AxfËok owiËd oËëbpRdKhwËg ËNwkwËfkw Kkwk oit 5/6 RdËK AwUK KËk e×xlm„ GQwrw ixZxSl, xLlMw^I ËklËMU, gwowËgw, Kilwe×k GlwKwt owkwxbËd ËKwd xeËKxUv ËbLw jwtxd„ jwdgwpd PlwPl KËkËQ jawkyxZ„
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> MwgZly xike×k Ëiwpwóibe×k xike×Ëk xgxâQdí xKQ× NUdwk icøxbËt dwiKwItwoËZô pkZwl ewxlZ pËtËQ„ MwgZly ËaËK bÔkewÁwk AËdK jwdgwpd MìæËgøk DË¥Ëm oKwl 8Uwk iËcø Uwxiêdwl ZøwM KËk„ eÞwt owËr 4 NëUwk xgkxZk ek Ëglw GKUwk xbËK Awgwk bÔkewÁwk gwo MìæËgøk DË¥Ëm MwgZly ËQËr jwt„ GQwrw xike×k, MwgZly, xPxrtwLwdw, eÁgy GlwKwt jwdgwpËdk PlwPl xQl AËdKUwB þñwhwxgK„
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> xike×k-10 d¹k ËMwlPZòzgËk pkZwl oiaêKkw ËhwËk jwdgwpËd hwvP×Ëkk ËPÄw Pwlwt„ G oit e×xlm gwcw xbËl pkZwl oiaêdKwkykw e×xlËmk Iek BUewUËKl xdËqe KkËZ awËK„ eËk e×xlm ZwËbk Q¢hÅ  KËk Ëbt„ xike×k awdwk Ixo KwRy ItwËRb Awly  gËld, ovNnêKwËl e×xlËmk pwËZ 7 pkZwl oiaêK AwUK pËtËQ„ AwUKKÚZËbk AxcKwvmB KIiy iwbÞwowk Qw¢„ GQwrw eÁgy, mwpAwly, xike×k-10, KwRyewrw, ËmIrwewrw, xPxrtwLwdw, møwily, ËUKxdKøwl Ëiwr, MwgZly GlwKwt xoxU owxhêo jwdgwpËdk PlwPl xKQ× þñwhwxgK„
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> Ëiwpwóibe×k xmtw ioxRb, UwDd pl I Awowb ËMËUk owiËd KIiy iwbÞwow Qw¢kw pVwu KËkB kwþæwt lwxVËowUw xdËt Agþÿwd xdËl DË£Rdw QxrËt eËr„ Zwkw Mwxr hwvP×Ëkk ËPÄw PwlwËl e×xlm iÚb× lwxVPwRê KËk Qw¢hÅ  KËk Ëbt„ G oit xeËKUwkËbk pwilwt b×B e×xlm oboø AwpZ pd„ NUdwþÿl ËaËK 18 RdËK AwUK KËk e×xlm„ bwkØoowlwi ËkwËW ËhwËk pkZwl oiaêKkw GKxU jw¢ygwpy gwËo Aw†d cxkËt Ëbtwk ËPÄw KËk„ Lgk ËeËt e×xlm bÞiíZ NUdwþÿËl Ëe#^QËl pkZwl oiaêKkw ewxlËt jwt„ MwgZly gwo UwxiêdwËlk AxcKwvm xUxKU KwDåUwk ËLwlw xQl„ ZwËbk bÔkewÁwk gwËok xUxKUI xgx¢ß KkËZ ËbLw ËMËQ„
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> XwKwk gwBËk xgxq® ovNnê Aw†d hwvP×k kwRcwdy XwKw AËeqwKÚZ mwìæ awKËlI P›MÞwi, KOzgwRwkop xgxhdíþÿwËd e×xlËmk oËÅ  gøweK ovNnê pËtËQ xeËKUwkËbk„ P›MÞwi ËaËK AwiwËbk ýUwf xkËewUêwk Rwdwd, fRl×l pK Awxidyk WwKw pkZwl iÔlZ GLwËd gøaêZwt ejêgxoZ pËtËQ„ owcwkY iwd×Ënk ËKwd owrw ËiËlxd„ ZËg KøwåUdËiåU ovlMí gwl×Qrw GlwKwt e×xlËmk oËÅ  Awxidy oiaêKËbk gøweK ovNnê pËtËQ„ GËZ AwpZ pËtËQ e×xlm, xeËKUwk, gwojw¢yop AcêmZwxcK„ GQwrw Axfo AwbwlZ, gøwvK, gëbkop xgxhdí ËoÆ’Ëk KwRKiê PËlËQ þñwhwxgK„
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> Ëglw 12Uwk xbËK AZxKêËZ dMkyk gwl×Qrw GlwKwt Zw«g Pwlwt pkZwl oiaêKkw„ pwUpwRwky gr iwbÞwow ËaËK KËtK m' Qw¢ GLwËd GËo xdxgêPwËk hwvP×k PwlwËZ awËK„ DMÞ iwbÞwow Qw¢kw pwilw Pwlwt iwBRhw«wk mkyËfk DkËok DË¥Ëm jwItw mZwxcK jwdgwpËd„ Aw†d cxkËt Ëbt xmDly xoGdxR ËýUmd ewËóe„ exkxþÿxZ xdtìèËY AwdËZ e×xlm GøwKmËd jwt„ G oit owcwkY iwd×nËKI Avm xdËZ ËbLw ËMËQ„ e×xlm KËtK kwD« xUtwkËml, fw^Kw †xl I lwxVPwRê KËk xeËKUwkËbk Q¢hÅ  KËk Ëbt„ P›MÞwi-LwMrwQxr orËKk QrwkK×l I DeËRlw obËk Ggv exUtwk iwbÞwow Qw¢kw P›MÞwi-KOzgwRwk ipworËKk mwxìækpwU I Lwoipl GlwKwt gøwxkËKW xbËlI eËk e×xlm Q¢hÅ  KËk Ëbt„ P›MÞwi gëbk KZÚêeËqk oxPg Ðotb fkpwb Dx¥d AwpËib  Rwdwd, gëbËk eYø IVw-dwiw xQl þñwhwxgK„
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> fxUKQxr ËaËK xdRþñ ovgwbbwZw Rwdwd, pkZwl PlwKwËl xeËKUwkkw dwxRkpwËU ËUÞd hwvP×k, fxUKQxr obËk iwbÞwow I iwRwËk pwilw I xgxhdí gøgow eÞxZÅwËd Aw†d I l×UZkwR Pwlwt„ D£k fxUKQxrk xptwËKw gwRwËkk KwËQ Bolwie×k GlwKwt iwbÞwowk Qw¢kw Upl e×xlËmk MwxrËZ pwilw PwxlËt hwvP×k KËk„ pwilw Pwlwt pjkZ iwIlwdw dxRxktw mwpk iwRwËk„ e×xlËmk oËÅ  ovNnê pt ib×dwNwU GlwKwt„ Gog þÿwd ËaËK e×xlm Ëgm K'RdËK AwUK KËkËQ„
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> KOzgwRwËk e×xlËmk oËÅ  cwItw ewùUwcwItw, ovNËnêk NUdwt e×xlmop AwpZ pËtËQ 25 Rd„ e×xlm xeËKUwkËbk Q¢hÅ  KkËZ KËtK kwD« xUtwkËml xdËqe I lwxVPwRê KËkËQ„ b×B iwbÞwow xmqKop 21 RdËK AwUK KËkËQ køwg-e×xlm„ owhwËk gøwoýUøwË«k KwËQ kwþæwt Uwtwk RòwxlËt xeËKUwkkw orK AgËkwËck ËPÄw KkËl e×xlm cwItw xbËt Q¢hÅ  KËk Ëbt, AwUK KËk 5 RdËK„ L×ldwt xXËlXwlw pkZwl ewxlZ pËtËQ„ xeËKUwkkw Mwxr I ËbwKwdewU hwvP×Ëkk ËPÄw PwlwËl e×xlm cwItw xbËt Q¢hÅ  KËk Ëbt, AwUK KËk 4 RdËK„ pxgMË™ Awxidyk pkZwl eÞZøwLøwd KËkËQ owcwkY iwd×n„ ZËg KËtKxUþÿwËd e×xlËmk †xl I lwxVPwËRê AwpZ pËtËQ 10 Rd„
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> xoËlËUk xgtwdygwRwËkk PwkLwBËt pkZwl Plwk oit AwItwiy lyM I RwiwtwZ oiaêKËbk iËcø ovNËnê AìæZ 10 Rd AwpZ pËtËQ„ iwBË¢ßwgwoËjwËM mÞxiK lyM ËdZw Awgb×l mwK×k PwkLwB PZòËk GËl RwiwtwZ ËdZw xilwb Awpib ËP#c×ky Mwxr AwUxKËt Zw^ËK iwkck KkËl ovNËnêk oÔ¢ewZ pt„ eÞwt NëUwgøwey b×'eËqk iËcø ovNnê PËl„ xgq׳ AwItwiy lyM Kiêykw RwiwtwZ oixaêZ Pwk ew^PxU ËbwKwd hwvP×k KËk„ Ëi#lhygwRwËk xeËKUwk I e×xlËmk iËcø ovNËnê 5 e×xlmop AwpZ pËtËQ 10 Rd„ GLwËd 5xU Mwxr hwvP×Ëkk NUdw NËU„ gw^mLwlyËZ eÞKwmø xeËKUwkkw þÿwdyt AwItwiy lyM ËdZw ËkRwDl Kxki ËP#c×kyk Mwxr gpËk pwilw PwlwËlI e×xlm eÞmwod xQl dykg„ xeËKUwkËbk pwËZ G oit ÐbxdK RdKËŸk eÞxZxdxcËKI lwxTzQZ pËZ pËtËQ„
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> fxkbe×Ëkk dMkKwëbwt xeËKUwkkw e×xlËmk GKxU Mwxr RòwxlËt xbËtËQ„ gøweK ovNËnê dMkKwëbwk Ixoop 40 Rd AwpZ pËtËQ„ AwpZËbk iËcø Rwfk dwËi †xlxg¦ GKRËdk Agþÿw Awm‰wRdK„ ÐhkËg gÅ gëc× KwxkMxk I gwxYxRøK ipwxgbøwlËtk owiËd xeËKUwkkw Ðhkg-AÂM™ ipworËK gËo ËKwkwd mxkf eËr gøwxkËKW oÚxÄ KËk„ iwxdKMË™ ËKwkwd mxkf pwËZ xdËt lwxVËowUwop xoÅ wBk-XwKw orK AgËkwc KËk xeËKUwkkw„ hwÅ wt xeËKUwkËbk lwxVPwËRê Ëgm K'Rd xeËKUwk AwpZ pËtËQ, owZ xmqKop ËiwU AwUK pËtËQ 8 Rd„ gÞwÊYgwxrtwt AwItwiy lyËMk þÿwdyt ovob oboø k Aw i Dgwtb×l ËiwKZwxbk ËP#c×kyk gwxr gpËk pwilw PwlwËdwk ËPÄw KËk xeËKUwkkw„ ZËg GËZ ËKwd qtqxZ ptxd„ pkZwl PlwKwËl ËdwtwLwly xgÅ¡wd I eÞj×x£ß xgmðxgbøwlËtk DewPwjê eÞËfok GËKGi owCb×l pK ËP#c×kyk oËÅ  Awxidy oiaêKkw Amwlyd AwPkY KkËl xgËqwËh ËfËU eËrd owcwkY Qw¢kw„ KOzgwRwËkk PKxktwt e×xlËmk høwdop 10xU Mwxr hwvP×k KËkËQ xeËKUwkkw„ kwDRwËd pkZwl oiaêK I Qw¢lyM KiyêËbk oËÅ  KËtK bfw ovNnê pËtËQ„ GËZ eÞwt 30/35 Rd AwpZ pËtËQ„ Pw^be×Ëkk KP×twt Qw¢lyËMk oËÅ  xeËKUwkËbk ovNËnê AwpZ pËtËQ 10 Rd„ xeËKUwkkw owËgK eÞxZiìèy W. ipyD¥yd Lwd AwliMyËkk ËeËUÞwlewËóeI pwilw Pwlwt„
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> fRËkk dwiwËRk ek Ikw Ëgwiw xdËt iwËV dwËi
> mvKk K×iwk Ëb: pkZwËl fRËkk dwiwËRk ekek AwÁwÉ AwKgk cµxd xbËt g×ËK ËKwkwd xdËt omþè Agþÿwt Zw-glylw PwxlËtËQ KIiy iwbÞwowk Qw¢ I RÅ ykw„ i×fxZ iwIlwdw fRl×l pK Awxidyk ËdZÚZòwcyd Bolwiy AwBd gwþægwtd KxixUk gøwdwËk KIiy iwbÞwowk Qw¢Ëbk ewmwewxm RÅ yËbk xbËt pkZwËl AwBdmÚáLlw gwxpdyk oboøËbk Iek pwilw PwlwËdw pt„ AwBdmÚáLlw gwxpdy ZwËbk oxpvoZwk i×ËLI Pki Ðcjê I opdmylZwk exkPt xbËt iwd×nRËdk Rwdiwl kqwk ËPÄw KËk„ AwZôkqw gøZyZ AwBdmÚáLlw gwxpdyËK gwrwgwxr I †xl Kkwk xdËbêm Ëbtw ptxd„ pkZwËlk oiËt oËkRxiËd N×Ëk, eÞZøqbmêyËbk oËÅ  Awlwe KËk, ËMwËtëbw ovþÿwk eÞxZËgbd ËaËK G xP¢ ewItw ËMËQ„
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> ËowigwËkk pkZwËlk oiËt e×xlm kwþæwt Awowk AwËMB kwþæw bLl KËk Ëdt pkZwËlk oiaêËd KIiy iwbÞwowk Qw¢ I RÅ ykw„ fRËkk dwiwËRk ekekB Zwkw kwReËa Agþÿwd Ëdt„ i×oxÁk ËewmwËK ËKwkwd g×ËK xdËt lwxVËowUw, ËMÞËdW, Ëgwiw pwËZ KËk Agþÿwd Ëdt kwReËa„ e×xlm Zwk xdxbêÄ þÿwËd pkZwËlk xWDxU KkËZ ËMËl ZwËbk gwcw Ëbt iwbÞwowk Qw¢ I RÅ ykw„ e×xlËmk Iek omþè Agþÿwt Sw^xeËt eËr Zwkw„ e×xlm ËgxmkhwM þÿwËd AwZôkqwËaê xeQ× pËUI ZwËbk pwZ ËaËK xdûKÚxZ ewtxd„ G KwkËY Ggwk pkZwl AwpµwdKwkyËbk pwËZ AwBdmÚáLlw gwxpdyk oboøËbk AwpZ pItwk ovLøw Ëgxm„ KIiy iwbÞwow Ëjog þÿwËd AwËQ ËoLwËdB pkZwËlk oiËt e×xlËmk oËÅ  ZwËbk Ëgxm oxpvo NUdw NËUËQ„ kwRcwdyk Ëiwpwóibe×k, xike×k, KwikwÅ ykPk, eùUd, kidw, KwKkwBl, XwKw«P›MÞwi ËkwËWk owBdËgwWê, mxdkAwLrw, jw¢wgwry, XwKw«dwkwtYM™ ËkwËWk R×kwBd, møwie×kop xgxhdí þÿwËd fRËkk dwiwËRk ekekB kwþæwt ËdËi AwËo KIiy iwbÞwowk Qw¢ I RÅ ykw„
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> XwKw«P›MÞwi ËkwËWk owdwkewr GlwKwt kpiZ Awly xitwk oËÅ  Awlwe pËlw„ nwËUwcê kpiZ Awly ËgxgUøwOzx PwlK„ Ëowigwk fRËkk AwjwËdk oiËt ËgxgUøwOzx xdËt kwþæwt Ëgk pd xZxd„ owdwkewËrk KIiy iwbÞwow ËaËK mZ mZ Qw¢ pwËZ lwxVËowUw xdËt AwÁwÉ AwKgk cµxd xbËt kwþæwt Ëgk pt„ omþè RÅ yËbk lwxVk AwNwËZ Zw^k ËgxgUøwxOÞ Möwo ËhËÅ  jwt„ XwKw«P›MÞwi ËkwW xbËt PlwPlKwky gwo-xixdgwËok Iek Zwkw Aw¢ßiY KËk, BUewUËKl xdËqe KËk hwvP×k KËk„ iwki×Ly AwPkËY bÔËk oËk GËo Gog NUdw ËbLËZ awËKd xZxd„ ZLdI owdwkewËr e×xlmËK xZxd ËbLËZ ewdxd„ jwdgwpd, xkOzwt hwvP×k KËk PlwPËl gwcwbwd Kkwk Lgk ËeËt e×xlm Awowk ek ZwËbk IekI Aw¢ßiY KËk KIiy iwbÞwowk Qw¢kw„ XwKw«P›MÞwi ËkwËW pkZwËlk dwËi oxpvo ovNËnêk NUdwk GhwËg gYêdw Ëbd ËgxgUøwOzx PwlK kpiZ Awly xitw„
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> XwKw«dwkwtYM™ ËkwËWk h×^BNk GlwKwk gwxoëbw Aw: kxpi h×^Btw mxdkAwLrwt jwItwk oiËt AwUKw eËrd owBdËgwWê GlwKwt„ Aw: kxpi h×^Btw GKRd kwRxixþè„ PxÁËmwcê gto Zwk„ oxpvo NUdwk eÞZøqbmêy xZxd„ oKwl owZUwk xbËK owBdËgwWê GlwKwt GËo ËbËLd KIiy iwbÞwowk Qw¢kw XwKw«P›MÞwËik kwþæwk bLl xdËt gËo AwËQ kwþæwt„ ËKwd gwo-xixdgwo, UÞwK, ËgxgUøwOzx, GidxK xkOzwI jwZwtwZ KkËZ xbËâQ dw„ ZwËbk g×ËK ËKwkwd, pwËZ MRwxkk lwxV, Ëlwpwk kW„ AwÁwÉ AwKgk cµxd I okKwkxgËkwcy ËoþíþíwMwd xbËâQ„ pkZwËlk dwËi oìèwËok Zw-glylw eÞZøq KËk Gog NUdwk gYêdw xbËtËQd Aw: kxpi h×^Btw„
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> XwKw I dwkwtYMË™k xgxhdí þÿwd N×Ëk ËbLw ËMËQ, pkZwËlk dwËi Æ×Ël jwZwtwZKwky Qw¢Qw¢y, GidxK ËkwMyËbk gpdKwky Gøw¹×Ëlëo†ËlwËK ejêìæ gwcw Ëbtw pËtËQ„ Ëowigwk oKwl eÞwt AwUUw„ dwkwtYMË™k 2m' mjøw pwoewZwËlk owiËdk kwþæw xbËt Gøw¹×ËlëoËjwËM AwoxQl iÚZ×øeajw¢y ËkwMy„ iwbÞwowk Qw¢kw lwxVËowUw pwËZ Gøw¹×ËlëoxUËK pwoewZwËl ËjËZ dw xbËt xfxkËt Ëbt„ RÐdK KwV gøgowty KZêgøkZ e×xlm KiêKZêwËbk G AxhËjwM KkËld„ e×xlm KiêKZêw I e×xlm bËlk owiËd xbËtB MRwxkk lwxV, Ëlwpwk kW pwËZ jwdgwpËd hwvP×k I Aw¢ßiY KkËQ„ GidxK Æ×Ëlk ËKwilixZ Qw¢Qw¢yËbk xkOzwËjwËM jwZwtwËZ gwcw Ëbtw pËtËQ„ e×xlm bËlk owiËd pkZwËlk dwËi oìèwËok Zw-glylw PwlwËdw oË£òI Pki Ðcjê I oËpøk exkPt xbËZ ËbLw ËMËQ ZwËbk„ mZ mZ iwd×n G NUdw eÞZøq KËkËQd„
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> XwKw ipwdMk e×xlËmk GK KiêKZêw Rwdwd, K×vf× ËKkwZ ýUwBËl KIiy iwbÞwowk Qw¢ I omþè RÅ ykw e×xlm gwxpdyk oboøËbk Iek Sw^xeËt eËrËQ„ kwRcwdyk kidw GlwKwt GhwËg AwBdmÚáLlw gwxpdyk Iek Aw¢ßiY Kkwk NUdw NËUËQ„ kwRcwdyk kidw GlwKw QwrwI Ëiwpwóibe×k, xike×k, KwikwÅ ykPk, mwpµwM, eùUd, jw¢wgwryop xgxhdí GlwKwt AwBdmÚáLlw gwxpdyk Iek Zwkw xgdw DÆwxdËZ Aw¢ßiY KËkËQ„ okKwËkk xdËbêm Ad×jwty AwBdmÚáLlw gwxpdy DÆwxdk i×ËLI Pki Ðcjê I opdmylZwk exkPt xbËtËQ„
> ËMwËtëbw ovþÿwk GK KiêKZêw RwxdËtËQd, ËMwËtëbw ovþÿwk eq ËaËK AwËMB RwxdËt Ëbtw pt ËowigwËkk pkZwËlk oiËt xK NUËZ ewËk„ ËMwËtëbw ovþÿwk eÞxZËgbËd DËÁL Kkw pt, pkZwËlk oiËt KIiy iwbÞwowk Qw¢ I owiËdk owxkËZ RÅ yËbk ËkËL ZwËbk pwËZ, g×ËK exg¢ ËKwkwd xbËt kwReËa xixQl KkwËdw pËg„ e×xlËmk oËÅ  ovNËnê xl® pItwk exkËgm oÚxÄ KkËg Qw¢ I RÅ ykw„
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> ovNnêKwËl ËK#mËl exg¢ ciêMÞìÿ ËfËl ËbËg kwReËa„ Gkek okKwk e×xlm xbËt exg¢ ËKwkwdËK Agiwddw Kkwk AxhËjwM GËd xgmðgøwey ËZwlewr oÚxÄk ËPÄw PwlwËg„ GhwËgB ciêeÞwY i×oliwdËbk Ëcw^Kw xbËt okKwkxgËkwcy RdiZ ÐZxkk dyldOzw xdËt iwËV dwiËQ Bolwiy AwBd gwþægwtd KxixU„ Gid dyldOzw gwþægwtËd AËaêk I RÅ yËbk ËjwMwd xbËtËQ RwiwtwËZk jצwekwcykw„ pkZwËlk oiËt xK NUËZ ewËk Zw xdËt ËMwËtëbw ovþÿw Ëj eÞxZËgbd xbËtËQ ZwkB eÞxZfld NËUËQ pkZwËl„
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> xgGdxe-RwiwtwËZk ËdZÚZòwcyd Pwkblyt ËRwËUk GKwvËmk ËPtwkiøwd fRl×l pK Awxidy Bolwiy AwBd gwþægwtËdk gøwdwËk WwKw pkZwlËK ËKwkwd kqwk pkZwl ofl pËtËQ gËl iìægø KËkËQd„ Ëowigwk lwlgwËM Zw^k KwkøwlËt GK ovgwb oËóilËd G iìægø KËkËQd xZxd„
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> GKRd AwBdRygy dwi eÞKwm dw Kkwk mËZê gËlËQd, Awxidyk g£ßgø Ad×jwty pkZwl dw pËl xK ËKwkwd kqw pËZw dw? exg¢ ciêMÞìÿ I exg¢ ciê xdËt Awxidy owËpgkw ciêeÞwY i×oliwdËbk Ëcw^Kw xbËt PËlËQd Zw^k xgPwk pItw DxPZ„ dwky dyxZiwlwk dwËi mwxìæk ciê BolwËik ËbwpwB xbËt Ëowigwk pkZwËlk oiËt Ilwiw iwmwËtL dwicwkykw oìèwËok Zw-glylw PwxlËt oxpvo NUdwk Rdô Ëbtw pËtËQ„
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> owBdËgwWê I xox¦kMË™ 10 pwRwk eÞxmxqZ KIiy Kiêy, iwbÞwowt otlwg! lwxV kwibw Xwl kW xdËt ipworËKk 7 xKxi R×Ër Agþÿwd
> kwRd h›wPwjê: DMÞeìÿy Bolwiy Qw¢ ovMVËdk Nw^xU xpËoËg exkxPZ kwRcwdyk owBdËgwWê I xox¦kM™ GlwKw„ MZ KËtK gQËk GB GlwKwt MËr DËVËQ ËQwU gr eÞwt 20xU KIiy iwbÞwow„ Gog iwbÞwowt kËtËQ 10 pwRwËkk Ëgxm eÞxmxqZ Kiêy„ Gk iËcø Rwxitw Dl×i Awmkwxftw iwbÞwowËZB kËtËQ ew^P pwRwk„ GB iwbÞwow ËaËKB ËMÞfZwk Kkw pËtxQl 21 AwMýU ËMÞËdW pwilw iwilwk AdøZi Awowxi xmqK Awgb×l AwDtwlËK„ GlwKwt iwbÞwowxhx£K Ëjog ovMVd MËr DËVËQ Zwk ËgxmkhwËMk ËdZw i×fxZ Awxidy„ GQwrwI kËtËQ Ëgm KËtKxU DMÞeìÿy ovMVËdk ËdZwKiêy„ ZwËbk GËK AeËkk iËcø oóeKê 'oway hwB' xpËoËg„ DMÞ owóeÞbwxtK mx£ßk D¤wËdk KwkËY GlwKwt owóeÞbwxtK oóeÞxZ dÄ pËâQ Awgwk Ëj ËKwd Bo×øËZ iwbÞwow Qw¢kw kwþæwt ËRpwËb dwiËQ„ ZwËbk KwkËY AwZˉ AwËQd GB GlwKwk iwd×n„ ËRpwby ËgxmkhwM Qw¢Ëbk gwxr K×xiÁw I Pw^be×Ëk„
>
> DMÞ owóeÞbwxtK mx£ßk Nw^xU Gog GlwKw ËowigwËkk pkZwËl Zw AwgwkI eÞiwxYZ pËlw„ pkZwl ofl KkËZ oKwl ËaËKB KËtK pwRwk iwbÞwow Qw¢ XwKw«P›MÞwi ipworËKk eÞwt owZ xKËlwxiUwk kwþæw AgËkwc KËk„ Ad×oëcwËd Rwdw ËMËQ, pkZwl ofl KkËZ xZd xbd AwËM ËaËK lwxV I Aþè ovMÞp ÂkØ KËk owBdËgwWê GlwKwk iwbÞwowk Qw¢kw„ xmqwaêyËbk ËgxmkhwM ËpfwRËZ Bolwi, zBolwiy AwBd gwþægwtd KxixUop xgxhdí ciêxhx£K ovMVËdk oËÅ  jף߄ Zwkw Bolwiy HKøwËRwËUk GKwvËmk ËPtwkiøwd i×fxZ fRl×l pK AwxidyËK GKRd g×R×Mê eyËkk bÚxÄËZ ËbËL„ þÿwdythwËg Zw^Ëbk ËdZÚZò xbËâQd Zw^Ëbk ËdZw Awgb×l AwDtwl„
>
> 'Awikw mpyËbk bkRw lwËhk Awmwt GËoxQ' iwawt Awkgy AqËk GB ËoþíwMwd Ëg^Ëc pkZwËlk oiaêËd kwþæwt dwËi iwbÞwow Qw¢kw„ ZwËbk ogwk ekËd xQl ewRwiw, ew™wxg I U×xe„ pwËZpwËZ xQl lwxV, kwibw, Xwl I Ëlwpwk kW„ oKwl ËaËK xgxhdí iwbÞwow ËaËK BU, Uwtwk I lwxV okgkwp Kkw pt„ ËRpwby xixQl Awk ËoíwMwËd D£wl pËt IËV ipworK„ Aþè I lwxVËowUw xdËt kwþæwt dwiwR ekËZ ËbLw jwt pkZwlKwkyËbk„Zd xKËlwxiUwk GlwKw iwbÞwowt otlwg jw¢gwry awdw GlwKwk AwËkKU× owiËd KwRlw I mxdkAwLkw„ Gkek ËaËKB GËKk ek GK ipworËKk ewËm MËr DËVËQ KIiy iwbÞwow„ GlwKwk gwxoëbwËbk g£ßgø, Aùe xbËdk gøgcwËd GlwKwk ËgxmkhwM iwbÞwow gÉZl hgËd exkYZ pËtËQ„ xSËlk iËcø xelwËkk Iek ËgxmkhwM iwbÞwow MËr DËVËQ„ Gog iwbÞwowk iËcø kËtËQ, Awmkwxftw iwbÞwow, jw¢wgwry Rwxitw Bgkwxpi iwbÞow, Rwxitw Awmkwxftw, iwbwdydMk iwbÞwow, i×x£ßdMk iwbÞwow, iwKwj×l Ébw Awl Bolwiy iwbÞwow, Rwxitw Awg×gKk iwbÞwow, RwxitwZ×d dgy, Rwxitw Kwxoxitw Awxkxgtwop Ëgm KËtKxU iwbÞwow„
>
> iwbwdydMk iwbÞwowt xMËt ËbLw ËMËQ, xgmwl GlwKwR×Ër xdiêwY Kkw pËtËQ PwkZlwxgxmÄ hgd„ owBdËgwWê GlwKwt Awmkwxftw iwbÞwowxUI PwkZlwxgxmÄ„ Gk ewËmk AwËkKxU iwbÞwowk gÉZl hgd GLd xdiêwYwcyd„ ZËg BËZwiËcøB GB iwbÞwowk Kwjê¢ßi ÂkØ pËtËQ„ K×xiÁwk gr×kw DeËRlwk Kw^Vwlewrw GlwKwk gwxoëbw owBf×l Bolwi„ xZxdI owBdËgwWê GlwKwk þÿwdyt GKxU iwbÞwowk Qw¢„ Ëowigwk pkZwËlk oiaêËd xeËKxUv KkËZ GËo e×xlËmk pwËZ ËMÞfZwk pd xZxd„ ËMÞfZwËkk ek RwdwËld iwbÞwowk Qw¢Ëbk iËcø Pw^be×k I K×xiÁwk oway hwB ogËPËt Ëgxm„ xZxd Rwdwd, okKwky dyxZ ewo pËl ËbËmk dwkyoiwR Ëgxm xdkøwxZZ pËg„ ZwB Rygd awKËZ Zwkw dwkydyxZ gwþægwtd KkËZ ËbËgd dw„ Z×nwkcwk GlwKwk bwkØl Bolwi iwbÞwowk Qw¢ mwio×l pK Rwdwd, oway hwBËbk xdËt dwkydyxZk xgkØ˦ ZwËbk ËRpwb AgøwpZ awKËg„ Awmkwxftw iwbÞwowk Qw¢ mxfK×l Bolwi Rwdwd, Awikw iwd×Ënk RwdiwËlk qxZk eËq dB„ ZËg okKwËkk eÞþæwxgZ dwkydyxZ Awikw KLdI ËiËd Ëdg dw„ Awikw ogwB ËRpwËbk Rdø eÞþæ×Z„ Awbmê gwþægwtËd AwiwËbk Kiêykw Rygd xbËZI eÞþæ×Z„
>
> xox¦kM™ awdwk hwkeÞw® KiêKZêw GoGi gbkØl Awli gËld, xox¦kMÅ¡ awdw GlwKwt iwbwdydMkop AwËkKxU iwbÞwow kËtËQ„ Gk gwBËk og iwbÞwow fZ×Áw I xWGixe GlwKwt„ xZxd Rwdwd, iwbÞwow Qw¢kw xgxhdí kwRÐdxZK bËlk oËÅ  jף߄ xgxhdí Bo×øËZ Zwkw GKx¢Z pItwk Kaw Rwdwd„ xZxd gËld, Qw¢Ëbk xgkØ˦ DMÞ owóeÞbwxtKZw I RÅ ygwËbk oËÅ  j×£ß awKwk ËKwd AxhËjwM AwiwËbk KwËQ AwËoxd
>
>
> AwxidyËK Axgl˹ kwÄÞËbÞwp iwilwt ËMÞfZwk Kk×d
> AwBd, AwbwlZ I kwËÄÞk xgkØ˦ ÉixK GidxK ËKwkwd g×ËK xdËt ciêyt xRxKk Z×Ël ovNwZ oÚxÄk ËLlwt ËdËiËQd ËRwËUk opËjwMy fRl×l pK Awxidy„ KIiy iwbÞowËK e×^xR KËk ËLwb eÞcwdiìèy ËmL pwxodwËK eÞKwËmø qiZw ËaËK ËUËdxp^PËr dwiwËdwk ÉixK, GidxK ËbmËK ËmL pwxodwmÔdø Kkwk ÉixK xbËâQd„ GxbËK RÅ y ibbbwËdk AxhËjwËM Axhj×£ß GB gøx£ßk kwÄÞxgËkwcy AwýfwlËd q׳ ËbËmk xgxmÄ Bolwiy xPìæwxgb I Bolwieìÿy ËdZwkw„ Awxidyk KiêKw«ËK RÅ y ZuekZw AxhxpZ KËk Axgl˹ kwÄÞËbÞwp iwilw xbËt ËMÞfZwËkk bwxg RwxdËtËQd Zw^kw„ ËKgl ZwB dt, Zwkw GB KiêKw«ËK dwky, iwdgZw I BolwixgËkwcy AxhxpZ KËk AwxidyËK cËk eÞKwËmø 101xU Ëbwkkw iwkwk bwxg RwxdËtËQd„ gËlËQd, iwdgZwxgËkwcy fËZwtw I dwkyËK Ëbwkkw iwkwk eËq Agþÿwd Ëdtwt AwxidyËK mwxþæ xbËZ„ gëc KkËZ pËg KIiy iwbÞwow xdËt Awxidyk kwRdyxZ„
>
> MZ KËtK xbËdk cwkwgwxpKZwt kxggwk I ËowigwkI eÞKwmø Rdohwt Awxidy eÞKwËmø ËbmËK ËmL pwxodwmÔdø Kkwk ÉixK xbËtËQd„ Awxidy eÞcwdiìèyËK ÉixK xbËZ jawkyxZ ciêyt xRxKk Z×lËQd Awk dwkydyxZ xdËt xiaøw Awk xg¸wxìæKk Zaø QxrËtËQd„ gËlËQd, eÞcwdiìèy ËmL pwxodw xgËbmy mx£ßk ¢ßyrdK„ pwxodw ËbmËK BolwimÔdø Kkwk ËPÄw KkËQd„ ZwB ËbmËK pwxodwmÔdø Kkw pËg„ Awxidy Zw^k KiêoÔPy ofl KkËZ kyxZiËZw fËZwtw xbËt gËld, pkZwlop Zw^k Adøwdø KiêoÔPy ËKwkwËdk ikøwbw kqwk Rdø„ ZwB G KiêoÔPy ofl KkËZ i×oliwdËbk KwR KkËZ pËg„ i×oliwdËbk iËd kwLËZ pËg, dwkydyxZk DË¥mø pËâQ dwkyËK e×kØn gwdwËdwk ËPÄw„ GB fËZwtwgwR Ggwk dwkydyxZ I fËZwtwxgËkwcy AwbwlËZk kwt gwxZËlk bwxgËZ WwKw pkZwlop oKl KiêoÔPyËZ Avm xdËZ ËbËmk oKl xmqw eÞxZÅwdËKI fËZwtw xbËâQd„ pkZwlop oKl KiêoÔPy ofl KkËZ Æ×l-KËlR, hwxoêxU, iwbÞwow og xKQ× gëc KËk kwþæwt dwiËZ pËg„ ipwËRwU okKwkËK DuLwZ KËk qiZwk iodËb gowk LwËtmI eÞKwm KkËQd Awxidy„ gËlËQd, GB okKwËkk eZd NxUËt Awikw qiZwk iodËb gog„ MZ 15 xbËd AìæZ 10xU oiwËgm I ohwt okKwk I eÞcwdiìèyËK qiZwP×øZ Kkwk ÉixK xbËtËQd Bolwiy HKøËRwU Ggv Bolwiy AwBd gwþægwtd KxixUk GB ËPtwkiøwd„ Awxidyk eÞxZxU Ad×ÅwËd Awxidyk ewËm awKËQd xgGdxe-RwiwtwËZk opËjwMy DMÞ Ëi#lgwby xgxhdí ovMVËdk xPxpßZ KËtKRd ËdZw„ jwkw ciyêt xRxKk Z×Ël xg¸wxìæKk Zaø QxrËt iwËV fwtbw ËlwUwk ËPÄw PwxlËt jwËâQd„
>
> GxbËK kwÄÞ, AwBd, AwbwlZ, okKwk I eÞcwdiìèyk xgkØ˦ GËKk ek GK ÉixK I ËKwkwdËK e×^xR KËk ovNwZ gwcwËdwk AeZuekZwt q׳ ËbËmk xgxmÄ Bolwiy xPìæwxgb I Bolwiy AwËëbwlËdk ËdZwkw„ Awxidyk KiêKw«ËK RÅ y I jצwekwcyËbk ZuekZw AxhxpZ KËk Axgl˹ kwÄÞËbÞwp iwilw xbËt AwxidyËK ËMÞfZwËkk bwxg RwxdËtËQd Bolwiy HKøËRwËUk ËPtwkiøwd xiQPwÉk kpiwd ËP#c×ky„ xZxd eÞmí kwËLd, xKhwËg AwbwlZ, okKwk I eÞcwdiìèyk xgkØ˦ GhwËg eÞKwmø KiêKw« PwlwËâQd xZxd? Zw^k mx£ßk Duo ËKwawt? eÞcwiìèyËK GhwËg eÞKwËmø cËiêk AegøwLøw xbËt GËKk ek GK ÉixK Ëbtwk owpo ewd ËKwaw ËaËK? xiQgwÉk kpiwd gËld, Awxidy jצwekwcyËbk kqwt ZwËbk pËt KwR KkËQd„ okKwËkk oZKê pItw DxPZ„ xZxd AwkI gËld, GB ËlwK BolwiËK xdËt ËLlËQ„ Gk KiêKw« BolwiËK ÉixKk i×ËL ËfËl xbËâQ„
>
> GxbËK exg¢ ËKwkwdËK RxrËt Awxidyop xgZxKêZ gøx£ßËbk KiêKwË« q׳ AwpËl o×díwZ Itwl RwiwtwËZk eÞcwd W. Ëiw: AwxRR×k kpiwd ËP#c×ky„ xZxd exg¢ ËKwkwdËK RxrËt dwkydyxZk xgkØ˦ Ëi#lgwbyËbk Pliwd KiêKw«ËK Adøwt I h×l gËl AxgxpZ KËkËQd„ xZxd gËlËQd, jwkw GLd Gog KkËQ Zwkw AwoËl Bolwi ËaËK AËdK bÔËk„
>
> Awxidyk KiêKw«ËK kwÄÞ, oiwR, dwky GidxK BolwixgËkwcy gËl iZ xbËtËQd oxóixlZ Bolwiy ËRwËUk ohwexZ iwIlwdw xRtwDl pwowd„ KiêKw«ËK kwËÄÞk Rdø ÉixK gËl oóeÞxZ iwddyt AwbwlËZ xZxd Awxidyk xgkØ˦ iwilwI KËkËQd„ xZxd Ëqwh eÞKwm KËk gËld, Awxidy Mv GËKk ek GK xg¸xìæ QrwËâQ„ ÉixK xbËâQ„ i×£ßwÅ Ëd kwþæw gëc KËk MwlwMwl KkËQ eÞcwdiìèyËK AwbwlZËK„ ¢ßgwk ioxRËb cËiêk AegøwLøw xbËt owcwkY i×oliwdËbk ËqxeËt Z×lËQ Awxidykw„ Axgl˹ AwxidyËK ËMÞfZwËkk bwxg RwxdËtËQd„ Awxidyk KiêKw«ËK dwky, Ëbm, iwdgZw I BolwixgËkwcy AxhxpZ KËk AwxidyËK cËk eÞKwËmø 101xU Ëbwkkw iwkwk bwxg RwxdËtËQd iwIlwdw xRtwDl pwowd„ gËlËQd, iwdgZwxgËkwcy fËZwtw I dwkyËK Ëbwkkw iwkwk eËq Agþÿwd Ëdtwk AekwËc AwxidyËK GB mwxþæ xbËZ„ gëc KkËZ pËg KIiy iwbÞwow xdËt Awxidyk kwRdyxZ„ xZxd ËbËmk xgxmÄ kwRdyxZxgb, dwky Ëd¢yop ogêþæËkk iwd×nËK Awxidy MvËtk xgkØ˦ Agþÿwd Ëdtwk Awpµwd Rwdwd„
>
> GxbËK gwvlwËbm ËfZdw eÞxZËkwc KxixUk ohwexZ AwlpwR i×fxZ iwo×i xgÁwp I owcwkY oóewbK pwËfR iwIlwdw Awgb×o ow£wkop mynê ËdZwkw AwxidyËK h«, eÞZwkK, ËKwkwd mkyf AgiwddwKwky xpËoËg AxhxpZ KËk ËMÞfZwËkk bwxg RwxdËtËQd„ ËdZÚgÚëb Awxidyk AwËtk Duo L×^ËR Ëgk Kkwk bwxg RwxdËtËQd„ GB oËÅ  gËlËQd, GB fËZwtwgwR xKhwËg XwKw mpËk QtZlw gwxr, GOz KËkwÁw Mwxr gøgpwk KËk Zw RwxZ RwdËZ Pwt„
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