Banner Advertiser

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Re: [ALOCHONA] End war on freedom of media in Bangladesh



dear mr. gomes,

it could be wise to get your letter EDITED by a friend, before you publish it. That can improve
the quality of your messages.


khoda hafez.


From: William Gomes <williamgomes.org@gmail.com>
To: "Mrs. Sheikh Hasina, Prime Minister,Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh" <pm@pmo.gov.bd>; ps1topm@pmo.gov.bd; psecy@pmo.gov.bd
Sent: Wednesday, 21 September 2011 5:56 PM
Subject: [ALOCHONA] End war on freedom of media in Bangladesh

 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PRESS RELEASE


September 21, 2011

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina
Prime Minister's Office
Old Sangsad Bhaban
Tejagaon, Dhaka-1215
Bangladesh

RE:   End war on freedom of media in Bangladesh

Dear Prime Minister,
I am William Gomes, human rights activist and journalist. Journalists in Bangladesh are frequently subjected to physical assault, harassment, and intimidation as the country has been wracked by political and criminal violence.
Freedom of expression is the mother to all other freedoms. For a democratic government it is essential to maintain a media for promoting respect for differences of opinions and discussion, free from any kind of censorship which can fulfill its watchdog function.
By the years Bangladeshi news media played a brave and praiseworthy role in upholding democratic values in the country whether it was during the time of illegal army regimes or autocratic democratic regime. Journalists are in battle for democracy while the government has declared war against media.
I am deeply concern about the ongoing suppression of speech or other public communication, raises issues of freedom of speech, suppression on media even after the landslide win of Bangladesh Awami League which has formed the present government with overwhelming support given by the people of Bangladesh after the last election. A range of restrictive laws and violence against journalists continue to hamper media freedom and undermining the democracy.  
Bangladesh is still far from being free which brings us near to the point that democracy in Bangladesh still has many challenges to overcome where the challenge of media freedom is a vital factor.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, Your government has a record of not tolerating criticism from the media.
I am concern about the pressure placed on news organizations by the weak rule of law and the perceived lack of judicial independence in Bangladesh.
I recall the impunity in the crimes against journalists and judicial harassment of journalists in connection with their reporting are two of the most serious threats to media freedom and investigative journalism in Bangladesh.
Bangladesh already has an appalling record for unsolved journalist murders, 11th worst in the world, according to CPJ's 2011 Impunity Index.
I am noting some of glimps of attack on media and media personals the notable facts during the time of your office:  
In March 2009, the video-sharing web site YouTube has been blocked by your government after a recording of a meeting between you and army officers was posted.
In October 2009, F.M. Masum, a journalist employed by the English-language daily "The New Age", who was arrested and tortured by an elite crime and counter-terrorist force, the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB).
In March 2010, a photo exhibit about extrajudicial executions "Crossfire," by Shahidul Alam, features photographs and installations relating to alleged extrajudicial killings by the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), was forcefully closed by police. Although your government had lift the  ban on the Drik gallery's "Crossfire" exhibition, When the high court convened on 31 March 2010 to hear gallery owner Shahidul Alam's appeal against the closure.
On April 2010, privately-owned Channel 1 TV station, which has been broadcasting for four years. The closure was announced on 27 April by Communications Minister Raziuddin Ahmed Raju, who said it was because the station had violated the 2001 Telecommunications Act by using broadcast equipment as collateral for loans.
In  May 2010, access to Facebook had  blocked in Bangladesh on  29 May 2010 , reportedly as a result of both the posting of Mohammed cartoons and "shocking" satirical images of prominent politicians, including Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, and Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the country's first president.
In  June 2010, The Dhaka office of Bangladesh's Amar Desh newspaper was stormed by police on Wednesday, just hours after Dhaka's deputy commissioner, Muhibul Haque, ordered its publishing license suspended. Police also arrested acting editor Mahmudur Rahman on fraud charges.
In June 2010, charge of sedition had been brought against Mahmudur Rahman, the chief editor of the opposition daily "Amar Desh". In the space of a few days, Rahman has been accused of fraud, obstructing the police, printing an outlawed group's posters and then sedition. Mahmudur Rahman became the victim of political persecution and  this case marks a tragic return to the old anti-democratic practice of harassing leading opposition figures.
In  June 2010, Mahmudur Rahman, the chief editor of the opposition daily "Amar Desh" on the open court said "Your honour, please save my life," The editor was quoted by local media as telling the court. "I am not supposed to be alive after the level of torture I have experienced at the cantonment police station. I was blindfolded and stripped by five men in the lock-up. I fainted after they pressed me on the chest and back."The editor was he was tortured in police custody.
In August 2010, Amar Desh newspaper editor and former politician Mahmudur Rahman was sentenced to six months in prison for publishing an article that accused the Supreme Court of bias towards the state. On 17 March 2011,  Mahmudur Rahman was released on completion of an arbitrary jail sentence for contempt of court. He was held for a total of nine months and 17 days.
In June 2011, Five journalists were injured in violence by ruling party supporters on 5 June 2011 in the town of Comilla, 100 km southest of Dhaka; two of them Abul Kashem Hridoy, the Comilla correspondent of Channel-i TV and the Bdnews24.com news agency, Pradip Dey, a cameraman with Bangladesh Television (BTV)  were  hospitalized.
Two days before that, four journalists on 3 June were Prothom Alo correspondent Touhidi Hossain (Towhidi Hasan), RTV correspondent Shiekh Hossain Belal, Ekushey Television correspondent Zahurul Islam and Ekushey Television cameraman Ahmed Sajeeb were attacked and injured by the employees of a company that is restoring a cultural site in the western district of Kushtia. The supporters of the ruling Awami League have no respect for the democratic process or for journalists.
In July 2011, In Narail, Moshiul Haque Mitu, 48, president of the Kalia Press Club and a Kalia upazila-based correspondent for the "Somokal" daily, suffered serious injuries after criminals threw bombs into his bedroom, on the morning of 11 July 2011. His wife, Rina Parvin, was also critically injured. They were taken to Khulna Medical College and Hospital and later transferred to the Dhaka Pongu Hospital.
In the same month, in a separate incident in the northern district of Rangpur, a gang in Kashiganj village, Badarganj upazila, attacked the Rangpur-based correspondent for Ekushey Television (ETV), Liakat Ali Badal, leaving him seriously injured. The incident took place on 11 July when Badal went to the village, along with ETV staff reporter Johnson Mahbub, to cover a story about the torture of two women.  
Imran Hossain, correspondent for the Rajshahi-based daily "Sonar Desh" in Tanore upazila, is in hiding in order to avoid arrest following an extortion case filed against him. Police ransacked his home and assaulted his wife.
In August 2011,  Ekramul Haq, founder and editor of the Bengali-language Sheershanews Web site and Sheersha Kagoj weekly was arrested by police alleging that the editor was trying to extort 2 million taka (US$26,800) from him for suppressing.  The arrest was part of a harassment campaign in retaliation for Haq's reporting on government corruption. The government cancelled media accreditation for the outlets' 10 journalists, including Haq. He was tortured in police remand and while I am writing to you he is still in prison and the news media was forced to close.
In September 2011, Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) reportedly assaulted two members of the staff of the Bangla Vision TV channel in a neighbourhood of the capital city Dhaka, on September 12.
Cameraman Russel Mizan and broadcast engineer Hasanul Islam Raihan was admitted  to hospital for emergency medical attention.
Bangladesh Television (BTV) work as mouthpiece of the government, regardless of which party is in power. Presently BTV is functioning as propaganda tool of the ruling Awami League government and highly controlled by the government and lacks professional standards.
Dear Prime Minister, I want to draw your attention although Bangladesh's constitution guarantees freedom of the press, it defines this freedom as "subject to any reasonable restrictions imposed by law in the interests of the security of the State, friendly relations with foreign states, public order, decency or morality. Which is also often used a profound ground to suppress and oppress the information from the media and stopped the media to freely publicize the information .
Basil Fernando: Director for Policy and Programme Development of Asian Human Rights Commission commenting on the present situations of Bangladeshi media freedom said "For a democratic government it is essential to facilitate a free platform of discussion and one of the important instruments of that platform is a free media, which is free from censorship.  A free media signifies the right of free speech and promoting respect for differences of opinions in public discussion. Without a free media a democracy is blind, deaf and dumb which are lead towards violence not justice and peace. The Bangladesh government has totally lost the characteristic of democratic government.
I want to recall  what eminent human rights personality said Bangladesh government has totally lost the characteristic of democratic government. Please urgently insure the freedom of Media in Bangladesh. I want to remind your election manifesto, which was called a charter of change, I urge you not to sacrifice justice for political interest.
I trust that you will take immediate action into this matter.

Yours sincerely,

William Nicholas Gomes

Journalist and Human Rights Activist

E-mail:William@williamgomes.org
Skype: William.gomes9
Face book: www.facebook.com/wngomes
Twitter: www.twitter.com/persecutionbd
www.williamgomes.org

Link:
End war on freedom of media in Bangladesh




__._,_.___


[Disclaimer: ALOCHONA Management is not liable for information contained in this message. The author takes full responsibility.]
To unsubscribe/subscribe, send request to alochona-owner@egroups.com




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___

Re: [ALOCHONA] Re: HEARTFELT GRATITUDES TO JOY AND PUTUL !!!!



Havn't we done enough damage to the democratic process by supporting family-dynasty in Bangladesh?

When we will wake up and elect more wise, honest, dedicated, intelligent people in the parliament?

khoda hafez.


From: ezajur <Ezajur@yahoo.com>
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, 21 September 2011 6:28 PM
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Re: HEARTFELT GRATITUDES TO JOY AND PUTUL !!!!

 
Dr Manik

So Digital Bangladesh is being led by Joy sitting in US and autism awareness is being led by Putul sitting in Canada.

And this why we have to be grateful to them?

The truth is you are grateful to them for their very existence - you need to follow a family member of Mujib otherwise you will be lost and scared.

You are incapable of dissent in your own grouping. So don't think you have made a point to anyone who is not a blind AL supporter by sucking up to Joy and Putul.

Ezajur Rahman
Kuwait

--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, Muhammad Ali <manik195709@...> wrote:
>
> Dear all,
> Prudent , educated parent like Sheikh Hasina has produced quality offsprings like
> Sajib Wazed Joy and Saima Hussain Putul. We are proud of them. They have already contributed enormously to build MODERN BANGLADESH.
>  
> On the other side look at Khaleda Zia and her GOLDEN SONS !!!
>  
>      They are by-product of ILLETERACY AND CORRUPTIONS !!!!
>  
> Regards,
> Dr. Manik
> Atlanta, GA
>





__._,_.___


[Disclaimer: ALOCHONA Management is not liable for information contained in this message. The author takes full responsibility.]
To unsubscribe/subscribe, send request to alochona-owner@egroups.com




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___

[ALOCHONA] corruption



Monday, September 26, 2011
Front Page

Education MP style

AL lawmaker Mannan heads managing bodies of 7 institutions; his wife, former night guard, 2 aides in charge of 4 others





A ruling party lawmaker is chairman of managing committee at seven educational institutions in Jhenidah, flouting government rules.
The rules stipulate that a member of parliament cannot hold chairman's post at more than four institutions. But Abdul Mannan, Awami League legislator from Jhenidah-4 (Kaliganj upazila), heads managing committee at two colleges, one madrasa, three secondary schools and one junior school.
Besides, his wife and three associates--who studied till SSC or below--chair managing committees of four institutions.
Sources at local schools and colleges allege the lawmaker and his aides are abusing their posts to make a fast buck by appointing teachers. They have earned over Tk 6 crore by appointing some 150 teachers in the last two years.
Talking to The Daily Star, several newly recruited teachers admitted they each paid Mannan and his men Tk 3 to 4 lakh to land the job.


__._,_.___


[Disclaimer: ALOCHONA Management is not liable for information contained in this message. The author takes full responsibility.]
To unsubscribe/subscribe, send request to alochona-owner@egroups.com




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___

Re: [mukto-mona] Re: The sprit of Bangalee nationalism?




I do not know if there is a perfect English translation for the Bengali word "Jati." As a Jati - we are Bangalee, irrespective of our religious affiliations, castes, and creeds. Bangalee-Jati is our secular cultural identity. The Bangalee-Jatiotabad consists of certain secular characteristics, such as, we celebrate Pahela-Boishakh, Bashata-Baran, Ekushe-February (February 21st), etc. etc. with cultural, and ritualistic activities. There are other festivities and practices, which used to be celebrated widely, irrespective of religious affiliations, but now mainly scattered fashion. They are Poush-Sangcranti, celebrated with varieties of Cakes (Pithas), Chaitra-Sangcranti, celebrated with cultural activities and fairs, Maghi-Purnima, etc. etc.  Bangalee-Jatiotabad, being above and beyond our religious characteristics, is the glue that can unite the majority under a true secular platform.

 

Closest English word for 'Jatiotabad' is Nationalism; I know it does not completely express the full meaning of the term Jatiotabad, as we mean. That's where the confusion comes from. Bangalee-Jatiotabad or Bengali-Nationalism is not a state entity. But, state has to allow free exercise of those secular rights and characteristics, and state has to nourish it to flourish. Non-Bangalees have their own secular Jatiotabad, and they should be allowed to exercise them freely also.

 

If I have misconception, please let me know.

 

I appreciate all your comments. Thanks.

 

Jiten Roy

 
--- On Sat, 9/24/11, subimal chakrabarty <subimal@yahoo.com> wrote:


From: subimal chakrabarty <subimal@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [mukto-mona] Re: The sprit of Bangalee nationalism?
To: "mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com" <mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Saturday, September 24, 2011, 7:01 PM

 
"-------------and nationalism is a cultural identity, which reflects majority cultural."----Dr. Jiten Roy
 
Let us take an example to examine Dr. Roy's comment. Nationality of Indians is Indian which indicates that their nationality is Indian. No problem with that. But which group of people constitutes the majority and what is this majority group's culture? Are these the people in the Hindi belt? Obviously not. Even being an Indian by nationality, a Bengali or an Assamese is a Bengali or an Assamese. Even within the subset of Bengal (West Bengal), we cannot force a Gorkha to identify himself as a Bengali. If the Gorkhas are culturally, linguistically, and historically distinct from Bengalis, why should we force them to call themselves Bengalis?  
 
"There is no issue of fairness in nationalism."---Dr. Jiten Roy
 
It will be quite unfair to force a Chakma to call himself a Bengali as this very word reflects language, culture, and history. Politically he is a "citizen of Bangladesh" but culturally a Chakma. The majority has no right to force a Chakma to accept a Bengali's cultural identity. This is not only unfair, this is coercive also.
 
"There has been an orchestrated attempt to alter our cultural identity (Bangalee) in this region during Pakistani era, and it is still going on in Bangladesh."----Dr. Jien Roy
 
I agree. Pakistani regimes tried to redefine Bengalis in East Pakistan as Pakistanis. That was a political game with India. But what is going on now? I would expect some elaboration. Regards.
From: Jiten Roy <jnrsr53@yahoo.com>
To: mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Saturday, September 24, 2011 4:51 PM
Subject: Re: [mukto-mona] Re: The sprit of Bangalee nationalism?
 
Everybody is missing my point. I am simply asking - what is our cultural identity, not our religious identity or nationality? 
 
Nationality and nationalism are two different things. Nationality is citizenship, and nationalism is a cultural identity, which reflects majority cultural. There is no issue of fairness in nationalism. There has been an orchestrated attempt to alter our cultural identity (Bangalee) in this region during Pakistani era, and it is still going on in Bangladesh.
 
Jiten Roy --- On Thu, 9/22/11, Sukhamaya Bain <subain1@yahoo.com> wrote:

From: Sukhamaya Bain <subain1@yahoo.com>
Subject: [mukto-mona] Re: The sprit of Bangalee nationalism?
To: "mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com" <mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Thursday, September 22, 2011, 10:29 PM

 
Bangladesh is a political entity, as opposed to a cultural one. May be, Najrul Islam's Bangla Desh and Ravindranath's Sonar Bangla were cultural, and those included more than the political entity of Bangladesh ; they also excluded at least the Chittagong Hill Tracts, which is a part of today's political Bangladesh .
 
Citizenship (nationality) is not cultural. I wish the secular politicians and intellectuals of  Bangladesh did not start this non-sense of Bangalee nationalism in 1971-72. It was wrong to ask the CHT people to call themselves Bangalees. Again, Bangalee nationalism was not really the spirit of all movements during 1947-71, and should not have been unless if we wanted to merge with West Bengal and allowed CHT to secede from us. Fairness, respect and dignity for Bangla and the Bangalees should not be considered the same as Bangalee nationalism. Bangalee nationalism would have demanded a separate nation for the Bangalees, even if the western Pakistanis treated the Bangalees with due respect. Our real spirit was no nationalism; it was fairness, respect and dignity for us.
 
Citizenship for anyone who seeks it? It is not done anywhere in the world. All countries have their laws to govern how a non-citizen would be given citizenship.
 
I would not ask Awami League to revive the so-called Bangalee nationalism (citizenship), rather I would ask them to respect all peoples of the land with respect; much like I would not ask them to call all Bangladeshis Muslims, much like I would not ask all Indians to be known as Hindus, much like I would not desire all cultural, linguistic and ethnic groups of the United States to be called Christians or English.
 
Well, so long for now,
 
Sukhamaya Bain
 
From: Jiten Roy <jnrsr53@yahoo.com>
To: mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, September 21, 2011 9:35 PM
Subject: Re: [mukto-mona] HAVOC CREATED BY JAMATI'S !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
Dr. Bain's comments tells me that, in my last sarcastic comments, I did not clarify my points enough; hence confusions.
I was looking for a cultural identity for the people of Bangladesh. I explored 3 conventional identities (Bangalee, Bangladeshi, and Moderate Muslim), which have been used in the past to represent the people of Bangladesh. But, none of them seemed to encompass all people. As a result, the identity crisis still remains, and we do not know who we are.
After Bangladesh was born, our cultural identity (Jatiota) was Bangalee, and our nationality was also Banglalee. Ershad changed our nationality to Bangladeshi. The motive was to include all the people of Bangladesh, so he told us at that time. Was it really the motive? If that was true – all non-Bangalee Biharis should have been citizen by now, and Father Tim, the former Principal of Notre Dame College, would have been citizen already. If you say that our nationality is Bangladeshi - then we should grant citizenship to any permanent resident of Bangladesh, if they seek one.
In my view, it was done purposefully to defuse pre-independence secular mindset, and neutralize the Bangalee-Jatiotabadi spirit, the spirit of independence movement. As you know, Quranic verses and state religion (Islam) were also introduced in the secular constitution right around that time.
Dr. Bain, Bangalee-Jatiotabadi spirit has been the driving force behind all movements in the East Pakistan since the language movement in 1952. Even though Sheikh Mujib was not seeking independence at the beginning, but his movement was fueled by the Bangali-Jatiotabadi spirit. This is the spirit that still can unite the mjority in Bangladesh. That's why - I have been asking Awami League to revive that spirit for their sake.
 
Thanks for your comments. Love to hear from you. Don't be a stranger.
 
Jiten Roy --- 


__._,_.___


****************************************************
Mukto Mona plans for a Grand Darwin Day Celebration: 
Call For Articles:

http://mukto-mona.com/wordpress/?p=68

http://mukto-mona.com/banga_blog/?p=585

****************************************************

VISIT MUKTO-MONA WEB-SITE : http://www.mukto-mona.com/

****************************************************

"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___

[ALOCHONA] FW: Turkish Govt returns Christian and Jewish properties Seized in 1936



 

 

 

Good act of the Turkish government.

 

 

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sayyid Syeed <ssyeed@isna.net>
Date: Mon, Aug 29, 2011 at 8:49 PM
Subject: Turkish Govt returns Christian and Jewish properties Seized in 1936
To: Sayyid Syeed <ssyeed@isna.net>

Turkish Government to Return Seized Property to Religious Minorities

By SEBNEM ARSU
Published: August 28, 2011

ANKARA, Turkey — The Turkish government said it would return hundreds of properties that were confiscated from religious minorities by the state or other parties over the years since 1936, and would pay compensation for properties that were seized and later sold.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan made the announcement on Sunday to representatives of more than 150 Christian and Jewish trusts gathered at a dinner he hosted in Istanbul to break the day’s Ramadan fast. The government decree to return the properties, bypassing nationalist opposition in Parliament, was issued late Saturday.

The European Union, which Turkey has applied to join, has pressed the country to ease or eliminate laws and policies that discriminate against non-Muslim religious groups, including restrictions on land ownership. Many of the properties, including schools, hospitals, orphanages and cemeteries, were seized after 1936 when trusts were called to list their assets, and in 1974 a separate ruling banned the groups from purchasing any new real estate.

Disputes over the groups’ properties have tied up Turkish and European courts for decades, and the European Court for Human Rights has ordered Turkey to pay compensation in several cases related to religious minority rights in recent years.

“Like everyone else, we also do know about the injustices that different religious groups have been subjected to because of their differences,” Mr. Erdogan said at the dinner, according to the semiofficial Anatolian News Agency. “Times that a citizen of ours would be oppressed due to his religion, ethnic origin or different way of life are over.”

In contrast with its staunchly secular predecessors, the Islam-inspired government of Mr. Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party, known as A.K.P., has been more sympathetic and attentive to Turkey’s non-Muslims, including Jews and Christians. It has enacted a number of measures since 2002 to bring Turkish law more into compliance with European Union standards on minority rights, so that Turkey’s application to join the union could advance.

The decree issued on Saturday removed legal impediments that had continued to block the return of the properties even after amendments were enacted in recent years to allow it.

“There have been changes made to existent legislation at least five times since the government of the A.K. Party, but they have not been very satisfactory in practice,” said a Greek government official who asked not to be identified because of his diplomatic position. “We hope this time the changes would make a real difference in implementation.”

Less than 1 percent of Turkey’s 74 million people belong to religious minorities; there are about 120,000 Christians of different denominations, including Greek Orthodox, and about 25,000 Jews.

A version of this article appeared in print on August 29, 2011, on page A4 of the New York edition with the headline: Turkish Government to Return Seized Property to Religious Minorities.


Dr. Sayyid M. Syeed,
National Director
Office for Interfaith & Community Alliances
Islamic Society of North America
Phone 202-544-5656 Fax 202-544-6636
110 Maryland Ave NE,  Suite 304
Washington DC 20002
www.ISNA.net

 



__._,_.___


[Disclaimer: ALOCHONA Management is not liable for information contained in this message. The author takes full responsibility.]
To unsubscribe/subscribe, send request to alochona-owner@egroups.com




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___

[mukto-mona] FW: Turkish Govt returns Christian and Jewish properties Seized in 1936



 

Good act of the Turkish government.

 

 

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sayyid Syeed <ssyeed@isna.net>
Date: Mon, Aug 29, 2011 at 8:49 PM
Subject: Turkish Govt returns Christian and Jewish properties Seized in 1936
To: Sayyid Syeed <ssyeed@isna.net>

Turkish Government to Return Seized Property to Religious Minorities

By SEBNEM ARSU
Published: August 28, 2011

ANKARA, Turkey — The Turkish government said it would return hundreds of properties that were confiscated from religious minorities by the state or other parties over the years since 1936, and would pay compensation for properties that were seized and later sold.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan made the announcement on Sunday to representatives of more than 150 Christian and Jewish trusts gathered at a dinner he hosted in Istanbul to break the day’s Ramadan fast. The government decree to return the properties, bypassing nationalist opposition in Parliament, was issued late Saturday.

The European Union, which Turkey has applied to join, has pressed the country to ease or eliminate laws and policies that discriminate against non-Muslim religious groups, including restrictions on land ownership. Many of the properties, including schools, hospitals, orphanages and cemeteries, were seized after 1936 when trusts were called to list their assets, and in 1974 a separate ruling banned the groups from purchasing any new real estate.

Disputes over the groups’ properties have tied up Turkish and European courts for decades, and the European Court for Human Rights has ordered Turkey to pay compensation in several cases related to religious minority rights in recent years.

“Like everyone else, we also do know about the injustices that different religious groups have been subjected to because of their differences,” Mr. Erdogan said at the dinner, according to the semiofficial Anatolian News Agency. “Times that a citizen of ours would be oppressed due to his religion, ethnic origin or different way of life are over.”

In contrast with its staunchly secular predecessors, the Islam-inspired government of Mr. Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party, known as A.K.P., has been more sympathetic and attentive to Turkey’s non-Muslims, including Jews and Christians. It has enacted a number of measures since 2002 to bring Turkish law more into compliance with European Union standards on minority rights, so that Turkey’s application to join the union could advance.

The decree issued on Saturday removed legal impediments that had continued to block the return of the properties even after amendments were enacted in recent years to allow it.

“There have been changes made to existent legislation at least five times since the government of the A.K. Party, but they have not been very satisfactory in practice,” said a Greek government official who asked not to be identified because of his diplomatic position. “We hope this time the changes would make a real difference in implementation.”

Less than 1 percent of Turkey’s 74 million people belong to religious minorities; there are about 120,000 Christians of different denominations, including Greek Orthodox, and about 25,000 Jews.

A version of this article appeared in print on August 29, 2011, on page A4 of the New York edition with the headline: Turkish Government to Return Seized Property to Religious Minorities.


Dr. Sayyid M. Syeed,
National Director
Office for Interfaith & Community Alliances
Islamic Society of North America
Phone 202-544-5656 Fax 202-544-6636
110 Maryland Ave NE,  Suite 304
Washington DC 20002
www.ISNA.net

 



__._,_.___


****************************************************
Mukto Mona plans for a Grand Darwin Day Celebration: 
Call For Articles:

http://mukto-mona.com/wordpress/?p=68

http://mukto-mona.com/banga_blog/?p=585

****************************************************

VISIT MUKTO-MONA WEB-SITE : http://www.mukto-mona.com/

****************************************************

"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___

[mukto-mona] FW: Jagannath Univesity Students Demand: Difficult Situation for the Government.Demand--editorial



Please see particularly the last paras

---------------------------------------------------------

 

Jagannath Univesity  Students Demand: Difficult Situation for the Government.Demand

 

Disgruntled students of Jagannath University staged  protest on Dhaka streets yesterday demanding government funding of the university beyond 2012 and ridding its dorms of illegal occupiers.They blockaded roads for several hours and vandalized 20 vehicles setting off a chain reaction that paralyzed many Dhaka streets with severe traffic jams from 10:30am. Around 30 students were injured when police charged truncheons to disperse the agitating students. Shahbagh police detained 18 students from Jatiya Press Club and High Court areas while Kotwali police picked up two in front of the university campus in Old Dhaka.

Witnesses said over 3,000 students brought out two processions--one at 10:00am and another at 11:00am--from the university campus obstructing transport movement on the roads from the campus to the Jatiya Press Club.They also demonstrated in front of the Jatiya Press Club around noon triggering severe traffic jams. A handful of students went on the rampage and vandalised several vehicles stuck in the jam.At one stage, police resorted to charging truncheons to disperse them.

Agitating students alleged that some activists of Jagannath University BCL unit beat them up during the demonstration near the High Court. According to the Jagannath University Act, the government will discontinue funding the university after 2012 and the university would have to run on its own income.Several students told The Daily Star that they brought out yesterday's processions as part of their continuous movement for last two years. They said unless clause-27 (4) of the Jagannath University Act is amended (which deals with funding of the institution), study cost for each student would double and be almost like that of private universities.“Although Jagannath University is a public university, it will gradually turn into a private university day by day,” said one of the students.Many students alleged that the students are facing acute residential crisis, but there are no initiative to recover their dormitories from illegal occupiers. The students also demand university buses for their transport and removal of a Bangladesh Bank branch office which is inside their campus.

.

Meanwhile, Education Minister Nurul Islam Nahid said the decision on funding Jagannath University will be made after consulting all stakeholders."I spoke to the university's vice-chancellor and the members of the University Grants Commission (UGC). We will find a way to solve this problem through discussions with everyone," he told journalists at his Secretariat office yesterday.When asked whether the law will be amended, the minister said, "I cannot say whether it will be amended unless a decision is made after talks."On the students' fear that semester fees will rise, he said, "We are not dismissing their logic… it is expected that students will be worried with rising education costs.” But, vandalism cannot be the solution, Nahid said, adding, “Creating such disorder by destroying people's properties taints the image of students.”He urged the universities to increase their internal revenue. He said it is not possible to develop everything with funds from the government.

It is a difficult situation. It was a wrong policy of successive governments to gradually increase its financial burden by paying the teachers pay of private schools .In any case it is now difficult to reverse this policy in the politically surcharged Bangladesh. The same is true of new public universities as they are used to lesser student fees.

We will raise another issue.It is bad that students have damaged twenty vehicles.Even then we will ask the government and police not to start cases against thousands of students or take them on police remand as they have done in the case of processions of Jammate Islami recently.

 



__._,_.___


****************************************************
Mukto Mona plans for a Grand Darwin Day Celebration: 
Call For Articles:

http://mukto-mona.com/wordpress/?p=68

http://mukto-mona.com/banga_blog/?p=585

****************************************************

VISIT MUKTO-MONA WEB-SITE : http://www.mukto-mona.com/

****************************************************

"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___

[ALOCHONA] FW: Jagannath Univesity Students Demand: Difficult Situation for the Government.Demand--editorial



Please see particularly the last paras

---------------------------------------------------------

 

Jagannath Univesity  Students Demand: Difficult Situation for the Government.Demand

 

Disgruntled students of Jagannath University staged  protest on Dhaka streets yesterday demanding government funding of the university beyond 2012 and ridding its dorms of illegal occupiers.They blockaded roads for several hours and vandalized 20 vehicles setting off a chain reaction that paralyzed many Dhaka streets with severe traffic jams from 10:30am. Around 30 students were injured when police charged truncheons to disperse the agitating students. Shahbagh police detained 18 students from Jatiya Press Club and High Court areas while Kotwali police picked up two in front of the university campus in Old Dhaka.

Witnesses said over 3,000 students brought out two processions--one at 10:00am and another at 11:00am--from the university campus obstructing transport movement on the roads from the campus to the Jatiya Press Club.They also demonstrated in front of the Jatiya Press Club around noon triggering severe traffic jams. A handful of students went on the rampage and vandalised several vehicles stuck in the jam.At one stage, police resorted to charging truncheons to disperse them.

Agitating students alleged that some activists of Jagannath University BCL unit beat them up during the demonstration near the High Court. According to the Jagannath University Act, the government will discontinue funding the university after 2012 and the university would have to run on its own income.Several students told The Daily Star that they brought out yesterday's processions as part of their continuous movement for last two years. They said unless clause-27 (4) of the Jagannath University Act is amended (which deals with funding of the institution), study cost for each student would double and be almost like that of private universities.“Although Jagannath University is a public university, it will gradually turn into a private university day by day,” said one of the students.Many students alleged that the students are facing acute residential crisis, but there are no initiative to recover their dormitories from illegal occupiers. The students also demand university buses for their transport and removal of a Bangladesh Bank branch office which is inside their campus.

.

Meanwhile, Education Minister Nurul Islam Nahid said the decision on funding Jagannath University will be made after consulting all stakeholders."I spoke to the university's vice-chancellor and the members of the University Grants Commission (UGC). We will find a way to solve this problem through discussions with everyone," he told journalists at his Secretariat office yesterday.When asked whether the law will be amended, the minister said, "I cannot say whether it will be amended unless a decision is made after talks."On the students' fear that semester fees will rise, he said, "We are not dismissing their logic… it is expected that students will be worried with rising education costs.” But, vandalism cannot be the solution, Nahid said, adding, “Creating such disorder by destroying people's properties taints the image of students.”He urged the universities to increase their internal revenue. He said it is not possible to develop everything with funds from the government.

It is a difficult situation. It was a wrong policy of successive governments to gradually increase its financial burden by paying the teachers pay of private schools .In any case it is now difficult to reverse this policy in the politically surcharged Bangladesh. The same is true of new public universities as they are used to lesser student fees.

We will raise another issue.It is bad that students have damaged twenty vehicles.Even then we will ask the government and police not to start cases against thousands of students or take them on police remand as they have done in the case of processions of Jammate Islami recently.

 



__._,_.___


[Disclaimer: ALOCHONA Management is not liable for information contained in this message. The author takes full responsibility.]
To unsubscribe/subscribe, send request to alochona-owner@egroups.com




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___

[ALOCHONA] FW: Israelis Demonstrate in Tel Aviv for Palestinian State



           This is a bad moment for fundamentalists of all hues, in India, Bangladesh and Pakistan, who share, unknowingly, the passionate anti-intellectualism of the AIPAC neocons of USA.
 
                     Farida Majid
 


Date: Fri, 23 Sep 2011 22:11:23 +0530

Subject: Israelis Demonstrate in Tel Aviv for Palestinian State

 
Israeli Leftists Demonstrate for Palestinian State In Tel
Aviv

By Ben Hartman

Jerusalem Post (Israel)
September 22, 2011

http://www.jpost.com/NationalNews/Article.aspx?id=239089

Dozens proclaim support for Palestinian bid outside
Independence Hall, sign declaration; Israel Prize laureates
among protesters.

Dozens of Israeli artists and academics on Thursday
proclaimed their support for the Palestinian United Nations
statehood bid, outside of Independence Hall in Tel Aviv.

The setting was symbolic, held outside the same building
where former Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion proclaimed the
independence of the state of Israel on May 14, 1948. Earlier
on Thursday, the group of 82 intellectuals and artists
published a declaration supporting the establishment of a
Palestinian state based on the 1967 lines. At the
demonstration on Thursday, the public was invited to sign
their names alongside the declaration.

The declaration reads "we, the undersigned, call on all
persons seeking peace and freedom, and upon all nations to
join us in welcoming the Palestinian Declaration of
Independence, to support it and to work and act together in
order to encourage the citizens of both countries to live
together in peace, based on the '67 borders and mutual
agreement. A final and complete end to the occupation is a
basic condition for the freedom of both peoples, for the
realization of Israel's Declaration of Independence and a
future of peaceful coexistence."

The undersigned include actress and Israel Prize laureate
Gila Almagor-Agmon, former Education Minister and Israel
Prize laureate Shulamit Aloni, former head of the IDF
education branch Maj. Gen (Ret) Nehemiah Dagan, former Chief
Education Officer, and author and Israel Prize laureate Amos
Oz.

Former Director General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
and one time Israeli Ambassador to South Africa Alon Liel
told the crowd that Israelis must support the Palestinian
statehood bid and ignore Washington's impending veto of the
initiative.

Liel called US President Barack Obama's speech at the UN
General Assembly the day before "a knockout punch to
[Palestinian Authority President] Mahmoud Abbas. A clearly
anti-Palestinian US campaign speech. A speech where he said
the US supports the rebels in Tunisia, in Libya, in Egypt,
in Bahrain, but in Palestinian? No. The Palestinians are
something else because they are facing Israel."

"It hurts to see a president like Obama, who caused us to
feel such great hope, dismiss Abu Mazen who has spent three
years working on the diplomatic track," Liel said, adding
"Obama and the US of today are no longer running the world
today, there is a larger international community that can
run the world. The US doesn't have the power to deal you
this blow."

The gesture was in a sense a repeat of a similar effort this
April, when a group that included many of the same Israelis
proclaimed their support for a Palestinian state outside
Independence Hall. Thursday's effort was significantly more
subdued and low-key than the one in April, in which large
numbers of passersbies began booing and shouting the
protestors, and a number of shoving matches broke out.

On Friday, the left-wing organization Peace Now will also
hold a series of demonstrations in support of the
Palestinian statehood bid. Entitled "Israel says yes to the
Palestinian state," the event will include rallies in north
Tel Aviv at the corner of Arlozorov and Namir, in Jerusalem
under the Strings Bridge, in Kiryat Ono, and in Haifa.

==========

Right-Wing Activists Crash Rally for Palestinian State

  Rally participated by 21 Israel Prize laureates was to
  culminate by signing declaration of Palestinian
  independence outside Tel Aviv's historical Independence
  Hall.

By Mazal Mualem
Haaretz (Israel)
September 22, 2011

http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/right-wing-activists-crash-rally-for-palestinian-state-1.357490

A rally organized by leftist intellectuals in support of a
Palestinian state yesterday descended into a verbal free-
for-all after a group of right-wing activists gate-crashed
the demonstration in Tel Aviv.

Among the organizers and left-wing participants were 17
Israel Prize laureates, looking to pressure Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu to embark on a diplomatic initiative,
ahead of the expected declaration of a Palestinian state
within 1967 borders at the U.N. General Assembly in
September.

The protesters' declaration said it supported the
"independence of two peoples who strengthen each other, is
both a moral and an existential need and is the basis for
the possibility of good neighborliness."

While the ceremony was underway with a "declaration of
independence from occupation" being read, right-wing
activists shouted "fifth column" and "traitors" at the
demonstrators.

When the actress Hanna Maron read from the declaration,
right-wing activists interrupted her repeatedly, shouting,
"You forgot what they did to you in Munich."

Maron was seriously injured in 1970 by a grenade thrown by
Palestinian militants at Munich airport, resulting in the
amputation of her leg.

The declaration, which was read on Rothschild Boulevard
outside Independence Hall, was couched in phrases recalling
Israel's Declaration of Dependence, which David Ben-Gurion
read in the same hall on May 14, 1948.

"We have gathered here on this 21st day of April to welcome
the expected declaration of independence of the Palestinian
state, the state bordering on Israel according to the
borders of our independence, which were created with the end
of the War of Independence in 1949, known as the 1967
borders," proclaimed the declaration.

Other participants were author Sami Michael, playwright
Yehoshua Sobol, filmmaker Ari Fogel, and Professor Zeev
Sternhell. Later, in a televised debate on Channel 2, Ben-
Gurion's grandson, Dr. Yariv Ben-Eliezer, lashed out at
Sternhell, asking: "Who do you think you are? My
grandfather's vision has been turned into a gimmick."

"There is intentional symbolism in it," Sternhell responded.
"We are raising the Declaration of Independence to a higher
level."

The incident spurred various responses. Deputy Foreign
Minister Daniel Ayalon said: "Such actions only drive the
chance for peace, reconciliation and the establishment of a
Palestinian state farther away. They create false hope among
the Palestinians that they can establish a state
unilaterally without negotiations with Israel."

The head of the Likud response team, MK Ofir Akunis, called
the initiative "a sorry provocation of an extreme and
bizarre leftist group pretending to represent the left."

MK Zahava Gal-On (New Movement-Meretz ) said the initiative
should be part of the political platform of the left.

==========

Recognizing a Palestinian State Based on the 1967 Borders is
Vital for Israel's Existence

[An English copy of the advert that appeared in Yedioth
Ahronoth on 18th May 2011
http://www.scribd.com/doc/55730153/An-English-copy-of-the-
advert-that-appeared-in-Yedioth-Ahronoth-on-18th-May-2011 ]

We, the citizens of Israel, call on the public to support
the recognition of a democratic Palestinian state as a
condition for ending the conflict, and reaching agreed
borders on the basis of the 1967 borders. Recognition of
such a Palestinian state is vital for Israel's existence. It
is the only way to guarantee the resolution of the convict
by negotiations, to prevent the eruption of another round of
massive violence and end the risky isolation of Israel in
the world.The successful implementation of the agreements
requires two leaderships, Israeli and Palestinian, which
recognize each other, choose peace and are fully committed
to it. This is the only policy that leaves Israel's fate and
security in its own hands. Any other policy contradicts the
promise of Zionism and the welfare of the Jewish people.

      We, the undersigned, therefore call upon any person
      seeking peace and liberty and upon all nations to
      join us in welcoming thePalestinian Declaration of
      Independence and support the efforts of the citizens
      of the two states to maintain peaceful relations on
      the basis of secure borders and good neighborliness.
      The end of the occupation is a fundamental condition
      for the liberation of the two peoples, the
      realization of the Israeli Declaration of
      Independence and a future of peaceful coexistence

Larry Abramson  - Artist and Prof. of the arts
Maj Gen (Ret.) Avraham Adan ("Bren")  - former Commander of
 the Armored Corps
Prof. Chaim Adler  - Israel Prize laureate
Prof. Joseph Agassi
Gila Almagor-Agmon  - Israel Prize laureate
Brig Gen (Ret.) Dr.  Yitzhak Arad  - former Chairman of Yad
 Vashem
Col (Ret.) As'ad As'ad  - former Member of Knesset, Likud
Brig Gen (Ret.) Menachem Aviram  - former Commander of
 Paratroopers Brigade and of the IDF Command and Staff
 College
Collette Avital  - former Consul in New York
Avner Azulai  - former senior Mossad official
Prof. Elie Barnavi  - former Ambassador to France
Brig Gen (Ret.) Mordechai Bar-On  - former Chief Education
 Officer
Ilan Baruch  - former Ambassador to South Africa
Prof. Yehuda Bauer  - former Director of the International
 Center for Holocaust Studies of Yad Vashem and Israel
 Prize laureate
Prof. Haim Ben-Shahar  - former President of Tel Aviv
 University, founder of the Israel Democracy Institute
Adv. Michael Ben Yair  - former Attorney General
Prof. Menachem Brinker  - Israel Prize laureate
Prof. Judith Buber Agassi
Prof. Naomi Chazan  - former Member of Knesset
Col (Ret.) Ran Cohen  - former Minister of Trade and
 Industry
Maj Gen (Ret) Nehemiah Dagan  - former Chief Education
 Officer
Dr. Yossi Dahan
Yael Dayan  - former Member of Knesset
Brig Gen (Ret.) Prof. Eran Dolev
Prof. Yehuda Elkana  - former President of the Central
 European University
Brig Gen (Ret.) Yitzchak Elron
Prof. Yaron Ezrahi  - winner of the Political Science
 Society Award
Yona Fischer  - Israel Prize laureate
Ari Folman  - Golden Globe laureate
Prof. Yitzhak Galnoor  - former Civil Service Commissioner
Prof. Haim Ganz
Maj Gen (Ret.) Shlomo Gazit  - former Head of Military
 Intelligence, Chairman of the Jewish Agency and President
 of Ben Gurion University
Yair Garbuz  - Emet Prize laureate
Moshe Gershuni  - Israel Prize laureate
Maj Gen (Ret.) Yosef Geva  - former OC Central Command
Prof. Galia Golan
Prof. Amiram Goldblum
Prof. Hanoch Gutfreund   - former President of the
 Hebrew University
Adv. Shlomo Gur  - former foreign serviceman and Director
 General of the Justice Ministry
Prof. David Harel  - Israel Prize and Emet laureate
Dr. Shmuel Harlap  - Chairman of Colmobil Limited
Yoram Kaniuk  - Sapir Prize laureate
Dani Karavan  - Israel Prize laureate
Prof. Elihu Katz  - Israel Prize laureate
Col (Ret.) Paul Kedar  - former Consul in New York
Prof. Yehoshua Kolodny  - Israel Prize laureate
Maj Gen (Ret.) Amos Lapidot  - former Commander of
 Israeli Air Force
Alex Levac  - Israel Prize laureate
Dr. Alon Liel  - former Director General of Foreign Ministry
Brig Gen (Ret.) Asher Levy
Maj Gen (Ret) Zeev Livneh  - established the Home Front
 Command
Ram Loevy  - Israel Prize laureate
Prof. Avishai Margalit  - Israel and Emet Prize laureate
Hanna Maron  - Israel Prize laureate
Maj Gen (Ret.) Menachem Meron (Mendy)  - former Commander of
 Military Colleges
Sami Michael  - Emet Prize laureate
Ohad Naharin  - Israel and Emet Prize laureate
Nachik Navot  - former Deputy Head of Mossad
Prof. Jad Ne'eman  - Israel Prize laureate
Amoz Oz  - Israel Prize laureate
Brig Gen (Ret.) Ilan Paz
Prof. Dov Pekelman
Maj Gen (Ret.) Dr. Elad Peled  - former Commander of
 National Security College and Director General of the
 Ministry of Education
Prof. Itamar Procaccia  - Israel Prize laureate
Sefi Rachlevsky  - author and expert on Jewish theology
Prof. Eliezer Rafaeli  - First President of Haifa University
Prof. Sheizaf Rafaeli  - Dean of the School of Management,
 Haifa University
Brig Gen (Ret.) Giora Ram  - former Deputy Commander of the
 Israeli Air Force
Prof. Gabi Salomon  - Israel Prize laureate
Adv. Talia Sasson  - former senior State Advocacy Official
Dr. Aliza Savir  - Deputy Director of Peres Center for Peace
Prof. Hillel Schocken
Prof. Alice Shalvi  - Israel Prize laureate
Maj Gen (Ret.) Nathan Sharoni  - President of Council of
 Peace and Security
Prof. Aliza Shenhar  - President of Yezreel Valley College
Prof. David Shulman  - Emet Prize laureate
Joshua Sobol  - Theater Award laureate
Prof. Zeev Sternhell  - Israel Prize laureate
Prof. Carlo Strenger
Prof. Zeev Tadmor  - former President of Technion, EmetPrize
 laureate
David Tartakover  - Israel Prize laureate
Dan Tsur  - Israel Prize laureate
Prof. Zeev Tzahor  - President of Sapir College
Micha Ullman  - Israel Prize laureate
Lia van Leer  - Israel Prize laureate
Prof. Menahem Yaari  - Israel Prize laureate, President
 (Emeritus) of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities
Maj Gen (Ret.) Aviezer Yaari  - former Commander of Military
 Colleges
Dalia Yairi
Prof. Yossi Yonah
Prof. Yirmiyahu Yovel  - Israel Prize laureate


--
Peace Is Doable




__._,_.___


[Disclaimer: ALOCHONA Management is not liable for information contained in this message. The author takes full responsibility.]
To unsubscribe/subscribe, send request to alochona-owner@egroups.com




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___