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Tuesday, August 12, 2008

[mukto-mona] 2008 Community Cooperation Award

Atheist Alliance International (AAI) is pleased to announce that the 2008
Community Cooperation Award has increased!!

Deadline for application is August 31, 2008

The Community Cooperation Award (CCA), originally made possible by an
anonymous donor, will in 2008 be funded by the Atheist Alliance
International and the Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard, and will increase to a
first prize of $600 and a runner-up prize of $300.

[Attached are PDFs of application and announcement]

The object of the CCA is to encourage cooperation, ethical awareness and
positive images of and within the Freethought community and also to foster
cooperation between atheist/freethought organizations and their larger home
communities. Cooperation, ethics, and positive image are the elements that
will be considered by the CCA committee during review of the applications.
Consideration will be given to the size of the applicant organization
relative to its achievements. It is our goal to encourage organizations to
employ ethical means to solve problems, controversies or disagreements they
may encounter, either within the organization itself or the community at
large. Finally, the organization should project a positive image of atheists
and freethinkers as individuals and as a community.

Applicant groups must be non-profit, non-political, atheist/freethought
organizations listed in the current edition of the Freethought Directory
published by AAI. The applicant organization need not be an AAI member
group. The award money may be used for any purpose. To qualify for the CCA,
applicant groups must submit a completed entry form, in English, listing
examples of positive action since August 1, 2007, signed by three group
representatives, indicating their group association (president, vice
president, etc.).

The winners selected by the CCA Committee may be asked to substantiate their
applications with documentation in the form of:

. Media coverage of community volunteer work
. Evidence of cooperation with civic or religious leaders in the community

. Listing with local United Way or other philanthropic organizations
. Tapes or transcripts from meetings/events
. Relevant articles from the organization's newsletter

Completed entry forms may be emailed to humanist@ameritech.net and
vicepresident@atheistalliance.org by August 31, 2008

The AAI CCA Committee will choose the winners. The decision will be final,
and the right will be reserved to withdraw the award after it is announced,
but before it is paid, if there is substantial evidence of undesirable
behavior on the part of the proposed recipients. A runner-up may also be
chosen in case the winner is deemed no longer worthy. The winners will be
announced at the 2008 AAI convention, September 25-28 in Long Beach,
California.

CCA Committee: Carol Smith, Chair, Stuart Bechman, Bobbie Kirkhart

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Sign the Petition : Release the Arrested University Teachers Immediately : An Appeal to the Caretaker Government of Bangladesh

http://www.mukto-mona.com/human_rights/university_teachers_arrest.htm

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Daily Star publishes an interview with Mukto-Mona
http://www.mukto-mona.com/news/daily_star/daily_star_MM.pdf

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MM site is blocked in Islamic countries such as UAE. Members of those theocratic states, kindly use any proxy (such as http://proxy.org/) to access mukto-mona.

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Mukto-Mona Celebrates 5th Anniversary
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/5_yrs_anniv/index.htm

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Mukto-Mona Celebrates Earth Day:
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Earth_day2006/index.htm

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Kansat Uprising : A Special Page from Mukto-Mona
http://www.mukto-mona.com/human_rights/kansat2006/members/


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MM Project : Grand assembly of local freedom fighters at Raumari
http://www.mukto-mona.com/project/Roumari/freedom_fighters_union300306.htm

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German Bangla Radio Interviews Mukto-Mona Members:
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Darwin_day/german_radio/


Mukto-Mona Celebrates Darwin Day:

http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Darwin_day/index.htm

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Some FAQ's about Mukto-Mona:

http://www.mukto-mona.com/new_site/mukto-mona/faq_mm.htm

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

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[ALOCHONA] Re: Everybody Should Care if Bangladesh Drowns

This is a marvellously written piece. Without seeking to subtract from
it I would add that Bangladesh should first and foremost care if it
drowns. Bangladesh should be leading the charge against climate change.
And most importantly Bangladesh should be at the cutting edge of policy
design to combat the effects of global warming. Do we have the talent?
Of course we do. Do we have the political leadership to deal with this
issue properly? Of course we don't.

It is not enough that individual Bangladeshis of considerable courage
and merit are grappling with this issue.

We need politicians of vision and genuine talent to engage with our
people to face this crisis.

And all we can come up with is blood y Hasina and blood y Khaleda.

If 145 million people need to migrate it will not be to any Western
nation - it will have to be to India...

Ezajur Rahman

Kuwait


--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, Isha Khan <bd_mailer@...> wrote:
>
> Everybody Should Care if Bangladesh Drowns
>
> A. Hannan Ismail asks what the global North's lack of commitment to
tackling climate problems might mean from a human rights perspective
> Bangladeshis have long been known as a mobile people. In fact, you
could say that it is in our blood to travel, move and explore. And yet,
this wanderlust owes much more to another form of liquid substance:
water.
>
> Have boat, will travel
> An earthquake-induced shift of the Jamuna river system made eastern
Bengal both navigable and cultivable from the late sixteenth century.
This change in waterways brought settlers from the west of the
sub-continent: pioneers who introduced agricultural practices and
non-liturgical Islamic rituals that intermingled with local religious
customs. Some of these newcomers became semi-mythologised as pirs (holy
men). The songs of Lalon, meandering across the late nineteenth century
like so many of Bengal's rivers, celebrated the admixture of faith and
farming that became their legacy.
>
> That other big chunk of water, the Bay of Bengal, enabled maritime
inhabitants of an earlier Bengal to explore and trade with Indochina and
Java, and export variants of Buddhism and Hinduism to those parts of the
world. All of this happened long before the Portuguese, the Dutch, the
French and then the British commandeered the waterways. Water too
carried agricultural labourers from greater Noakhali and Chittagong on
seasonal treks to the tilling fields of Burma. Such excursions are why
the old-timers of "Singapura" (Singapore) sometimes referred to people
of south Asian descent as "Bangals."
>
> Here today, gone tomorrow
> The eastern part of historical Bengal is an active delta. Geological
and hydro-morphological forces wash vast quantities of silt down from
the Himalayas and this settles to become alluvial sediment. This stuff
has built up over the last 6,000 years or so to form a territory that
is, for the time being at least, home to about 150 million people. Seen
through the telescope of time, Bangladesh is a geological infant. The
gradients of the Himalayas and its piedmonts, combined with the
monsoons, have made this plain land possible.
>
> Conversely, no Himalayas means none of our big rivers: no Padma, no
Jamuna and no Meghna: ergo no Bangladesh.
>
> Given enough time, all this will come to an end. Man-made climate
change will only accelerate us towards this conclusion. Thermal
expansion of the Bay of Bengal, tectonic events stimulated by changes in
temperature, increasingly erratic run-off from the estuaries, topsoil
erosion where most of the bio-diversity lives and dies, more intense
pulses of rainfall and a potential collapse of the monsoon cycle itself,
saline penetration, aridity in the western part of the country, and so
on.
>
> We have pressed fast-forward to the inevitable, as documented so
evocatively in Afsan Chowdhury's film Does Anybody Care if Bangladesh
Drowns?
>
> Eight centuries after water carried Bengali traders to the perimeters
of the Indian Ocean, and four centuries after water again brought
pioneers from upper-riparian reaches, water will again prompt
Bangladeshis to set sail.
>
> Awareness is good but not good enough
> Many readers of Forum understand that the science is now pretty clear.
Finally, fourth time round, the world is listening to the work of the
United Nations and its Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC). And with it, a new generation of Bangladeshis at home and
overseas has tuned in.
>
> The growing awareness has many converts, not all of whom you'd want
your mother to meet. The Pentagon, for instance, produced a report in
2004 warning of the national security threat posed by climate change
(the inevitable first filter for that most martial of governments).
Conservative periodicals such as The Economist have finally caught up
with 40 years of environmentalist lobbying on the matter.
>
> Bangladeshis who have been on the climate change beat for decades
continue to plug away, earning well-deserved plaudits for their efforts.
Indeed, we are fortunate to have some well-regarded and well-placed
experts at home and abroad. They are now being joined by a whole new
generation of players. Young Bangladeshi journalists are beginning to
pen their own news stories and analysis with increasing literacy. All
sorts of neophytes are getting involved too, mobilizing, meeting, and
engaging everywhere. The Bangladeshi blogosphere is buzzing, in its
sometimes-silly and sometimes-useful way.
>
> A growth in public awareness of climate change is a secular good. The
progressive text book says that public awareness and mobilisation can
induce both governments and the private sector to develop and deepen
commitments to climate change action. It goes on to say that people as
citizens can pressure their governments to act; while the same people,
this time acting as consumers, can prompt similar responses from
markets. Flipping to the chapter about empowering poor and marginalised
people, we understand that deepening democracy and making markets more
inclusive can bring power to still more people. Without informed and
mobilised publics, both governments and the private sector will likely
remain either too reactive or too slow, stuck-in-the mud throw backs
rather than vanguards of transformative change.
>
> But will public awareness be enough to save Bangladesh this time? I
have already suggested an answer to this question, but it is worth
burying false hopes and naïve defiance once and for all.
>
> Optimism of the will, pessimism of the mind
> Here is where we are today as described by actors worth listening to.
Rajendra Pachauri, chair of the IPCC, has suggested that the
international community has only seven years to pull its proverbial
finger out and demonstrate meaningful action. Bleak becomes bleaker if
you believe the World Wildlife Fund's assessment of the recent G8 summit
outcome on climate change: "Pathetic."
>
> Many readers will recall the recent remarks of former US
vice-president Al Gore, who has called for his country to shift to 100
per cent renewable energy consumption within ten years. Veteran
development thinker Susan George has weighed in to claim that bottom-up
participatory approaches will not help us this time. She calls for a New
Keynesian approach of directed top-down intervention to respond to the
crisis. These are constructive but desperate calls. If you think they
are radical ideas (they're not really), then listen to James Gustave
Speth, former head of the United Nations Development Program. He
contends that it's not very clever to expect the problem to become the
solution. In his new book, The Bridge at the Edge of the World:
Capitalism, the Environment, and Crossing from Crisis to Sustainability,
he concludes that the costs of capitalism far outweigh its benefits. He
argues that the world needs less rapacious and unsustainable approaches
to
> creating value out of ecology and society. Put this one on your
reading list.
>
> My personal experience suggests that pessimism is entirely
appropriate.
> Right now I work in Zambia, sub-Saharan Africa. The team I work with
has supported the government to develop a national climate change
strategy, a national action plan of adaptation, a national climate
change secretariat, the beginnings of in-depth economic analyses on the
impacts of climate change, developed a proposal to "climate proof" the
national development plan, and so on.
>
>
>
>
>
> We have helped augment country-wide awareness campaigns and are trying
to strengthen the capacity of Zambians to engage meaningfully in
multilateral processes. Finally, we are debating the very debatable
virtues of carbon trading.
>
> In spite of this effort, climate change remains just one of the
million issues vying for space within the consciousness of elected
representatives and public officials. Who can blame them? This is a
class of political and administrative elite that has been schooled and
seduced and sold to the myths of the CO2 economy. Not unlike upper and
middle class Bangladeshis. They are disciples of the narrowly
economistic world views of the IMF and the World Bank, one which
important bilateral donors such as the UK's Department for International
Development have been only too happy to reinforce down the years.
>
> Meanwhile mean surface temperatures have risen by fully one degree
celsius in the last 30 years; the Kalahari Desert is remobilising
northwards; aridity is becoming endemic; seasons are becoming less
predictable and disrupting the agricultural cycle upon which the
majority of the population depends; and natural disasters are more
erratic and intense when they do occur. If this wasn't enough, here come
the same donors again, sacks full of cash and this time talking the good
talk about climate change.
>
> What we miss
> Is there a future for Bangladesh's bottom 145 million? In Bangladesh?
No. Overseas? If this is about human rights, the answer should be: Yes.
>
> Let me try to explain. We all have rights, either realised or denied.
The Western mindset tends to obsess about civil and political rights,
but there are also social, economic and cultural rights. There are
rights to development and rights to habitat too. These rights can be
inter-generational. This makes the rights-climate change relationship a
Pandora's Box that most countries of the over-consuming global North
would want to remain nailed shut. This alone suggests that it is a track
worth taking.
>
> Why? As we can see from the discussions around Kyoto and its successor
arrangements, the over-consuming global North has yet to come close to
acknowledging its historical role in creating economies, politics,
institutions and cultures that depend on CO2-belching technologies. The
G8 cannot even agree on the baseline year from which to measure current
performance on emissions reduction. So, no accountability for the past
and not much for the present either.
>
> To establish "baselines" would imply responsibility. It's the foot in
the door through which the moral case for compensation could enter. The
Kyoto Protocol goes as far as to acknowledge differentiated
responsibilities, but a human rights-based approach to climate change
responsibility could take us further. Indeed, it could take us in the
direction of legal action or reparations.
>
> According to the Geneva-based International Council on Human Rights
Policy, there are at least four issues that can be considered in
bringing human rights into the climate change debate. Each has its
merits. First, looked at most simply, one can attribute responsibility
to groups of people who dump CO2-equivalent gases into the atmosphere
which have impacts on the current life chances of other groups of
people. Second, slightly more complicated, there is the impact of
current CO2-emitting activity that will lead to the loss of future life
potential. Third, and here things get tricky, since climate change is
global and will affect everyone, this raises a question of who is
responsible for how much of the burden for finding solutions. Fourth, we
can look at climate change in terms of entitlements for past, present
and future usage.
>
> It sounds complicated but only if you want to avoid taking
responsibility. If a rights-based argument doesn't carry the weight it
should, then perhaps the global North would prefer to apply some of its
own tested approaches to remedying transgression. Take, for instance,
the Nuremberg Principles.
>
> The good bits went something like this: If you invade another country,
you are responsible for everything that happens afterwards (civil and
ethnic strife: yours; sectarianisation: yours; economic collapse:
yours). Or to use former US Secretary of State Colin Powell's counsel to
President George W. Bush before Iraq II: "If you break it, you own it."
Now, translate this to climate change: if you emit without restraint,
you are responsible for everything that happens after that. Britain and
other Allied Forces applied this principle with a vengeance on the Axis
Powers after World War II. There are contemporary efforts that take such
an approach. I could cite, for example, the methods of assessed
repayment of climate debt proffered by Friends of the Earth.
>
> Pressing for justice and equity on climate change impacts from a human
rights-based perspective means that we in the under-consuming global
South must be ready to reverse the gaze and insist on the global North
taking responsibility. Yet today, few countries in the global South have
incorporated historical injustice into their calculations for a more
just future. Some do try to distinguish between emissions deriving from
conspicuous consumption as opposed to subsistence consumption. And there
are indeed a handful of countries, especially the big ones like Brazil,
China, India and South Africa, who have raised the matter of historical
responsibility.
>
> If we are serious about the human rights of Bangladeshis who will be
hit hardest by climate change, then our positions need to be invigorated
by a rights-based approach. Social, economic and cultural rights face
obliteration. The rights to development and habitation are at mortal
risk. Civil and political rights, which receive so much of the attention
under the crude shorthand of "democracy," will be washed away. The
rights-based approach means being serious about responsibilities. This
is about more than "Our Common Future" (the title of the landmark
Brundtland Report of 1987). It must begin with acknowledgment of
responsibilities for our common past.
>
> One-way ticket
> Since the "international community" does not appear to be up to the
task of shifting fast towards low-emitting systems of production,
distribution and consumption, the next logical and humane step would be
to start looking for new homes overseas for tens of millions of
Bangladeshis.
>
> To date, the effects of climate change have mostly produced internal
displacement within the borders of Bangladesh, with India also taking
some of the brunt. That is to say, its human impacts remain hidden from
the view of the global North. The net of migration must now be cast
wider.
>
>
>
>
>
> If I was a policy wonk, I would suggest that such relocation would
have two inter-related objectives: first, the protection of the rights
of the people relocated reconciled with the responsibilities of
receiving countries in lieu of actual repayment of climate debt; and
second, the avoidance of tension and conflict likely to occur in the
absence of such strategies. The first objective is the yin to the second
objective's yang.
>
> Sound crazy? It might, if you already haven't begun to think about it.
But we're serious about human rights, aren't we?
>
> It sounds nuts because today we live in a world defined by the
prohibitions of nation-states, plus regional and global compacts more or
less premised on the sovereignty of nation-states. This coercive
apparatus, erected across the globe over the last one hundred years, is
already over-loaded by toxic disputes involving nationalisms, class,
ethnicity, religion, livelihoods and resources. It doesn't take too well
to large-scale human movements. Then add tens of millions of
Bangladeshis to the equation.
>
> That's where we're headed because until the over-consuming global
North in particular pulls its finger out, it's the right thing to do
because it's the rights-based thing to pursue.
> It won't be fun. The politically-sanctioned resettlement of entire
populations is nothing new. They have been prompted by war and sometimes
presented as a remedy to avert further war. Hundreds of thousands of
Germans were resettled westwards after World War II as part of a
political outcome framed by the Allies. The Jewish diaspora too needed
accommodation after the horrors meted out during that same conflict.
Were it not for the subsequent denial of Palestinian rights and the
disastrous disregard for a status quo based on the 1967 borders, today's
bloodshed in that region could have been much
> reduced.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Large-scale resettlements are rarely handled well if handled abruptly
or non-transparently. Had Clement Atlee's Labour government not been in
such a hurry to run away from the Indian sub-continent (remember, it
brought forward its withdrawal one year ahead of schedule), perhaps the
appalling scale of massacre in the Punjab could have been averted. And
going further back still, resettlement of Native Americans westwards,
ahead of the advancing settlers, was marked by the treachery and
betrayal of President Andrew Jackson and others. Indeed, it served as a
thin veil for genocide until 1893, when the US census declared, with
chilling banality, that the internal frontier was closed.
> These precedents do not augur well for an evacuation of Bangladesh.
But what are the humane alternatives?
>
> A common refrain of south Asian immigrants growing up in Britain in
the 1970s and 1980s was: "We are over here because you were over there."
The influx of south Asians into Britain was intertwined with the British
presence in south Asia for two centuries beforehand. The New
Commonwealth Immigration Act of 1964 implicitly recognised this
historical tie.
>
> Today, people uprooted by climate change should be getting ready to
move for an analogous reason. "We are coming over there because you have
been emitting over, well, everywhere actually." You can call this
blow-back, historical symmetry, reaping what you sow, or just desserts.
But it is history balancing itself out and it cannot be avoided.
>
> A fight for the right
> The natural course of action for this human-induced catastrophe would
be for people to up and move from A to B. People have done this
throughout all of human history when confronted by environmental change.
In pre-modern times there was of course no talk about human rights. But
then again, there were no nation-states either.
>
>
>
>
>
> I wasn't joking about applying Nuremburg-type principles. Universal
human rights offer a basis -- I would argue the only basis -- on which
Bangladeshis can confront the restrictions and denials and obfuscations
of the over-consuming global North. That means adding a third pillar to
climate change responses alongside adaptation and mitigation:
litigation.
> Human rights can provide a vocabulary through which ethical and moral
arguments can be fought to protect and promote the life chances of
millions; it can generate grounds for solidarity between peoples who
share common cause for inter-generational justice, and it can call to
order those who would argue that the past is past, and we should now
only focus on a Churchillian age of consequences.
>
> If the G8 and other over-consuming emitters do not sort themselves out
soon, then a real age of consequences will be upon us. Tens of millions
of Bangladeshis will call upon the traditions of their maritime
forebears and make their ways to more clement shores. They will demand
their right to live.
> And what will we do then?
>
>
> A. Hannan Ismail lives in Zambia. You can contact him at:
ahannanismail @yahoo.co.uk.
>
> http://www.thedailystar.net/forum/2008/august/care.htm
>


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

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[ALOCHONA] Re: Stop fighting Bangladeshi, follow Vietnum

Dear Alochoks

It will not be our time for a few years yet as it is obvious from
the behaviour of both AL and BNP that the need for reform, by any
definition, is not understood by them.

We can cover up our emasculated body with stupid bravado - our
politicians do it well. We take such pride in our garments and
labour sectors - both flourishing on wages unacceptable elsewhere.
Sure these successes are worthy enough but our leaders make it sound
like we're just behind Vietnam!

Discipline of some sort is needed - in every discipline. As long as
we have politicans who understand only chaos and who cannot lead by
example we are set to fail.

Don't worry - maybe we can export a 100,000 of our citizens to
Vietnam to work as unskilled labour. It would be another grand
success for us. It would also make our precious manpower agents and
their MP business partners richer thereby further strengthening
democracy, Bangladeshi style.

Ezajur Rahman
Kuwait

--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, WinsUSA@... wrote:
>
>
> When is it going to be our term???
>
> I was one of the business delegates who accompanied the former PM
Khaleda Zia on a state visit to Vietnam in 2005 and have had
business there just as the country opened up. What a remarkable
progress the country has shown in attracting foreign investment and
creating emplyment although the capital market has suffered
recently.
>
> Talk is cheap....when will our leaders wake up and realize this
what Vietman has achieved in 3 years???
>
> Wake up Bangladesh.
>
> Faruque
> Bangladesh MIC by 2020
>
> Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: "M. M. Chowdhury \(Mithu\)" <cgmpservices@...>
>
> Date: Tue, 29 Jul 2008 04:16:24
> To: <cgmpservices@...>
> Subject: [ALOCHONA] Stop fighting Bangladeshi, follow Vietnum
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Vietnam lures biggest-ever foreign investment in 7 months
> Xinhua, Hanoi
>
> Vietnam has so far this year licensed 654 foreign-invested
projects with total registered capital of nearly 44.5 billion U.S.
dollars, rising 546 percent in capital against the same period last
year, and equating to the combined foreign direct investment (FDI)
lured from 1988 to 2006, local newspaper Investment reported on
Monday.
> Among the fresh FDI, over 51.3 percent are poured into service,
and 48.2 percent into industry, including a steel project worth
nearly 7.9 billion dollars, and an oil refinery project valued at
6.2 billion dollars, the newspaper quoted statistics from the
country's Ministry of Investment and Planning as reporting.
> Among the 654 projects, 27 have registered capital of at least 100
million dollars each, and eight have registered capital of one
billion dollars each upward. A large number of projects are invested
by multinational companies based in China's Taiwan, Japan, the
United States, Canada, Singapore, Brunei, South Korea, Kuwait and
the Netherlands. Since the beginning of this year, 188 operational
foreign- invested projects in Vietnam have raised their capital by a
total of 788.6 million dollars, posting respective year-on-year
declines of 31.4 percent and 44.5 percent, local newspaper Vietnam
Economic Times reported today.
> Vietnam has also posted realized capital of foreign-invested
projects totaling six billion dollars since the beginning of this
year, up 42.9 percent against the same period last year.
> The ministry is, in coordination with relevant ministries, sectors
and localities nationwide, facilitating the disbursement of licensed
foreign-invested projects, mainly by simplifying administrative
procedures and speeding up site clearance, said Vietnam Economic
Times.
>

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

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[ALOCHONA] Bangladesh's Olympic dream comes true by wild cards

Bangladesh's Olympic dream comes true by wild cards

 

It is a dream for every athlete who has qualified for the Olympics to get medals, but for the Bangladeshi athletes who go to the games by wild cards, participation and trying best to get good results are the most important.

 

After the country's independence in 1971, no Bangladeshi athlete has ever qualified for the Olympics. In order to broaden the participation in the Games, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) provides some wild cards to those countries whose athletes have failed to get any qualification.

 

Bangladesh applied for 6 wild cards for the upcoming Beijing Olympics. The IOC only gave the country five, while inviting one female shooter, Sharmin, to watch the Games as a spectator.

Bangladesh sent observers to the Olympics in 1976 and has been sending athletes to contest at the Games by wild cards since Atlanta 1996.

 

The five wild cards for the Beijing Games include 2 for swimming, 2 for track and field, and 1 for shooting.

 

In Bangladesh, most of the athletes are not professionals and therefore have no salary. They are students or employees and only get training in their spare time.

 

The Bangladeshi sports largely lack international competitiveness, as the country is short of sports facilities and the athletes often lack sponsorship or systematic training.

 

Many athletes said training, championships and medals give them more spiritual reward than the material one, because they don't get much bonus even if they win a gold medal at international games.

 

Nazrul Islam Rumee, chief coach of Bangladesh's national athletic team, told Xinhua in a recent interview that although Bangladeshi athletes suffer from poor facilities and train with no salary or nutritious food, they still work very hard and prepare with their best efforts for every major games they could take part in.

 

Islam said that he would take one male and one female athletes to the Beijing Olympics. The two athletes, Abu Abdullah and Nahar Beauty, will contest in the 100-meter sprint.

 

Abdullah and Nahar said they hope they can break their own records in Beijing.

 

According to Islam, Abdullah's personal record stands at 10.3 seconds and Nahar's at 11.6, both recorded by a hand timer and maybe not so accurate.

 

The coach said the wild cards give Bangladeshi athletes an opportunity not only to contest at the Olympics, but also to make friends and share experience with athletes from other parts of the world.

 

He believed the Bangladeshi athletes will learn a lot from the Olympics and will be inspired to further improve themselves.

 

It will be the first time for Abdullah and Nahar to participate in the Olympics, something they both feel very excited at and proud of.

 

Shoyeb Uzzaman, a rifle coach with the Bangladesh Shooting Federation, will take one shooter, Imam Hossoin, to the Beijing Olympics. Hossoin will compete in the men's 10-meter rifle event.

 

Hossoin said he hoped he could get a result of 588 to 590 rings at the Games.

 

Doli and Bubel Rana will join the swimming competition in Beijing. Doli, a young girl, also competed at the Sydney and Athens Games.

Doli said she is very proud to be a three-time Olympian. "I hope I can get good results and also gain more experience from the Beijing Games," she said.

 

With "One World, One Dream" as the theme of the Beijing Olympics, there is also one dream shared by all participating Bangladeshi athletes, that is one day they could all go to the Olympic Games as a qualified athlete.

(Xinhua News Agency July 30, 2008)

 

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[mukto-mona] Re: Georgia

WRT: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mukto-mona/message/49375

Dear Mr Ray,

Thank you very much for this article. There is a lot of nonsense
being bandied about in sections of the US media about the war in
Georgia though it is clear that not many of the people here are
buying the pitch. Even some conservative groups have been skeptical
about the nonsense being bandied about.

Earlier today I posted a note on Mike Smith's blog on Politico.com, a
prominent non-partisan political website in Washington which is cut
and pasted below. I have also been monitoring the conservative talk
shows on radio here - this is the preferred medium of the
conservatives in the USA. Suffice it to say that anti Russian
propaganda has not found takers even within this community.
Interestingly, COndoleeza Rice has been attacked by a couple of
conservative commentators because she has not come out to condemn the
Russians like they hoped she would - she is a fluent Russian speaker
and the New York Times produced intelligence assessments from within
the CIA which said that until the Georgians actually went into South
OSsetia there was no Russian mobilisation of forces at all. My
feeling is that Ms RIce has taken care not to fall into a trap and
hence the attacks on her from the Conservative side will only
increase in the days to come. This is going to be an interesting
development to watch in Washington far beyond the end of hostilities
in South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Best wishes,

Mehul Kamdar

http://www.politico.com/blogs/jonathanmartin/0808/McCain_says_Russia_w
ants_to_restore_old_regional_influence.html#comments


The fact about the Georgian crisis is that it makes the Republicans
look ignorant - and that is a charitable assessment. ANyone who knows
the recent history of that region would laugh at the mention of
Sakashvili as a "democratically elected president" considering how he
nearly pulled a coup off after a vote counting scandal where Eduard
Shavardnadze was called the winner. Additionally, The New York Times
went into the history of the conflict in detail and clearly pointed
out that intelligence assessments in the USA indicated that there had
been no mobilization of Russian troops in preparation to invade
Georgia prior to the Georgian forces' miscalculation in trying to
retake Ossetia. What must irk the Republicans - and I am no Obama
supporter - is the fact that the speed of the Russian operation and
their quick cessation of hostilities after they ahd achieved the aim
of routing the Georgian military must make the war in Iraq look like
an act of monumental idiocy. This country is now on the brink of
economic disaster and of a national weariness as far as competing
with the rest of the world is concerned thanks to the expense and the
difficulties in fighting a war that has dragged on long after victory
was declared. Russia was exerting its influence in its part of the
world? You bet it was. The Cuban missile crisis is a far better
equivalent to compare this to than the German annexation of
Sudetenland. Don't believe me? Israel and Germany, two staunch US
allies, have refused to condemn the Russians. In fact, Germany vetoed
Georgian plans to join NATO a couple of years ago. Mc Cain would only
make a fool of himself if he continues to dwell on this. He has been
doing well in the polls recently. Perhaps, he too, like his opponent,
has a death-wish as far as becoming President is concerned.

Posted By: Mehul Kamdar | August 12, 2008 at 10:58 AM




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[mukto-mona] Re: Article on Taslima Narin's return to India

WRT: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mukto-mona/message/49367

Trust a miserable lump of fundamentalist trash to come in and talk out
of his hat on what this site "should do" about a writer that he does
not like. Yeah, there is a lot of importance that deserves to be given
to a no-name recalcitrant preaching down to a group of freethinkers. This comment should get the attention that it truly deserves.

Mehul Kamdar


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Re: [ALOCHONA] Re: Terrorism of Chhatra League Goons!!!!

Goons? Who are you calling goons? Shibir's chicken is coming home to roost after so many years. It's about time!! Shibir and other Wahabi/Moududis have no place in our country, and should be deported to their beloved countries (i.e. Pakistan and Saudi Arabia) by the public. We don't need a government mandate to do it. Just deport those SOBs.


----- Original Message ----
From: musasarkar <m_musa92870@yahoo.com>
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, August 12, 2008 2:43:23 AM
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Re: Terrorism of Chhatra League Goons!!!!

Let's get the whole picture:


For more News: http://www.jugantor .com/web/ content/2008/ 08/09/news0868. htm



Sources:  http://www.ittefaq. com/content/ 2008/08/07/ news0726. htm
               http://www.jugantor .com/web/ content/2008/ 08/07/print0675. htm

Latest News on Chhatra Dal Destroying Cars at DU:
            http://www.bdnews24 .com/bangla/ details.php? id=32380&cid=2


--- In alochona@yahoogroup s.com, hasan md <hasan_eu@...> wrote:
>
> Angry BCL activists vandalised the Dhaka University
> Vice-Chancellor' s office and set up a fire in protest
> against the re-arrest of BCL General Secretary Mahfuzul
> Haider Chowdhury Roton soon after his release from
> Mymensingh Central Jail yesterday. Bangla
>
> Students burn furniture in front of the Dhaka University VC office yesterday, protesting the arrest of Chhatra League leader Mahfuzur Haider Chowdhury
>  
> Bangladesh Chhatra League activists damage vehicles on the Dhaka University campus on Tuesday, demanding release of the organisation' s general secretary Mahfuzul Haider Chowdhury Roton. — New Age photo
>
> for details see,,,
> daily jaijaidin
> http://www.jaijaidi n.com/details. php?nid=84618
> daily new age
> http://www.newagebd .com/2008/ aug/06/front. html#4
> daily ittefaq
> http://www.ittefaq. com/content/ 2008/08/06/ news0361. htm
> daily naya diganta
> http://www.dailynay adiganta. com/2008/ 08/06/fullnews. asp?News_ ID=96749&sec=2


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[ALOCHONA] Wow! Bangla is in the top 10 most spoken languages in the world

I was surprised to learn that Music of Greeece, former Greece (Yugoslavia, Albania, Kosovo, Croatia, etc), Armenia, Georgia, Central Asian Countries and some parts of Russia was quiet similar to Music of Indian Sub Continent. Decades ago Mukesh's song 'Awaaraa hooN' was a hit in USSR and all Eastern Block Countries. HemanTo Mokerji's 'RaaT Nashili hai, khoya, khoy ChanD hai, ik baar moskoraa Day, ik baar moskoraa Day" and some of his other songs were also hummed by them though he was called HemanT Kumar as in India.  

"Raheem M." <raheemm1@yahoo.com> wrote:

Dear Alochoks,

This is so amazing! Bangla is in the top 10 most spoken language in the world!
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_languages_by_number_of_native_speakers#Top_20)
Bangladesh could use this fact in its cultural and tourism branding efforts. Bangla is as sexy and beautiful as French. Did you know that the #1 music video on the internet contains a Bangla song? (Check it out -- http://www.fewtureweb.com/category/fun).

We should make hay out of this straw. There needs to be films with sexy girls talking in beautiful Bangla. We should collaborate with one of the top rap stars like 50 cents (a.k.a. fiddy cents) and get him to sample a bangla track in one of his next songs. Then perhaps we could get a major Hollywood movie to include a mix of a Bangla song into the movie - can you imagine how amazing it would be if the next bond movie was interlayed with high paced audio containing Bangla fusion music instead of the usual boring whatever they use?

Alochoks, think about it? We could make Bangla sexy! Then this would lead to other great things - perhaps the Oscar folks would notice one of the fantastic Bangla dramas - and we could get a nomination. Maybe MTV would highlight Habib or one of those guys and make them into a international super stars! Oh lord - we would become so cool!

And can you imagine what kind of effect this could have on GDP, politics, elections, weather and what not? I mean this is ground-breaking, earth-shattering, universe-rattling and then some!

Please give it some thought. Let us write 10,000 lines on this great idea. We shall launch online petitions. Let us meet and discuss. We shall form several regional organizations, with respective leaders. We shall do press campaigns (please try to wear fitted, tailored suits - we cant be hip if we dress like old school professors. If you want to be old school - go all the way and just wear panjabi and paijama - anyways I digress). Let us write to the editors and maybe collect some donations. And dont forget, you HAVE TO recruit one professor! Aint nothing cool like a university professor!

And if the press campaign is successful, please do not forget to do a dawaat. A large community picnic is even better! We have to celebrate every little success! Invite some biggies - your local pol or whatever. If you want to make that into another press event - no worries baby - go for it! All I ask is that you include all the leaders in it. Sometimes, one of those quite, go getters, who get things done will start criticizing. Only way to deal with this is - nip it in the bud - you cant have any room for negativity.

And oh yes - cant forget the factions! (Faction - love that word - maybe include it into a slogan for Bangla?) This is VERY IMPORTANT! I dont care how you do it - just get it done. Make sure that your local "Promote Bangla" organization has several factions - lets start with the basics - we need a BNP faction, an AL faction, a Sylhet faction, a Pabna faction, a Chittagong faction, etc. Go crazy with the factions! The more, the merrier! Let yourself loose. Bonus points for the guy who is able to create the most factions - its rockin!

Finally Alochoks, we shall come back to this forum in about a year and talk about our great success! I look forward to 2009! Its early but hey - Bangla is cool and so am I and whatever...

- Raheem
New York

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[Nagorik_Shokti] Earn $5000 for reading emails , 8/14/2008, 12:00 am

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[ALOCHONA] RE: Sir Salman Rushdie's fatwa against freedom of expression

 

     This writer, Shajahan Madampat, gloatingly constructs his comments on a serious subject such as "freedom of expression" based on his assumption that tabloid-type libelous trash by a British police officer can be judged to be the same as a work of fiction by a world-class novelist. Notice Madampat's leading suggestion of false opposition in the paragraph below between a living person, an author, and fictional characters within a dream-sequence of a fictional character depicted in a fiction by that author:

 

Echoing his Muslim critics, Rushdie says in an interview with The Guardian: 'This is not a free speech issue, this is libel — there is a difference between those two things. I can defend the truth, I will not have my character destroyed and presented to the world as something that it is not. I am not trying to prevent him from publishing his stupid book but if they publish it as it is there will be consequences and there will be a libel action.' Contrast this indignation with the Satanic Verses which describes a brothel in which all the sex workers take the names of the Prophet's wives, who are revered by Muslims as the mothers of the believers.

'He is portraying me as mean, nasty, tight-fisted, arrogant and extremely unpleasant. In my humble opinion I am none of those things,' says the writer, who used the derogatory name Mahound for the prophet, a term that smacked of the crusades.

 

            Madampat is ignorant and flat wrong like many of Rushdie's Muslim critics! Mahound, the name for the Prophet, does not just 'smack' of the crusades. It comes from the crusades. It is lifted out from Medieval European Romance fiction composed around the time of the crusades. I have read the medieval European Romance literature and know the context of the various mis-spelt names of the Prophet in them.  Rushdie deliberately chose this name to show how Europe had been anti-Islam historically, and his choice had to do with the fact that he himself (or rather, the character in his novel) feels the hurt of the insult hurled at the Prophet by the Europeans of the Middle Ages. His desire is to vanquish the insult by "wearing it is as a mark of pride" just like the negroes have taken on the term 'Black' which used to be an insulting term to depict them.  Rushdie borrowed Mahound from Medieval Europe to protest an insult, not because he wanted to insult the Prophet.

 

            Like all Rushdie's Muslim critics, Madampat is oblivious of Western racism of which Rushdie as well as they are victims. That callow British police officer is quite peeved at having to protect Rushdie in his line of duty during the international fracas in 1990. He cannot understand what the fuss is about and is green with envy at the fame and star-status of a 'coloured Paki' which is all Rushdie was to him.

 

             ---- Farida Majid




To: saldwr@yahoogroups.com
From: ysikand@yahoo.com
Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2008 00:48:35 -0700
Subject: [india-unity] Sir Salman Rushdie's fatwa against freedom of expression

Sir Salman Rushdie's fatwa against freedom of expression
(Khaleej Times - 11/08/2008)
BY SHAJAHAN MADAMPAT

SIR Salman Rushdie, that beloved symbol of freedom of expression, has now turned Khomeini, so to speak, exposing, in an ironic twist of tale, the hypocrisy and double standards that marked the entire liberal case for unqualified and unrestrained freedom of representation.

The man, in whose defence the world's intelligentsia mounted an intellectual blitzkrieg against the alleged medievalism of the Muslim masses, has threatened to sue the publishers of a book about him by a former police officer, Ron Evans. In his forthcoming book, On Her Majesty's Service: My Incredible Life in the World's Most Dangerous Close Protection Squad, Evans dares to paint a rather unflattering portrait of the writer, whose unflattering ways stirred up controversies ever since he began to write. Rushdie alleges that the book 'destroys his character' and 'presents wholly made up incidents as facts.'

Echoing his Muslim critics, Rushdie says in an interview with The Guardian: 'This is not a free speech issue, this is libel — there is a difference between those two things. I can defend the truth, I will not have my character destroyed and presented to the world as something that it is not. I am not trying to prevent him from publishing his stupid book but if they publish it as it is there will be consequences and there will be a libel action.' Contrast this indignation with the Satanic Verses which describes a brothel in which all the sex workers take the names of the Prophet's wives, who are revered by Muslims as the mothers of the believers.

'He is portraying me as mean, nasty, tight-fisted, arrogant and extremely unpleasant. In my humble opinion I am none of those things,' says the writer, who used the derogatory name Mahound for the prophet, a term that smacked of the crusades.

'It is an obscenity to suggest that I asked people to leave the room so that I could have sex with my girlfriend. I will not have that said about me,' avers Rushdie. This prudish protestation comes from the man who described Margaret Thatcher as 'Maggie the Bitch' in his novel. He had this to write about white women: 'Never mind fat, Jewish, non-deferential, white women were for ******* and throwing over.'

Ironically, Evans, the victim of the novelist's ire, was a member of the Scotland Yard team which protected Sir Salman when he faced death threats. Compared to Rushdie's favourite epithets to describe many eminent historical figures, Evan's description of Rushdie as nasty and arrogant is rather mild. After all, not even Rushdie's supporters consider him a paragon of good personal conduct and refinement. What Rushdie's critics told then is exactly what he now parrots in his defence. 'The simple fact of the matter is that nothing of this sort happened.'

The last two decades have seen many interesting debates, occasionally spilling over to the streets, on the holy subject of freedom of expression. Almost always, with few exceptions, Islam and Muslims were at the receiving end. The tone and tenor of the raging controversies seemed to suggest that the medieval mindset of the Muslims made them extra-sensitive to even well intentioned and mild criticisms. Many a writer, ranging from the quotidian pen-pusher to exalted names from world literature, lamented the intolerance of the Muslim community.

There was indeed a grain of truth in the charges levelled against the community. One always felt there were better ways of handling criticisms and vilifications. Thoughtless reaction to criticisms on the part of Muslim leadership has done enormous disservice not only to the reputation of the community, but also to literature! For example, the hue and cry over the writings of Taslima Nasrin, a third-rate writer by any reckoning, has elevated her to the level of an international celebrity. At least those who never read her books seem to think she is a great writer!

However, one point repeatedly made by defenders of the Muslim view point seemed to have always fallen on deaf years. The point was that each society had its own inviolable sanctities and sacred imaginations which define, to a large extent, the collective subconscious of people identified as a single bloc by virtue of nationhood, religion, culture or whatever. Muslims have their notions of the sacred and inviolable just as other societies have theirs; counter-narratives on the Holocaust are still a punishable offence in several Western countries. Though in varying degrees, all peoples, both on individual and collective levels, are sensitive to certain modes of representation. That is precisely why all cultures sought to distinguish between free speech and libel in one way or another.

The debates around Salman Rushdie's Satanic Verses showed the appalling selectivity with which arguments were deployed in his defence, marshalling an array of liberal concepts to justify his distortion of a very crucial part of Islamic history. Many objective observers who tried to dispassionately understand the issue pointed out the double standards and chicanery that marked the debate. But Western intelligentsia and their supporters elsewhere largely ignored the arguments that called for a balanced approach to the whole issue, instead of looking at the issue of freedom of expression in absolute terms.

Now, that Rushdie himself has called his bluff and betrayed his own cause, true to his consistent pattern, it is perhaps pertinent to parody those statements made ad nauseam over the last few decades: Banning of books is a reactionary way of handling differences; the solution is to intellectually fight the contents of the book. A writer of Rushdie's stature must not try to stop the publishing of a book. He must let the people judge the book and the opinions expressed therein about him, just as he wanted the people to judge the contents of The Satanic Verses. Courts of law are not the best places to judge the merits and demerits of books and films, but the wise republic of the readers and the viewers!

Shajahan Madampat is a cultural critic and commentator. He can be reached at shajahan98@yahoo.com




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[mukto-mona] RE: Sir Salman Rushdie's fatwa against freedom of expression

 

     This writer, Shajahan Madampat, gloatingly constructs his comments on a serious subject such as "freedom of expression" based on his assumption that tabloid-type libelous trash by a British police officer can be judged to be the same as a work of fiction by a world-class novelist. Notice Madampat's leading suggestion of false opposition in the paragraph below between a living person, an author, and fictional characters within a dream-sequence of a fictional character depicted in a fiction by that author:

 

Echoing his Muslim critics, Rushdie says in an interview with The Guardian: 'This is not a free speech issue, this is libel — there is a difference between those two things. I can defend the truth, I will not have my character destroyed and presented to the world as something that it is not. I am not trying to prevent him from publishing his stupid book but if they publish it as it is there will be consequences and there will be a libel action.' Contrast this indignation with the Satanic Verses which describes a brothel in which all the sex workers take the names of the Prophet's wives, who are revered by Muslims as the mothers of the believers.

'He is portraying me as mean, nasty, tight-fisted, arrogant and extremely unpleasant. In my humble opinion I am none of those things,' says the writer, who used the derogatory name Mahound for the prophet, a term that smacked of the crusades.

 

            Madampat is ignorant and flat wrong like many of Rushdie's Muslim critics! Mahound, the name for the Prophet, does not just 'smack' of the crusades. It comes from the crusades. It is lifted out from Medieval European Romance fiction composed around the time of the crusades. I have read the medieval European Romance literature and know the context of the various mis-spelt names of the Prophet in them.  Rushdie deliberately chose this name to show how Europe had been anti-Islam historically, and his choice had to do with the fact that he himself (or rather, the character in his novel) feels the hurt of the insult hurled at the Prophet by the Europeans of the Middle Ages. His desire is to vanquish the insult by "wearing it is as a mark of pride" just like the negroes have taken on the term 'Black' which used to be an insulting term to depict them.  Rushdie borrowed Mahound from Medieval Europe to protest an insult, not because he wanted to insult the Prophet.

 

            Like all Rushdie's Muslim critics, Madampat is oblivious of Western racism of which Rushdie as well as they are victims. That callow British police officer is quite peeved at having to protect Rushdie in his line of duty during the international fracas in 1990. He cannot understand what the fuss is about and is green with envy at the fame and star-status of a 'coloured Paki' which is all Rushdie was to him.

 

             ---- Farida Majid




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Sign the Petition : Release the Arrested University Teachers Immediately : An Appeal to the Caretaker Government of Bangladesh

http://www.mukto-mona.com/human_rights/university_teachers_arrest.htm

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Daily Star publishes an interview with Mukto-Mona
http://www.mukto-mona.com/news/daily_star/daily_star_MM.pdf

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MM site is blocked in Islamic countries such as UAE. Members of those theocratic states, kindly use any proxy (such as http://proxy.org/) to access mukto-mona.

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Mukto-Mona Celebrates 5th Anniversary
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/5_yrs_anniv/index.htm

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Mukto-Mona Celebrates Earth Day:
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Earth_day2006/index.htm

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Kansat Uprising : A Special Page from Mukto-Mona 
http://www.mukto-mona.com/human_rights/kansat2006/members/


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MM Project : Grand assembly of local freedom fighters at Raumari
http://www.mukto-mona.com/project/Roumari/freedom_fighters_union300306.htm

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German Bangla Radio Interviews Mukto-Mona Members:
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Darwin_day/german_radio/


Mukto-Mona Celebrates Darwin Day:

http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Darwin_day/index.htm

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Some FAQ's about Mukto-Mona:

http://www.mukto-mona.com/new_site/mukto-mona/faq_mm.htm

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

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"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




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[ALOCHONA] Bangladesh to file anti-dumping complaint at WTO for first time

Dear Alochoks,

I was heartened to read that the Bangladesh Tariff Commission is getting ready to file complaint at the World Trade Organization against anti-dumping practices by trading countries. (http://thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=50193)

Dumping is the practice of selling a product at a price lower than the price normally charged in the home market. This practice is disastrous for local industries.

This is what the government should have been doing decades ago before our local market was flooded with foreign products. For the first time, under this CTG, our local industry is getting a chance to fight back against such illegal practices! Truly, if this government could stay for 5 years, our country's potential would be greatly unleashed.

We hope that the next government will continue such good practices.

- Raheem

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