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Thursday, May 7, 2009

Re: [ALOCHONA] News of HOPE! --be fully prepared to face noisy, nasty resistance

Ms Majid,
Why "Bismillah" is a problem for you?
FYI, Awami League is keeping it.
Now I'll share some good news. Jamaat took your idea and removed it
from their party constitution.
What's next?
Let me give you some food for thought. The word "Awami" came from Urdu.
Let me see how you can "Update" it.
Apparently Jamaat is more "Flexible" about these "Minor" issues as long
it takes them to haven AKA "Power".
My bet is Jamaat will give in first.

Good luck.
-qar

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[ALOCHONA] Fifth Amendment Imbroglio: Bangladesh in Huge Ransom



Fifth Amendment Imbroglio: Bangladesh in Huge Ransom

 M.T. Hussain
 
SC Full Bench
The declaration by the High Court in 2005 of the 5th Amendment as illegal and then filed leave to appeal right then by the previous government that was withdrawn by this AL Government on the 3rd May 2009 have obviously put Bangladesh into huge ransom. Fortunately, some responsible citizens of the country have rightly stood to become a party to the appeal that has been granted on the 4th May 2009 by the Supreme Court 7 member full bench, and allowed them to file appeal in one month's time.
Continuity at stake
The Fifth Amendment of the Constitution made on the 6th April 1979 was not only historic but also extremely crucial as life and death issue for constitutional continuity of Bangladesh. One must ask oneself how could any responsible and patriotic person much less responsible government with any bit of concern for the country's lawful continuity abandon the appeal petition in 2009 earlier made in 2005 to the supreme court in the case and pending since then.
Naïve's exercise
I am neither a professional lawyer nor a political party anybody but a humble senior citizen retired from formal job nearly 15 years ago felt extremely stunned at the news of the withdrawal of the appeal on the 3rd May evening by the present government of Bangladesh that I may like to explain in some detail below.
13 minutes drama
The Fifth Amendment in serial order followed the Fourth Amendment of the Bangladesh Constitution made on the 25th January 1975. Ironically the Fourth Amendment though made in the Bangladesh Parliament had been notoriously not only ill conceived but also followed evil process so far as parliamentary norms were concerned. It had been a 13 minutes business session wherein the Leader of the House alone had his edict announced and passed without having gone through due process of debate and all that needed. Based on that violation of norms the amendment lacked normal legality of parliamentary democratic process.
Dictator
Why was that so? Why was the hide and seek with democracy and national future? The reason was simple. The leader wished to become lone dictator for life having there none in opposition to him, much less any opposition party in the national Parliament. He banned all political parties and then imposed instead the lone party of his own Awami League versioned anew as the BAKSAL or Bangladesh Krishak Sramik Awami League, as if by changing thus the nomenclature he brought in all into the party fold! The multi-party nature of the State and the Constitution abruptly changed by the leader in thirteen minutes in such haste that he allowed none to speak in the floor against the undemocratic romantic venture.

Questionable

How much was the leader honest and sincere for overall welfare of the people was not above question for his lieutenants and cadres had been engaged in fortune seeking so much unkindly that they had inflicted famine of their own making in the country in 1974 that brought in unnatural deaths to 27,000 vulnerable men, women and children due to hunger according to government estimate and lakhs according to other estimates. The death scenes in even the city of Dhaka at the nose of the government were not only tragic but also so menacing that hundreds of dead bodies had been picked up from the streets day in and day out by voluntary organizations like Anjumne Mafidul Islam, etc. for burial.
Hoodlums and killers
The repression on the political opposition whoever had been in some action program for the welfare of the country was sized up through various private armed hoodlums including one under the leader's eldest son Kamal, another under his nephew Moni, still another under his most favorite and S.P. of Dhaka Mahboob and the unconstitutional Para military force Rakhi Bahini unleashed indiscriminately on the imaginary political opponents. That Rakhhi Bahini, in fact, had been raised under the Indian R&AW and Indian Army General Ovan as a specially trained and armed force in parallel with the regular armed forces only for protection of the leader and answerable to the lone top leader.
Apart from making the legislative and executive taken under the sole control of the leader, the judiciary had also been made totally subservient so much so that even the Supreme Court judges had been made removable at the top leader's mercy.

Undignified image

At the international level Bangladesh had no dignified image. Countries like China, Saudi Arabia, etc had not even in over three and a half years of existence recognized Bangladesh as an independent country for its subservience to India and the then Soviet Union. The Fourth Amendment of the Constitution that turned the country into one party dictatorial rule made it more friendless, particularly, in the West.
National Relief
Then came the national relief from repression in mid August 1975. The leader was toppled in a successful military coup profusely welcomed by the people at home and abroad. The people had a great sigh of relief so much so that none lamented the fall of the leader. Though counter coups had been tried but all failed and pro 15th August coup putsch remained in full hold. The notorious lone party BAKSAL had been declared void, medias freed, declarations one after another for freedom and democracy issued, multi-party general elections held, and ultimately the Fifth Amendment passed in the newly elected Parliament on the 6th April 1979.

Pluralism

The Fifth Amendment had been clearly featured not only by provisions for pluralism and multi-party democracy but also changing the constitutional principles. The main changes included three issues; left off Bengali nationalism and in place adopted the logical Bangladeshi nationalism, abandoned socialism to Islamic social justice, and replaced secularism to Faith and Absolute Trust in the Almighty Allah. These changes had full consent and support of the people measured not only in the election results but also as they kept in tune with the general aspirations of the people in the past historical process. All these three issues incorporated in the 1972 Constitution had no reflection of the common aspirations of the people, much less majority demands, but were well known to be imposed by Delhi as they wished to make through the armed intervention in the 1971 war.
Three decades
Since then over the last three decades, the country has moved ahead by the underpinning strength of the Fifth Amendment that nothing came up posing any challenge. How come that some evil omen in 2005 came up with a case against the Amendment. Amazingly the bench judge of the High Court who declared the 5th Amendment illegal had already proved himself in another case as some one vindictive and against the victorious coup of August 1975.

Successful coup's indemnity

The successful coup of the 15th August 1975 by any account was not a simple murder case but victorious one that by itself had the indemnity of any bloodletting as is provided in law. There is no denying the fact that successful coup is a legal mode for political power ascendance. That was what happened following the August coup, first making Khondoker Moustaque the President of the Republic by the coup heroes on its own right and power of the victorious coup itself on the very day. Then followed the transfer of power from Moustaque to Justice Sayem in about three months (83 days) and then on to General Ziaur Rahman on the 29th November (1975) -all transfers of State power as a follow up of the lawful 15th August coup. These changes had come about one after another in sequences of continuity based on the lawful change of the 15th August 1975. In addition, Ziaur Rahman had the overwhelming 'yes' vote in the referendum made in 1977 for the President of Bangladesh. The Fifth Amendment was not made arbitrarily but in the duly elected Parliament in 1979 as a continuity of the national events and changes made through participatory democratic process all based on the successful coup of August 1975 that was given nod and due allegiance for further legitimacy by all concerned at home and abroad.
Silly
It was absolutely silly that the challenge of the Fifth Amendment was made in the court after 30 years. It was very stunning and possibly very injurious for the nation that the sort of judgment was made in the case for it implied so many vicious syndromes to obviously resurface before the nation and the country.
Vacuum
First, in the vacuum created by the judgment, shall the country go back to the constitutional position of the 4th Amendment as it was on the 25th January of 1975? Could now any party be in existence except the BAKSAL? How about even the Awami League and its chief now holding the position of the P..M. as the elected leader of the house and of the Awami League and not of the BAKSAL? How about the validity and legality of all administrative actions taken after the 15th August 1975 for about 35 years now? Could the 2009 parliament be legal or made legal and in what way? Could Sheikh Mujib's dead body dug out of the grave and placed as the President of the BAKSAL and of Bangladesh Republic as of today in 2009? Or else, could his daughter and now the P.M. be given legitimacy in power due to her being the legitimate inheritance? I am sure none could make any satisfactory reply to these questions today.
The Fifth Amendment's fate
It is a matter of simple common sense that even if the Fifth Amendment is to be done away with, one has to follow steps based on the same Amendment for the time being. That is, the present parliament as the continuity of the Fifth Amendment has to initiate a bill in the due process and then get that passed in the Parliament for scrapping not the Fifth Amendment proper but issues possibly one by one that constituted the Fifth Amendment.
Not easy
Such scrapping off would entail naturally the three issues involving the principles of the Constitution, and certainly the BISMILLAH at the top of the Constitution. Though this Muslim code words are not part of the Constitution, and its scrapping off involves no amendment process as such, but the task may not be that easy as some might have thought. The Muslims constituting 90% of the population emotionally attached to the code words BISMILLAH may play some havoc in case the issue is surfaced. Attempts to change the other three of the principles would face the same situation, I am afraid. Why should any government of Bangladesh go for the venture at all? Are these changes anyway needed to uplift the well being of the people of Bangladesh? I would suppose, not at all.
Underlying fallacies and spirit
On the contrary, I would argue that these principles if pursued in spirit, not in letters alone, may bring in better welfare in smoother way for in such case of development process people would have motivation for spiritual end. In fact, the Prophet of Islam induced the followers with this spiritual incentive to work and to do well to others. Abandoning spiritually inspired Islamic fraternity and going back for Bengali secular approach to society is no way worth for wholesome development in Muslim dominated Bangladesh society. People of Bangladesh are everywhere better known as Bangladeshi and not as Bengali, not even in passports issued by the Government. The so-called principle of secularism has even failed in the West so far as family solidarity and social cohesion for comprehensive peace are concerned. So far as the issue of socialism put up in the 1972 Constitution is concerned, that is almost a matter of bygone days except dictatorial Cuba and North Korea that can hardly be a model for development for the 21st century Bangladesh pursuing pluralism and multi-party democracy, on the one hand, and free market open policies appreciably with efficiency for the last three decades, on the other.

Inherent good

It is true that the spirit of the Fifth Amendment had hardly been implemented in Bangladesh but the spirit is inherent there and if stayed they might well be taken recourse to in future for social uplift and for increased productivity through materialization of what some authority rightly calls spiritual incentive.
Loss and gain
Going secular would no doubt please our big neighbor and some Western powers but that may not equally please our brothers in faith in many countries. The loss and gain have thus to be measured with care and for accuracy.



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RE: [ALOCHONA] Awami League- lawmaker beats up upazila chairman




 Yes let dem beats those BEYADOB Chairman who think they are all in all in UZ.
 


To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
From: maqsudo@hotmail.com
Date: Mon, 4 May 2009 08:27:57 +0000
Subject: RE: [ALOCHONA] Awami League- lawmaker beats up upazila chairman



Can we expect some comments from AL supporters on this shame-story?


dr. maqsud omar





To: dhakamails@yahoogroups.com
From: bd_mailer@yahoo.com
Date: Sat, 2 May 2009 22:39:12 -0700
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Awami League- lawmaker beats up upazila chairman



Awami League- lawmaker beats up upazila chairman

The Awami League-backed Banaripara upazila chairman, Golam Faruk, was assaulted allegedly by AL lawmaker for the Barisal-2 constituency Manirul Islam Moni and his followers in Barisal Friday morning.Golam Faruk, who is also the joint convener of the divisional association of upazila chairmen and vice-chairmen, in a press conference at the Barisal Reporters Unity Saturday noon said the Banaripara police officer-in-charge had invited him to the police station Friday morning.

When he reached there at about 10:45am, local lawmaker Moni, who was waiting inside the room of the OC, chased him. Moni hurled a teacup on Faruk and ordered his men to beat and kill him, Faruk alleged in a written statement.Ziauddin Siron, Sumon Roy, Ilias Sardar, led by defeated upazila chairman candidate AL leader Suvash Shil, beat up Faruk and his associate Baishari union Juba League leader Mizanur Rahman and tore their dresses inside the police station.

Constable Md Selim became severely injured as he tried to save the victims and the OC, after rescuing them, sent them to Barisal under police escort, he alleged, adding, 'I did not go back to my area as I fell insecure.'

Azizul Huq Akkas, BNP-backed chairman of sadar upazila, Shah Alam, AL-backed chairman of Gournadi upazila, Abul Kalam Azad, Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal-backed chairman of Wazirpur upazila, were also present in the press conference and condemned the attack.Principal Zakir Hossain, convener of Banaripara upazila Awami League, also condemned the assault on UZ chairman.People of Baishari, Syedkathi, Udoykathi, Iluhar and Bisharkandi unions under Banaripara upazila observed strike disrupting ferry service and closing markets on Saturday in protest at the attack.

The complaint of Golam Faruk against the MP and his men was not registered as case till Saturday afternoon as permission of higher authorities is needed in this connection, Banaripara police officer-in-charge Farukul Islam acknowledged.

Monirul Islam Moni, AL lawmaker for Barisal-2 (Banripara-Wazirpur), totally denying the allegation, said he heard that some of his party men were engaged in altercation with Banaripara upazila chairman over the lease of the ferry terminal and misbehaved with him. 'I shall try to solve the problem,' he added.

http://www.newagebd.com/2009/may/03/front.html#11







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[ALOCHONA] I: New Zealand : PhD Scholarship in Electronic Engineering, Victoria University of Wellington





--- Gio 7/5/09, Abu Yousuf <ayousufcep@yahoo.com> ha scritto:
Da: Abu Yousuf <ayousufcep@yahoo.com>
Oggetto: New Zealand : PhD Scholarship in Electronic Engineering, Victoria University of Wellington
A: panjeri@yahoogroups.com
Cc: sultanasust@yahoo.com
Data: Giovedì 7 maggio 2009, 15:11


detail here
Abu Yousuf
PhD Student
 Laboratory of Biochemical Engineering
Department of Chemical Engineering
University of Napoli Federico II
Napoli-80124, Italy
&
Assistant Professor
 Department of Chemical Engineering & Polymer Science
Shahjalal University of Science & Technology
Sylhet-3114, Bangladesh




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RE: [ALOCHONA] Taking help from possible adversary in recostruction of BDR may be detrimental to country's sovereignty



 
I believe the best solution would be to bring the processes, construction, management, leadership, training and development of the 'Sacrosanct' "Rakhshmi Bahinee" as the real image in the rights and privileges of the "Mukti Bahinee" that represented the spiritual and statutory sacrificial soul of the Bangla Ma'taa. BDR was in fact a transformed "Ashu'dh" name of the Pakistani EPR; therefore that unholy lamp (Prodeep) was way overdue to be extinguished and thrown away from the sacred altar of the Mother. After all we are the Grand children of the Great mother-India. We must not make the wash-water of the mother's feet dirty when we drink the holy water of the Ganges.
 
Well! The unholy lamp is already taken care of by the recent Amendmend of the Constitution through Abrogating the name and qualifications of the foreign god "Allah" that was once illegitimately recognized by the dirty Muslim Ziaur Rahman or something in 1977 or so. How dare, that circumcised culprit inserted 'Bismillah" in our holy Book of Constitution?Now the Book of Constitution has become Pure and Holy. Sristeekort'a Bhogobaan Rakhsh'a Kor'ecche', Dad'a/Bhaiy! From now, you can do whatever you like, but do never abandon your sweet "Swine, Shampeign, and Dh'utee". 
 
To some it may seem that the "BDR Massacre" was ordained to cleanup the mess leftover by the Pakistanis and their unholy Islamic-political ghosts (Maybe, who knows?). Long-live the Jono-Netri/Desh-Netri!! M'aa Tomaei Shohosr'o Pron'am. J'oy Bangla!
 
 
       
 

 


To: dhakamails@yahoogroups.com
From: bd_mailer@yahoo.com
Date: Thu, 7 May 2009 00:37:25 -0700
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Taking help from possible adversary in recostruction of BDR may be detrimental to country's sovereignty



Taking help from possible adversary in recostruction of BDR may be detrimental to country's sovereignty

Obaid

Re: Neighbouring countries' help to be sought in BDR reconstruction: Sohel Taj -'We can take the assistance of neighbouring countries in reorganising the BDR, especially with regard to the mode of training and modernisation


India & Myanmar are the two possible adversaries though they may be friendly where their interest are not conflicting. when the conflicting situation will arise then it will be easy for them to over power the BDR and take control of our land. knowing everything of BDR they will make their contingency plan to overpower BDR.I don't think Maj Gen Moinul has given this idea being a professional patriotic officer.

Shohel Taj if has said so then pobably planning to make BDR as Rakkhi Bahini like the earlier days of Bangladesh came into being. This may be the hidden agenda of our friendly India as they have done with other neighbours. Those in Bangladesh supporting it,are actually igniting unrest and trouble in Bangldesh and adjacent indian states as in Nepal.

Old tricks of anexation of smaller countries by India may invite grave danger for the subcotinent. Killing of Indira, Mujib, Rajib,Bhutto,King of Nepa&, attack on Bandarnaik are the result of Indian politics.So State minister please learn from history that it does not reoccur.

Obaid
taponbaby@yahoo.com
http://newsfrombangladesh.net/view.php?hidRecord=262177




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[ALOCHONA] Chhatra League Shonar Chheleder Din Bodoler Shomachar at BAKRIBI



See the attached a great shomachar at Bangladesh Agriculture University (BAU) on the excellence of performance towards implementation of din bodoler sonod by chhatra leangue shonar chhelera. Din bodol hobei hobe...



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[ALOCHONA] Re: An Interesting Song Themed "Keno, Keno, Keno" at Youtube

Another song of Haider Hossain on BDR officers' carnage. please lend a sympathetic ear and enjoy it with your heart and soul.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oL8IRwyXT80&NR=1

So many WHYs are there to be answered and yet there are more whys and questions but not a answer.

--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, Wohid <bidrohee@...> wrote:
>
> I had many why ("keno") that I could neither express so perfectly, nor do have I an answer to many of them. The song at the following youtube link covers most of my "keno" and beyond. I'm sure you will find some of your "keno" in common  with this. Enjoy the song at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XI7DtjJUsTU, and let's find some convincing answers to these “keno” as well. Regards. Wohid
>


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

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[ALOCHONA] Re: Murder and Rape by Bachchu Rajakar aka Moulana Abul Kalam Azad



Of course he just killed and raped some people in 1971 to please his master Pakistani Army.  But that doesn't make him guilty.  Furthermore, committing rapes and murders might have been prerequisites to enroll into moulana program in the Jamaati madrassah that he attended (I am really not sure whether he attended any).

--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, Mohammed Ramjan <mramjan@...> wrote:
>
>
> All are false propoganda against Maulana
>
>
>
> To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
> From: m_musa92870@...
> Date: Wed, 29 Apr 2009 19:49:06 +0000
> Subject: [ALOCHONA] Murder and Rape by Bachchu Rajakar aka Moulana Abul Kalam Azad
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Source: http://www.shamokal.com/archive.details.php?nd=2009-04-24&nid=110109
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> _________________________________________________________________
> Hotmail® goes with you.
> http://windowslive.com/Tutorial/Hotmail/Mobile?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_HM_Tutorial_Mobile1_052009
>


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[ALOCHONA] Re: [khabor.com] Khaleda Zia is mad of losing power and finds no hope of getting that back?



O yeah!  Who killed Sabequnnahar Sony of BUET, the first female victim in our country's history,  in June 8, 2002?  You cannot teach us lesson in history if you deliberately ignore your party's much worse activities in the past. 

Sorry I could not go back to June 2002 webpages.  Daily Star started archiving in 2003.  Here is a link from June 8, 2003.

Main accused still at large a year after Sony's killing
http://www.thedailystar.net/2003/06/08/d30608011414.htm

On the same date's front page, you can find how you party people killed ex-AL MP and his companion in Natore:
http://www.thedailystar.net/2003/06/08/d3060801033.htm

Please try to fool us more.  We enjoy it.

--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, Mahathir of BD <wouldbemahathirofbd@...> wrote:
>
> Khaleda is certainly wrong. The country is flooded with terrorist of Chattro league,Jobo league, sramik league and so caled mukijuddha league.
>  
> For the first time in its 63 years history, medical stident was killed in DMA by the jongi of chattra league in the country.
> \
>
>  Everyday nation is reading news of terrorism of jongi chttra leagues .
>  
>  
> Is there any army in the world that can win over 150 Millions people? Should we be afraid of any country?
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>                                
>                               
>
> --- On Sun, 5/3/09, Sitangshu Guha guhasb@... wrote:
>
>
> From: Sitangshu Guha guhasb@...
> Subject: [khabor.com] Khaleda Zia is mad of losing power and finds no hope of getting that back?
> To: khabor@yahoogroups.com, mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com
> Cc: MuktoChinta@yahoogroups.com, nybangla@..., alochona@yahoogroups.com, "bafi-g" bafi-g@yahoogroups.com
> Date: Sunday, May 3, 2009, 11:12 PM
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Is Khaleda Zia supporting terrorists?
> Khaleda Zia told that, there are no terrorists in Bangladesh! Just after one day, US ambassador told, there is possibility of terrorist attack in Bangladesh. While government is trying to stop terrorism, is Khaleda Zia trying to save them? Her statement is supportive of terrorism.
> Why she did not resign within a month of her tenure?
> When Khaleda Zia took power in 2001, within 1 month, the whole country became a persecuted land. Jamaat & BNP persecuted minorities and opposition party workers. The whole world condemned that, but she was adamant to make Bangladesh a land of Jihadi Islamists. She should have resigned in Nov 2001. Does she understand, people dumped her? Gaffar Chowdhury is right, ‘Mother of Thieves’ will never become PM of Bangladesh again.
>



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[ALOCHONA] BAL Alert

BAL Alert!!!
Ibn Hossain, PhD
 
While the result of the recently concluded general election in Bangladesh generated a massive shock and awe for many, people began to have complacent breath as the military-led undemocratic government was over. However, the recent scenarios in Bangladesh show that "the thieves have been replaced by a dangerous gang of robbers."
 
The current Bangladesh Awami League (BAL) government came to power with a mask of progressive vision, but all it has is retrogressive agenda largely orchestrated by its local ultra-secularists and their foreign masters. Here are some of the recent legacies of BAL governments and its dangerous cadres:
 
1. Killing and Murdering
Killing and murdering has become widespread since BAL assumed power three months ago. The unruly gangs of BAL activists not only brutally killed their political opponents, but also their own activists. The recent brutal killing of their own leader in Dhaka medical College is just one of numerous examples. If they kill their own leader so brutally due to internal factions and feuds, one can imagine how dangerous and heinous they are for their political opponents. Every day people are witnessing the extreme savagery and ferocity of BAL activists in Bangladesh . Odhikar, a reputed human rights organization, claims that since January 2009, 62 people have killed and 4258 have been injured by BAL cadres.   
 
2. Pilkhana tragedy and displacing blames:
The world was totally stunned to see the worst form of gruesome killing of 57 army officers and their families and burning and dumping the corpses in Pilkhana, Dhaka on February 24-25, 2009 . All these were done largely with the direct behest and active involvement of BAL government. The State Minister Jahangir K. Nanak has already fled the country once investigation began to dig into his linkage to the notorious carnage. The more tragedy is that rather than bringing the killers to justice, the government has taken a very comprehensive approach which involves procrastination, diverting people's attention to something else, wiping out evidences by the deaths of perpetrators and witnesses in custody, rewarding some killers in Dubai airport, blaming the victims and sanctifying the perpetrators. If the BAL government fails to establish true justice, it will generate grave consequences for Bangladesh . There is a widespread apprehension that the
investigation report may not even be published.
 
 
3. Torture cell:
The BAL cadres in most universities including Jahangirnagar and Rajshshi have set up torture cells to inhumanly torture their political opponents. The victims include their own activists posing challenges for leadership, political opponents, and teachers. The methods of torture are so brutal and inhuman, they sometimes eclipse the methods applied in Abu Gharib prison and Gunatanamo Bay . The extreme tortures by BAL arms thugs have already claimed many innocent lives.
4. Rape and Drug House:
Many BAL activists in many universities and institutions have very successfully established rape house. Many innocent female students are victims of this grave inhumanity. While all these practices are very open secret, people and the victims do not voice out against these because of potential grave consequences. The inhumanity of these rapists sometimes reach to such an extreme verge that they—rather than being remorseful—celebrate their actions in a boastful manner. Manik, a BAL cadre in Jahangirnagar University , openly celebrated his "rape century" when he completed raping 100 girls that drew a huge media coverage! Apart from inhuman rape, many BAL controlled hostels turn to drug house at night.
 
5. Burning people alive:
The extreme brutality of the BAL cadres takes many forms. One of the gravest forms is burning people alive. One of the well cited examples is setting fine on a bus full of passengers by BAL cadres. Around a dozen innocent people were brutally burnt to death. One of the most savage BAL cadres, who later on became an MP, used to burn people alive in the flaming fire in brick fields. As reported by one of his close associates, "the odor and the weird sound of the burning corpse make him very happy!"  
 
 
6. Dancing on the corpse:
October 28, 2006 is one of the most horrible days in the history of humanity. The unprecedented rejoice and elations over the Nobel Peace Prize won by Dr. Muhammad Yunus were still mounting everywhere in Bangladesh . The whole world suddenly became stunned and terribly shocked to see the gruesome political violence created by BAL activists. The unruly BAL activists started mercilessly beating their political opponents to death with poles and oars and dancing on the corpses with joy! The second shock—deeper than ever—appeared when instead of eschewing these violence and gruesome murders, further violent strategies were adopted and an attempt was made by some BAList intellectuals along with their political masters to justify the former violence with a view to blaming the victims and sanctifying the oppressors. None of these brutal murderers were put to justice, rather the victims families were put in extreme intimidation and harassments.
 
The above are just few of numerous instances of BAL brutality in recent times. The total history of BAL's savagery, fascism, inhumanity and gross human rights violations is parallel to none. The Hindu minorities who often support BAL regimes are also the grave victims of BAL atrocities.  Recently BAL cadres demolished a Shib Mandir ( Hindu Temple ) in Dhaka in a broad day light, and the local court surprisingly refused to take any case against these fascist cadres. 
 
The extreme brutality of the BAL-created "Rakhkhi Bahini" and "BAKSAL" is still in the imagination of elderly generation, if not in younger generations' mind. The same patterns of the brutality are currently going on in full swing and in various ugliest forms, not occasionally but almost daily: murdering, raping, looting, grafting, plundering, intimidating, containing, lying, fabricating, insulting, and many others. The current BAL regime is a total reign of fascism and a dangerous tyranny.
 
Ironically, rather than focusing on these BAL rag-tags' gravest forms of savagery and inhumanity, the BAList media and intellectuals are very discursively and deliberately diverting people's attention to something else, such as war-criminals and Jongis. While the war criminals and Jongis are serious issues to be resolved, people need to be very careful of how blames of all social owes are reduced and transferred to the issues of war-criminals and Jongis! Bangladesh and its people are totally unsafe and extremely unfortunate to have the Neo-Nazis on power.  We all must resist this extreme fascism. We must not betray our conscience!            


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Re: [ALOCHONA] Re: FW: From Bangladesh to Darfur: Racism leads to Genocide in the Muslim World



Gaza don't stand a chance in comparison with Darfur. Gaza situation is at least 5000 times better than Darfur. Gaza is in this shape because of so called palestanian who are nothing but Syrians infiltrators, and Gaza shall continue to be a problematic area for next 100 years, and that's because no one wants PEACE there.  
As far as Darur is concerned, it was a peaceful country till it started getting RAPED at THE WILL OF Sudanese govt. backed JINJAWEET, WHICH MEANS DEATH ON A HORSE --- kind of reminds me of those 7 army of SERONE in Harry Poter. Jinjaweet first started genocide mission with non-muslims and now they moved on to muslims.
Muslims world were ignoring the killings of non-muslims even till last two years but now it has come under the radar screen because Jinjaweet is done with non-muslims..... next in line is muslims.
UN has been a lame duck about it for the last 12 years. The question is who is funding these arms and ammo? Not Russians, not US, not Iran, not Koreans, not Taliban's/Al Queda...then who? Could it be china? Possibility.... there are lots of study out there as this is not a new subject. 
 
Debashish
Live and Let Live!




From: musasarkar <m_musa92870@yahoo.com>
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, May 4, 2009 4:39:09 PM
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Re: FW: From Bangladesh to Darfur: Racism leads to Genocide in the Muslim World

The situation in Gaza is indeed very bad, but that doesn't give a light-skinned Muslim race excuse to commit horrendous barbarism on another dark-skinned Muslim race.   Recently in a big gathering of the IMPOTENTS, the heads of all the Arab nations stood firmly behind Sudan 's government.  There was no mention of the Darfur sufferings of the Black Muslims at the hand of Arabized light-skinned Sudanese.  It was utterly shameful.  It can remind us of their inhumane roles in 1971. 

There is no natural resource in Darfur, so we cannot say whoever is trying to alleviate the miseries of Black Muslims are interested in Darfur because of that. 

When there is a fight among the Muslims, we Muslim usually side with the wrong and unjust side, and then we try to blame others.  If we do not take care of our own mess, then the All-mighty will use the others to take care of us.  Just look at Iraq and Afghanistan .  Nothing happens without HIS permission, not even a leaf moves.

--- In alochona@yahoogroup s.com, Jamil Ahmed <jamil_dhaka@ ...> wrote:
>
> I am not an expert on Darfur but when  Israel is shading tear for darfur makes me think.
> Situation in Gaza is worse then Darfur but one one talking about it.
> Is there any natural resource in Darfur?
> They are not shading tear because Muslims are killing Muslim for sure.
>
>
>
> --- On Thu, 4/23/09, Farida Majid farida_majid@ ... wrote:
>
> From: Farida Majid farida_majid@ ...
> Subject: [ALOCHONA] FW: From Bangladesh to Darfur: Racism leads to Genocide in the Muslim World
> To:
> Date: Thursday, April 23, 2009, 5:42 PM
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> #yiv610836477 .hmmessage P
> {
> margin:0px;padding: 0px;}
> #yiv610836477 {
> font-size:10pt; font-family: Verdana;}
>
>
>
>
>  
>
>
> To: From: tarekfatah@. ..: Wed, 22 Apr 2009 10:11:26 -0400
> Subject: From Bangladesh to Darfur: Racism leads to Genocide in the Muslim World
>
>
>
> Tuesday, April 21, 2009
>
> From Bangladesh to Darfur: 
>
> How internalised racism has permitted lighter skinned
>
> Muslims to slaughter their darker skinned co-religionists.
>
> Speech by Tarek Fatah
>
> The Durban Review Conference
> Geneva, Switzerland
> http://www.facebook .com/note. php?note_ id=164051190246
>
> Dear NGO colleagues and delegates,
>
> I speak to you deeply disappointed that my colleague Milly Nsekalije, a survivor of the Rwandan massacre could not share her story with all of you because in the eyes of some since she is not 100% Tutsi, she cannot have been a victim of the Genocide. 
>
>
>
> With Milly Nsekalije, a mixed-race survivor of the Rwadan Genocide, who was denied the right 
> to speak by Tutsi activists as she was "not 100% pure Tutsi."
> What does it say about the state of racism in our world when the victims of a genocide practise exclusion on the basis of the so-called purity of blood lines and ethnicities.
>
> Worse than her exclusion from today’s event is the fact that it has happened at a conference meant to combat racism, when it fact, in my opinion, whether it was yesterday’s speech by Mahmood Ahmadenijad or this afternoon’s barring off Ms. Nsekalije, we have turned the concept of racism upside down.
>
> Having said that, please allow me to dwell on how racism plays out its dirty game, not just as a Black-White divide, but also as a cancer that affects relations between people of colour, often sharing the same religion, but different shades of brown or black skin.
>
> When the issue of racism comes up, the internalised racism that devours the people of the developing world in Asia and Africa, from within, rarely comes up for discussion.
>
> This afternoon I would like to shed some light on two genocidesâ€"one in 1970-71 and the other that continues as I speak. In both instances the root of the problem lay in how one group of Muslims felt they were racially superior to their victims, who also happened to be Muslims. In both cases the doctrine of racial superiority and the practise of institutional racism went unchallenged even after the horrible consequences of such racism was evident and for all to see.
>
>
> Bangladesh
> The first genocide took place in then East Pakistan, now Bangladesh and second is taking place in Darfur. Let me dwell on the Bangladesh genocide first.
>
>
>
>
> In 1970 in Pakistan, my country of birth was divided between two wings; an eastern part that is today known as Bangladesh and the western rump that survived a subsequent war with India as the state we know as Pakistan.
>
> East Pakistan was inhabited by the darker skinned Bengali people who happened to be the majority community of the country, but found themselves ruled by a lighter skinned minority from what was known as West Pakistanâ€"separated by a 1,000 miles.
>
> In the first 25 years of the country, the racist depiction of the darker skinned Bengalis as an inferior and incapable people became the unquestioned dogma among the ruling minority. In addition to the racist depiction of the darker-skinned Bengalis, their culture was portrayed as unislamic and being influenced by Hinduism. Their music, cuisine and attire were mocked while their language was banned and led to widespread protests and deaths in 1952.
>
> In 1970, after suffering under the minority rule of West Pakistan for 25 years, the people of East Pakistan voted to elect a party based in their region and gained a clear majority in the country’s national parliament.
>
> However, the racist view that Bengali people were incapable of ruling the country or that they were traitors to the fair-skinned minority of West Pakistan, led to a military intervention and widespread massacres in which one million people were killed in a ten-month period.
>
> The killing of the Bengali people by the West Pakistan army stopped only when India intervened and defeated the Pakistan Armed forces, but not before hundreds of Bengali intellectuals, professors, poets, authors, musicians and painters, were rounded up and massacred in the final act of mass murder that started with the tolerance of racism as an act of faith.
>
> One million Muslims were murdered by fellow Muslims in an orgy of hate that defied the teachings of Islam and the very Prophet Muhammad who was being invoked by the Pakistan Army. At the root of this sad blot on Islamic history and all of humanity lay the view that people of darker skin are inferior to those for geographic reasons have for no fault of theirs, a lighter skin colour.
>
> One would have hoped that the lessons of 1970-71 would have been learnt in the Muslim World, but the sad fact is that the ubiquitous racism that resides inside the Islamic world has faced no opposition. On the contrary there is near universal denial about this cancer, not just among the governments that rule with oppressive instruments of power, but also many NGOs and civil society groups in the Muslim world.
>
>
> Darfur
> The latest manifestation of racism leading to a genocide is in Sudan where the Arab Janjaweed militia and the Arab government in Khartoum has resulted in the killing of 500,000 Darfuri Muslims whose only fault is that they are Black and thus considered as inferior to the ruling classes of that country.
>
>
>
>
> The mistreatment of Black Muslims by those who feel they are superior because of their lighter skin colour has been historical. Only in the Middle East can one get away by addressing a Black man as “Ya Abdi�, which translates to the horrible words, “Oh you slave�.
>
> The acceptance of racism among the dominant community in the Arab world has today resulted in not just the genocide of Darfuris, but also the celebration by the Arab League of the man charged by the International Criminal Court, President Bashir of Sudan.
>
> It is time that the medieval doctrine of the inferiority of non-Arab Muslims to Arab Muslims is laid to rest. It is necessary that Arab countries and leaders of Arab NGOs denounce this doctrine that has led to the discrimination of darker skinned Muslims by Arab governments in counties as far apart as Dubai to Darfur.
>
> Behind the genocide of Bengal and Darfur, separated by 30 years, is the unchallenged doctrine of racial superiority of one ethnic group over another that has gone unnoticed and unpunished by any institution anywhere in the world.
>
> This doctrine of racism has brought untold misery on the victims of this cancer, but this becomes worse when such racism is given a religious validation. In this day and age, we have fatwas from contemporary Islamic scholars who maintain that a non-Arab Muslim like me would be committing an act of sin if I considered myself equal to an Arab. 
>
> Fatwas from the 14th century have been dusted off the shelves, re-furbished and published on on-line Islamist forums to justify the superiority of one group over the other. This has provided the moral justification to the mass murder being committed on the Black Muslims of Darfur, which unfortunately, has gone unmentioned even at this conference.
>
>
> Conclusion
> Let me conclude by suggesting that if racism is a mountain that we all need to conquer, then we have not yet come to a place where we can see this mountain in the horizon, let alone be at base camp. 
>
> Ladies and gentlemen, sisters and brothers, if we cannot allow a woman to speak here because she is of mixed blood or the fact that untouchability in India is not on the agenda in Geneva, or that nations of the OIC seek the right to restrict free speech, or a demagogue from Iran with blood on his hands has the audacity to lecture us on human rights, then all I can say is that in the words of Robert Frost, we have miles to go before we sleep…
>
>
>
> Rediscover Hotmail®: Get quick friend updates right in your inbox. Check it out.
>




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[ALOCHONA] Govt needs to reconstitute BDR on its own



Govt needs to reconstitute BDR on its own

 

 

IT IS a source of growing alarm that senior members of the ruling Awami League alliance, including some influential ministers, are repeatedly indicating that governments in neighbouring countries will be asked to play a role in the reconstitution of the Bangladesh Rifles, after the decision to disband the border guards in the wake of the Pilkhana Massacre. The latest statement to this effect came from the State Minister for Home Affairs Tanjim Ahmed Sohel Taj on Tuesday after the BDR chief met with home minister Sahara Khatun, as reported in Wednesday's New Age. According to Tanjim, the government will likely seek help from neighbouring countries for the training and modernisation of the new force.

We are alarmed by these plans for a number of reasons, the principal having to do with the strategic implications of our national borders with both Myanmar and India being guarded by a force that feels even fractionally beholden to these foreign governments for either their equipment or their training. Surely the implications of this move, even in a token form, cannot be lost on the present regime's senior leaders. Tasked with the immense responsibility of preserving a country's territorial integrity, border guards play one of the key roles in the functioning of a nation state, though that role is often invisible, in the form of deterrence.
 
If good fences make good neighbours, undermining the standing of the soon-to-be reconstituted border security agency by seeing them trained or outfitted by governments that share geographical borders with the country is not only counter productive in terms of martial strategy but potentially dangerous. While the government has expressed its desire to involve New Delhi and Naypyidaw in the BDR reconstitution, the US has offered to lend a hand in the effort as well. Ironically, these are also the three countries whose geo-strategic interests may potentially require them to violate Bangladesh's territorial integrity.

It is pertinent to mention here that both Naypyidaw and New Delhi not only authorised oil and gas exploration vessels to violate Bangladesh's territorial boundaries to conduct surveys, but refused to withdraw from our territorial waters despite repeated protests from Dhaka last year. It does not speak well of neighbourly relations that both these violations took place at a time when Bangladesh was at its weakest political juncture, governed by a military-backed interim government.
 
The present regime cannot ignore the fact that every year, scores of Bangladeshi civilians are shot and killed by the Indian Border Security Forces – a reality that has received repeated focus but has persisted nonetheless. These facts themselves are enough to indicate that border relations between Bangladesh and its two neighbours in question have been troubled at the best of times. The Awami League-led alliance government cannot afford to ignore these stark realities.

Last but not least, we must remind the government that its plan to reconstitute the BDR with the help of neighbouring governments is offensive to the national sentiment of independence and sovereignty. We cannot overstate the importance of constructive neighbourly relations across South Asia for regional progress and security, but the government must ultimately retain full control of some key arms of the state – without exception.

 



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[ALOCHONA] Taking help from possible adversary in recostruction of BDR may be detrimental to country's sovereignty



Taking help from possible adversary in recostruction of BDR may be detrimental to country's sovereignty

Obaid

Re: Neighbouring countries' help to be sought in BDR reconstruction: Sohel Taj -'We can take the assistance of neighbouring countries in reorganising the BDR, especially with regard to the mode of training and modernisation


India & Myanmar are the two possible adversaries though they may be friendly where their interest are not conflicting. when the conflicting situation will arise then it will be easy for them to over power the BDR and take control of our land. knowing everything of BDR they will make their contingency plan to overpower BDR.I don't think Maj Gen Moinul has given this idea being a professional patriotic officer.

Shohel Taj if has said so then pobably planning to make BDR as Rakkhi Bahini like the earlier days of Bangladesh came into being. This may be the hidden agenda of our friendly India as they have done with other neighbours. Those in Bangladesh supporting it,are actually igniting unrest and trouble in Bangldesh and adjacent indian states as in Nepal.

Old tricks of anexation of smaller countries by India may invite grave danger for the subcotinent. Killing of Indira, Mujib, Rajib,Bhutto,King of Nepa&, attack on Bandarnaik are the result of Indian politics.So State minister please learn from history that it does not reoccur.

Obaid
taponbaby@yahoo.com
http://newsfrombangladesh.net/view.php?hidRecord=262177



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[ALOCHONA] Dipu Moni’s 11 visits in four months



Dipu Moni's 11 visits in four months

 
 
Dr. Dipu Moni, Foreign Minister of 4-month old Mahajote Government, has so far visited seven countries since new govt came to power. She is scheduled to visit four more countries this month. Her upcoming visit to Myanmar scheduled on May 15 is only bilateral. Others are multilateral and related to attending international conferences and seminars.

It may be mentioned that Foreign Adviser to Fakhruddin's caretaker government Dr. Iftekhar Choudhury hit the newspaper headlines by visiting 22 countries in 18 months.

Country's only woman Foreign Minister Dr. Dipu Moni, who was considered to be the best among the ministerial lots in the Cabinet, is said to have been following her predecessor Dr. Iftekhar Choudhory. There are 14 countries where no ambassador has yet been posted. New Foreign Secretary has not yet been appointed after induction of the new Government. The corridor in the Foreign Ministry is often crowded by the pro-Awami League diplomats to grab the prized foreign ministry postings. The Foreign Minister is not learnt to have given enough time to meet the needs of her office.

Dr. Dipu Moni began his foreign tour just after her induction as foreign minister by visiting Geneva where she attended a human rights conference. She announced Bangladesh's Zero tolerance to extra-Judicial killings in the Geneva conference which obtained acclaim from the international circle

The second trip of Dipu Moni was to Malaysia. She was accompanied by expatriates Welfare Minister Dr. Mosharraf Hossain during her visit to Malaysia where she tried to resolve the revocation of work visas of 55,000 Bangladeshi workers. Her visit to Malaysia was neither bilateral nor formal. They went to Malaysia to represent Bangladesh Prime Minister in the National Conference of the Malaysia's ruling Party. She succeeded in meeting the top leaders of Malaysia on the sidelines and returned home empty handed except having some assurances to resolve the work permit issue of the expatriates..

After Malasyia Dr. Dipu Moni made a brief sojourn at Netherland to attend a International Conference on Afghanistan. There she met US Foreign Secretary Hillary Clinton on the sidelines. She invited Clinton to visit Bangladesh. After Netherland she visited Turkey to attend a Multilateral Forum. Foreign Minister Dipu Moni visited Saudi Arabia as a member of PM Hasina's delegation. She could not hold bilateral meeting with her Saudi Counterpart Prince Faisal. But her Saudi Counterpart called on Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina at her Hotel Suite. Dipu Moni visited Norway after her return from Saudi Arabia to attend a world conference on climate change in Oslo. She also visited Cuba to attend a non-aligned ministerial meet in Havana, the capital of the country.

Foreign Minister Dr. Dipu Moni was scheduled to fly to South Africa today to attend the swearing-in ceremony of South Africa's President Dr. Jacob Juma. President Zillur Rahman was invited to join the coronation of the South Africa's President. Dipu Moni is to represent him as he is sick. In 1991 and 1996 the Foreign Ministers of both BNP and Awami League Governments respectively attended the coronation of the then presidents of South Africa. On May 11, Dipu Moni will return to Dhaka from South Africa only to embark on Myanmar tour on May 15.

Gen Rokonuddullah, the outgoing Ambassador to Myanmar, was made special envoy to prepare the groundwork of Dipu Moni's visit to Mayanmar. Demarcation of maritime boundary, repatriation of Rohingya refugees and barbed wire fencing on the border are to be the thorny issues to be discussed in the bilateral meeting. The departure of Major General Anup Chakma, the newly appointed Ambassador to Myanmar, was likely to be delayed.

Foreign Minister is also scheduled to fly to Syria on May 23 to attend OIC Foreign Ministers' Conference there. She is to attend a multilateral conference on May 28 in Singapore. Informed circles said, many of the conferences attended by the foreign minister may be represented by the ambassadors posted in the respective countries.

Dr. Dipu Moni was also scheduled to visit war-torn Sri Lanka at the fag end of this month to attend a SAARC ministerial conference.

http://nation.ittefaq.com/issues/2009/05/07/news0544.htm



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[ALOCHONA] Neighbouring countries' help to be sought in BDR reconstruction: Sohel Taj



Neighbouring countries’ help to be sought in BDR reconstruction: Sohel Taj
Courtesy New Age 6/5/09

The state minister for home affairs, Tanjim Ahmed Sohel Taj, said the government would seek the help of neighbouring countries to reorganise the Bangladesh Rifles.
   He made this comment after the BDR’s chief, Major General Mainul Islam, met home minister Sahara Khatun on Tuesday.
   They discussed the reorganisation of the force and the border guards’ new uniform.
   ‘We can take the assistance of neighbouring countries in reorganising the BDR, especially with regard to the mode of training and modernisation of the force,’ Sohel Taj told reporters, adding that the situation in BDR was now normal.
   The government had earlier formed a committee, headed by Mainul Islam, to make recommendations on reorganisation of the BDR after the late February rebellion in the Pilkhana in which 75 people, most of them army officers, were killed.
   The committee studied the organograms of the border guards of several countries before submitting a report to the government.
   Mainul Islam at a press briefing had earlier said that the BDR’s soldiers had lost their trustworthiness because of the rebellion, and the trust could be regained only if the soldiers help investigators to ferret out the rebels.
   Five soldiers were remanded in custody for five days on Tuesday in connection with the BDR carnage case.
   The Criminal Investigation Department, assigned to investigate the case, produced 29 soldiers before the court of the chief metropolitan magistrate on Tuesday afternoon at the end of their seven-day remand. The CID sought a fresh seven-day remand for five of the soldiers.
   After the hearing, metropolitan magistrate Faisal Atiq bin Kader granted five days’ remand to the five soldiers — deputy assistant directors Abdul Jalil and Mirza Habibur Rahman, sepoy Kajal, sepoy Abdur Rahman and sepoy Selim Reza — and sent the others to jail.
   A total of 56 soldiers are now in CID’s custody. The court has so far remanded more than 400 people, most of them soldiers, for interrogation.
   The CID has so far arrested 1,331 people, including some civilians, in connection with the BDR carnage case, and 59 of them have made confessional statements to the court.
   The family members of BDR soldiers are still taking their belongings out of their quarters. Ten families vacated the quarters inside the Pilkhana on Tuesday, raising the total number of quarters vacated so far to 530.

 




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