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Monday, June 1, 2009

Re: [ALOCHONA] Re: Was our military short-staffed during the BDR Mutiny and if so why?



I agree I am a novice, and possibly half a moron at the same time.
 
Anyway, I am glad to know that you have a question now. Somehow I thought you had answer (singular) to all the difficult questions (plural) based on your writings on the forum. In some of your writings, I could almost feel you were there when the conspirators were hatching their evil plans -- it is as vivid as Anwar Hossain's Masud Rana or Ian Fleming's James Bond, I am sure that proves how novice I am in this kind of games.
 
Being a novice, I do get confused if things get little complicated -- like, you have a question now, whereas you said in the earlier e-mail that "Their fear is that the truth is now out it needs to be repressed at all costs." I thought you already knew the "truth", and now I know you have a question at the same time! Man, I am getting dizzy!
 
Like many, I wish we knew the truth behind the BDR massacre. Like many, I wish we could have gone to the bottom of it so anything like this can't happen again in future. Like many, I wish all the masterminds can be brought to justice. Like many more, I am afraid we will never find out who were the masterminds behind the massacre; except few scapegoats (most of whom probably just followed the commotion without having any idea what was really going on and why) will be hanged in the name of justice.
 
I will be silent now.
 
- mashuque


From: M.B.I. Munshi <MBIMunshi@gmail.com>
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2009 10:01:40 PM
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Re: Was our military short-staffed during the BDR Mutiny and if so why?


Now that you have lost the argument you resort to misinterpreting what I write. I did not say that one has to work with all these intelligence agencies to acquire information. You have to be a real moron to believe that or even suggest it. Since some here are clearly working on a RAW agenda they obviously know that intel agencies often work together. Look at the torture allegations against MI5 that has involved the DGFI of Bangladesh. Not to appreciate the connections and networks that are part and parcel of intel work shows an utter ignorance of these work. Clearly Mr. Mushfique Rahman you are either deceiving us or a complete novice and should remain silent.

The question that started this thread was whether India had deliberately diverted a section of our command officers so an effective military option could not be taken against the mutineers. This is the only question thats needs an answer so please stop diverting the thread to an irrelevant track.

--- In alochona@yahoogroup s.com, Mashuque Rahman <mashuque@.. .> wrote:
>
> I personally don't have any problem when a Bangladeshi (origin) person claims to have contacts and access to Bangladesh Intelligence forces. Even if some one does not have direct access, it is not too difficult to manage to get there if he/she wants to (as almost all of us know some one in some place who can help us get there).
>
> I do have major problem when someone (of Bangladesh origin) claims to have sources (I assume that means access through the sources as well) at not only Bangladesh Intelligence, but also with RAW, ISI, CIA, MI6, SVR (I am lost on this one!), MOSSAID!! Give me a break! PLEASE!
>
> I must have missed out on the bidding process as I don't get paid by RAW although I don't subscribe to your beliefs (please note I did not say "your logic" as your arguments are always formed around your beliefs observing the writings I have seen on this forum). You must be making a lot just being paid by all these agencies now. Can you do me (and may be some others on the forum) a favor, and use your sources to give an update on Sunita Paul as we are missing her on the forum -- she has very similar beliefs and writings as yours and we are getting worried not seeing her presence on the forum lately (she can write at lightning speed comparable to yours I think). Keep up the "good" work, but cut down the number of sources as even they would not feel comfortable sharing inside info with you (as you might pass it on to the others) any more.
>
> - mashuque
>
>
>
>
> ____________ _________ _________ __
> From: M.B.I. Munshi <MBIMunshi@. ..>
> To: alochona@yahoogroup s.com
> Sent: Thursday, May 21, 2009 8:07:24 PM
> Subject: [ALOCHONA] Re: Was our military short-staffed during the BDR Mutiny and if so why?
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Actually I have had excellent access to Bangladesh intelligence and far greater than you can imagine or will ever personally have. I have also sources on RAW, ISI, CIA, MI6, SVR, MOSSAD. If you write and work in these areas you are bound to acquire a wealth of information. So in other words all the RAW stooges here are entirely wrong and since they have not read the book either they are making wild and uncorroborated assumptions. Of course, I believe many who now hold the Indian position have actually prostituted themselves out to the highest bidder so their opinions and attitudes may be safely disregarded. Their fear is that the truth is now out it needs to be repressed at all costs. They no longer have an opinion of their own and have lost their souls so they can now only abuse and insult on instructions form higher authority. It is truly sad when you lose your identity as a human being but that is the cost of working for RAW.
>
> --- In alochona@yahoogroup s.com, Cyrus <thoughtocrat@ ...> wrote:
> >
> > Do you have any access to the intelligence community in Bangladesh? or Indian or Pakistani intelligence community with credible intelligence reports?
>



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[ALOCHONA] Re: Was our military short-staffed during the BDR Mutiny and if so why?

If we take the hypothetical scenario that the army moved regardless of political orders and flattened Pilkhana with the consequence of a direct face off with the government and then Hasina acceded to India's proposal to send a peace mission that would have probably clashed with the army what would have happened to those command officers then in India? Were they diverted there not to prevent a military move against the BDR mutineers but to stall any subsequent collision between the army and the government putting the military high command in two minds?

--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, Enam Haque <enam28@...> wrote:
>
> Not true. Army was ready to do a full fledged attack. Also the RAB was ready to carry out its own assault. Military commanders inside Peelkhana gave a reasonable estimate to PM, and other policy makers. But the PM and her team refused and decided to do political solution to the mutiny while the nephew of the PM was busy clearing the 3 km within Peelkhana for the top mutineers to escape.
>  
>


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[ALOCHONA] BANGLADESH: Prolonged State of Emergency threatening the judiciary and human rights defenders' ability to work



BANGLADESH: Prolonged State of Emergency threatening the judiciary and human rights defenders' ability to work
 

Under a 20-month-long State of Emergency, which began on January 11, 2007, Bangladesh has been plunged into a period in which human rights have been severely undermined and serious violations have increased significantly. These include widespread and massive arbitrary arrests and detentions, estimated at numbering over 500,000, as well as rampant ill-treatment and torture, and a significant increase in extra-judicial killings. Furthermore, the military-controlled government has been promulgating arbitrary laws that have lead directly to further abuses of human rights and further obstruction of all avenues available to victims seeking remedies. The authorities have been institutionalising extra-constitutional practices that undermine the institutions of the rule of law, causing damage to the fabric of the State that will remain for years. Despite the scale of this crisis, the international community has been silent thus far.

Mass arbitrary arrests and detentions

Astounding numbers of persons have been arrested since the State of Emergency began. The unconvincing response of the government to these allegations has been to deny that they have space to detain this number of persons. Bangladesh already has a well-documented track record of serious over-crowding in its prisons. Persons are arrested en-masse in order to intimidate, and, in general, are not detained for long periods.

 

An example of the scale of the problem is the four-week crackdown that started on May 28, 2008, resulting in the arbitrary arrest and detention of more than 50,000 Bangladeshis. During this, the Inspector General of Police (IGP) admitted to the media, on June 9, 2008, that the police have to use the emergency laws, as these do not permit bail, therefore avoiding courts releasing suspects. The ALRC notes that courts typically release suspects when there is no evidence against them. The IGP also admitted that an average of 1,667 persons have been being arrested in the country each day since the beginning of the emergency. The detention of so many individuals, even for relatively short periods, is leading to severe overcrowding in the country's prisons. Reports indicate that most persons arrested are subjected to some form of ill-treatment, including beatings, and that torture is also being used on a significant number of detainees, during which the police extract money or confessions.

Extra-judicial killings on the rise

Reliable reports indicate that over 300 persons have been extra-judicially killed since the State of Emergency was imposed. The authorities justify these as encounter, crossfire, shoot-out, gun-fight, or "in the line of fire" killings. However, many such deaths documented by the ALRC result from torture in custody. Other examples include the case of two alleged underground political activists, Mr. Abdur Rashid Malitha, alias Tapan Malitha, (aged 48) and Ms.. Nasima Akhtar Rikta (aged 18),  that the Rapid Action Battalion woke up and then shot in their beds on 18 June. There have been no effective investigations or criminal prosecutions concerning any of these killings to date.

Unconstitutional counter-terrorism ordinance leading to abuses

On June 11, 2008, the military-controlled government imposed Anti-Terror Ordinance-2008, supposedly to combat terrorism. Section 6 of the ordinance, includes provisions for rigorous imprisonment of a minimum of three years to a maximum 20 years life-term, as well as the death penalty, for various crimes including: killings; serious attacks; abductions or kidnapping; causing damage to property; and possession of explosives, listed dangerous chemicals or firearms, with the "intention to harm the unity, harmony, security or sovereignty of Bangladesh and create panic among its people or any segment of the population."

 

Persons can be charged under Section 7 with providing financial or other forms of support for loosely-defined "terrorist activities" on the basis of mere "reasonable suspicion." Section 39 asserts that the crimes under this ordinance are non-bailable. Section 54 of the Code of Criminal Procedure-1898 and Section 86 of the Dhaka Metropolitan Police Ordinance-1976, already allow the police to arrest any person on suspicion. These powers have previously been abused to arrest people en masse. Under the new ordinance, the penalties and sentences for the various crimes are higher, however.

 

The police can hold persons in remand for interrogation for ten consecutive days, which can be extended for a further five days by magistrates, under Section 26.. Magistrates typically follow the instructions of the government and other influential groups. Furthermore, multiple fabricated charges produced sequentially are used to ensure lengthier remand periods.

 

As with corruption charges that are being tried in special, military-government-appointed tribunals, charges under the Anti-Terror Ordinance are tried by Anti-Terror Special Tribunals. There are serious concerns about such tribunals' ability to deliver fair trials, as they are held in camera, without the presence of the public even the accused persons' relatives.
 
Under Section 32, a magistrate or judge cannot grant bail "unless satisfied with reasonable grounds that the accused person might not be convicted." This suggests that the judge must pre-judge the case before it has been heard in full, which evidently goes against the fundamental principles of justice as accepted in international norms and standards.

 

According to Section 41, the government may transfer, on "reasonable grounds," any case relating to crimes under this ordinance, from any sessions court or tribunal to any special tribunal, or from any special tribunal to any sessions court, at any stage prior to the completion of depositions. This power allows the government to interfere in any case it wishes and completely erodes any notion of the independence of the judiciary.  In a criminal proceeding, the government is a party to the dispute. If such a party is given statutory power to transfer cases at a whim, it is likely that it will exploit this power, resulting in delays and/or travesties of justice. This is being seen in Bangladesh under the State of Emergency.

 

Despite the Special Power Act-1974, the Emergency Power Ordinance-2007 and the Emergency Power Rules-2007, which already give the government wide powers to arbitrarily arrest and detain people, the government has armed itself further with the Anti Terror Ordinance-2008 to increase its crackdown, with further abuses expected to be perpetrated. For this reason, the international community, which has thus far remained eerily mute, must immediately begin to act to pressure Bangladesh's government ?a member of the Human Rights Council - to lift the emergency and repeal all such ordinances.

 

The government has also begun having select persons released, using executive orders from the Ministry of Home Affairs, completely bypassing and further undermining the courts and judiciary. The courts, in which charges have been laid against these persons, did not grant bail. These include prominent persons, such as former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and Khaleda Zia's son Arafat Rahman Koko.

 

The subordinate magistrates and sessions courts are being used as tool by the government to arrest and detain targeted persons, and release whomever the government wishes. All courts, including the Supreme Court, are under regular supervision by the intelligence agencies and personnel of the armed forces, who dictate what prosecutors and attorneys must do to comply with the military-government's wishes. If, despite this, the High Court grants bail to targeted persons, the law-enforcement agencies  arrest and detain such persons again, literally in front of the main gate of the prison, upon their release, and charge them with "breaching emergency laws".

 

The High Court Division of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh on July 13, 2008, ruled that the President of an un-elected government, such as that currently in power, does not have the constitutional power to promulgate ordinances, unless such ordinances regard the general election concerning which the government was brought to power to organise. The same court also declared all ordinances made by the present military-controlled government to be ultra vires and unconstitutional. However, the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court on July 21, 2008, stayed this order for one month.  The government has promulgated at least 79 ordinances, most of which run contrary to Bangladesh's Constitution.

Truth and Accountability Commissions

Truth and Accountability Commissions were set up on July 30, 2008, for five months, under the Voluntary Disclosure Ordinance 2008, to give amnesty to corruption suspects. Suspects are supposed to disclose information to the Commission about any corruption they have committed and declare the amount of assets and money earned through illegal means. These assets are then handed over to the State and the Commission issues a certificate which acts as an exemption from any future criminal prosecution or punishment for these acts. Such persons are barred from contesting elections and holding public or corporate offices for five years. However, the whole process is confidential, apparently to preserve the persons' social dignity.

 

The lack of transparency of this system is a serious concern, notably as the authorities have detained a number of politicians and businessmen during the State of Emergency on charges of corruption, many of whom have been convicted for a minimum of three years by special tribunals, in secretive trials that do not meet international standards of fair trial. The Constitution of Bangladesh clearly asserts in Article 27 that every citizen has right to enjoy equality before the law, but the military-controlled government manipulates the system with laws ultra vires to the country's constitution.
These Commissions are designed in order to ensure impunity for current government officials and those connected to them for past corruption, ensuring they cannot be held responsible for any of their actions, while opponents of the regime continue to be pursued for similar offences.

Increased insecurity for human rights defenders

Human rights defenders and professionals, including from the media, are regularly being monitored, threatened and intimidated by the personnel of the country's armed forces and various intelligence agencies. Numerous human rights organisations that have been critical of the government and are seeking redress for victims have been visited by the intelligence agencies' officers, who check their project proposals, activities and funding sources. Dozens of human rights defenders are facing fabricated criminal charges, which have been lodged either by the law-enforcement agencies or by their allies.1  Many of them have been detained and tortured.2

 

While there are a large number of NGOs operating in Bangladesh, providing services that the State is failing to provide itself, the great majority of them are reduced to working on non-threatening issues, as working on serious rights violations such as torture, extra-judicial killings and the like results in severe repercussions.

 

The Asian Legal Resource Centre remains deeply disappointed by the Human Rights Council's lack of action concerning the serious human rights crisis that has been unfolding in Bangladesh since early 2007. The Council must show that it does not operate with selectivity and double-standards, and take all necessary actions to ensure that Bangladesh halts the ongoing wave of gross violations of human rights, including arbitrary arrests and detention, the fabrication of charges, ill-treatment, torture and extra-judicial killings. In order to do this, the unjustifiable and counter-productive State of Emergency must immediately be lifted and all ordinances promulgated under it must be repealed, as they are in violation of the Constitution and are at the root of many rights abuses. Bangladesh's membership in the Human Rights Council continues to be an embarrassment to the world's apex human rights body.

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

Footnotes:

 
About ALRC: The Asian Legal Resource Centre is an independent regional non-governmental organisation holding general consultative status with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations. It is the sister organisation of the Asian Human Rights Commission. The Hong Kong-based group seeks to strengthen and encourage positive action on legal and human rights issues at local and national levels throughout Asia
 



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Re: [Diagnose] FW: [ALOCHONA] Engineers, Doctors are corrupted!!! _ Minister Syed Ashraf



Calling some group total "Corrupt" is somewhat a bigotry and disrespectful to others. This type of remarks is unacceptable from any type of educated person. Engineers and Doctors are "Corrupt", as noted by Syed Ashraf is nothing but a resonance what our most honest and respectful President HM Ershad told in a gathering when he assumed power of governance.  Should I say Mr. Ershad was a dishonest and most dirty person in the history of Bangladesh? I am not planning to make such comment. I sincerely would like to believe that these drummers, who are posting such mails supporting this notion and including Syed Ashraf, Honorable Minister of Bangladesh government are really honest and sincere.  My intention here is not to compare which of the following groups is most corrupt. If you visit data for last 20 years of Engineers, Doctors, Bureaucrats, Defense and our heroic Politicians you will find the answer.  But still I'll not say that all politicians are "Corrupt".  Friends, we have seen a lot over the years and lets not bit the drum just to support our own party, this is worse than the act of an enemy. 

 

May God help our Politicians and their blind drummers!!!

 

Regards

 

Deshodrohi




From: dasd asdasd <amerdesh@yahoo.com>
To: Diagnose YG <diagnose@yahoogroups.com>; Diagnose@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2009 6:58:22 PM
Subject: RE: [Diagnose] FW: [ALOCHONA] Engineers, Doctors are corrupted!!! _ Minister Syed Ashraf




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Re: [ALOCHONA] Re: Engineers, Doctors are corrupted!!! _ Minister Syed Ashraf



 
 
It is the system of governance that corrupts everybody including the politicians.
A highly centralized government which depends  on non elected bureaucracy to govern the whole country from the villages to the capital, is indeed an apology of democracy.
As said absolute power will corrupt absolutely.
 
As for your contention that the minus two formula was correct,at the end of the day it couldn't be implemented.That says a lot about whether it was correct or not.Besides if you minus the present cow & goat at the helm of the parties,there are many hundreds more in the que, to replenish the vacuum. Is it not?
Devolution of powers of central govt. &empowerment of elected  local govt to be the day to day rulers of the local affairs, is the core solution to the problem.
 
Mizan


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[ALOCHONA] Join Bangladeshi Social Network



 
Corrupted people are always creating situation by saying that not only he but also other people also corrupted. Never say they or never they support for taking legal lawful action against the corruption. By using confusing language sentences they create confusion so that lawful action can not be taken against the corruption for saving themselves.
It is the praise worthy example that Minister Syed Ashraf is specifically said that Doctors & Engineers are corrupted.
Is it not really true? Does it mean that others are not corrupted??
Mr. Syed Ashraf s/o Shahid Mr. Syed Nazrul Islam is the Elected Public Representative MP & a top class leader in BAL Party & Minister of BAL Government.   It is very good news that he uttering his voice against the corruption specially doctors & engineers who are the literally key persons in the country.
Now his duty, the duty of his party & the duty of his BAL Government is to take lawful legal action against of all corrupted people either he is a doctor or he is an engineer or he is a teacher or he is an employee or he is a politician or political leader.

--- On Wed, 27/5/09, K. Raisuddin <Kraisuddin@hotmail. com> wrote:

From: K. Raisuddin <Kraisuddin@hotmail. com>
Subject: RE: [Diagnose] FW: [ALOCHONA] Engineers, Doctors are corrupted!!! _ Minister Syed Ashraf
To: "Diagnose YG" <diagnose@yahoogroup s.com>
Received: Wednesday, 27 May, 2009, 3:36 PM

However, every problem has some sort of solution, may not be total but at least approximate. Golam Dayan,  and
Dasd asdasd,  M H Khan, Syed A. Islam (Minister), all said one thing in common is that Bangladesh has terrible corruptions. Well said. However, all of them made one serious mistake, which is "balme game". Blaming the others, to show, "Me or We" are good and the others are corrupted. One one said it directly but that is what ultimately boils down to the final meaning. I am not a firishta but I know I am not by any means with any of the corruptions. But I hate to participate into the blame game. Rather, I feel that me and some others who are really similar minded, not to do corruption by self and try as much possible to influence the others in a positive manner to work against corruptions and spread the message around as much as possible. We may not be able to achive anything in our generation but the work will create generations and groups in future who definitely will get greater results to be away from corruptions.
 
One must understand the crux of the problem. It does not need a rocket science to understand it. Because most of the advanced countries of the world are corruptions free, or even if there is some corruptions, the amount is thousand fold less than what Bangladesh has. The entire country is engulfef in corruptions. Most people has the mentality of living on some other's money. This has to go. Also everything is measured in the Bangladeshi society by the amount of money someone has and so everyone tries right and left to make some money whatever way possible. Once someone becomes successful in making money which way beyond the value of his genuine labor of brain and physique, one gets addicted to it, and keeps on doing it, until facing any big ovstacle. Since law and order is seriously disrespected, the implementation of laws are not there and the bribe (monetary or relational) between the enforcer and the enforced seriously prevent the enforcement. Political corruption is also very serious in Bangladesh. Most people are muslims. Islam has the rules to stop monetary corruptions, but most people are muslims by name not by conviction. However, Islam has serious ingrained political corruptions. Islam does not respect the others, seriously undemocratic, women and minors are undermined, culturally primitive, backward in commerce and trade, no monetary policy, no incentive for earning, no dream for worldly development of self, culture, nation, or the world. Time is money. If enough time is used to earn money fairly, everybody can do better. But islam will seriously encourage to spend time for ibadat than earning money. So, religious muslims can not do well in earning fair money. This is one of the reasons for muslims to be financially backward. Bedides religion, everyone has to work hard and for extended time to earn money with hard labor. When this tradition will come to our society, everyone will remain engaged in hard work and corruptions will reduce.  T

To: Diagnose@yahoogroup s.com
From: golamdaiyan@ yahoo.co. in
Date: Fri, 22 May 2009 10:36:55 +0530
Subject: Re: [Diagnose] FW: [ALOCHONA] Engineers, Doctors are corrupted!!! _ Minister Syed Ashraf



NIce ALOCHONA...
 
Somehow everyone in top to bottom are engaged in corruption directly or indirectly. A government service or Business firm or politicial.. . So there can not be any alochona. It may seems that who is giving us a advice of honesty, he might be corrupted one. In my country we can not rely on anyone. Because we donot have Unity. We are making a team or syndicate to avail ilegal facilities from the core heart of economy and law. Nothing else. More big smugler, theif, characterless people are holding the greate posts in government and business sector. They are only influencing our University students to become corrupted. An educational institute is the place of knowledge descovery. There is no money, so how come corruption come among students? Eventhough a University students bearly know about the professional wolrd. So, students, if they learn corruption they are learning it from the exiting system created by politicians and gov. employees. Not University.
 
Bye

 
G. M. Daiyan


--- On Thu, 21/5/09, dasd asdasd <amerdesh@yahoo. com> wrote:

From: dasd asdasd <amerdesh@yahoo. com>
Subject: Re: [Diagnose] FW: [ALOCHONA] Engineers, Doctors are corrupted!!! _ Minister Syed Ashraf
To: "dhakamails@ yahoogroups. com" <dhakamails@yahoogro ups.com>, "Diagnose YG" <diagnose@yahoogroup s.com>, "Farid Khan" <faridhkhan@gmail. com>, "Ghulam Iqbal" <iqbalg@bigfoot. com>, "Hasinur Rahman (Dr.)" <hasimaju@yahoo. com>, "kazi.hasan@ aes.com" <kazi.hasan@aes. com>, "Khobor YG" <khabor@yahoogroups. com>, Diagnose@yahoogroup s.com
Date: Thursday, 21 May, 2009, 9:12 AM

 
It is very very clear that all universities are now the factories of making irresponsible & corrupted educated doctors engineers & other faculty educated graduates,
1) The Teachers are doing nast politics but are not learning for earning update knowledge education to provide the students update knowledge educations, not providing correct lessons & not taking regular classes & examination in time.  The students are getting untimely at lat students back dated knowledge less education for receiving certificates.
 After completion their so called study in the university they are not efficient to perform their duty honestly & correctly in their work fields. Only they can know chapabaji works as worthless & nonsense persons & can do works harassing the people for earning illegal money & power. 
Accordingly it can be said by Minister Syed Ashraf
that Engineers, Doctors are corrupted!!! _
So the people Tax & Vat payers of Bangladesh are asking Minister Syed Ashraf son /of Syed Nazrul Islam the first acting president of Bangladesh that he must take legal necessary action to do modification in education section in education courses & in education teaching staffs for providing correct update knowledge education to the students to educating them as honest skilled educated doctors, engineers & other faculty graduates so that they can honest efficient work persons in their work fields.
 

--- On Mon, 18/5/09, K. Raisuddin <Kraisuddin@hotmail. com> wrote:

From: K. Raisuddin <Kraisuddin@hotmail. com>
Subject: [Diagnose] FW: [ALOCHONA] Engineers, Doctors are corrupted!!! _ Minister Syed Ashraf
To: "dhakamails@ yahoogroups. com" <dhakamails@yahoogro ups.com>, "Diagnose YG" <diagnose@yahoogroup s.com>, "Farid Khan" <faridhkhan@gmail. com>, "Ghulam Iqbal" <iqbalg@bigfoot. com>, "Hasinur Rahman (Dr.)" <hasimaju@yahoo. com>, "kazi.hasan@ aes.com" <kazi.hasan@aes. com>, "Khobor YG" <khabor@yahoogroups. com>
Received: Monday, 18 May, 2009, 4:26 PM


How does he know about the Engineering Universities, Medical Collages and Agricultural Universities to produce educated corrupted engineers, doctors and agriculturists? Did he study in any of the institutions? Does by any means he attached himself with any research work dealing with what institutions make how much corruptions?
 
For my entire life, I am hearing that the Engineering University is a place of model education. No corruptions did ever touch this institution while many other institutions, even a lot of them surrounding it had a lot of corruptions, either among the students or among the administrations.
 
Starting from the Pakistan time, years after the years, all kinds of junk politicians, would create their cadres among the students of the Universities and of the colleges, with a view to motivating them to ill purposes, but those screwed up politicians could not touch the grounds of the institutions of real learning such as the Engineering University and Colleges, PG and Medical colleges, and the Agricultural University and the colleges; for a main reason that the highest class students go in those institutions, with a sole ambition of  studying, learning, and for becoming the legitimate future professionals. No one goes there to be politicians.
 
Anybody please just tell me an absolute truth, who are more corrupted in Bangladesh? The politicians? or the Professionals like engineers, doctors, health professionals,  and agriculturists?
 
I am not saying that there are no corrupted professionals or there are no honest politicians. All I am saying that if you make a statistical measurement, you will see the statistical curve of the measurement will go in opposite directions for the Bangladeshi professionals and the Bangladeshi politicians.  Thirty years ago or before, people could feel the contributions of the politicians but today people feel that the country will run a lot better without any politicians. Politician are the ones who are spoiling the country by all means. But if you observe for the same period, you will see that Bangladesh could not produce the food for 65 to 70 millions people of the country. A number of people would die by hunger. Today Bangladesh is feeding 150 million people with a lot more and lot better food supply. Who made this to happen? Politicians or the agriculturists, engineers, and professionals of the host of disciplines? Thirty years ago, people would left and right immaturely, child and mother mortality was at the peak. Today all kinds of mortalities due to disease and disadvantage have reduced drastically. Who made it happen? The politicians or the doctors, health professionals, and health researchers? Thirty years ago or before, how many buildings were there to live or work, and how many roads were there to drive? How many today? Were all those built just by the politicians? Engineers, designers, constructors, mentors etc. all worked hard to make all these happen.
 
If all professionals were only corrupted, then how all these achievements happened? Please provide the information about how much political achievements have happened in last several decades?

 



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CC: editor@amadershomoy .com; editor@amardeshbd. com; editor@bangladeshto day.com; editor@dailynoyadig onto.com; editor@ittefaq. com; editor@jugantor. com; editor@manabzamin. net; editor@prothom- alo.com; editor@thedailystar .net; editor@newagebd. com; editor@nation. ittefaq.com; editor@shamokal. com; editor@newstoday- bd.com
From: engrmhkhan@yahoo. com
Date: Sun, 17 May 2009 12:08:27 -0700
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Engineers, Doctors are corrupted!!! _ Minister Syed Ashraf
 

Dear Brothers & Sisters,

 

Greetings from the heart of Bangladesh.

 

We are shocked after reading the news on The Daily Amardesh. Please find the link below,

 

http://www.amardesh bd.com/dailynews /detail_news_ index.php? NewsID=224112&NewsType=bistarito&SectionID=home

 

According to the news, LGRD minister Syed Ashraful Islam has made comments that Engineering Universities, Medical Collages and Agricultural Universities produces educated corrupted engineers, doctors and agriculturist.

 

Are we really non-sense? We all know who pressurize, order, control and collect money through engineers, doctors and agriculturist?

 

The answer is very easy most of them are the backbencher ministers, MPs, businessmen, contractors, political leaders etc. I am 100% sure if Honorable Minister wants LGRD ministry will be less corrupted ministry of BD Gov within next 5 years.

 

In Bangladesh, the most meritorious students, the proud of nation study Engineering, Medical Science and General Sciences in Engineering Universities, Medical Collages, DU, JU, CU, RU, KU, SUST etc. But relatively less meritorious students i.e. UNO, DC, OC, SP, Secretary and officers of administration, police etc has been enjoying enormous power and wealth than those bright students of nation. How farce! How stupidity!!

 

Hope, honorable Minister will think about the comments again and will find out the real causes of corruption.

 

Thanks & regards,


Engr. Mosharraf H. Khan
 
 
 


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Re: [ALOCHONA] Political appointments in key missions



Sorry. The brother of Finance Minister is not a career diplomat and not now working as a diplomat in Kuwait. He lives in Boston now and unfortunately an American Citizen. The person appointed as the Ambassador in Moscow is a businessman. Never had any job experience. And we all know the quality of Russian PhD.

SH
Toronto


From: J.A. Chowdhury <Chwdhury@hotmail.com>
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2009 5:01:25 PM
Subject: RE: [ALOCHONA] Political appointments in key missions


Dear Ezaj
Yes it is political appointment but considering their performance. Brother of finance minister is a professional diplomat. He is serving in your country Kuwait now. Expatriate who got appointment in Moscow is a high educated Phd holder. So I think nothing wrong with this appointment. Newspaper cretisized it because they are just AL supporter.
 
Regards
 
J.A.Chowdhury


To: alochona@yahoogroup s.com
From: ezajur.rahman@ q8.com
Date: Wed, 27 May 2009 18:03:31 +0300
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Political appointments in key missions



Political appointments in key missions

Courtesy New Age 27/5/09

http://www.newagebd .com/2009/ may/27/fb. html

 

I started reading your front page news 'government prefers political appointment in key missions' (May 24) with interest and ended with disgust. After nearly five months during which key missions have been left without a head of mission (Germany has been without one for over a year and half!), this government has finally laid the 'theoretical' foundation of how it would establish diplomatic missions. As expounded by Mostafa Farooq Mohammad, a former diplomat and a Member of Parliament now, the government will henceforth send to key missions individuals who 'must act as alter egos of the head of government'. I am afraid not many of us understood what he meant by this. Does it mean that the prime minister will choose for these posts those she knows personally and who in turn know her personally, like the name proposed to be the ambassador to Kuwait happens to be a friend of Sheikh Kamal?
   I was disgusted that such an idea has been given by a professional diplomat. The journalist who interviewed this gentleman should have asked him whether he would have subscribed to such a view when he was serving as a professional diplomat. There is no question that he would not for that would have meant acknowledging that he is incompetent. The 'theoretical' base that this government is laying for appointment of ambassadors/ high commissioners is being laid by openly telling the professionals of the ministry of foreign affairs that they are incompetent.
   On the issue of being alter egos, how do former diplomats who have left the country to become citizens of another country become better alter egos of our prime minister? As alter egos, would they have an access to the prime minister of a regular basis? What would then happen to our poor Dipu Moni? Most importantly, does it mean that in the past 37 years when people like Mostafa Farooq Mohammad as professional diplomats headed missions had been worthless? I am told that this gentleman was a good professional diplomat but I am afraid in his eagerness to sell an un-sellable agenda of the government, he has proven himself no better no worse than a sycophant.
   At a time when we are trying to create a digital Bangladesh with emphasis on professionalism, we are doing the reverse by posting in our key missions individuals in place of professional diplomats. These political ambassadors would no doubt be placed in their positions over career diplomats who would be manning the ministry of foreign affairs. Does logic say that they would cooperate with these 'outsiders' in implementing the policies of the government? Or does Farooq Mohammad think that foreign policy and its implementation begins and ends in ambassadors being the alter egos of the prime minister? At this stage, I am not sure whether I should be laughing over it or be disgusted and say 'God help Bangladesh!'
   The appointment of an expatriate in Russia as the country's next ambassador to Moscow takes the cake! So does the appointment of the individual named for Saudi Arabia who happens to be a brother of the finance minister. People who know the foreign ministry better however know too well that no theory or anything is behind these appointments. These have been made on purely personal interests.
   All told, I am astounded how a former career diplomat comes out to make a statement denigrating his juniors in a service that I am sure he was proud to serve. This is betrayal to say the least.
   Rashed Ahmed
   Gulshan, Dhaka

 






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Re: [ALOCHONA] Govt. creating jobs for AL activists only



Friends

Hypocrisy,mockery,twisting facts,killing,looting,arson are the main characteristics of the only "Chetona Dhari" party in Bangladesh. They only stand to reap benefit for self,family n party and mainly for the mentors across the border.

They had been very vocal about "Dolio Koron" and with the help of the concubine JHARNALIST OF THE SO-CALLED CHETONA GHORANA" MADE THE PEOPLE BELIEVE THAT NONE OTHER THAN BAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAL  HAS ANY RIGHT TO REAP BENEFIT ???????????????

So, it is natural for the betrayers of the cause to swallow anything or everything starting from lone "KOMBOL" since day 1 of Bangladesh n made thje real needy to be onlookers.

Pages after pages could be written about the wrong doing of BAAAAAAAL since Pakistani days but they have a great shrewed way of projecting them as the saviour of the rights of the people. But in reality they are main goon to snatch the inalieanble right of the people to excercise free democratic paractice, have freedom of expression,be a pride carrier of Shadhin Bangladesh. In reality the creation of BAKSAL,closure of news papers,forcing people to worship family stooges and so and so forth are only few examples of black teeth of the Jono bondhu.

Nothing sane could be expected from HINDU  STAAAAAANI oriented politics for Bangladesh.

Faruque Alamgir

On Sun, May 31, 2009 at 9:34 PM, Wohid <bidrohee@yahoo.com> wrote:


Govt. creating jobs for AL activists only

 

Faisal Rahim

 

(Weekly Holiday, Dhaka, May 29, 2009)

 

The Prime Minister?s Office (PMO) in a letter sent to local Awami League (AL) functionaries recently has asked them to supply names of educated party workers to the PMO for job processing.


   The PMO?s move is to prepare a list of educated party workers and find them government jobs. The letter has been issued to the presidents and general secretaries of Upazila Awami League and the MPs of respective constituencies asking them to send a list of such young people belonging to the party to the PM office by May 30.


   It has also mentioned that the list should accompany the proof that each of them is a party member or activists with credential letters signed by credible local party functionaries.


   The letter said the names to be supplied would be used to develop a database to find appropriate employment for the party boys in the coming days. Newspaper reports say the prime minister has taken the initiative to find employment for party workers to reduce the level of anarchy and tender snatching, internal party feuds and inter-group clashes. This is part of the Awami League election manifesto to find employment to at least one member of each family, the news report added.


   Another report said, this move is to match the previous government?s programme to find at least 100-day employment to a member of each poor family. It appears that this initiative has been taken to lessen the impact of the PMO?s move focused to employ the party men only. Besides, the PMO?s letter has clearly suggested the fact that it is a party programme in the light of its election manifesto to find job to its educated activists.
   No more 100-day scheme


   The Government has earlier announced that the 100-day employment scheme for the poor families does not exist any more and it will be replaced by a more suitable food security programme.


   Meanwhile, the Government has also announced that it would prepare a new list of the recipients of the financial benefits under social safety net programme which supports old abandoned women, disadvantaged freedom fighters and such other vulnerable groups.


   Correction, AL activists as Imams


   The AL Government?s argument is that the present list is not an appropriate one and contains a large number of BNP-led alliance supporters and it needs to be corrected. The letter from the Prime Minister?s office thus comes as the latest one amongst many other party initiatives to put the party workers to government jobs wherever possible.


   The new administration is also identifying areas where jobs are to be created for the party men. A recent report said that the Islamic Foundation under the Ministry of Religious Affairs has identified jobs of several hundred imams and teachers now employed in running the mosque based informal schooling system. Those who are currently employed have been accused of being the supporters and activists of Jamat-e-Islami and would be replaced by the AL activists.


   Another news item says the government has relaxed the pre-qualification of marriage registrars or the Quazis. Earlier candidates were required to have passed at least ?Alim? level of religious education to understand the religious rules and guidelines governing marriage performance and its registration. Now anyone having passed the HSC can be employed as a marriage registrar. The law ministry employs the marriage registrars and analysts apprehend that the existing marriage registrars are likely to be replaced in a large scale. Such schemes are being prepared to replace employees at all level beginning from the LGRD ministry to health, education, local government and rural development and the like.


   By sending those letters to the local level AL leaders, the PMO has been effectively converted into a party office. This prompted the critics to ask if Sheikh Hasina has decided to become the prime minister of the Awami League or Bangladesh. If she thinks, they say, that she is equally responsible for the whole nation as she feels about the AL supporters and activists, does she believe that her office has taken the right initiative?


   Another side of the Government?s policy appears to be providing incentives to support the ruling party. For example, recently the Health Minister, the health secretary and the DG of Health and another joint secretary of the same ministry went to Geneva to attend an international conference despite a Government instruction that the minister and the secretary of the same ministry should not leave Dhaka together. They were also accompanied by half a dozen newsmen, belonging to party-supporting media.


   It may be mentioned that never before such a large number of top officials including the minister of a single ministry had left Dhaka to attend an international conference.

 

Likewise, never before such large numbers of newsmen were taken to such an expensive trip at Government expense.


   Analysts fear the way the politicisation process of the administration is coming to the fore, the socio-economic fabrics of the country is bound to collapse to give rise to confrontation and clash. They hope the administration will realise its adverse impact and avoid it to happen at any cost.


 






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[ALOCHONA] Tipaimukh Dam: Development or Destruction



Tipaimukh Dam: Development or Destruction
 
By David Buhril

The "development projects" that are damming the rivers of the North East has inevitably come to be a part of the larger global discourse about large dams. This series of article looks into the complexities of Tipaimukh dam. David Buhril wishes to thank Panos South Asia for supporting this research initiative.

Far away from the idyllic flow of the Tuivai and Tuiruong (Tipaimukh) rivers, authorities cornered in power corridors gave a nod for environmental clearance of the controversial Tipaimukh Hydro-Electric Multipurpose Project.

While South Asia's biggest economy wanted to harness the hydroelectric power, little did the Tipaimukh villagers of the indigenous Hmar people, who would be affected by the foreign decisions, know about the impact of the decisions that has already put a go-ahead stamp for the mega structure to overtake their rivers, land, livelihood, culture and resources.

Their lifeline has been made to cut them off from the channels of representation, which should otherwise be made inevitable when they would be directly affected by the decision that was passed without their knowledge. The power of the decision makers who are not aware about their independent survival cultures would go a long way to usher a turbulent change that would negate the chance of their survival and continuity as people.

Tuiruong, the river that feeds their everyday life, interlinks them with their tribesmen in the upper stream as well as the down stream would be dammned in the name of development that has remain elusive in their life. The indigenous Hmar people, once again, realised that they are being excluded from control over the decisions and regulative institutions that will not only change the course of the river, but also their life.

While the emerging international standards and good corporate practice increasingly recognise pre-existing natural and community water and land uses, to respect indigenous rights and to negotiate prior informed consent of the traditional land owners, the unconsulted decisions for environmental clearance wholly negates their existence as human being.

Far from the negotiation table and power corridor that negates them, Tipaimukh villagers are worried and confused lot. "Tuiruong flows like the blood that keeps us alive. The endless talk for damming the river has brought us nightmares as we are never told what the structure would be like.

Besides, everything that has been happening against us are being decided outside us. We are worried. Moreover, the Government of Manipur will be sending forces to built the dam. We don't know what they are all up to," Thanghlei of Lungthulien village said.

The attempt to secure energy in these fringe geography has already insecure indigenous people who were put at the altar without any democratic consultations. This has severed the the Tipaimukh villagers whose ancestral land and resource were being targeted as urban fodder. With their cultural and identity footprints firmly attached to Tipaimukh, the proposed Tipaimukh dam has come to represent an imperialist-like character that the forgotten people are yet to come to terms with.

Much before the undisturbed sequence of repeated acts of survival see the structure that will rise to dictate them, the recently passed environmental clearance is seen as a more potent force than Christianity that first reached the Hmar people in Tipaimukh's Senvon village in the year 1910. The Tipaimukh villagers wonder whether they will continue to figure as survival indigenous societies when the act and decisions of the State go against them.

The Tipaimukh villagers in the fringe hills and mountain of Tipaimukh hardly know that their land and resources are being targeted to quench India's growing energy needs.

The proposed Hydro Electric Multipurpose Project that is designed to generate 1500 MW by damming the two rivers in seven years and three months is not merely a battle between development and environment, but a bigger battle between the "promise" and disguise of "development" and the impact it would have on stable indigenous community and their livelihood system.

For a community that has not seen the other side of their existence, the dam builder, North East Electric Power Corporation (NEEPCO) attempts to light up the dark world outside them does not come close to wake them to the need for sacrificing their land and resources.

After the decades of their mishandled experiences by the Government of Manipur that has severely failed to respond to their quest and aspirations for welfare and development, the indigenous communities of Tipaimukh have realised that the ebb and flow of their lives depends on Tipaimukh, which never fails them.

The Tipaimukh villagers are unaware about the promise of the 15.9 billion M3 reservoir capacity of the proposed dam, which will be the largest reservoir in the country. "We don't trust a government that has repeatedly failed us. We trust our soil, rivers and nature that has been a blessing for us. The Government or State is just a mistake.

They don't exist for us", Lalchunghnung, a villager from Tipaimukh's Senvon said. While the Government's decision has already outside the traditional land dwellers, the survival prospects of the indigenous people are left at mire in the name of "development."
 
Leaving out the indigenous population from the necessary framework of "free, prior and informed consent" the Government of Manipur and NEEPCO are heading for aggressive development in Tipaimukh.

The dogged efforts exerted by the Government of Manipur and North East Electric Power Corporation (NEEPCO) to dam Tuiruong (Tipaimukh) and Tuivai rivers for the Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Multipurpose Project has come to represent development aggression.

The aggressive character have today been affirmed by the Government of Manipur decision to militarise Tipaimukh. Much before the environmental clearance was given, the Government of Manipur decided to open security posts at seven kilometers intervals along the 99 km stretch of Mon Bahadur road, which is to be used for movement of materials required for the construction of the controversial dam.

A total of 15 posts of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), Border Security Force (BSF) and Indian Reserve Battalion (IRB) will be initially stationed to provide security for the movement of officials of NEEPCO, the implementing agency of the project.

Moreover, the Union Government had already promised a Rs 400 crore security cover for the proposed project.. For the military station, villagers of the doom- bound Sipuikawn, which will be submerge by the dam water were made to allot land at the top of the hill.

"We heard that they would be coming in anytime soon. They have chosen the highest point of our hill. I think the dam water would not touch them while our village is predicted to go under water", Rorel of Sipuikawn village said.

In the absence of "prior and informed consent", the Tipaimukh villagers are cornered to fend for themselves. They have no institutional support to enforce their rights and interest.

Moreover, there is no accountable governmental body to enforce the rights of the people who would be affected by the project. In the face of that, the supposed protective charters, legislation and principles remain theoretically oriented rather than pragmatic.

A minor section of Tipaimukh villagers took part in the one and only "public hearing" that was conducted in Tipaimukh on March 31, 2008. The villagers were treated with brusqueness. Many of the participants came to know about the hastily conducted "public hearing" by word of mouth that was milling in the villages.

"The hearing was called at such short notice that we were left with no time to prepare ourselves. As the bamboo flowering has brought us immense misery, many of us did not have the money to go all the way to Tipaimukh for the purpose.. I also went, but it was a messy and confusing affair.

The Deputy Commissioner of Churachandpur district who arrived with a good number of security forces exercised patronising and dictatorial attitude. Majority of us did not understand what they were lecturing as they spoke in languages that was foreign to us.

If the authorities thought they were conducting consultation, I must say that was a big mistake. They never get to listen us out as none of us spoke. They handpicked few pro-dam speakers and that was how it vainly ended. Not a big deal", Lalsang of Parbung village said.

The Government of Manipur did not seem to see any reason to consult the Hmar people who would be severely affected by the dam. It is evident that the requirement for an informed and prior consent is merely taken as a procedural affair.

This necessitated the need for activating the framework for assessing the risks involved and recognition of the tribal peoples rights in accordance with their customary and traditional law that was assigned a higher pedestal than the law of the land.

The uninformed villagers were told that the project was conceived by the Government and that the project would go ahead regardless of their opposition. Tipaimukh villagers were made to feel like squatters on their ancestral land. The overt aggressiveness is seen by many as a tactic to further made the people helpless; to compel them to give up their land for the project to take shape.

This has immensely put a pressure on the villagers who were also frequently baited by the promises of contract, job, compensation, employment prospects and promises of everything that is missing in their lives. "For a deprived community who are already suppressed with high-handed policies and decisions, the political motives are not people centred and there is no trace of us getting the proclaimed benefits. The dam will be the biggest trap in our lives", a mission teacher said.

Apprehension has caught the Tipaimukh villagers imagination in the absence of transparency. The project had once fragmented the fringe society creating a minor class of pro-dam and the left out majority who are totally opposed to the dam. However, slowly, the looming ambiguities that has been playing with their ancestral land has pulled them together with a collective quest for securing their rights and land.

This has resulted in the conflict of interest where the State interpretations of development did not seep in easily despite the money spill in the already investment stage that the project has entered.

job, compensation, employment prospects and promises of everything that is missing in their lives. "For a deprived community who are already suppressed with high-handed policies and decisions, the political motives are not people centred and there is no trace of us getting the proclaimed benefits. The dam will be the biggest trap in our lives", a mission teacher said.

Apprehension has caught the Tipaimukh villagers imagination in the absence of transparency. The project had once fragmented the fringe society creating a minor class of pro-dam and the left out majority who are totally opposed to the dam.

However, slowly, the looming ambiguities that has been playing with their ancestral land has pulled them together with a collective quest for securing their rights and land. This has resulted in the conflict of interest where the State interpretations of development did not seep in easily despite the money spill in the already investment stage that the project has entered.

The Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Multipurpose Project has entered into its initial investment stage. The Government of Manipur and NEEPCO has not only injected proposals for militarization but has also pumped in money for small scale contracts, which otherwise has benefitted a little over five persons in the entire Tipaimukh sub-division.

Despite the run for money for the few that was planted by the NEEPCO, the Tipaimukh villagers are not ready to dam its principal lifeline lightly. Despite the fact that the State and NEEPCO did not touch upon the key issues of the indigenous peoples rights to protect and preserve their ancestral land and their survival as a people, the visible quest is for their pro-active involvement in a project that they believe should centred around them.

However, the Government as well as the dam builder have not dealt with the adverse cultural, social and environmental impacts that the dam would bring.The dam planners made neither projections nor provisions for the cultural repercussions of the project on the indigenous peoples.

"What we have heard in all these years has been, if not the brightest, than the brighter side of the dam. The authorities who come and go projected the dam as our saviour and the only way to development available for us", Hmingmawi of Tipaimukh village said.

On the other hand Lalditum said, "I have not seen any dam in my life and it is impossible to even imagine the good and bad side of it. But I don't want to be compensated. I don't want my village and any other Tipaimukh village to be submerged. If that change has to overtake us, whatever beautiful name it bears, development would be our biggest enemy", Siema said.

"The promises of the dam that we have long conceived are baked with lame promise and expectations. I used to imagine a bright and sparkling Tipaimukh dam. That was why I spoke for the dam before. But now, after learning about diverse experiences and the nature of what we often called development and our experiences to this day, it is certain that we would be at the losing end", Rolawm said.

Despite that the development aggression pursued by the Government of Manipur and NEEPCO has made it evident that they are ignorant about the survival cultures of the indigenous people whose livelihood system is fed by the two rivers that are projected to be dammed. This has inevitably introduced the transcending participation of the Tipaimukh villagers in development.

The worries of the Tipaimukh villagers are also reflected in their concern about the prospects of maintaining the age-old ties with their tribesmen in the upper stream as well as in the downstream. "Tuiruong is more than a flowing water. It is at the heart of our existence as human being.

The dam will severe our ties with the rest of our tribesman, which will toll us in the long run", Chala said . Lawmsiem of Sartuinek village said, "We don't want high waters to split up our lives. If it is for development, it should come with a different face and character and not by damming our precious rivers."

Oblivious of who the stakeholders are, Tipaimukh villagers are already at the receiving end of the project. While the power game has negated their participation and representation, the Tipaimukh villagers still aspires for a transparent process of decision-making by involving them with equal status.

The gap in the existing power relations is seen to be the factor that has severely reduced their rights. and led to failure in assessing the risk involved. In their quest for a people centric development, the Tipaimukh villagers idea of development weaves around equity, sustainability, transparency, accountability, participatory decision making and efficiency.

The conceived dam that will gnaw into their lifeline is seen as a hindrance to their development. While the inevitability for a negotiation to the already pursued efforts is strongly felt, the people who would be affected by the project felt the need to emphasise on certain priorities and primacies that consider their well-being and its prospect as a people.

The Tipaimukh villagers are dissatisfied with the undue legitimacy and high-handedness that was overtaken by the Government of Manipur as well as the NEEPCO.

For the natural resource- based communities the marginalization that resulted with the aggressive intervention of the State and dam builder has become more than intolerable. This has moved them for an immediate review of all existing procedures and regulations concerning Tipaimukh project.

Moreover, the Tipaimukh villagers quest for a review of policy and institutional frameworks to assess and remove any bias that goes against their participation. While the need for recognizing entitlements and sharing benefits is further felt, the absence of all the priorities in the proposed project has made them wonder if the Tipaimukh dam is for development or destruction.

http://e-pao.net/epSubPageExtractor.asp?src=news_section.opinions.Opinion_on_Building_of_Tipaimukh_Dam.Tipaimukh_
Dam_Development_or_Destruction_1



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