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Tuesday, August 4, 2009

[ALOCHONA] Tipai team returns home 'convinced'



Tipai team returns home ‘convinced’
Staff Correspondent

Courtesy New Age 5/8/09

The Bangladesh parliamentary delegation returned home ‘convinced’ that India’s Tipaimukh project was still in a conceptual stage and New Delhi would not do anything harmful for Bangladesh at the site.
    Delegation leader Abdur Razzak also claimed that they now have in hand enough information, which was not gathered in last 20-25 years, to check with local experts and assess the environmental impacts from any such project on the common river Barak in Manipur state of India.
   ‘Both the Indian external affairs and power ministers reiterated the pledge of Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh that India would not implement any project which will do harm to Bangladesh,’ he said Tuesday at the Zia International Airport immediately after the team’s return from New Delhi.
   The former water resources minister headed the 10-member delegation that reached New Delhi on July 29 and discussed with Indian ministers and officials to convey Bangladesh’s concerns about the planned dam at Tipaimukh and stop India from proceeding with the dam project, which is feared to be disastrous for downstream Bangladesh.
   The team was to visit the controversial dam site in Manipur state, but inclement weather prevented the helicopter carrying them from landing there on Friday and Saturday. Half of the team returned home Sunday, but the six lawmakers stayed back in New Delhi for one more day for further talks with Indian authorities.
   The delegation leader earlier said that Indian authorities had told them that a hydroelectricity project has been planned at Tipaimukh and there would not any irrigation component.
   ‘I can say for sure that there is no structure yet on the site. The future of the project is also not certain,’ Razzak said on the basis of impressions he got from Indian authorities and also the team’s aerial view of the project site.
   Referring to the concerns of Indian officials, he said if anything goes wrong, environmental impacts would be felt by India first.
   ABM Ruhul Amin Hawlader, Jatiya Party’s secretary general and a member of the delegation, said India has not yet started any construction at the Tipaimukh site and it is still at a conceptual stage.
   Asked whether India would abandon the project, Abdur Razzak said it is up to the Indian government to decide the fate of the project.
   The North Eastern Electric Power Company, which was earlier assigned to implement the Tipaimukh project, has declined to go ahead with the job, he informed.
   ‘Now the Indian government is negotiating with NHPC Limited for implementation of the project. An agreement would be signed between them,’ he added
   Razzak, who also chairs the parliamentary standing committee on water resources ministry, claimed that the delegation has got enough data in hand.
   ‘We also requested them for more data to examine the probable environmental impacts on Bangladesh from any structure on Barak river,’ he added.
   Sheikh M Wahid-uz-Zaman, water resources secretary, also a member of the delegation, said the information they got during the trip was not available to Bangladesh in last 20 to 25 years.
   ‘We will analyse the data and share those with our experts to weigh the possible impacts of the project on Bangladesh.’
   The government decided to send the parliamentary team amid an uproar against the planned Tipaimukh project, which local environmentalists and politicians feared would restrict flows to the Meghna and spell disasters for ecology in the Sylhet region.
   Opposition BNP skipped sending its representative with the team.

 




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[ALOCHONA] India, Bangladesh: Dam Diplomacy



India, Bangladesh: Dam Diplomacy

As India and Bangladesh engage in a heated debate about an Indian-planned dam project, experts disagree about the consequences for Bangladeshi people and the environment, Animesh Roul reports for ISN Security Watch.
 
By Animesh Roul in New Delhi for ISN Security Watch

 
Never before have water-sharing issues caused so much controversy in South Asia as the proposed Tipaimukh dam project over the Barack river in India's northeast has. The river flows westward, merging into the Meghna river system in neighboring Bangladesh.
 
India's plan to build a multipurpose hydroelectric dam over the river has caused heated political debate and has become the cause du jour of civil society movements in Bangladesh who fear its environmental and economic repercussions.
 
Bangladeshi Foreign Minister Dipu Moni, recently speaking to reporters from the sideline of a Dhaka conference, indicated that "if the Tipaimukh dam goes against the interests of Bangladesh, [we] will do whatever is necessary to protect national interests."
 
Moni has rebuked Indian envoy Pinak Ranjan Chakravarti for referring to Bangladesh environmentalists as "so-called experts" and accusing them of being politically motivated. Chakravarti's off-the-cuff remarks created an uproar in Bangladesh and triggered protests outside the Indian High Commission in Dhaka, where demonstrators burned his effigy. 
 
Differing perceptions
The North Eastern Electric Power Corp (NEEPCO) is in charge of the $1.7 billion project, which aims to generate 1,500 megawatts of hydroelectric power. But experts disagree on the purpose of the dam and its eventual impact.
 
The perception prevails in Bangladesh that their larger neighbor is carrying out the project without any consultation with the lower riparian state and that ultimately the proposed dam will have a severe ecological impact that could lead to the desertification of eastern Bangladesh.
 
India argues that since the Tipaimukh dam would be used for hydroelectric power generation and not for irrigation, it would not cause any negative consequences downstream or any ecological harm to Bangladesh.
 
Ainun Nishat, country director of the International Union for Conservation of Nature Bangladesh (IUCN), was recently quoted on BDNews24.com as saying that "the construction of [the] Tipaimukh dam will reduce the natural monsoon flood patterns of the area on which cultivation depends."
"Even a hydroelectric project, which is not an irrigation project, can have pretty serious downstream impacts," asserted Himanshu Thakkar of the New Delhi-based South Asia Network on Dams, Rivers & People (SANDRAP).
Speaking to ISN Security Watch, he warned that "the project will have far-reaching adverse impacts on the environment upstream and downstream of the dam, and also will have a global effect due to the likelihood of the emission of massive quantities (yet to be assessed) of methane gas, which is a 21-times-more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.
 
"The fear of serious downstream impacts prevalent in Bangladesh is well founded, but the nature and quantum would depend on many factors, including the way the dam is operated," Thakkar added. "I have not heard of any dam, be it for irrigational or power generation, without any upstream and downstream impact," said Manipur-based Ramananda Wangkheirakpam, the coordinator for North East People's Alliance in Bangladesh.
 
Wangkheirakpam is less cautious, telling ISN Security Watch that "the dam will inundate upstream in Manipur and create havoc across the border" and "India knows the impact."
 
Farakka revisited
It is not the first time India and Bangladesh have clashed over dam issues. Ties have been strained over the sharing of Ganges water and the Farakka barrage in the past. Bangladesh faced a severe water scarcity due to the barrage, especially during winter season.  However, in December 1996, a 30-year water-sharing agreement with conditions perceived as favoring India eased some of the brewing tensions.
 
Many in Bangladesh fear that the Tipaimukh dam will be another Farakka.
Scholar and activist Habib Siddiqui described the Tipaimukh project for the website The New Nation as likely another "death trap." Muhammad Hillaluddin, coordinator and activist at the Dhaka-based Angikar Bangladesh Foundation, holds similar sentiments. "The Farakka barrage was thrusted upon the newly born Bangladesh in the early years of  the 1970s, but now the situation has changed," he told ISN Security Watch. "The resultant conflict will take severe form and be prolonged for many days to come."
 
"So far, India does not seem to be taking the Bangladesh government and people into confidence about the project and its impacts," Thakkar lamented.
But the dam is also opposed by some in India.
 
On 26 July, some 100 people gathered in the town of Lakhipur, in India's own Assam state, downstream from the Barak river, which environmentalists warn could end up under 10 meters of water should the proposed dam collapse. It is the first case in which downstream communities in India have protested the proposed dam.
 
Ecological blunder?
Environmental activists and experts from northeastern India and Bangladesh fear massive inundation of villages and clogging and drying up of the river systems if the ambitious Tipaimukh dam project is put in place.
 
The Action Committee Against Tipaimukh Dam (ACTIP), an umbrella group spearheading anti-dam protests in Manipur in March 2007 submitted a memorandum to the Indian government in protest against the project. ACTIP observed in their memorandum that nearly 285-square kilometers of land will be submerged under water if the project is implemented.
 
According to Hillaluddin, "the Haor wetlands of northeast Bangladesh engulfing almost one-sixth of the country will face water logging, due to the water level difference in the rivers in late monsoon, which will affect cultivation and commercial fisheries." Hillaluddin also fears that earthquakes could damage the massive structure of the along with its huge reservoir, resulting in "catastrophic consequences especially for the downstream districts of Bangladesh." 
 
Beyond physical environmental fears, Ramananda Wangkheirakpam foresees an "environment-induced conflict" in the region. "There will be massive migration from Bangladesh due to the Tipaimukh project once it is operationalized and might contribute to the conflict between locals and Bangladeshis," he cautioned. 
 
Political floodwaters
The Tipaimukh issue figured in informal talks between Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Bangladesh counterpart Sheikh Hasina on the sideline of the 15th Non-Aligned Movement summit, held in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, in July.
 
A section of the present Sheikh Hasina-led administration believes that India's plan for hydropower generation could benefit the country.
But according to a high-ranking source close to the talks, there are "strong elements within the ruling Awami League (AL) that can pull down the Sheikh Hasina government if they sign any agreement with India" on the dam issue.
 
Amid widespread opposition to the project at home, especially from the main opposition Khaleda Zia-led Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), which is blamed for 'playing politics' over the dam, and many environmental groups, Prime Minster Sheikh Hasina is quite optimistic for an amicable resolution of this contentious water sharing issue with India through talks soon.
But as Hillaluddin is less certain, saying the issue is extremely important and highly complicated, especially as experts across the board seem to strongly disagree as to the potential impact the dam will have on water resources, ecology and people.


http://www.isn.ethz.ch/isn/Current-Affairs/Security-Watch/Detail/?lng=en&id=103649



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[ALOCHONA] The fallacies of Tipaimukh dam




The Indian government's recent decision to go ahead with the plan of constructing a dam at Tipaimukh on the river Barak has touched off intense debates, both in Bangladesh and India, on its merit. Dr M Monirul Qader Mirza debunks the Indian government's argument in favour of the Tipaimukh project in an essay serialised in three parts


BANGLADESH and India share basins of 54 international rivers. The waters of these rivers play an important economic role for agriculture, urban and rural water supplies and navigation sectors. Among the shared rivers between the two countries, until recently, the Ganges was the most debated because of withdrawals of its waters at the Farakka Barrage point and 90 other points above of it. Thus far, Brahmaputra and the Meghna/Barak have remained virgin in terms of water impoundments and withdrawal/transfer. However, this is no more the case. India's recent decision to go ahead with the plan of building a dam at Tipaimukh on the river Barak has ignited heated debates on its merit in India and Bangladesh.
   
   Fallacy 1: Bangladesh consented to build the Tipaimukh Dam Project
   IMMEDIATELY after the independence of Bangladesh, the two countries established the Indo-Bangladesh Joint Rivers Commission to foster cooperation on water resources development and sharing benefits. In the very first meeting of the JRC, India informed Bangladesh that it had identified a project for the construction of a storage reservoir on the Barak for flood control. The Bangladesh side urged Indian officials to take conditions in Bangladesh into consideration. The 2nd through 6th meetings, project outline, at the constitution of joint committee of experts, flood problems of Sylhet and Cachar regions and hydrological studies on the Barak dam project were discussed. In the 7th meeting of the JRC, India informed the commission that a dam site at Bhubandhar was identified. However, Bangladeshi officials observed that the proposed dam site would have minimal flood moderation potential and, therefore, further investigation was recommended. In the minutes of the 14th meeting of the JRC, the following statement regarding the Barak dam project was made: 'With regard to the flood problem of Sylhet, Cachar and adjoining areas, the Commission should jointly examine the scope of the Indian scheme of storage dam on Barak River at Tipaimukh and study expeditiously the potential flood control and other benefits in Bangladesh and report the progress to the Commission at its next meeting.'


   From the record of discussions of the JRC, the following conclusions can be drawn: (1) a dam at the Tipaimukh site was not recommended by the Joint Committee of Experts constituted by the JRC; (2) the proposed dam at Tipaimukh is absolutely an Indian proposal. It was identified by the Indian Central Water Commission in 1974; (3) records do not demonstrate that Bangladesh ever formally consented to construction of a dam at Tipaimukh; and (4) it was never jointly studied and no report submitted to the 15th meeting of the JRC or in any subsequent meetings. Salient features of the Tipaimukh Dam latter appeared in the 'Indian Proposal to Augment the Ganges Water at Farakka' and its updated version submitted to Bangladesh in 1978 and 1983, respectively, and later in the 'Indo-Bangladesh Task Force Report on Flood Management 1990'. The logic of the inclusion of this project into the augmentation proposal of the Ganges waters was not known, because, in the official discussions, diversion of any water from the Meghna/Barak basin to the Ganges never came up.
   
   Fallacy 2: Tipaimukh will reduce extreme flooding in Bangladesh
   THIS is not as simple as stated by India in the 'Indo-Bangladesh Task Force Report on Flood Management 1990.' 'The storage will moderate the floods in the Cachar district of Assam and Sylhet and Dhaka districts of Bangladesh and provide these areas much awaited relief from floods besides reducing the chances of obstructing the drainage of the main Padma (Ganga) in the event of synchronisation of the flood flows and backing up of Meghna as it happened in 1988' (p 14). Bangladesh countered the Indian claim by arguing that the 'updated Indian proposal provides gated spillway for all the dams and claim benefits "to a significant measure" from Dihang dam "to a large extent" from the Subansiri dam and "to vast areas in India and Bangladesh" from the Tipaimukh dam for flood moderation. The above Indian claims are not substantiated by facts and figures' (p 26).


   Bangladesh further stated, 'The Indian proposal of constructing a dam at Tipaimukh will also not help in flood moderation in Bangladesh as the Meghna basin within Bangladesh is a saucer shaped land mass consisting of a large number of beels and haors. The soil moisture deficiency is comparatively less than in other areas of Bangladesh. The average pre-monsoon precipitation is above 900mm and after meeting the soil moisture deficiency it partly goes to depression storages in the different beels and haors in the area. Sometimes pre-monsoon precipitation also causes early flash floods' (p 26).


   'The intensity and duration of monsoon rainfall is of high magnitude in the Sylhet area. The average being of the order of 4000mm. Above 70-80% of the monsoon precipitation goes to direct runoff which causes heavy flood almost every year in the area. The estimated runoff depth is of the order of 3m. As such the Indian proposal of constructing dam at Tipaimukh will not help flood moderation in Bangladesh as the monsoon precipitation in Sylhet basin is enough to cause floods in Bangladesh' (p 26).


   India countered Bangladesh's argument by insisting that the 'Tipaimukh reservoir having 9.00 milliard cum. as its live storage will be very effective in absorbing high floods in the valley and protecting the Cacher and Sylhet areas from the flood-ravages. The Tipaimukh reservoir will moderate the floods generated by heavy precipitation over a catchment of 12,758 Sq..km which otherwise would continue to ravage the downstream areas in an uncontrolled manner. Areas of both the countries will get considerable relief from the flood menace after the Tipaimukh reservoir comes up' (p 61).


   The limitation of 9 milliard cubic meters of live storage for flood moderation and hydropower generation is explained below.


   Initially, the main purpose of such dam construction in the Meghna/Barak basin was 'flood control'. However, over the years, its purposes were shifted to 'hydropower generation' and 'irrigation'. A multi-purpose dam has to encounter many problems to optimise its operation to serve all the purposes (could be opposing) efficiently. For example, in order to mitigate downstream flood problems, the storage behind the Tipaimukh dam should be maintained at the lowest level possible at the beginning of the monsoon. If this is the case, then power generation from the dam will have to be compromised. To maximise power generation, water levels (therefore the storage volume) must be maintained at the highest possible levels. This will have limited impact on flood moderation. Therefore, experts are concerned over the stated flood-control benefit of the Tipaimukh dam in extreme conditions, as its main purpose is to generate electricity.


   Moreover, there are also other concerns. After a detention from a heavy rainfall event, generated runoff water should be released through the spillway as quickly as possible, within the capacity of the downstream channel to maintain safety of the dam itself. Firsthand examples exist in our neighbourhood. In 2000 the south-western region of Bangladesh was suddenly engulfed by waters arriving from the neighbouring India. The source of the flood waters was the water released from a string of dams in West Bengal, where the capacity of the dams was exceeded due to the sudden onrush of runoff from the catchment areas. Similar incidents were experienced in other parts of the world as well. 'During the El NiƱo of 1983, climate and hydrologic forecasts failed to predict abnormally heavy spring runoff in the Rocky Mountains. Dam operators along the Colorado River maintained high water storage levels, failing to prepare for the potential of the flooding. By the time operators began to react, water was bypassing the dams via their spillways and wreaking havoc throughout the system. Ultimately, the Glen Canyon dam in Arizona was heavily impacted with flood flows eroding large volumes of rock from within the canyon walls that support the dam. Fortunately, the flooding peaked and control was regained before the dam was breached' (http: //science.jrank.org, 2009). As the northeast region of India is very prone to rainfall with long rainy seasons, such events will likely happen in the near future and bring about havoc in the downstream areas of the Barak/Meghna basin in India and Bangladesh.


   The reservoir simulation study downstream of the Tipaimukh shows that it would withstand 100-year floods. It should be noted that large floods are often designated as a 'one-hundred-year flood' but a 100-year flood does not mean that such a flood occurs once every 100 years. Instead it signifies that there is a one in one-hundred (or 1%) chance of such a flood occurring in a given year, with two exceptions: Sonaimukh and Badarpurghat would be 0.75m and 0.65m above the danger levels, respectively. However, the data used for the calculation the 100-year flood for the Tipaimukh Dam is significantly dated. In its letter of clearance, dated October 24, 2008, the Ministry of Environment and Forests, the government of India asked the authorities concerned to update the peak flood estimation for the project. The MEF stated, 'Peak flood estimation by frequency method, utilising a short series of 16 years (1966-1981), when the observed peak is 9100 cumec will lead to a significant increase 1 in 100-year flood estimated as 4931 cumec only. Flood frequency study has to be carried out utilising the data from 1966 to 2007 and got vetted by CWC.' Although the MEF urged NEEPCO to update flood analysis, recently it has released the environmental impact assessment report for general public without any revisions.


   Considering a 100-year flood from a short record of only 16 years is an unusual hydrologic practice. Without update of the hydrological assessment and related design parameters, the project will introduce significant risks for the population living in the downstream areas. Any increase in volume of 100-year flood means higher flood depths in the downstream areas of the dam in India and Bangladesh.


   To be continued


   Dr M Monirul Qader Mirza is a water resources engineer and an adjunct professor with the Department of Physical and Environmental Sciences, University of Toronto at Scarborough, Canada.

 

http://www.newagebd.com/2009/aug/05/oped.html




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RE: [ALOCHONA] Reply to Shamim Chowdhury on Tipaimukh Dam



Mr.Jamil
You wrote in your posting "India will take care of their interest". I am agree with you. 
Now question is, if they do it, what we can do?  AL Govt. trying to prevent it by a peacefull way.They are not sit idle.They are working with diplomatic way. and your BNP Jamaat....? As an opposition party they have no issue. Let them busy with Tipai Muk.
 
Kind Regard
 
J.A.Chowdhury
 
 


To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
From: jamil_dhaka@yahoo.com
Date: Sun, 2 Aug 2009 19:11:20 -0700
Subject: Re: [ALOCHONA] Reply to Shamim Chowdhury on Tipaimukh Dam



Tipaimukh Dam is not a AL or BNP issue. This is an issue of our survival.
I don't think Bongo Bondhu would sit idle when some thing big like this is going on.
India will take care of their interest and that's normal.
We should do the same. If we think as a nation that we can do it, then we will.

--- On Tue, 7/28/09, eastside_peds@bellsouth.net <eastside_peds@bellsouth.net> wrote:

From: eastside_peds@bellsouth.net <eastside_peds@bellsouth.net>
Subject: Re: [ALOCHONA] Reply to Shamim Chowdhury on Tipaimukh Dam
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com, "Dhaka Mails" <dhakamails@yahoogroups.com>
Cc: "Isha Khan" <bd_mailer@yahoo.com>
Date: Tuesday, July 28, 2009, 12:09 PM

Mr. Bahar,
During her India visit as Prime Minister, Khaleda Zia forgot to raise "WATER SHARING ISSUE" with her Indian counterpart!! This is called HEADBOWING towards India. You have attended the so called Fobana in DC!! You are not with the main stream ( Houston Fobana ), always with the loosers ( BNP )!! So, your arguments do not carry any value!
 
Dr. Manik
-------------- Original message from Isha Khan <bd_mailer@yahoo.com>: --------------

 


--- On Mon, 6/8/09, abid bahar <abidbahar@Yahoo. com> wrote:
Date: Monday, June 8, 2009, 10:31 PM

Reply to Shamim Chowdhury on Tipaimukh Dam:

Abid Bahar:

 It is true, political parties are engaged more in making profit by selling privileges than promoting the national interest. This could be said for both the major political parties of Bangladesh . Having said this however, Shamim Chowdhury's argument below to blame BNP than India for the Tipaimukh dam is preposterous. It is done either from his ignorance or at best from his political mindset. He says:

Shamim Chowdhury:

"It is obscure to believe India did not informed (sic)  Bangladesh about their Tipaimukh project, therefore there is a possibility that BNP-Jamaat alliance gave a secret green signal to go ahead with this illegal unilateral decision and India took a chance on head bowing BNP-Jamaat government."

Abid Bahar:

How can Shamim Chowdhury be so sure when he is just assuming and saying "there is a possibility", "it is obscure"? How does he know for sure BNP did the "head bowing." to the Indian project? It is the BNP government that raised the Farakka problem to the United Nations. Moreover, we have seen in the Farakka dam project that India does these projects through extreme secrecy. Farakka was completed during the liberation war. We only know about these from Indian sources

Shamim Chowdhury:

People of Bangladesh learned about Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Project on river Barak, the second largest river in the region in Manipur as well as river Tuivai after Awami League led alliance came into power. For the month and half we have seen numerous seminar symposium making attempt to create awareness among common people as well as government.

Abid Bahar:

I myself as the member of the International Farakka Committee knew about the dam project in 1994. Then we were asking for both the equitable distributions of the Ganges water as well as to stop Tipaimuk dam.  This Indian dam project with many others was identified in a map drawn by B.M. Abbas during the 70's. We have done many seminars on Indian dam projects during the 90's and later; including one in Dhaka in 2003 at the China -Bangladesh Friendship centre where local and foreign experts and BNP ministers were also present while we narrowly escaped AL's call for nationwide strikes. It is said that hese presures led India to sign a deal with Hasina.

 Unfortunately, Shamim Chowdhury came to know about the Tipaimukh project only recently when India is asking the AL government to approve the deal including to give transit through Bangladesh .

Indian policy here is fooling us and rule and here we have politicians and socalled experts like Shamim Chowdhury working as  the AL analyst.

I will not go any further to waste my time to point out Shamim Chowdhury's type of propaganda or spreading of ignorance as fact but will leave the readers to find out his base on "obscure" information and his understanding of  the Tipaimukhdam problem..

_________ ______


Shamim Chowdhury's article below:

BNP-Jamaat alliance was in power when Indian government finalized Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Project in Manipur in 2003. The North Eastern Electric Power Corporation (neepco), the government agency entrusted with the responsibility of building power projects in the northeast, has been handed the project. In November 2005, it floated a global tender for the project. In July 2006, the pre-bid qualification of the tender for the first phase wasd opened. Initially Indian government budgeted five thousand crore for this project.

The ball was finally rolling from Indian side in 2003 while the BNP-Jamaat alliance government in Bangladesh was sleeping. Irresponsible, incompetent Khaleda government did not utter a single word about Tipaimukh from 2001 to 2006 while in power. It is obscure to believe India did not informed Bangladesh about their Tipaimukh project, therefore there is a possibility that BNP-Jamaat alliance gave a secret green signal to go ahead with this illegal unilateral decision and India took a chance on head bowing BNP-Jamaat government.

When all the unthinkable was happening with Indian unilateral decision only few miles from Bangladesh soil, two successive government, Khaleda-Nizami and Iazuddin-Fokhruddin failed to raise the issue with India and failed to inform people of Bangladesh about its danger.

People of Bangladesh learned about Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Project on river Barak, the second largest river in the region in Manipur as well as river Tuivai after Awami League led alliance came into power. For the month and half we have seen numerous seminar symposium making attempt to create awareness among common people as well as government.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's government had already started bilateral talks with Indian counter part on Tipaimukh project. Government has rightly decided to form two-examination committee. Out of this two committee, one will comprise all party parliamentarians and the other will include technical experts. Both committees will visit proposed Tipaimukh Hydro Eclectic project as fact finding mission, from there report Bangladesh will make its case on how to place Bangladesh interest on Indian unilateral decision on Tipaimukh hydro electric project.

Interestingly, Khaleda-Nizami alliance government all off a sadden wakeup from their deep sleep and trying to  make some buzz ward for political reason against Tipaimukh project, the project that they gave secret green signal to Indian authority in 2003 selling the interest of Bangladesh for mere political gain.

The nation still vividly remembers, Khaleda Zia led her delegation to India on 26 to 28 May of 1992 to talk to her counter part P.V. Noroshima Rao then Indian Prime Minister. During this trip she forgot to raise the question about not getting due shares of water from Farraka Barrage. After coming back from the tour India , facing criticism from press then Prime Minister Khaleda Zia acknowledged that she forgot to raise the question with her Indian apart.

This is extremely sad for people of Bangladesh that Prime Minister Khaleda Zia can forget to raise a life and death question with Indian authority. Interestingly while Khaleda Zia forgot to raise the Farakka issue she signed a treaty with Indian government on June 26 1992 on Tinbigha corridor for 999 years lease. We know among many other problems Tinbigha is one of the thorns between India-Bangladesh relations, Khaleda getting a chance to be in power for three times could not resolve it.

We as a nation must find all facts about Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Multipurpose project before interest of Bangladesh is dashed out one more time. We must stand as a nation and not allow India to erect anything, which will be against the interest of Bangladesh . However, to do that we must first learn about all if and but about Tipaimukh project. I hope Khaleda Zia will disclose all facts about Tipaimukh projects and her government's actions and deeds with Indian government during her last stay in government 2001-2006. Nation need to know if there was any secret deal with Khaleda-Nizami, alliance government in 2003 before Indian government gave the final authorization on this project and formed The North Eastern Electric Power Corporation (neepco).Shamim Chowdhury's argument below to blame BNP for the Tipaimukh dam instead of India is at best politically motivated. He says:

 
"It is obscure to believe India did not informed (sic) Bangladesh about their Tipaimukh project, therefore there is a possibility that BNP-Jamaat alliance gave a secret green signal to go ahead with this illegal unilateral decision and India took a chance on head bowing BNP-Jamaat government."
 
How can he be sure when he is just assuming. He says "there is a possibility. " How does Shamin Chowdhury know it was a "head bowing BNP-Jamaat government."


From: Shamim Chowdhury <veirsmill@yahoo. com>
To: Diagnose@yahoogroup s.com
Sent: Sunday, June 7, 2009 10:14:48 PM
Subject: [Diagnose] Re: Fw: Tipaimukh Dam: Strong Protest coming through political forces

BNP-Jamaat alliance was in power when Indian government finalized Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Project in Manipur in 2003. The North Eastern Electric Power Corporation (neepco), the government agency entrusted with the responsibility of building power projects in the northeast, has been handed the project. In November 2005, it floated a global tender for the project. In July 2006, the pre-bid qualification of the tender for the first phase wasd opened. Initially Indian government budgeted five thousand crore for this project.

 

The ball was finally rolling from Indian side in 2003 while the BNP-Jamaat alliance government in Bangladesh was sleeping. Irresponsible, incompetent Khaleda government did not utter a single word about Tipaimukh from 2001 to 2006 while in power. It is obscure to believe India did not informed Bangladesh about their Tipaimukh project, therefore there is a possibility that BNP-Jamaat alliance gave a secret green signal to go ahead with this illegal unilateral decision and India took a chance on head bowing BNP-Jamaat government.

 

When all the unthinkable was happening with Indian unilateral decision only few miles from Bangladesh soil, two successive government, Khaleda-Nizami and Iazuddin-Fokhruddin failed to raise the issue with India and failed to inform people of Bangladesh about its danger.

People of Bangladesh learned about Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Project on river Barak, the second largest river in the region in Manipur as well as river Tuivai after Awami League led alliance came into power. For the month and half we have seen numerous seminar symposium making attempt to create awareness among common people as well as government.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's government had already started bilateral talks with Indian counter part on Tipaimukh project. Government has rightly decided to form two-examination committee. Out of this two committee, one will comprise all party parliamentarians and the other will include technical experts. Both committees will visit proposed Tipaimukh Hydro Eclectic project as fact finding mission, from there report Bangladesh will make its case on how to place Bangladesh interest on Indian unilateral decision on Tipaimukh hydro electric project.

Interestingly, Khaleda-Nizami alliance government all off a sadden wakeup from their deep sleep and trying to  make some buzz ward for political reason against Tipaimukh project, the project that they gave secret green signal to Indian authority in 2003 selling the interest of Bangladesh for mere political gain.

The nation still vividly remembers, Khaleda Zia led her delegation to India on 26 to 28 May of 1992 to talk to her counter part P.V. Noroshima Rao then Indian Prime Minister. During this trip she forgot to raise the question about not getting due shares of water from Farraka Barrage. After coming back from the tour India , facing criticism from press then Prime Minister Khaleda Zia acknowledged that she forgot to raise the question with her Indian apart.

This is extremely sad for people of Bangladesh that Prime Minister Khaleda Zia can forget to raise a life and death question with Indian authority. Interestingly while Khaleda Zia forgot to raise the Farakka issue she signed a treaty with Indian government on June 26 1992 on Tinbigha corridor for 999 years lease. We know among many other problems Tinbigha is one of the thorns between India-Bangladesh relations, Khaleda getting a chance to be in power for three times could not resolve it.

We as a nation must find all facts about Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Multipurpose project before interest of Bangladesh is dashed out one more time. We must stand as a nation and not allow India to erect anything, which will be against the interest of Bangladesh . However, to do that we must first learn about all if and but about Tipaimukh project. I hope Khaleda Zia will disclose all facts about Tipaimukh projects and her government's actions and deeds with Indian government during her last stay in government 2001-2006. Nation need to know if there was any secret deal with Khaleda-Nizami, alliance government in 2003 before Indian government gave the final authorization on this project and formed The North Eastern Electric Power Corporation (neepco).

Sincerely,

Shamim Chowdhury

Maryland, USA
--- In Diagnose@yahoogroup s.com, kazi Mohammad Ismail <kazimohammadismail@ ....> wrote:
>
> Dear all
>  
> Earlier wrote a message about Future Politics of Bangladesh will be concentred in tipaimukh dam. Now it is clear that social, political and civilian are coming strongly to protet contruction of tipaimukh dam.
>  
> yesterday the biggest islamic party in Bangladesh, Jammat organised a grand rally at Dhaka. One day before  some leftest parties (khalequzzaman among others) opined against tipaimukh dam. everyday there had seminars in this issue. See the links:
>  
> http://nation. ittefaq.com/ issues/2009/ 05/22/news0893. htm
>  
> http://jamaat- video.blogspot. com/
> http://www.youtube. com/bjiict
>  
> http://www.kanglaon line.com/ index.php? template= kshow&kid=691
> http://www.e- pao.net/epSubPag eExtractor. asp?src=news_ section.opinions .Opinion_ on_Building_ of_Tipaimukh_ Dam
> http://ne.icrindia. org/tag/tipaimuk h-dam/
> http://www.bdnews24 .com/details. php?id=77785&cid=2
> http://www.downtoea rth.org.in/ cover.asp? foldername= 20061015&filename=news&sec_id=9&sid=52
>  
> kazi mohammad ismail
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
>






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[ALOCHONA] Re: Hasina and family's lifelong security

Dear Alochok Omar

Welcome. No problem.

We great ganja eating coconuts have to stick together :)

At least our opinions, and the opinions of those we directly argue with, are clear and known. It must be so strange to live life without really having an opinion on anything :)

The questions that need to be asked of our nation and it's leaders are blindingly obvious to anyone who can publicly put country before party. But lets try to find some answers too.

Have a nice day.

Regards

Ezajur Rahman
Kuwait


--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, maqsud omaba <maqsudo@...> wrote:
>
>
> thanks...for the clarification.
> Sorry...for the slip.
>
> I was in a hurry.
>
> Best wishes.
> Khoda hafez.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
> From: ezajur.rahman@...
> Date: Mon, 3 Aug 2009 06:30:26 +0000
> Subject: [ALOCHONA] Re: Hasina and family's lifelong security
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Dear Alochok Omar
>
> My comments were dripping with sarcasm. You should have known it the moment you read the preposterous use of the term 'sovereign integrity' : )
>
> You should have been one of those who laughed loud or smiled wryly or shook his head knowingly.
>
> But more important than my poor sarcasm and your poor intuition is the fact that:
>
> The majority of ministers in the government of Bangladesh believe what I have written to be true. Some of it is spoken only in grand public gatherings of the party faithful. Some of it is spoken only in private meetings of the party leadership. Some of it is spoken only in bed to a supportive spouse some it is never spoken but stays silent within amongst the insecurities, vulnerabilities and hypocrisies of many a mediocre man whose efforts at political greatness depend entirely on the mood of his Nethri.
>
> Regards
>
> Ezajur Rahman
>


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[ALOCHONA] Reply to Shamim Chowdhury on Tipaimukh Dam



Hasina or Shamim Cowdhury  can blame anyone, but, as a Bangladeshi, we can not sit idle on this issue. Understand Bangladesh can not fight with India, but, we certainly raise our voice and heard by the world.
 
Silence is not a choice! Any patriotic Bangladeshi need to be aware the consequences of Tipai Dam. It has a long term effect, irrespective of political affiliation we all need to speak in unison. When there is a flood, it will not mercy Awami-supporter neither BNP or Jamaat.


--- On Sun, 8/2/09, Jamil Ahmed <jamil_dhaka@yahoo.com> wrote:

From: Jamil Ahmed <jamil_dhaka@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [ALOCHONA] Reply to Shamim Chowdhury on Tipaimukh Dam
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, August 2, 2009, 7:11 PM

 
Tipaimukh Dam is not a AL or BNP issue. This is an issue of our survival.
I don't think Bongo Bondhu would sit idle when some thing big like this is going on.
India will take care of their interest and that's normal.
We should do the same. If we think as a nation that we can do it, then we will.

--- On Tue, 7/28/09, eastside_peds@ bellsouth. net <eastside_peds@ bellsouth. net> wrote:

From: eastside_peds@ bellsouth. net <eastside_peds@ bellsouth. net>
Subject: Re: [ALOCHONA] Reply to Shamim Chowdhury on Tipaimukh Dam
To: alochona@yahoogroup s.com, "Dhaka Mails" <dhakamails@yahoogro ups.com>
Cc: "Isha Khan" <bd_mailer@yahoo. com>
Date: Tuesday, July 28, 2009, 12:09 PM

Mr. Bahar,
During her India visit as Prime Minister, Khaleda Zia forgot to raise "WATER SHARING ISSUE" with her Indian counterpart! ! This is called HEADBOWING towards India. You have attended the so called Fobana in DC!! You are not with the main stream ( Houston Fobana ), always with the loosers ( BNP )!! So, your arguments do not carry any value!
 
Dr. Manik
------------ -- Original message from Isha Khan <bd_mailer@yahoo. com>: ------------ --

 


--- On Mon, 6/8/09, abid bahar <abidbahar@Yahoo. com> wrote:
Date: Monday, June 8, 2009, 10:31 PM

Reply to Shamim Chowdhury on Tipaimukh Dam:

Abid Bahar:

 It is true, political parties are engaged more in making profit by selling privileges than promoting the national interest. This could be said for both the major political parties of Bangladesh . Having said this however, Shamim Chowdhury's argument below to blame BNP than India for the Tipaimukh dam is preposterous. It is done either from his ignorance or at best from his political mindset. He says:

Shamim Chowdhury:

"It is obscure to believe India did not informed (sic)  Bangladesh about their Tipaimukh project, therefore there is a possibility that BNP-Jamaat alliance gave a secret green signal to go ahead with this illegal unilateral decision and India took a chance on head bowing BNP-Jamaat government."

Abid Bahar:

How can Shamim Chowdhury be so sure when he is just assuming and saying "there is a possibility", "it is obscure"? How does he know for sure BNP did the "head bowing." to the Indian project? It is the BNP government that raised the Farakka problem to the United Nations. Moreover, we have seen in the Farakka dam project that India does these projects through extreme secrecy. Farakka was completed during the liberation war. We only know about these from Indian sources

Shamim Chowdhury:

People of Bangladesh learned about Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Project on river Barak, the second largest river in the region in Manipur as well as river Tuivai after Awami League led alliance came into power. For the month and half we have seen numerous seminar symposium making attempt to create awareness among common people as well as government.

Abid Bahar:

I myself as the member of the International Farakka Committee knew about the dam project in 1994. Then we were asking for both the equitable distributions of the Ganges water as well as to stop Tipaimuk dam.  This Indian dam project with many others was identified in a map drawn by B.M. Abbas during the 70's. We have done many seminars on Indian dam projects during the 90's and later; including one in Dhaka in 2003 at the China -Bangladesh Friendship centre where local and foreign experts and BNP ministers were also present while we narrowly escaped AL's call for nationwide strikes. It is said that hese presures led India to sign a deal with Hasina.

 Unfortunately, Shamim Chowdhury came to know about the Tipaimukh project only recently when India is asking the AL government to approve the deal including to give transit through Bangladesh .

Indian policy here is fooling us and rule and here we have politicians and socalled experts like Shamim Chowdhury working as  the AL analyst.

I will not go any further to waste my time to point out Shamim Chowdhury's type of propaganda or spreading of ignorance as fact but will leave the readers to find out his base on "obscure" information and his understanding of  the Tipaimukhdam problem..

_________ ______


Shamim Chowdhury's article below:

BNP-Jamaat alliance was in power when Indian government finalized Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Project in Manipur in 2003. The North Eastern Electric Power Corporation (neepco), the government agency entrusted with the responsibility of building power projects in the northeast, has been handed the project. In November 2005, it floated a global tender for the project. In July 2006, the pre-bid qualification of the tender for the first phase wasd opened. Initially Indian government budgeted five thousand crore for this project.

The ball was finally rolling from Indian side in 2003 while the BNP-Jamaat alliance government in Bangladesh was sleeping. Irresponsible, incompetent Khaleda government did not utter a single word about Tipaimukh from 2001 to 2006 while in power. It is obscure to believe India did not informed Bangladesh about their Tipaimukh project, therefore there is a possibility that BNP-Jamaat alliance gave a secret green signal to go ahead with this illegal unilateral decision and India took a chance on head bowing BNP-Jamaat government.

When all the unthinkable was happening with Indian unilateral decision only few miles from Bangladesh soil, two successive government, Khaleda-Nizami and Iazuddin-Fokhruddin failed to raise the issue with India and failed to inform people of Bangladesh about its danger.

People of Bangladesh learned about Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Project on river Barak, the second largest river in the region in Manipur as well as river Tuivai after Awami League led alliance came into power. For the month and half we have seen numerous seminar symposium making attempt to create awareness among common people as well as government.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's government had already started bilateral talks with Indian counter part on Tipaimukh project. Government has rightly decided to form two-examination committee. Out of this two committee, one will comprise all party parliamentarians and the other will include technical experts. Both committees will visit proposed Tipaimukh Hydro Eclectic project as fact finding mission, from there report Bangladesh will make its case on how to place Bangladesh interest on Indian unilateral decision on Tipaimukh hydro electric project.

Interestingly, Khaleda-Nizami alliance government all off a sadden wakeup from their deep sleep and trying to  make some buzz ward for political reason against Tipaimukh project, the project that they gave secret green signal to Indian authority in 2003 selling the interest of Bangladesh for mere political gain.

The nation still vividly remembers, Khaleda Zia led her delegation to India on 26 to 28 May of 1992 to talk to her counter part P.V. Noroshima Rao then Indian Prime Minister. During this trip she forgot to raise the question about not getting due shares of water from Farraka Barrage. After coming back from the tour India , facing criticism from press then Prime Minister Khaleda Zia acknowledged that she forgot to raise the question with her Indian apart.

This is extremely sad for people of Bangladesh that Prime Minister Khaleda Zia can forget to raise a life and death question with Indian authority. Interestingly while Khaleda Zia forgot to raise the Farakka issue she signed a treaty with Indian government on June 26 1992 on Tinbigha corridor for 999 years lease. We know among many other problems Tinbigha is one of the thorns between India-Bangladesh relations, Khaleda getting a chance to be in power for three times could not resolve it.

We as a nation must find all facts about Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Multipurpose project before interest of Bangladesh is dashed out one more time. We must stand as a nation and not allow India to erect anything, which will be against the interest of Bangladesh . However, to do that we must first learn about all if and but about Tipaimukh project. I hope Khaleda Zia will disclose all facts about Tipaimukh projects and her government's actions and deeds with Indian government during her last stay in government 2001-2006. Nation need to know if there was any secret deal with Khaleda-Nizami, alliance government in 2003 before Indian government gave the final authorization on this project and formed The North Eastern Electric Power Corporation (neepco).Shamim Chowdhury's argument below to blame BNP for the Tipaimukh dam instead of India is at best politically motivated. He says:

 
"It is obscure to believe India did not informed (sic) Bangladesh about their Tipaimukh project, therefore there is a possibility that BNP-Jamaat alliance gave a secret green signal to go ahead with this illegal unilateral decision and India took a chance on head bowing BNP-Jamaat government."
 
How can he be sure when he is just assuming. He says "there is a possibility. " How does Shamin Chowdhury know it was a "head bowing BNP-Jamaat government."


From: Shamim Chowdhury <veirsmill@yahoo. com>
To: Diagnose@yahoogroup s.com
Sent: Sunday, June 7, 2009 10:14:48 PM
Subject: [Diagnose] Re: Fw: Tipaimukh Dam: Strong Protest coming through political forces

BNP-Jamaat alliance was in power when Indian government finalized Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Project in Manipur in 2003. The North Eastern Electric Power Corporation (neepco), the government agency entrusted with the responsibility of building power projects in the northeast, has been handed the project. In November 2005, it floated a global tender for the project. In July 2006, the pre-bid qualification of the tender for the first phase wasd opened. Initially Indian government budgeted five thousand crore for this project.

 

The ball was finally rolling from Indian side in 2003 while the BNP-Jamaat alliance government in Bangladesh was sleeping. Irresponsible, incompetent Khaleda government did not utter a single word about Tipaimukh from 2001 to 2006 while in power. It is obscure to believe India did not informed Bangladesh about their Tipaimukh project, therefore there is a possibility that BNP-Jamaat alliance gave a secret green signal to go ahead with this illegal unilateral decision and India took a chance on head bowing BNP-Jamaat government.

 

When all the unthinkable was happening with Indian unilateral decision only few miles from Bangladesh soil, two successive government, Khaleda-Nizami and Iazuddin-Fokhruddin failed to raise the issue with India and failed to inform people of Bangladesh about its danger.

People of Bangladesh learned about Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Project on river Barak, the second largest river in the region in Manipur as well as river Tuivai after Awami League led alliance came into power. For the month and half we have seen numerous seminar symposium making attempt to create awareness among common people as well as government.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's government had already started bilateral talks with Indian counter part on Tipaimukh project. Government has rightly decided to form two-examination committee. Out of this two committee, one will comprise all party parliamentarians and the other will include technical experts. Both committees will visit proposed Tipaimukh Hydro Eclectic project as fact finding mission, from there report Bangladesh will make its case on how to place Bangladesh interest on Indian unilateral decision on Tipaimukh hydro electric project.

Interestingly, Khaleda-Nizami alliance government all off a sadden wakeup from their deep sleep and trying to  make some buzz ward for political reason against Tipaimukh project, the project that they gave secret green signal to Indian authority in 2003 selling the interest of Bangladesh for mere political gain.

The nation still vividly remembers, Khaleda Zia led her delegation to India on 26 to 28 May of 1992 to talk to her counter part P.V. Noroshima Rao then Indian Prime Minister. During this trip she forgot to raise the question about not getting due shares of water from Farraka Barrage. After coming back from the tour India , facing criticism from press then Prime Minister Khaleda Zia acknowledged that she forgot to raise the question with her Indian apart.

This is extremely sad for people of Bangladesh that Prime Minister Khaleda Zia can forget to raise a life and death question with Indian authority. Interestingly while Khaleda Zia forgot to raise the Farakka issue she signed a treaty with Indian government on June 26 1992 on Tinbigha corridor for 999 years lease. We know among many other problems Tinbigha is one of the thorns between India-Bangladesh relations, Khaleda getting a chance to be in power for three times could not resolve it.

We as a nation must find all facts about Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Multipurpose project before interest of Bangladesh is dashed out one more time. We must stand as a nation and not allow India to erect anything, which will be against the interest of Bangladesh . However, to do that we must first learn about all if and but about Tipaimukh project. I hope Khaleda Zia will disclose all facts about Tipaimukh projects and her government's actions and deeds with Indian government during her last stay in government 2001-2006. Nation need to know if there was any secret deal with Khaleda-Nizami, alliance government in 2003 before Indian government gave the final authorization on this project and formed The North Eastern Electric Power Corporation (neepco).

Sincerely,

Shamim Chowdhury

Maryland, USA
--- In Diagnose@yahoogroup s.com, kazi Mohammad Ismail <kazimohammadismail@ ....> wrote:
>
> Dear all
>  
> Earlier wrote a message about Future Politics of Bangladesh will be concentred in tipaimukh dam. Now it is clear that social, political and civilian are coming strongly to protet contruction of tipaimukh dam.
>  
> yesterday the biggest islamic party in Bangladesh, Jammat organised a grand rally at Dhaka. One day before  some leftest parties (khalequzzaman among others) opined against tipaimukh dam. everyday there had seminars in this issue. See the links:
>  
> http://nation. ittefaq.com/ issues/2009/ 05/22/news0893. htm
>  
> http://jamaat- video.blogspot. com/
> http://www.youtube. com/bjiict
>  
> http://www.kanglaon line.com/ index.php? template= kshow&kid=691
> http://www.e- pao.net/epSubPag eExtractor. asp?src=news_ section.opinions .Opinion_ on_Building_ of_Tipaimukh_ Dam
> http://ne.icrindia. org/tag/tipaimuk h-dam/
> http://www.bdnews24 .com/details. php?id=77785&cid=2
> http://www.downtoea rth.org.in/ cover.asp? foldername= 20061015&filename=news&sec_id=9&sid=52
>  
> kazi mohammad ismail
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
>





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Re: [ALOCHONA] BDR Probe body misses 3rd deadline



Mustafiz,
'Then' at the end ' There will be none' to stand as worthy witness! And that is expected,right ? The plan and procedure to derail investigation of a conspiracy is done ahead of implementing conspiracy itself. If you were a planner would you not do the same! Thanks for reminding us about the case though. But again Allah has his own plan!
 
sami
 
 
 

From: Ezajur Rahman <ezajur.rahman@q8.com>
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, August 4, 2009 1:06:21 AM
Subject: [ALOCHONA] BDR Probe body misses 3rd deadline



UNNATURAL DEATHS OF BDR JAWANS
Probe body misses 3rd deadline

Courtesy New Age 4/8/09


Mustafizur Rahman

The investigation committee failed to make any headway in probing the deaths of BDR soldiers in custody even in the last two months and a half as such death toll soared to 35 until Sunday, officials said.
   The government has given the probe body one more month to complete the investigation into 'unnatural deaths' of Bangladesh Rifles soldiers in custody in the aftermath of the February 25-26 bloody rebellion at the BDR headquarters.
   The home ministry's committee, formed on May 14, had missed the deadline for the third time, said an official concerned.
    As the last deadline for submitting probe report expired on July 26, the government on July 29 gave it one-month time further to facilitate 'better investigation into the incidents.'
   'The committee asked for more time to properly investigate the incidents of unnatural deaths…We have allowed one month more so that the body can complete the task in a better manner,' home secretary Abdus Sobhan Sikder told New Age on Monday.
   The government initiated the executive inquiry into unnatural deaths of the paramilitary force members, who were taken into custody on suspicion of their involvement with the mutiny, in the wake of pressures from local and international rights groups.
   At least 35 BDR soldiers died in custody in Dhaka and elsewhere after the rebellion that killed 75 persons, including 57 army officers deputed to the border force.
   The police so far arrested more than 3,000 BDR soldiers at places across the country in connection with the worst rebellion in BDR that stunned the nation and put the two-month old government in troubles.
   Of the arrested, seven reportedly committed suicide, eight died of 'heart attack' and the other 20 deaths were caused by various diseases, according to the BDR authorities.
   'The deputy secretary-led committee is too weak to carry out such a sensitive task,' said a senior official at the home ministry.
   In late June, the committee was given a month's extension for completing the inquiry into the incidents after it missed the second deadline.
   The committee formed with representatives from BDR and police was supposed to submit report in 15 days to June 4.
   But it could not even start the work in the given time as deputy secretary (law) Zakir Hassain initially declined to head the four-member body.
   It was given 15 more days.
   The committee is supposed to identify the reasons behind the unnatural deaths of border guards and recommend steps to prevent such custodial deaths.

 







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