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Sunday, November 15, 2009

[ALOCHONA] Re: BSF killed 91 Bangladeshi s in 10 months,raise the issue duringPM'svisit to india odhiker demands

Amin Bhai

Do you think that the present going to HINDU STANI to talk for
Bangladesh ? Do they have the guts no my friend no ??? It is nothing
but they are bound to sign to any paper or chukti of which 100% for
the benifit of bestial HINDU STAAAN not Bangladesh.

It is not we( so called detractors in the language of BAAL activists)
but the stawart like Sayed Asraf ,doktor Modasser cleared the
confusion of the people that they have been throned by HINDU STAAAN.
So, how we could expect patriotism from subservient party in power.

THE END RESULT WILL BE BESTIAL ARMY,HEAVY ARMOURED VEHICLE WILL HAVE
ACCESS THRU OUR LAND TO FIGHT THE INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENT IN SEVEN
SISTERS N CHITTAGONG PORT WILL BE 90% BUSY FOR USE OF MUHIT'S HINDU
FRIENDS N TIPAI MUKHI WILL BE CONSTRUCETD N THEY WILL BE KILLING OUR
PEOPLE LIKE CATS N DOGS AS BDR HAS BEEN DESTROYED.
THE HUNDREDS OF UNRESOLVED ISSUES LIKE TIN BIGA/ TAAL PATTY/CHIT
MAHALS/BORDEDR DEMARCATION,THE HUGE TRADE IMBALANCE ETC ETC ETC ETC
WILL BE KEPT PENDING FOR AGES.

IN PURE BANGLA WE CAN SAY " BICARER BANI NIBHRITEY KADEY" SO THE
JUST ISSUES FVAOURING BANGLADESH WILL SIMMER N BE LEFT OUT.

Faruque AlamgIR

On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 12:26 AM, Md. Aminul Islam
<aminul_islam_raj@yahoo.com> wrote:
> Dear all,
> indian BSF killed 91 innocent Bangladeshis durinng the last 10months period
> says humantarian organisation Odhiker,
> http://www.amardeshbd.com/dailynews/detail_news_index.php?NewsID=246339&NewsType=bistarito&SectionID=home&GZP=CAIQFCDP
>


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[ALOCHONA] BSF killed 91 Bangladeshi s in 10 months,raise the issue duringPM'svisit to india odhiker demands



Dear all,
indian BSF killed 91 innocent Bangladeshis durinng the last 10months period says humantarian organisation Odhiker,



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[ALOCHONA] Property statement : BAL agenda



Property statement : BAL agenda

http://www.amardeshbd.com/dailynews/detail_news_index.php?NewsID=246337&NewsType=bistarito&SectionID=home&DKA=UFDQMSVK



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[ALOCHONA] Amnesty seeks fair trial for mutiny suspects



Amnesty seeks fair trial for mutiny suspects
 
London, Nov 12 (bdnews24.com)--The Bangladesh government must ensure justice for the victims of the Feb 2009 BDR mutiny by ensuring that all suspects receive a fair trial, Amnesty International has said in a report released in London on Wednesday.

It urged the government to ensure that those suspected of committing crimes are brought to justice under internationally recognised fair trial standards which include the right to family visits and access to lawyers.

The report "Looking for Justice: Mutineers on trial in Bangladesh" carries testimony from family members of the Bangladesh Rifles (BDR) accused of participating in the mutiny.

These reports suggest that scores, possibly hundreds of BDR personnel had suffered torture, for possible involvement in the mutiny. Nearly all were denied the opportunity to seek the assistance of a lawyer for weeks or months.

Amnesty International's Bangladesh researcher Abbas Faiz told bdnews24.com that this was an opportunity for the government of Bangladesh to show its commitment to the international human rights treaties that it has ratified by ensuring that those suspected of committing crimes are brought to justice under internationally recognised fair trial standards.

The government is obligated under these treaties and its domestic law to provide justice for the victims of the massacre. It also has an obligation to ensure that the human rights of those accused of the mutiny and killings are protected, Faiz added.

The report said "Amnesty International condemns the unlawful killings, hostage taking and other human rights abuses committed during the mutiny and calls for the perpetrators to be brought to justice".

"The government of Bangladesh has an opportunity to reinforce trust in the rule of law by ensuring the civilian courts, which will be trying the accused, deliver justice."

Abbas Faiz said, "The mutiny was brutal and led to the killing of civilians, and army officers who died in horrific circumstances. It's vital that the government of Bangladesh brings the perpetrators of these crimes to justice in a manner that is compatible with international law."

Following the mutiny, thousands of BDR personnel were confined to barracks and denied all contact with the outside world. Reports soon emerged as family members began to meet the detainees, alleging that scores, possibly hundreds of BDR personnel had suffered human rights violations, including torture, for possible involvement in the mutiny.

"Looking for justice" documents the methods of torture used including depriving suspects of sleep over a number of days, subjecting suspects to beatings and the use of pliers to crush testicles, inserting needles under suspect's nails and administering electric shocks.

"The reports of torture that Amnesty International has received are consistent with the previously documented torture and ill treatment of detainees in Bangladesh. It's not good enough for the authorities to deny that torture isn't taking place. There needs to be greater accountability on this issue." said Faiz.

Reports said at least 20 BDR personnel died in custody between March 9 and May 6 2009 alone. BDR sources claimed that four of them committed suicide, seven died of heart attacks and another nine died from diseases. By October 10 2009, the total number of BDR Personnel who have died in custody has risen to 48.

Faiz told bdnews24.com Amnesty International welcomes the Supreme Court's clarification that army court martial has no jurisdiction to try BDR personnel accused of mass killings and other criminal offences during the February 2009 mutiny.

The government must also reconsider its decision to use Speedy Trial Tribunal because the time limit these courts impose for the completion of the trial may lead to a miscarriage of justice, he observed.

He said amnesty may publish another report on BDR Special Court later.

Amnesty International urged the government to ensure that those suspected of committing crimes are brought to justice under internationally recognised fair trial standards which include the right to family visits and access to lawyers.



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[ALOCHONA] Asian Highway ESCAP route : Dhaka becomes party



Asian Highway ESCAP route : Dhaka becomes party


Bangladesh has become party to the ESCAP sponsored Asian Highway agreement. This was notified from the ESCAP headquarters in Bangkok. The ESCAP sponsored route kept Tamabil as the entry point and Benapole and Banglabandh as the exit points.()

Earlier Bangladesh was not a party to the ESCAP-sponsored Asian Highway agreement because of the controversy revolving round the route.

The ESCAP sponsored route would help meet the Indian demand for transit from Bangladesh and obliterate the historical Grand Trunk Road built during the Shershah regime to connect the East Asian countries from Gumdung of Cox''s Bazar.

Except the Awami League government no other governments accepted the ESCAP sponsored Asian Highway routes. The last four-party alliance government withheld the ratification of the ESCAP prepared agreement and pressed hard to include the Chittagong-Myanmar route as one of the international routes of the Asian Highway.

But on every occasion Bangladesh was told to become party to the ESCAP agreement by ratifying the same and thereafter put forward the amendment proposal. But such advice was not considered logical, because once the ESCAP sponsored route is accepted it would be hard to change.

The present regime, however, accepted the logic to become a party to the agreement and ratified the ESCAP sponsored Asian agreement in August last.

After becoming party to the agreement, officials concerned felt that an amendment proposal to the original agreement should be proposed to accept the Cox''s Bazar-Myanmar route as one of the international routes. But the file could not move as no directive so far was received from the political authorities. The communications ministry officials feared that the amendment proposal might be dropped as there was indication that India would oppose the amendment proposal.

The communications ministry officials also said that they did not receive any encouraging response from Myanmar regarding Bangladesh''s demand to include Cox''s Bazar-Myanmar route as one of the international routes of the Asian Highway.

The maritime boundary dispute with Yangon compounded the whole gamut of bi-lateral relations. Both Myanmar and India have taken a common stand against Bangladesh''s claim regarding maritime boundary.

Bangladesh has already approached the UN arbitration to find a logical solution to Bay boundary dispute with its two neighbours. Two Indian nationals would plead in favour of Yangon and Delhi, which would create a great problem for Bangladesh.

In such a situation concerned officials feel that Yangon might side with India and might not support Bangladesh demand for the amendment to the Asian Highway agreement.

A senior official of the communications ministry said that Myanmar did not respond to the RFP (request for proposal) sent to them for their concurrence to develop Gumdung-Bawalibazar road, which would be developed by Bangladesh at its own expense. The understanding of developing the Gumdung-Bawalibazar was reached during the last 4-party alliance government.

http://www.newstoday-bd.com/frontpage.asp?newsdate=#22829



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[ALOCHONA] Bande Mataram controversy from a Bengali angle



 

 

From its inception during the Independence Movement, Bande Mataram controversy was artificially canned by shrewd manipulators of communal politics posing as village idiots pitifully needing protection of their "religious sentiments." The recent re-visiting of the controversy was unnecessary and a publicity stunt by the Deoband Maulanas.

 

Some quick facts:

                           The text is completely secular

                            It was composed before the writing of the novel, Anandamath

                            The novel is mis-characterized as anti-Muslim, and a recent English translation confirms that there is no full-blown communal intent in the text

                            The song was written for Mother Bengal and adressed to her 'saat koti' children, half of whom were Muslims. In a sly bit of editing, 'saat koti' was changed to 'koti koti' thereby not only de-coupling it from Bengal, but also distorting the song's homage to Mother Bengal to a divine Durga. Bankim was long dead, and had little to do with this doctoring of his song's text.

 

Like the popular American sports news-broadcaster bellows on camera: "Let's go to the videotape!" I would like to roll the 'tape' of the time of production of the text of Bande Mataram.

 

At the timing of the composition of the song, it would be more than a couple of decades since the British had dropped all mercantile pretensions and gobbled up India as a part of its Empire. The not-too-distant memory of the bitter battles fought and lost in 1857 is still smarting in many a heart. Bengal, whose plentiful wealth had been systematically robbed to enrich the British Treasury for more than a hundred years now, is the seat of governance of this foreign imperial power over whole India.  Calcutta, a flourishing metropolis, was turning out an educated middle class whose intellectual and cultural accomplishments far surpassed the expectations of Mill-Macaulay & Co. who wanted nothing more than mediocre servicemen of the Empire by their Indian education policies.  Bankim was the first graduate of the newly established Calcutta University after trudging through an incredibly cumbersome and tough syllabus.

 

Exposure to English language and literature acted as an enabler in the rapid development of Bengali as a modern language.  There was a new awakening of love and pride for motherland and mother language, and nostalgia for the freedom that used to belong to the people. Bengal had traded with foreigners for centuries, and even endured Company rule since the fall of Sirajuddowla in 1757.  Heavy taxation and privatization of community land caused unprecedented famine that devastated the population. Even so, the effect of outright colonization took some time to sink in.  Bankim lamented in one of his essays: "Nowadays we hear a lot about Administrator and rules and regulations. In this land in the olden times you could call a bunyan tree an 'administrator' (shaasonkarta)". By which Bankim is stating unambiguously that we Bangalis were a free, self-ruled nation before the British came and took away our freedom.

 

Bankim's Bande Mataram was the most powerful, but many of his contemporary poets and composers, both Hindus and Muslims, wrote paeans for Mother Bangla (the word 'bangla' denoting both the land and the language).  Two generations after Bankim, my grandfather, the poet Golam Mostafa composed his song showing clear influence of both Bankim and Iqbal: "Shakol desher chaite shera moder Bangladesh, sujala sufala shasya-shyamola snigdho shitalabesh." Kazi Nazrul Islam, one of the greatest of Bengali poets, my nana's friend, wrote: "Namo namo namo Bangladesh momo, chiromonoramo, chiro madhur." Unfortunately the village idiots of Bangladesh today avoid singing Nazrul's song because it has 'namo namo namo' as invocation that is considered a bit too Hindu-like. Invocations are common parlance, and any speaker of that language should be free to use them regardless of the religious identity of that person.  Imagine Hindi/Urdu-speaking Hindus not singing A. R. Rahman's "Ma, tujhe salaam" because 'salaam' sounds Muslim-like!

 

[To be continued with more facts and findings .. .. .. ]

 

                 Farida Majid




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[mukto-mona] Poem 'Patriot' - (Dedicated to Memorial/Remembrance/Veteran’s Day to end all sufferings from military aggressions – Deepak Sarkar, www.kolki.com )



 

'In war time, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies' - The Right Honourable Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill, Nobel Laureate (Former British Admiral and Prime Minister who passionately participated in both World Wars)

 

Patriot

(Dedicated to Memorial/Remembrance/Veteran's Day to end all sufferings from military aggressions – Deepak Sarkar, www.kolki.com )

[No soldier must go beyond border unless in peace mission or rescuing world citizens from calamities! Kolki]

 

Though we come in the world as citizens -

Boundary beyond our control makes us limited!

Assigning a country with a border well guarded -

Making us patriot to protect land inherited!

 

Soon we learn about Fatherland or Motherland!

Heroes who fought in many heroic stands

Died like patriots guarding skies and barriers -

Often for freedom, sometimes for invasions as intruders!

 

We become adult inspired by 'Us' versus 'Them'

From sports to jobs to economy to military race!

Competition grows to beat neighbouring state -

Who can build the military to fight for Supremacy the best!

 

Defence industries survive on profits a war generates

Hurriedly spreads media rumours-gossips to build a case! 

Politicians helplessly rally around momentum for election ease

End up authorizing, supporting, 'Unjust Illegal War' aggressive! 

 

A true patriot can never send another beyond border 

While hiding in the White House or Parliament or Palace shelter

Knowing well war means killings among brothers and sisters

Join soldiers proudly to defend country from attackers!

 

Author: Deepak Sarkar, 844 Royal Oak Ave, Victoria, BC V8X 3T2, Canada; E-mail: Deepak.Sarkar@ieee.org; Poetry & Peace Web Site: www.kolki.com; Tel/Fax: 250-412-2897

 

[What 61 million Britons or 304 million Americans or 33 million Canadians or 21 million Australians or 4.1 million New Zealanders need to have a good life in their newly found homelands with unexploited enormous resources, unspoilt nature, and hospitable wise and caring natives? It is time to re-think what citizens gain from fighting wars that mainly embolden virtual private alliance (Vicar of Christ) at the cost of worldwide collateral damages and related sufferings! Kolki]

 

[It's a fight for Truth & justice against Lies & injustice which is the law of causation! This is a decisive moment in history and all humans must strive to fight for truth with their Heavenly power inside so that they can live heavenly life on Earth with peaceful possessions and truthful vocations! God (universal loving expression) bless our beloved world and all sentient being.J Kolki]

 

[When religions coexist, leaders communicate, media respect neutrality, laws not blinded by immunity, and citizens need take precedence over profitability - peace becomes reality, world lives in harmony. Kolki]

 

 

 



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

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

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

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

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




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[ALOCHONA] Where Will They Get the Troops?



Where Will They Get the Troops?

Hidden behind the gates of military bases across the U.S., troops facing AWOL and desertion charges regularly find themselves in the hands of a military that metes out informal, open-ended punishments by forcing them to wait months -- sometimes more than a year -- to face military justice. In the meantime, some of these soldiers are offered a free pass out of this legal limbo as long as they agree to deploy to Afghanistan or Iraq -- even if they have been diagnosed with severe post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

In August 2008 at TomDispatch.com, we reported on the deplorable conditions at the 82nd Replacement Barracks at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. There, more than 50 members of Echo Platoon of the 82nd Airborne Division's 82nd Replacement Detachment were being held while awaiting AWOL and desertion charges. Investigations launched since then -- in part in response to our article -- have revealed that the plight of members of Echo Platoon is not an isolated one. It is, in fact, disturbingly commonplace on other bases throughout the United States. And it is from these "holdover units," filled with disgruntled soldiers who have gone AWOL, many of whom are struggling with PTSD from previous deployments in war zones, that the military is hoping to help meet its manpower needs for Afghanistan.

Nightmare in Echo Platoon

On August 16th, determined to put an end to unbearable mental and psychological pain, Private Timothy Rich, while on 24-hour suicide watch, attempted to jump to his death from the roof of Echo Platoon's barracks (where he had been held since being arrested for going AWOL). Prior to his suicide attempt, Rich had been offered amnesty by the military in exchange for agreeing to deploy to Afghanistan or Iraq.

He had already been through a hellish year awaiting a discharge and treatment for mental health problems. "I want to leave here very bad," he explained. "For four months they have been telling me that I'll get out next week. I didn't see an end to it, so I figured I'd try and end it myself."

He fell three stories, bouncing off a tree, before hitting the ground and cracking his spine. The military gave him a back brace, psychotropic drugs, and put him on a renewed, 24-hour suicide watch.

While he has recently been discharged from the military, Rich was not atypical of the soldiers of Echo Platoon, some forced to wait a year or more in legal limbo -- in dilapidated buildings under the authority of abusive commanders -- for legal proceedings to begin, and many struggling with mental illness or PTSD from previous deployments. As Specialist Dustin Stevens told us last August: "[It's] horrible here. We are treated like animals. Some of us are going crazy, some are sick. There are people here who should be in mental hospitals. And the way I see it, I did nothing wrong."

Shortly after our story was published, Stevens told us that at least half a dozen soldiers in the platoon, including him, were suddenly given trial dates. Although he was likely to be found guilty and face punishment, Stevens claimed to be "relieved" to have an end in sight. Soon after, according to Echo Platoon informants, their barracks were condemned as a result of a military investigation of the site and, on October 19th, the platoon itself was disbanded.

Recently, due possibly to the attention his story drew to the mistreatment and indefinite detention soldiers were facing in Echo Platoon, Stevens was informed by the military he would be "chaptered out" -- in other words, given an administrative discharge from the Army -- and will not be forced to serve formal prison time.

James Branum, Stevens' civilian lawyer, as well as the legal adviser to the G.I. Rights Hotline of Oklahoma and co-chair of the Military Law Task Force (MLTF), summed developments up this way: "After repeated complaints and congressional inquiry, Echo Platoon was shut down. The whole place was shut down. Everyone was scattered to other units. If your old unit still exists, they are sending you to your old unit. We know that at least one of the NCOs [non-commissioned officers] in charge of Echo Platoon was fired. I think this is a positive thing."

Echoes of Echo

The troubling state of affairs in Echo Platoon may only have been the tip of the iceberg when it comes to Army holdover units. Evidence suggests that soldiers being held on other bases in the United States for AWOL and desertion face similar apathy or intentional neglect – and that they, too, are often left with the choice between living in legal limbo or agreeing to be sent to a war zone.

Scott Wildman, a former Army Specialist, went AWOL in 2007 when he was unable to receive adequate help for severe PTSD sustained after a 15-month deployment to Iraq. In February 2009, he finally turned himself in at Fort Lewis in Washington State, only to find himself lost in a labyrinthine bureaucracy. For the first four months, he was not allowed to leave a confined area and was forbidden even to walk around by himself.

Here's how he describes his experience: "I was flipping out. My wife had left me while I was over there. I hadn't seen my kids in a couple years. I came home and tried to get help. At Fort Lewis, they do not care about you. I had been diagnosed by civilian and military doctors with severe depression, PTSD, and severe anxiety. When you are at the unit, they make fun of you. They crack PTSD jokes. They all have it too, but they're too cool."

During the eight months he has been held at Fort Lewis, Wildman claims he has suffered verbal abuse and substandard mental healthcare. "The command treated me like dirt. My commander ignored me for the first couple months until my roommate jumped me. They'll make sure you're in the room and call you a 'bunch of PTSD pussies.'"

Four weeks ago, Wildman was informed that he would be court-martialed, but was not given a trial date. Feeling he had no other choice, he went AWOL again and remains so today.

"I'd been going to see some military counselors, but we weren't making progress on the real problem…. They give us classes on calm and peacefulness, but they are right near the shooting ranges. There's gunfire and explosions all around, people being screamed at all the time because it's infantry. It's not a good place for someone with [mental health] issues."

At one point, despite a confidentiality protocol that should have prevented it, Wildman's commanders went through his medical evaluations and found out that he had been involved in the accidental killing of two little girls in Iraq. They proceeded to needle him by threatening to write him up for war crimes.

Explaining why he once again went AWOL, Wildman says, "I didn't know what was going to happen next. I had to remove myself from that situation."

"Examples of how the military is treating soldiers, like the case of Wildman, are common," comments Kathleen Gilberd, co-chair of the MLTF. She also points out that the Army, stretched thin by years of multiple deployments to two war zones, has taken to downplaying potentially severe medical conditions to keep soldiers eligible for service overseas. It is commonplace, she reports, for formerly AWOL soldiers to be "bribed" with offers of having all charges, or potential charges, dropped, as long as they accept deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan.

"A lot of folks who are under-diagnosed or misdiagnosed are being deployed second and third times," she adds. "Barrier mechanisms that should prevent this from happening are being routinely ignored... If someone is on psychotropic medication or is diagnosed with a fresh psychiatric condition, there should be a 90-day observation period and delay, under DOD [Department of Defense] policy."

Remarkably, that sometimes-ignored 90-day hold period for military personnel on psychotropic medications does not always apply to soldiers who are diagnosed with traumatic brain injury (TBI) of a sort commonly caused by roadside bombs. According to an Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center analysis, reported in the Denver Post in August 2008, more than "43,000 service members -- two-thirds of them in the Army or Army Reserve -- were classified as nondeployable for medical reasons three months before they deployed" to Iraq. The process, if anything, only seems to be accelerating when it comes to Afghanistan.

Deploying the Undeployables

Not all soldiers go AWOL in order to save their minds and bodies. Some are trying to save their families. One soldier held in Bravo Platoon, a holdover unit of the 3rd Brigade, 4th Infantry Division at Fort Carson in Colorado Springs (who did not want his name made public) disclosed that, having returned from service in Iraq, he was told he would soon be redeployed there. Because his mother was ill, he refused and was threatened with a court martial.

"When I turned myself in, I submitted a binder with letters from my mom's doctors and state officials that made clear that I needed to be home to take care of my mother. At that time, they had me on restriction and lockdown 24/7 to keep me from leaving again. Later they punished me. I was assigned extra duty and received a rank reduction from E3 to a private. I was treated like crap."

He and the other soldiers in his holdover platoon were subjected to verbal abuse and made to do menial jobs. He claimed that he was threatened daily with being sent to the United States Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, the military's maximum security correctional facility -- and then was urged to agree to go back to Iraq instead. It made no difference that he had "no-go" orders from doctors at Fort Carson exempting him from overseas deployment.

His commander promised him a clean slate if he would redeploy to Iraq, insisting that the only alternative was a court-martial. Despite a regimen of humiliation, he stood his ground and was finally discharged for family hardship in September 2008. There were at least 11 other soldiers then in Bravo Platoon. Like their counterparts in Echo, most were told that their records would be wiped clean once they agreed to redeploy. The alternative was a non-judicial punishment, followed by a court-martial some months down the line.

As he tells it, Sergeant Heath Carter, originally based at Fort Polk, Louisiana, found himself torn between pressing family needs and an indifferent military command. On returning from the invasion of Iraq, he discovered his daughter living in what he believed to be an unsafe environment. Heath and his new wife started consulting attorneys in order to secure custody of the child. Precisely during this time, the military began changing Carter's duty station. He was moved from Fort Polk to Fort Huachuca, Arizona, then on to Fort Stewart, Georgia, reducing his chances of gaining custody.

Convinced that this was a crucial matter for his daughter, he requested compassionate reassignment to Fort Leavenworth, Missouri, about two hours away from her. His appeals to the military command, to his chaplain, even to his congressman failed. In May 2007, having run out of options, he went AWOL from Fort Stewart, heading home to fight for custody, which he won.

This January 25th, however, he was arrested at his home by Military Police, who flew him back to Fort Stewart where he has been awaiting charges for the past eight months. Being a sergeant, he is in a regular unit, not a holdover one. Initially, his commander assured him he would be sent home within a month and a half. Several months later, the same commander decided to court-martial him.

Carter feels frustrated. "If they had done that in the beginning, I would have been home by now. It's taken this long for them to decide. Now I have to wait for the court-martial. If we had known it would take this long, my family could have moved down here. Every time I ask when I'll have a trial, they say it's only going to be another two weeks. I get the feeling they're lying. They've messed with my pay. They're trying to push me to do something wrong."

His ordeal has forced Carter to reflect on America's wars. Once, he admits, he was proud of his mission in Iraq. Now, he sees things differently. "I don't think there is any reason for us to be there except for oil."

His wife, who witnessed her husband's callous treatment, says, "He's been there [Iraq], done that, and seen horrible, terrible things, so of course he doesn't want to go back."

While the Obama administration decides how many thousands of troops to send to Afghanistan, service men and women are already facing repeated deployments, oftentimes while having already been diagnosed with medical conditions that should render them unfit for deployment.

Nothing has changed for these beleaguered troops, except the venue of their maltreatment and the desperation with which the military is now struggling to make the necessary deployment numbers as it continues to fight two endless wars.

Dahr Jamail, an independent journalist, is the author of The Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan (Haymarket Books, 2009), andBeyond the Green Zone: Dispatches From an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq(Haymarket Books, 2007). Jamail reported from occupied Iraq for nine months, as well as from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Turkey over the last five years.

Sarah Lazare is the project coordinator for Courage to Resist, an organization that supports troops who refuse to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan. She is also a freelance writer.

 

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=15987




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[ALOCHONA] Fw: RE: Presidential pardon for Shahadab is abuse of power, say citizens





--- On Sun, 11/15/09, Zoglul Husain <zoglul@hotmail.co.uk> wrote:
This not the first time that the government has abused power, it has abused power from the beginning in legal proceedings, BDR events, army events, CHT, Oil-gas dealings, border events, reported push back of ULFA leaders, just to name some of the areas of consideration.
 
But the main thing about this government is that it has usurped power and is not elected. Their ally Ershad stated clearly that this government would never come to power without the help of the military. So did Abdul Jalil, their former secretary, who said that the government came to power through understanding with the army. What these two leaders' utterances fell short of is that through the conspiracy of the so-called one-eleven 2001 and the two-year military-controlled caretaker government, launched by India and supported by the US and their allies including the UN, and finally through rigging by ballot-staffing under military deployment in a so-called election on 29 December 2008, this government has actually usurped the power. This is not an elected government. The elections of 1991, 1996 and 2001, despite shortcomings, were acceptable to the people. But the election of 2008 cannot be accepted.
 
The abuse of power by this government is not unexpected. We need to thoroughly expose the government.
 
Do the people or the parliament know what agreements Hasina is going to sign in India? Would not that be abuse of power? Illegal government's agreements are definitely illegal and we cannot accept those as valid.
   
 

Date: Sat, 14 Nov 2009 23:40:42 -0800
From: bd_mailer@yahoo.com
Subject: Presidential pardon for Shahadab is abuse of power, say citizens
To: dhakamails@yahoogroups.com

Presidential pardon for Shahadab is abuse of power, say citizens
 
People of different professions and eminent citizens of the country termed the reported waiving of the sentence of 18 years' imprisonment of an absconder convicted in four corruption cases as naked abuse of power and contradiction of the government's commitment to curb corruption.
  
According to reliable reports President Zillur Rahman has waived the sentence of 18 years of imprisonment and financial penalties amounting to about Tk 1.6 crore against Shahadab Akbar, son of deputy leader of the Parliament Syeda Sajeda Chowdhury, who is also a presidium member of the Awami League and an intimate of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.
  
Shahadab was convicted and sentenced in four corruption cases under different Sections of the Anti-Corruption Commission Act in 2008 during the interim government's rule. He was sentenced when he was absconding and he is still a fugitive.
  
Citizens alleged that the President had 'abused' power and was guilty of 'political nepotism' as Sajeda is very close to him.Eminent citizens said it was a decision made purely on political considerations.They also said that the waiving of the sentence of a corrupt person has exposed the Awami League's hypocrisy in terms of its electoral pledge to curb corruption.
  
'We have heard of presidential clemency only in cases of capital punishment, but using presidential power to save a corrupt man from legal consequences is something unheard of,' M Mukhlesur Rahman, a psychologist of the Modern Psychiatric Hospital, told New Age on Friday. He said that corruption would not be reduced in the country if such things go on happening.
  
Mohsin Uddin, a businessman at Bashundhara Shopping Centre, said, 'It was nothing but abuse of the power of the Awami League. After ensuring that corruption cases against its own leaders are dropped, the government has now started waiving the sentences of convicts.'
  
'I do not have any information of a previous precedent of presidential pardon for a person convicted of corruption. If they (present and previous Presidents) did it, they abused their power and betrayed the people who are aspiring to free our society of corruption,' said Masudur Rahman, a teacher of a college in the city.
  
Akbar Ali Khan, former adviser to the caretaker government, and Professor Muzaffer Ahmad, member of the Board of Trustees of Transparency International Bangladesh, said that the President himself would not have taken such the decision of waiving Shahadab's sentence unless the Prime Minister had asked him to do so.
  
According to Article 48(3) of the Constitution the President in all his functions, save only that of appointing the Prime Minister and the Chief Justice, shall act in accordance with the advice of the Prime Minister.Article 49 of the Constitution says, 'The President shall have the power to grant pardons, reprieves and respites and to remit, suspend or commute any sentence passed by any court, tribunal or other authority.'
  
Both the eminent citizens of the country mentioned above observed that the process was undertaken very secretly and it would be wise to disclose the process to the people.'As everyone is equal before the law, what will the government do if other corrupt persons, who were convicted in similar cases, apply for waiver of sentences?' asked Muzaffer.
  
Many distinguished citizens said that a very bad precedent had been set, as it would increase corruption by people with powerful connections.The Awami League in its election manifesto said that elimination of corruption was one of its five priority issues. 'Multi-pronged measures to fight corruption will be put in place. Powerful people will have to submit wealth statements annually. Strict measures will be taken to eliminate bribery, extortion, rent seeking and corruption. Strong measures will be taken against those having unearned and black money, and against loan defaulters, tender manipulators and users of muscle power at every level of the state and society,' pledged the manifesto.
 
http://www.newagebd.com/2009/nov/14/front.html#6



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[mukto-mona] Philadelphia Announces the Tallest LEED Certified Building in US



Philadelphia Announces the Tallest LEED Certified Building in US

by Bridgette Meinhold, 11/09/09

comcast center, philadelphia, LEED, LEED certification, LEED-CS, energy efficiency,  eco-upgrade, tallest LEED certified building

Located in downtown Philadelphia right above the Suburban rail station, the Comcast Center has been awarded the title of "tallest LEED certified building in the US" after earning a Gold Certification for LEED-CS (Core & Shell). The obelisk-like 58 story tower is covered in high-performance glass and sunscreens, and features louvers in the atria to help optimize daylight inside the building. Many other green design features help this mixed-use skyscraper reduce energy consumption, making it a great example of environmentally responsible urban growth.

comcast center, philadelphia, LEED, LEED certification, LEED-CS, energy efficiency, eco-upgrade, tallest LEED certified building

The Comcast Center's high-performance windows block 60% of the heat from the sun and let in 70% of the site's available daylight. This reduces energy usage from lighting and cooling, which are both huge portions of a skyscraper's energy demands. Radiant heating, thermal extraction, and displacement ventilation also help the building be more efficient. High-efficiency water fixtures help the building use 40% less water than a typical office building, and shading in the plaza outside reduces the project's urban heat-island effect by 70%.

Last week we wrote about how Taipei 101, one of the world's tallest buildings, is set to begin a massive energy efficiency upgrade project that will help it become more environmentally responsible. Skyscrapers, while expensive and energy intensive to construct, are an effective way to increase density and also help city dwellers reduce their environmental impact. People who live in cities generally have a lower carbon footprint, and tall, dense buildings are a factor in that carbon reduction as well as more efficient public transportation. So, when skyscrapers make it a point to become even more environmentally responsible, everyone wins.

With the LEED-CS certification of the Comcast Center led by Robert A.M. Stern this last year, people in Philadelphia can be satisfied in knowing that such a large building is now using significantly less energy than it was before.




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[mukto-mona] Reducing Greenhouse Gases May Not Be Enough to Slow Climate Change



Reducing Greenhouse Gases May Not Be Enough to Slow Climate Change

Released: 11/10/2009 8:00 AM EST
Source: Georgia Institute of Technology
Newswise — Georgia Tech City and Regional Planning Professor Brian Stone publishes a paper in the December edition of Environmental Science and Technology that suggests policymakers need to address the influence of global deforestation and urbanization on climate change, in addition to greenhouse gas emissions.

According to Stone's paper, as the international community meets in Copenhagen in December to develop a new framework for responding to climate change, policymakers need to give serious consideration to broadening the range of management strategies beyond greenhouse gas reductions alone.

"Across the U.S. as a whole, approximately 50 percent of the warming that has occurred since 1950 is due to land use changes (usually in the form of clearing forest for crops or cities) rather than to the emission of greenhouse gases," said Stone. "Most large U.S. cities, including Atlanta, are warming at more than twice the rate of the planet as a whole – a rate that is mostly attributable to land use change. As a result, emissions reduction programs – like the cap and trade program under consideration by the U.S. Congress – may not sufficiently slow climate change in large cities where most people live and where land use change is the dominant driver of warming."

According to Stone's research, slowing the rate of forest loss around the world, and regenerating forests where lost, could significantly slow the pace of global warming.

"Treaty negotiators should formally recognize land use change as a key driver of warming," said Stone. "The role of land use in global warming is the most important climate-related story that has not been widely covered in the media."

Stone recommends slowing what he terms the "green loss effect" through the planting of millions of trees in urbanized areas and through the protection and regeneration of global forests outside of urbanized regions. Forested areas provide the combined benefits of directly cooling the atmosphere and of absorbing greenhouse gases, leading to additional cooling. Green architecture in cities, including green roofs and more highly reflective construction materials, would further contribute to a slowing of warming rates. Stone envisions local and state governments taking the lead in addressing the land use drivers of climate change, while the federal government takes the lead in implementing carbon reduction initiatives, like cap and trade programs.

"As we look to address the climate change issue from a land use perspective, there is a huge opportunity for local and state governments," said Stone. "Presently, local government capacity is largely unharnessed in climate management structures under consideration by the U.S. Congress. Yet local governments possess extensive powers to manage the land use activities in both the urban and rural areas."

The Environmental Science and Technology article is available at http://pubs.acs.org/journal/esthag.



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[mukto-mona] Behavior Modification Could Ease Concerns About Nanoparticles



Behavior Modification Could Ease Concerns About Nanoparticles

Released: 11/11/2009 11:00 AM EST
Embargo expired: 11/12/2009 8:00 AM EST
Source: American Chemical Society (ACS)

Newswise — In an advance that could help ease health and environmental concerns about the emerging nanotechnology industry, scientists are reporting development of technology for changing the behavior of nanoparticles in municipal sewage treatment plants — their main gateway into the environment. Their study will be published online November 12 in ACS' journal Environmental Science & Technology: Fate of Silica Nanoparticles in Simulated Primary Wastewater Treatment.

Helen Jarvie from the UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology and colleagues note that experts predict large increases in the production of nanoparticles — particles less than 1/1000th the width of a human hair — in the next decade. Manufacturers already use 2 million tons of nanoparticles each year in foods, cosmetics, medicines, and other consumer products. Studies have hinted that some nanoparticles could have adverse environmental health effects. Water discharged from sewage treatment plants is the major gateway for spread of nanoparticles to the aquatic environment. Scientists thus are focusing on how nanoparticles behave in wastewater and how that gateway might be closed off.

The study simulated (primary) sewage treatment to show that coating silica nanoparticles (similar to those used in ointments, toothpaste and household cleaners) with a detergent-like material made the nanoparticles clump together into the solid residue termed sewage sludge. Sludge often is stored in landfills or recycled as agricultural fertilizer. Uncoated nanoparticles, in contrast, stayed in the water and therefore remained in the effluent stream.

As the nanoparticles are simply too small to be visualized optically, the team used neutron scattering (at the UK's ISIS Facility) to view the sewage at the nano scale. The neutrons easily penetrate the sewage 'soup' and scatter strongly from the nanoparticles, allowing their aggregation behavior to be followed with time. The study demonstrates the potential for coating or otherwise changing the surface chemistry of nanoparticles to re-route their journey through sewage treatment plants, the scientists say.

"Fate of Silica Nanoparticles in Simulated Primary Wastewater Treatment"


Description

In an advance that could help ease health and environmental concerns about the emerging nanotechnology industry, scientists are reporting development of technology for changing the behavior of nanoparticles in municipal sewage treatment plants — their main gateway into the environment.





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