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Friday, August 20, 2010

[ALOCHONA] Chinese Special Forces cut off Siliguri corridor: 2012



Chinese Special Forces cut off Siliguri corridor: 2012
 
India has the potential to be to Asia, what America is to the world – a symbol of hope, liberty and freedom.
 
Closed societies like China or Pakistan do not fit the bill. Due to authoritarian regimes in Beijing and Islamabad, in times to come they will remain preoccupied with growing internal societal turmoil. Therefore, they will naturally tend to threaten democratic India, militarily and with the help of their irregular forces to divert attention from the brewing internal storm. Particularly true, as on one hand, the Indian democracy negates their authoritarian philosophy, and on the other, the Union is perceived as a soft target to be conquered or cause rupture.
 
But technology driven 21st century cannot be China's century in Asia as is being touted by its proxy Pakistan or the Chinese themselves. Simply as these are very brittle, regressive and perpetually paranoid societies that cannot sustain such enlarged influence as they get into an over reach. While the People's Liberation Army, the largest in the world consists of 3.5 million soldiers to project power; Beijing employs whopping twenty-one million to police the dissent internally!
 
Military threat from such dictatorial regimes will increase to free societies as the western democracies retreat from Asia. There already exists a severe trust deficit between China and the small countries in the region.
 
Possibly India is the only country in Asia that boasts of the potential to occupy the strategic high ground gradually being vacated by the retreating western forces, provided it develops offensive orientation at the political level. Unlike China, its soft power increasingly impacts on Asia. The young demographic profile will continue to propel Indian economy to greater heights at least till end of the year 2050. China's ageing profile shows trends that it will, first grow old then rich, unlike Japan, which grew rich then old. India if governed fairly well, will grow rich and then old like Japan.
 
India's multi-ethnic, multi-cultural and multi-religious society is the melting pot in Asia that benefits from rich diversity and open society. However, it is not as fortunate to be situated geographically in a safe haven like America, which is surrounded by nations with similar values.
 
THE HISTORICAL THREAT
 
Historically, the direction of demographic flow for centuries saw invasions from Central Asia to capture Delhi. Every fifty to hundred years, the subcontinent due to the genius of natives tends to generate wealth. From time immemorial this attracted hordes of invaders from Central Asia. Delhi Durbar was unable to defend itself as it neglected its military. Time and again, the rulers in Delhi were subjugated, as their incompetence in wielding the military was pathological.
 
 

map

Once again India is generating vast wealth. Once again it refuses to defend it!

Despite historical lessons of defeat at the hands of marauding armies, Delhi Durbar's incompetence and ignorance in equipping the excellent military machine inherited from the British is again on display. Today the danger of disruption to the Union is much higher than in the previous centuries. Worse, the lack of offensive orientation in political thinking degrades the ability of the military to defend the Union from the extraordinary threat developing on its borders.

The level of danger continues to creep north from "orange" to "red" on our land borders primarily on two counts. First, as a deception plan Pakistan on its birth, professed to be secular, while in reality the leaders wanted a purely Islamic state. As a result the minority Hindu population of more than thirteen percent in a population of 76 million in 1947 got reduced to barely two percent even as the population of Pakistan increased in 2004 to 156 million. After refusing to share power with the Bengalis in the East and breaking up their country, the Pakistani Sunnis not satisfied with this calibrated purge, now want to eliminate the Shias and expel the Ahmadiyas from Islam.

In its devious journey towards fundamentalist Islam, it also wants to lock the women folk inside their homes under Taliban diktat, thus negating fifty percent of its population. This dangerous religious philosophy based on extreme form of imported Wahabi Islam is intolerant of worldview of others, wields nuclear weapons, nurtures a Talibanised army that runs a large irregular guerrilla force solely motivated by Islamic fundamentalism, and partners China. The ideology of Pakistan is in direct confrontation with the values cherished by India.

Worse, Pakistan's financial bankruptcy exacerbates the internal instability. This in turn provides cheap human resource, to be used as cannon fodder, by the Jihad Factory run by the ISI. One feeds on the other. Islamic fundamentalism occupies Pakistan's political space that in turn negates Indian influence, which wisely extended up to Afghanistan during British rule. It was the British Indian Army that kept a check on the repeat of a history of invasions from Central Asia.

Ironically, instead of consolidating and integrating Kashmir, pacifist New Delhi is permitting the birth of a similar pocket of influence with extreme philosophy in the valley that will come back to haunt India in the near future.

THE THREAT FROM NORTH

Second, to add to the woes of New Delhi, a bigger threat in addition to the existing one is posed by communist China. While too much 'god' motivates Pakistan, China pretends to be a 'godless' state. Unlike nations that boast of an army, in Pakistan the army owns the state. On the other hand, in China the People's Liberation Army is loyal to the Chinese Communist Party and not the state. Dissent in both is a 'no-no' in varying degrees. Both, Pakistan and China, unlike India are paranoid about open societies. Thus, Beijing and Islamabad share commonality of purpose and together direct their energies to upstage India in international forums, on the borders and by fomenting internal dissent. In a unique 'jointmanship,' Islamabad clandestinely transfers sensitive defence technology it receives from the west to Beijing on 'barter basis' as there is ban on transfer to China!

The concurrent rise of China and India pits them against each other, as they compete for the same resources, but one with an authoritarian regime that is scared of Dalai Lama and Google, and the other with a free society that revels in religion, Dalai Lama and Google.

Threat from China was evident from its maps in 1946. Mao with the help of these maps described Tibet as the palm of a hand with its five fingers – Ladakh, Sikkim, Nepal, Bhutan and NEFA as Chinese territories that needed to be liberated. Tibet was liberated by force while New Delhi slept. Nepal found India's refusal to defend Tibet as a sign of an unreliable ally and thought it prudent to open communications with Beijing.

Today India stands encircled by China.

THE THREAT PERCEPTION

To be supreme in Asia, and impelled by the necessity to divert the attention from the growing internal turmoil, Beijing is likely to design a limited but visible military victory in a joint strategy with Islamabad. Pakistan under severe threat of fragmentation would be more than a willing ally.

With Afghanistan being abandoned by the West, beginning July 2011, Islamabad will craft a strategy to take over Kabul with the help of Islamic fundamentalist groups. The irony is that in the aftermath of the exit of the West; Taliban will occupy the Parliament being built by India in Kabul and connive disruption from there of the Indian Union. These groups will not target the West immediately since the latter retains the ability to re-intervene once inaction is deemed as 'suicidal'. The Taliban will initially concentrate on unraveling a soft target like India in concert with Beijing -Islamabad -Kabul or Chinese Communists- Pakistan Army- Irregular Forces axis.

The physical threat to India will materialize in 2012, after the exit of the American forces from Afghanistan. Earlier India had to contend with a single threat from its West/Central Asia. Now another threat posed from the North under a joint strategy between China and Pakistan has emerged.

The developing scenario suggests that henceforth GHQ Rawalpindi will further orchestrate provocation against India to regain lost ground in J&K by way of rallies in PoK or Lahore and through military machinations on our borders. It will provide fillip to terrorist attacks, export of fake currency, inserting terrorists in India through Nepal, activation of sleeper cells, and raising controversy on non-issues like water. Beijing while talking ambiguously up to 2012 buildup will continue to support the Maoists in Nepal and step up training and funding to Maoist in India. The intensity of Cyber War will meanwhile increase.

In nutshell, the objective will be to keep India off balance.

THE STRATEGY

By 2012, to unravel India, Beijing is likely to para-drop a division of its Special Forces inside the Siliguri Corridor to sever the Northeast. There will be simultaneous attacks in other parts of the border and linkup with the Special Forces holding the Siliguri Corridor will be effected. All these will take place under the nuclear overhang. In concert Islamabad will activate the second front to unhook Kashmir by making offensive moves across the IB in the plains and the desert to divide Indian reaction capability. Meanwhile the fifth columnists supporting these external forces will unleash mayhem inside.

Two key question for New Delhi:

  1. Will India go nuclear if its territorial integrity is threatened? France's stated policy is that it will use the nuclear option, if Germany is attacked. Germany is not likely to face a nuclear adversary, yet France will use nuclear option if it is attacked. India faces threat from two nuclear powers in its vicinity. Will India shift its stated position of second strike to first strike, if the territorial integrity of the Union is under threat?
  2. Will New Delhi have the gumption to order the Navy to retaliate and stop the flow of cargo in the Indian Ocean being freighted to China? Or will it order the Air Force to conduct offensive and decisive strategic strikes inside Tibet?

New Delhi requires to develop offensive orientation in its thinking for the answers to be in affirmative. India has produced more than its share of great thinkers in civil affairs. However, being a pacifist society, it does not boast of a single military thinker of repute. Therefore, we should not hesitate to import knowledge from the best military thinkers to create an assertive society, just in the same way, as we need to import the best defence technologies to set up the most modern defence industry hub that ensures expansion of democratic space in Asia.

The ideal opportunity for China to dismember India is between 2011 and 2014 on multiple counts. First, to divert attention from the growing dissent within. Second, beyond this period, Pakistan as a fragmented nation may not exist to support the Chinese. Third, the change of generation by 2015 will witness an assertive India. Fourth, the new Indian assertiveness will ensure rapid modernization of the Armed Forces with robust military capabilities. Last but not the least, given the fact it does not pose threat to any country, India will create strong international alliances. It is in a unique position and gets along well with the West, as well as countries like Russia and others. In fact, the international opinion will decisively tilt in favour of India if it shrewdly deals the powerful geo-economic card held in the arsenal.

The answer to the outlined nightmare stares India on its face.India simply needs to take out the cost-benefit ratio from the game plan of the opponent by rapidly acquiring the requisite military muscle that outguns and outclasses the adversary. War is akin to business. If there is no cost-benefit ratio, it cannot be imposed! Such assertive actions will also naturally propel India in Asia as the most influential player and arrest the slide of retreating democracies.

Bharat Verma, Editor Indian Defence Review and author of the book Fault Lines and Indian Armed Forces.

http://www.indiandefencereview.com/2010/07/chinese-special-forces-cut-off-siliguri-corridor-2012.html



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[ALOCHONA] Modalities for regional connectivity, transit and transhipment



Modalities for regional connectivity, transit and transhipment
 
Manzur Ahmed
 
The Bangladesh-India summit held in January, 2010 has broken through the cold spell of our bilateral relations and generated a great momentum and huge opportunity to strengthen and promote our trade and economic relations for mutual benefit.
 
In a rapidly modernising and globalising world, connectivity is the most imperative requirement and key to expediting speedy, efficient and sustainable regional and global trade. Bangladesh enjoys a strategic geographical location and can be the bridge between South Asia and South East Asia. It can be the regional hub of transportation for eastern India, northeast India, Nepal, Bhutan and ASEAN countries, if it can capitalize its location advantages.
 
But, it appears that a section of the society and some policy makers are bent upon confusing and detracting the newly generated dynamics of Bangladesh-India co-operations especially in trade and economic relations between the two countries by only linking and lobbying for the passage of goods between two places in India through the territory of Bangladesh with the current agenda on regional connectivity, Transit and Transhipment.
 
It is also reported in the newspapers that assistance has been sought from Asian Development Bank in carrying out a study on the economic benefits of providing transit facility to India, presumably, to emphasize widely publicized financial allurements to lobby and promote the passage of goods between two places in India through the territory of Bangladesh.
 
The doctrine of third country transit, put forward by Honorable Indian Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh in his opening address given at the 13th SAARC Summit "that all South Asian countries would provide each other, reciprocally, transit facilities to third countries", is the cardinal principle and the best interpretation of our international and regional commitments and obligations relating to trade related Transit and Transhipment in the region and beyond.
 
Extracts: 'We need to recharge and regenerate the arteries of transport and communication that bind us together and in turn link our region to the rest of Asia to reclaim the property that is undoubtedly our due.'… 'In pursuit of this vision, let us agree, at this summit, that all South Asian countries would provide each other, reciprocally, transit facilities to third countries, not only connecting one another, but also connecting to the larger Asian neighborhood, in the Gulf, Central Asia and the South-East Asia."
 
It is essential for Bangladesh to first examine the governing principles of "Transit and Transhipment in International Trade" as mandated under ARTICLE V of GATT 1994 and take into account the obligations, options and flexibilities available for Bangladesh before accepting or adopting modalities on regional connectivity, transit and transhipment.
 
Governing principles of Transit and Transhipment in International Trade: Paragraphs 1 and 2 of Article V of GATT 1994: GATT Article V on Transit and Transshipment in International Trade is an integral part of WTO framework Compliance of Transit and Transshipment provisions of GATT Article V is obligatory for both Bangladesh and India subject to flexibilities accorded to LDCs.
 
Article V (1) Goods (including baggage), and also vessels and other means of transport, shall be deemed to be in transit across the territory of a contracting party when the passage across such territory, with or without trans-shipment, warehousing, breaking bulk, or change in the mode of transport, is only a portion of a complete journey beginning and terminating beyond the frontier of the contracting party across whose territory the traffic passes. Traffic of this nature is termed in this article traffic in transit.
 
(2) There shall be freedom of transit through the territory of each contracting party, via the routes most convenient for international transit, for traffic in transit to or from the territory of other contracting parties. No distinction shall be made which is based on the flag of vessels, the place of origin, departure, entry, exit or destination, or on any circumstances relating to the ownership of goods, of vessels or of other means of transport."
 
Transit and Transhipment in Bangladesh: Bangladesh is pursuing outmoded, asymmetric, and unilateral Transit and Transhipment policies, much to the detriment of Bangladesh's interest, deviating from ARTICLE V OF GATT 1994 and Article - 8 of SAFTA Agreement: relating to "g) transit facilities for efficient intra-SAARC trade, especially for the land-locked Contracting States".
 
Bangladesh agreed to provide passage (Transit) of goods between two places in India through the territory of Bangladesh under Article VIII of Bangladesh-India Trade Agreement, 1986 "Article VIII The two Governments agree to make mutually beneficial arrangements for the use of their waterways, roadways and railways for commerce between the two countries for passage of goods between two places in one country through the territory of the other."
 
Bangladesh-India Trade Agreement was signed in 1986 by C. T. A. Siddiki and Pronob Mukharjee. Unless renewed it expires in three years. It was renewed on 21.03.06 in New-Delhi by Mr. Kamal Nath and Mr. M. Saifur Rahman and renewed again on February 9, 2010 signed during the day-long visit of Indian External Affairs Minister Pronob Mukherjee.
 
Nepal-India-Bangladesh Transit: Nepal and Bangladesh signed a Trade and Payments Agreement and a Transit Agreement in 1976. The following six places have been approved for the movement of traffic-in-transit through the ports and other territory by all means of transport: The seaports of Khulna-Chalna and Chittagong The following border points on the Bangladeshi-Indian border - Biral, Banglabandh, Chilhati, and Benapole.
 
Border Points: Benapole is a road crossing point near Calcutta and its Indian side border point is Petrapole. Chilhati is a broad gauge rail terminal which used to be connected with the Indian side of border rail station Haldibari before 1971. Currently, Nepal is using the border crossing points of Biral and Banglabandh, which will be described in the following paragraphs.
 
Transit Routes: Biral which is a meter gauge rail point at Bangladesh border was brought under regular use for the movement of Nepal's trade traffic to and through Bangladesh after the Government of India allowed the rail connection from its border station Radhikapur to Biral.
 
India has allowed use of the road connecting its Phulbari border point with Bangladesh. The Kakarvita (Nepal Border)-Panitanki (India Border with Nepal)-Phulbari (India Border with Bangladesh) route provides a shortest access of only 44 km to Banglabandh border for Nepal's trade with and through Bangladesh. As the short route was very congested, a new route of about 55-km passing through Bagdogra and Ghose Pukur by-pass is made open for truck transportation all days of the week.
 
Compared to Radhikapur-Biral rail route connecting the India-Nepal border transit points and requiring to follow all the transit procedures as laid down in the Treaty of Transit, the Phulbari-Banglabandh route was allowed only for one border crossing point of Kakarvita- Panitanki road with the application of different operational modalities.
 
Transit procedures in India: Transit procedures as laid down in the Treaty of Transit signed between Nepal and India for the movements of third country trade traffic apply to Nepal's trade with and transit traffic through Bangladesh. The Calcutta Customs has authorized the border customs offices of Radhikapur and Phulbari to process CTD and other documents for the clearance of Nepal's transit traffic. Nepalese exporters and importers are not required to go to the Calcutta Customs for processing of documents.
 
With the stationing of Nepal Transit and Warehousing Co Ltd. (NTWCL) offices at both the transit points of Radhikapur and Kakarvita, an undertaking letter in lieu of duty insurance to the Indian customs is easily obtainable on the spot for trading with and through Bangladesh. For goods moving through the Phulbari- Banglabandh route, the private sector importers and exporters also obtain NTWCL's undertaking letter and clearing services as per the operational modality applicable to this route.
 
From 1984 the branch office of NICL at Raigunj City, which is close to Radhikapur border also started issuing duty insurance policy coverage for the goods passing through the rail route of Radhikapur-Biral. The duty insurance is issued by NICL after the Radhikapur land border customs examines CTD indicating the customs valuation for duty insurance.
 
NTWCL levies a clearing fee of 0.20% of the FOB value on Export and 0.30% of the CIF value on import trade traffic moving through the Phulbari-Banglabandh route. The charges for issuing the letter of undertaking to the Indian Customs are 0.07% for cement and fertilizer, and 0.15% for other products on FOB exports and CIF imports.
 
Transit Procedures in Bangladesh: The bilateral Transit Agreement between Nepal and Bangladesh has prescribed documentation procedures and formatted a document called 'Transit Declaring Invoice' (TDI) separately for imports and exports via Bangladesh routes. The procedures elaborated by the Standing Order No 6 dated 27 June 1979 of the Customs House of Chittagong constitute import and export procedures in Bangladesh.
 
For the movement of goods to and through Bangladesh in Radhikapur-Biral rail route or Phulbari-Banglabandh road route, documentation requirements of the Indian Customs as well as of the Bangladesh Customs relating to processing of both the CTD and TDI have to be met by the Nepalese traders.
 
Nepal-India-Bangladesh Customs Transit Procedure: Goods when exported and imported to and from the third country by sea cargo, the consignment have to be passed through India or and Bangladesh for transit route. The Calcutta port of India is about 1150 Km from Nepalese border. Registered clearing agents could assist in speedy clearance of goods through the port of Calcutta.
 
All the traffic in Transit via Calcutta Port could pass only through the following routes: Galgalia -Jogbani -Bhimnagar -Jaynagar -Raxaul -Nautanawa -Barhni -Nepalgunj Road -Gauri -Phanta -Banbasa -Tikonia -Jarwa -Bhitamore (Sitamarhi) -Sukhia Pokhari
 
Bangladesh-India 'Inland water transit protocol: The inland water transit protocol was first signed in 1972. The protocol provides to make mutually beneficial arrangements for the use of their waterways for commerce maintaining the river routes within its territory in a navigable condition. It was renewed in 1999, 2001, 2007 before the latest renewal on February 9, 2010 signed during the day-long visit of Indian External Affairs Minister Pronob Mukherjee.
 
The countries now allow each other ten points as ports of call to ferry their goods. The ports are Ashuganj, Narayanganj, Mongla, Khulna and Sirajganj for India and Kolkata, Haldia, Karimganj Silghat and Pandu for Bangladesh. In keeping with the protocol, both the countries allow transit for cargo through eight routes, counting both ways.
 
l The Kolkata-Pandu route stretches via Haldia, Raimangal, Chalna, Khulna, Mongla, Kaukhali, Barisal, Hizla, Chandpur, Narayanganj, Aricha, Sirajganj, Bahadurabad, Chilmari and Dhubri.
 
l The Kolkata-Karimganj route stretches via Haldia, Raimangal, Mongla, Kaukhali, Barisal, Hizla, Chandpur, Narayanganj, Bhairab Bazar, Ajmiriganj, Markuli, Sherpur, Fenchuganj and Zakiganj.
 
l Two of the routes are between Rajshahi and Dhulian via Godagari, both ways.
 
l The Karimganj-Pandu route stretches via Zakiganj, Fenchuganj, Sherpur, Markuli, Ajmiriganj, Bhairab Bazar, Narayanganj, Chandpur, Aricha, Sirajganj, Bahadurabad, Chilmari and Dhubri.
 
ODA Consignment: India has sought 'special permission' from Bangladesh under "Protocol on Inland Water Transit and Trade" between Bangladesh and India (PIWTT) for transportation of the some 'over-dimensional consignments' (about 290 tonnes) of power generation equipments from Kolkata port to Pallatana in Tripura state through Bangladesh for setting up a power plant.
 
The transport of goods from Ashuganj by road to Akhaura is not covered by the PIWTT. Transportation of goods from one part of India to another part through Bangladesh is beyond the scope and mandate of the PIWTT. The PIWTT does not allow multi-modal transport facilities as it is only meant for transport of goods for transit through waterways and not through the land route.
 
Bhutan-Bangladesh Transit: Bhutanese exporters have started using the new trade route via Dawki-Tamabil land custom station route via India's north-eastern region to export to Bangladesh from January 25, 2010. Until recently Bhutanese exporters used the route through Siliguri in West Bengal to transport goods to Bangladesh. The new route is expected to reduce distance (Bhutan- Changrabandha to Dhaka is 600+450 km Bhutan- Dawki-Tamabil is 280+54 km) to only 334 Kilometers from around 1050 km, save time and cut transportation cost. New Delhi and Dhaka recently agreed to upgrade facilities in the Dawki-Tamabil Land Custom Station.
 
ADB study: Without emphasising widely publicised financial allurements to promote the passage of goods between two places in India through the territory of Bangladesh the TOR of the proposed study by the Asian Development Bank have be specified to cover third country transit and transshipment through land, sea and air routes, infrastructure, capacity & management development and formulation of appropriate regional "Transit & Transshipment" protocol.
 
Movement of vehicles for mutual or and international trade from Bangladesh, Bhutan, India and Nepal have to be allowed for transit to designated port of export through specified routes or enter Zero Point for transshipment as the case may be.
 
Appropriate protocol with regulations on fees and charges with harmonized and simplified customs procedures have to be operationalized to expedite mutual trade and third country transit facilitating movement of goods and vehicles to and from Bangladesh through the territories of India-Bangladesh-Nepal- Bhutan and beyond.
 
Myanmar India gas pipeline: In order to ensure long term energy security Bangladesh must outsource energy and Myanmar, because of its proximity, is the ideal source of most convenient, safe and continued supply of electricity, oil and gas. Bangladesh therefore should agree, as the first beneficiary at virtually no cost, to allow Myanmar India gas pipeline through its territory to avail the opportunity of obtaining supply of gas at highly cost effective price from Myanmar to meet its growing energy needs in addition to inherent revenue and other associated benefits. Bangladesh-India should also undertake joint ventures to harness energy resources in Myanmar for mutual benefit.
 
(The writer is Chairman, Fair Trade Advocacy Centre and chairman: FBCCI Standing Committee on WTO and RTAs. He can be reached at email: mahmed019@hotmail.com, a.manzur@yahoo.com)
 
 
 
 


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[ALOCHONA] Growing Role Of Defence Forces In Governance: An Invitation For Emergency?



Growing Role Of Defence Forces In Governance: An Invitation For Emergency?

By Maj Gen S.G.Vombatkere (Retd)

At present, perhaps about one-third of available army troops are deployed in counter-insurgency (CI) operations in Kashmir and the north-eastern states. There is no question that government is empowered to call in the army for CI the role, but this is taking its toll of both training and preparedness for its primary role of countering external threat and maintaining India's territorial integrity and sovereignty. While the army can be called to perform its secondary role of aid to civil power (meaning bureaucratic-cum-police effort under the Ministry of Home Affairs), the state police cannot be deployed in dealing with external threat. However, some of the Central Police Organizations (CPOs, like BSF and ITBP) have a limited role on the borders, to relieve the army for training and preparedness for its primary role. It is noteworthy that the army has been deployed in aid to civil power not only in the CI role, but also for natural and man-made calamities and even to rescue children who have fallen into uncapped bore-wells.

This of course brings into question the basic competence of state and central governments which already have at their disposal, considerable bureaucratic human resource (including state police and CPOs) and complete control over the funds necessary to tackle most emergencies. It is natural to call in trained and disciplined army power in extremely calamitous situations, but the army is being requisitioned at the drop of a hat. Indeed, it has been estimated that since 1947, the army has been deployed – from platoon to division level strengths – somewhere or the other within the country for various tasks once in four dayson an average. It would be unfair to blame the bureaucracy entirely for glaring failures of governance, because the political executive must bear a substantial portion of responsibility (including invoking the Armed Forces Special Powers Act for army deployment) for consistent political lapses, blundering and chicanery.

While the decision to deploy the army in countering the "greatest threat to internal security" in Chhattisgarh finally rests with the Cabinet advised by the CCPA and the NSA, it is likely to be influenced largely by MHA with MoD assuming a subordinate role. It will bear repetition that the army by itself has no desire or stake in getting itself deployed in its secondary role of aid to civil power, and that such deployment is consistent with its remaining under civilian control as it should (unlike in neighbouring Pakistan). However, army's growing role through increased deployment in Chhattisgarh and elsewhere may send two messages into the ether of national and international relations.

In the national scene, the message is that governments are utterly incompetent in handling self-created emergencies (which is as close to the truth as it can get), and (falsely) that the army is asking to be involved in internal security. This is actually dangerous for internal security, as it will act as incentive to militant and terrorist elements within India, whose aim is to compel the State to commit as much of its forces and resources as possible to cause economic and political (democratic) paralysis. Indeed, India already appears to be in a state of undeclared internal emergency, with state police and CPOs deployed against various militant groups in 225 districts of 23 states.

In the international arena, the message is that the army's commitment in internal security is growing (which is true) and that the armed forces are relatively unprepared to counter external threat (which is false). This may well explain reports of China's very recent deployment of military forces in Tibet in a southward leaning stance, which should cause deep concern to MoD.

The success of US President Obama's impending India visit to strengthen India-US strategic ties may be stymied by possible outbreak of border hostilities initiated by China to divert attention from its own domestic instabilities and rebellions. On the flip side, hostilities could remedy the UPA government's precarious condition by declaration of emergency to silence the democratic dissent of India's "million rebellions" against corporate initiatives. To make a further – and not entirely illogical – guess, incipient economic collapse brought about by currently trotting inflation breaking into a gallop due to war, may create favourable conditions for implementing the agenda of the Washington Consensus [Ref 1]. World renowned economist Jeffrey Sachs has been spotted recently in India.

Reference:

1. Naomi Klein; "The Shock Doctrine"; Penguin Books, 2007.

Maj Gen S.G.Vombatkere retired as the Additional Director General Discipline & Vigilance in Army HQ, New Delhi, in 1996 after 35 years in the Indian Army with combat, staff and technical experience. He holds a PhD degree in Structural Dynamics from I.I.T., Madras, and the President of India awarded him Visishta Seva Medal in 1993 for distinguished service rendered in Ladakh. Since retirement, he is engaged in voluntary work with Mysore Grahakara Parishat, and is a member of National Alliance of People's Movements (NAPM) and People's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL). He coordinates and lectures a Course on Science, Technology and Sustainable Development for undergraduate students of University of Iowa, USA, and two universities of Canada, who spend a semester at Mysore as part of their Studies Abroad in South India. He is Adjunct Associate Professor of the University of Iowa, USA. E-mail:sg9kere@live.com
 


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[ALOCHONA] Eid Bazar Dokhol



Eid Bazar Dokhol
 
 


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[ALOCHONA] Aug 21 attack : Babar,Tarek ?



Aug 21 attack : Babar,Tarek ?
 
 


 


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[ALOCHONA] Surgeons conduct successful kidney transplantation at DMCH




 
A kidney transplantation operation was conducted successfully at Dhaka Medical College Hospital, one of the government general hospitals in the country for the first time.
   'The surgery was conducted on July 26 and both the kidney recipient and donor survived well,' DMCH director Brigadier Shahidul Haque Mallik said at a press briefing at his office on Thursday.
   The operation was conducted by a team of expert surgeons of the urology department of DMCH and Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University under the supervision of nephrology department of the DMCH.
   The anesthesiology Department of BSMMU and DMCH cooperated in conducting the operation.
   The kidney receiver, Jubair Hossain, 23, and his brother kidney donor, Sohel Abedin, 21, had already been released from the hospital.
   Mallik said, 'We have sufficient infrastructure for kidney transplantation for the last four to five years at the hospital. But it could not be done due to lack of taking initiatives.'
   The poor patients would be benefited from this kind of treatment facilities as the transplantation costs only about Tk 30,000. Similar surgeries cost around Tk seven lakh at any private sector hospital in the
   country.
   Nizam Uddin Chowdhury, head of nephrology department of DMCH, said, 'To provide specialised treatment to the patients we have to
   face different types of obstacles.
   But we hope to conduct more kidney transplantation operations at our hospital.'
   He also said that the patients who need kidney dialysis can take the treatment at DMCH which costs only Tk 200.
   UH Sahara Khatun, head of anesthesiology department of DMCH, said the monitoring of the patient is very important, specially after the operation.
   She said a team of expert anaesthetists is a must to handle such critical patients at the intensive care unit.
   They said anesthesiology department of DMCH needs more instruments and manpower to provide better treatment to the patients.
   Mahbubul Alam, professor of Urology department of DMCH, among others, was present at the press briefing.
 


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[ALOCHONA] Prof Asif Nazrul's column



Prof Asif Nazrul's column
 
 


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[ALOCHONA] Dangerous slide in law and order



Dangerous slide in law and order

 
The country's law and order situation has turned frightening last week though the government declared arrangement of sufficient security measures at the advent of Ramzan and also in connection with the observance of August 15 as national mourning day.
   
The deteriorating situation was badly manifested with ruling party men's involvement in criminal activities, clashes over business contract grabbing and toll collections, assaulting police officials and killing political rivals.
   The media last week focused on the murder of Ibrahim Ahmed, 38, an Awami League activist of Ward No. 56 of Dhaka City Corporation. Ibrahim, a resident of Topkhana area, was a Ward Councillor aspirant, claimed his relatives.
  
 According to police, Juba League leader Ibrahim Ahmed died of bullet fired with a licensed pistol of Nurunnabi Chowdhury Shaon, the recently elected Awami League (AL) MP of Bhola-3.
   A case has been filed against ruling MP Nurunnabi Chowdhury Shaon over the murder of his close associate and Juba League leader Ibrahim Ahmed.
   Police also seized two vehicles including the jeep used by legislator Shaon, 18 rounds of bullets, a bullet cartridge, the pistol from which a bullet pierced Ibrahim's face and the bullet.
   
   MP slaps OC
   Another ruling party lawmaker Sheikh Afil Uddin from Jessore hit the headlines by assaulting the Officer-in-Charge (OC) of Sharsha police station.
   Sharsha OC told the newsmen that Sheikh Afill Uddin MP had physically assaulted him as he registered a case in connection with the killing of Juba Dal leader Abdul Hamid.
   Sheikh Afil Uddin, however, admitted that he had scolded the Officer-in-Charge of Sharsha police station and asked him to quit the police station immediately but denied having assaulted him.
   
He admitted that he summoned Enamul Huq, OC of Sharsa Police Station to his jute mill on Sunday to ask him why he filed a murder case without any investigation.
   Newspaper report reveals that Afil rebuked the OC and slapped him on the face for arresting an accused in the case without the lawmaker's permission. Moments after this, ruling party activists Musa Mahmud, Asad and Kamal beat him up.
   
The OC managed to escape and filed a general diary against the lawmaker and the three others later in the night.
   The situation developed following the killing of BNP activist Abdul Hamid of Paruighupi village on Saturday night. A case was filed against 26 Awami League leaders and activists with links to the murder.
   Meanwhile, police personnel have expressed resentment at the assault on a police officer by a ruling party lawmaker on Sunday night in Jessore. Wishing anonymity, a number of law enforcers said they felt insecure and humiliated at the incident.
   
The administration in Narayanganj also experienced a humiliating situation when two MPs belonging to ruling party heated exchange in the district law and order committee meeting last week.
   The debate ensued between Nasim Osman and Sarah Begum Kobori over some local problems. Deputy Commissioner M Shamsur Rahman, who chaired the meeting, adjourned the proceedings amid tension between the supporters of two lawmakers.
   
   Political killings
   Abdul Hamid, 35, a Juba Dal leader was stabbed to death allegedly by activists of the ruling Awami League at Paruighupi under Sharsha upazila in Jessore Saturday night.
   Early Tuesday, police recovered bodies of two youths from a marsh along Bogra-Natore road in Singra upazila of Natore.
   
The deceased were identified as Iqbal Hasan, a Jubo League leader of Pabna, and Khorshed alias Shawon, a suspected criminal of the capital.
   Natore Jubo League vice president Yahia Chowdhury claimed that the two were picked up from his house by plain-clothes policemen on August 11.
   A Jatiyatabadi Juba Dal leader was stabbed to death in the northern industrial town of Bogra Thursday evening.  Quoting witnesses the police said that 28-year old Shahin Ali, a leader of Ward 9 of Juba Dal was stabbed to death at Khandar in the town by the rivals in the organisation.
   
Meanwhile, Mizanur Rahman, a Bangladesh Chhatra League leader of Gazipur district, who suffered stab wound on August 3, succumbed to his injuries at DMCH on Friday.
   In the capital city, unidentified assailants on Saturday afternoon shot dead Siddiqur Rahman (45), an activist of Juba League and a member of the employees' union the Institute of Public Health (IPH) at Mohakhali.
   Witnesses said a group of armed assailants opened fire on Siddiqur Rahman when he was coming out of IPH mosque after saying Asr prayers at around 5:30pm, leaving him critically injured.
   An outlawed party leader was hacked to death by his rivals at Pittala field on Baniapukur-Jugirgofa Road in Gangni upazila early Monday.
   
The deceased was Atiar Rahman, regional commander of Purbo Banglar Communist Party, Lal Potaka faction, and son of Zamir Uddin of Baniapukur village.
   In Khulna, Abu Syed Badal, 46, chairman of Damodar union parishad was shot dead by some unidentified miscreants at Damodar village in Fultala upazila Monday morning. Police said his father Abul Kashem was also shot dead by terrorists in 1998.
   
In Jhenaidah, a union level leader of the ruling Awami League sustained serious injury as a crude bomb was hurled on him Sunday night at sadar upazila. The victim, identified as Shamsul Islam, 57, of village Dhopabila in Jhenaidah sadar upazila, was taken to Jhenaidah General Hospital.
   Mugging in Dhaka and outside
   Gunman of a lawmaker gunned down a mugger when he was fleeing after snatching booties from a woman in the city's high security diplomatic area of Gulshan in abroad daylight Wednesday. Armed muggers, riding on two motorbikes waylaid a rickshaw carrying the woman and took away her vanity bag, cell phone and two gold bangles at about 1:45pm.
   
   Policeman stabbed
   On Tuesday night, a group of hoodlums stabbed four policemen at Nikunja in the capital and snatched a pistol from one of them. Khilkhet police station acting officer-n-charge Deen-e-Alam, undergoing treatment at Dhaka Medical College Hospital following the attack, said they went to Nikunja at around 9 PM after a local Awami League activist informed them that a group of youths were teasing his niece, Sakira Nasreen Mitu, a class X student of Open University. After the police arrested one of the goons his accomplices swooped on police.
   
In capital's Moghbazar area, alleged extortionists shot dead a contractor in on Thursday night and also injured a pedestrian. The deceased, Mohammad Swapan, 35, was riddled with four bullets as he went to buy medicine from a pharmacy near his Ambagan residence in Moghbazar around 8:30pm.
   The injured, Nur Mohammad Nuru, 27, of the same neighbourhood was in line of fire as he standing nearby. He suffered wound to his lower back.
   The deceased's uncle Abdul Kader said last week some extortionists demanded Tk 50,000 from Swapan. They might have shot Swapan as he refused to pay the money, said Kader.
   
In another case of mugging, armed criminals snatched Tk 5.12 lakh from two traders, injuring them with bullets and bomb in the process, in separate incidents in the city's Mirpur and Sutrapur areas on August 1.
   In Mirpur, Hasan along with his younger brother Qayyum Talukder withdrew Tk 5 lakh from the Mirpur Branch of Prime Bank at Rokeya Sarani at about 3:30 pm. Muggers snatched the money and fired them when they tried to resist.
   In another incident, the vegetable trader Saidul, while returning to Mohammadpur by a rickshaw van loaded with vegetables from Shyam Bazar at about 12:30 P.M on Saturday was attacked and injured with bullets by the muggers. The muggers fled away after snatching Tk 12,000 from Saidul.
   
A mugging gang sprayed bullets, exploded bombs near a money exchange firm in city's DIT Extension Road at Fakirapool area and looted over Tk 18 lakh in local and foreign currencies last night.
   The injured employees of Mondian Money Exchange are manager Khandaker Reazul, 45, cashier Rezaul Karim, 50, and owner of a nearby shop Mohammad Masud, 45. They were admitted to Dhaka Medical College Hospital.
   In Sylhet city , a group of muggers snatched Tk 4.75 lakh from a businessman after stabbing him on Monday.
   The injured, Suleman Miah of village Pratappur under Doarabazar in Sunamganj, was admitted to Sylhet Osmani Medical College Hospital with serious wounds.
   
   More incidents of Killing
   In Gazipur, six suspected robbers were lynched in last week. Police have registered three separate cases on charge of preparations for dacoity, arms case and a murder case.
   In Narayanganhj, police on Tuesday recovered the body of Aman, 30, from School Ghat in the River Sitalakhya in Bandar upazila. He was cutting master of Hridoy Hosiery.
   
On Friday, Faridpur police recovered a decomposed body of an unidentified youth packed a gunny bag in near Jogar bridge at village Dighalia under Modhukhali upazila.
   Being informed by local people, the Modhukhali Thana police went to the spot at about 8:00am and recovered the body.
   A rickshawpuller, Sikandar Ali, 22, was stabbed to death by a fellow in the New Zealand Box Culvert area Khagrachari Monday, the police said.
   Early last week, a youth's body was recovered from the Nagor River at Singra in Natore.   The deceased was identified as Gopeshwar, 20, son of Gaura Chandra of village Sathala at Raninagar in Natore.
   
   Undaunted Chhatra League
   At least 10 students were injured as two factions of the Bangladesh Chhatra League clashed Wednesday with lethal weapons at Jagannath University in Dhaka.
   Eyewitness said the clash ensued at about 7:30pm between supporters of the university unit BCL Sraban group and Babar group over distribution of iftar on the campus.
  
 Chhatra League activists attacked and beat a newsman, Milon, 30, local correspondent of daily 'Amader Somoy' in Damurhuda upazila headquarters of Chuadanga on Sunday night.
   Protesting at the incident Darshana Press Club member in a meeting demanded arrest and exemplary punishment of the attackers.
   In an infighting among themselves, at least two BCL cadres were injured at Barisal Sher-e-Bangla Medical College on Monday.
   Teachers and senior BCL leaders brought the situation under control with support from police, deployed on the campus.
   New issues
   
In the wake of government's order to close CNG re-fuelling stations from 3pm to 9pm every day, owners of the pumps have demanded adequate security to their installations.
   Secretary General of Bangladesh CNG Filling Stations and Conversion Workshops Owners Association Zakir Hossain Nayan apprehend a security problem following the government decision to keep their pumps closed six hours a day.
 


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[ALOCHONA] Deals with Delhi must be challenged



Deals with Delhi must be challenged

M. Shahidul Islam
 
Sovereign foreign policy making is an arduous undertaking involving risk reduction and aiming to ensuring cost-benefit equilibrium. The haste and the alacrity with which our government is moving to meet all the Indian demands has reached an alarming pitch and meets none of those criteria. Stemming from a quasi-legal commitment outlined in the joint-communiqué of January 13, 2010, the absence of 'sustainable' follow up agreements and treaties make the moves illegal, and perhaps, unconstitutional. In international relations, such overzealousness often ends up with disastrous consequences, besides.
   
Since early 2009 when it assumed power, Dhaka had quietly allowed dozens of Delhi's secret service members to arrest leading ULFA separatists of Assam within out country, according to sources within the security establishments. Bolstered by AL's unflinching commitment (reached before the election) to ally with Delhi strategically, Indian army chief announced that 'India is ready to take on both Pakistan and China in a 'two front war' simultaneously.' That boon for Delhi posed as a thorn for the people of Bangladesh, as, in the weeks following, our nation started to bleed profusely.
   
Amidst the cajoling and coaxing of Dhaka with unjustified loan and other dangling carrots, our government did not even bother to see what the concerned officials or experts wanted.
   For instance, then DG of the BDR, Maj. Gen. Mainul Islam, wrote to both the Ministry of Home and Foreign Affairs in early March this year to make diplomatic bids to stop Indian incursions along the Sylhet-Meghalaya border, informing the ministries that the BSF had intruded into Bangladesh territory in Jointapur eight times in 23 days, kidnapped BDR jawan, killed unarmed civilians, shot on sight Bangladeshi farmers entering for cropping in adversely possessed land, and, since February 4, Indian citizens were being escorted routinely by BSF to occupy Bangladeshi land. The letter cautioned that the situation along the Jointapur frontier began to deteriorate after BSF strength was reinforced by a battle-hardened battalion injected from Kashmir frontier with Pakistan.
   
   Bid for annexation
   It is distressing that the concerned ministries did nothing to stop such Indian incursions. According to Bangladesh's Directorate of Land Records and Surveys, Bangladesh holds 162 acres of adversely possessed lands in Jointapur upazila against India's 60.53 acres, which the BSF, along with tribal civilians, has been trying to capture since the border turned virtually undermanned following the BDR mutiny, resulting in at least 20 instances of gunfire exchanges since February 2010.
   
This too is an unfinished legacy of the previous AL regime. One of the coveted targets of Indian forces being a strategic slice of land near the village of Padua which the BSF had occupied since the conclusion of the 1971 Indo-Pak war-despite India never making a claim on that land since 1947-Delhi aimed to turn the 95 hectares of land into a de facto adverse possession first, and tried to annex it in early 2001 when the AL was about to lose its grip on power amidst widespread mass discontent.
   
Fortunately for Bangladesh, the military aspect of the move proved to be a fateful one for Delhi. To deflect BDR's attention away from the real target, Indian forces launched an early morning attack on April 16, 2001 on the Boroibari BDR outpost (in Kurigram) along the Bangladesh-Assam frontiers, over 100 km to the west of Padua, which India calls Pyrdiwah. The BDR (then) being well prepared, violent confrontation ensued and 16 Indian soldiers died while 43 were reported injured and 15 becoming POWs.
   
   Orchestrated moves
   A similar scheme is underway once again to annex Padua. When Shipping Minister Shahjahan Khan was busy on August 13 in inaugurating the 14th land port with India (at Akhaura) along Bangladesh-Tripura borders, he had little knowledge of what brewed on other side of the borders.
   
Hours before his arrival at the sprawling newly-constructed land port site, Tripura police issued a red-alert against what it said possible infiltration from Bangladesh of guerrillas allegedly hiding inside the CHT jungles. One of the DIGs of Indian police, Nepal Das, informed on August 13 that "Jawans of paramilitary Tripura State Rifles (TSR) were deployed along with BSF personnel to guard the border to check infiltration of ultras from Bangladesh." The following day (August 14), Bangladesh- Meghalaya border witnessed massive deployment of BSF forces following Meghalaya's Home Minister, H.D.R. Lyngdoh, claiming that "about 10 to 12 rebels have sneaked into India from Bangladesh to disrupt the Independence Day celebrations in Meghalaya."
   
Yet, the visit to Dhaka of Finance Minister Pronab Mukherjee on August 7 added further momentum to fulfilling the remnants of the pipeline Indian desires. But that too did little to ebb Indian pressure- exertion against Dhaka. Coinciding with Foreign Minister Dipu Moni's on-site inspection of Benapole and Mongla ports last week to hasten the Indian connectivity designs, something more precarious started brewing across the borders. The Khasi Students' Union (KSU) and Federation of Khasi, Jaintia and Garo People (FKJGP) of Meghalaya called on the Indian home minister, P Chidambaram, in New Delhi on August 13 and made a demand to hold a fresh survey to recover lands that are within Bangladesh.
   
Sources say the drama was orchestrated to compel Dhaka to sit for negotiations on matters that are historically settled. A reliable source maintains that the FKJGP team was goaded to the court of the central government in Delhi by federal minister of state for water resources, Vincent H Pala, who is a Meghalaya native. As such, more trouble is expected now along the 443 kilometers long Meghalaya-Bangladesh border, abutting resource-rich Sylhet and inhabited mainly by the Khasi, Garo and Jaintia tribals.
   
   North-East connected
   These engineered moves belittles Delhi's credibility before the world community and Delhi entertaining such demands tantamount to hurling insult against an over- friendly regime in Dhaka. Unless Delhi changes its stances, such miscalculated moves may pose grave danger to regional peace and security and put at risk the nation's inherent vision to stay equidistant from China and India. Besides, the series of major land ports being commissioned along the Tripura-Bangladesh borders have allowed Delhi to achieve what it had failed since 1947.
   
Delhi now has the ease and the comfort to reach the super highway NH 44 that enters Assam from Tripura via Karimgonj, before snaking onward through the entire Northeast, including Meghalaya, Assam, whole of North Bengal and Kolkata. As well, 84 per cent of Tripura's border being with Bangladesh, Delhi has made a real geopolitical dent by compelling Dhaka to allow the opening of so many land ports, construction of the Feni bridge to connect Sobroom with Chittagong port via Ramgar, obtaining trans-shipment and transiting facilities within Bangladesh, and, investing in port and infrastructure developments a staggering $1 billion which Delhi had imposed upon Bangladesh when it was least needed. The briskness of these moves prompted one expert to compare them with over speeding sport cars whizzing past a perilously constricted alleyway, inviting inevitable dangers.
   
That seems apt. An unprecedented aura of hurry-scurry remains the hallmark of such dealings. Lately, a team of officials from the Indian Railway Construction Company (IRCON) visited Dhaka and finalised alignment of the 13-km Agartala-Akhaura rail track to connect 5.4 km Indian track with 7.6 km Bangladeshi track to carry Indian goods from the Ashugonj port to Tripura. Vipin Jha, India's Northeast Frontier Railway's additional general manager, told the media that the ongoing work for railway network up to Sabroom would be completed by March 2014 and the proposed railway station would be just 75 km from Chittagong port in Bangladesh.
   
Communications ministry sources said India is going to extend railway network to two more places along its border with Bangladesh -- Sabroom in southern Tripura, 135 km from Agartala, and Akhaura in western Tripura, just 6 km from Agartala railway station.
   Bangladesh operates regular train services on its side up to Akhaura and various other places, opposite several sub-divisional towns in the Indian state of Tripura.
   During Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's January 10-13 visit to India, New Delhi agreed to provide grant for construction of Akhaura- Agartala rail line.
   
India will provide $ 1 billion credit for a range of projects including railway infrastructure, supply of locomotives and passenger coaches, rehabilitation of Saidpur railway workshop and procurement of buses, and for dredging projects.
   Bangladesh will procure 10 locomotives for its railway at a cost of $35.5 million. It will also purchase 125 broad gauge passenger coaches for the railway costing $53.6 million. Moreover, Bangladesh will buy 60 tank wagons worth $8.85 million and 50 flat wagons worth $4.55 million for the railway with the Indian credit.
   Besides, a railway bridge will be constructed on the Titas River that will cost $120 million.
   Officials mentioned that a survey was conducted in 1999 for connecting Agartala-Akhaura railway stations.
   
Bangladesh and India resumed regular train service in April 2008, after 43 years, through Darshana in Bangladesh and Gede in Nadia district of West Bengal. The service was suspended after the 1965 war between India and Pakistan.
   Meanwhile, officials in Dhaka said India has agreed to give Bangladesh transit to Nepal through Rohanpur-Singabad broad gauge railway link. Bangladesh wanted to convert Radhikapur-Birol rail line into broad gauge one and requested for railway transit to Bhutan as well.
 


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[ALOCHONA] Surveillance to monitor 'khutba' at mosques starts



SECULARISM IS THE GOAL

Surveillance to monitor 'khutba' at mosques starts
 
Faisal Rahim
 
The government has placed Imams of the mosques under special surveillance and started to monitor 'khutba' or the religious sermons that they deliver at Friday Jumma prayers and on other occasions. In this backdrop, police has taken to custody on August 7, the Imam of the Chawrasta mosque of Tetulia Sadar Union Parishad and assistant professor of Sahabuddin Girls School and College Maulana Abdul Gani In Dinajpur for presenting critical interpretation of some religious issues which ruling party activists found sensitive to the image of the present government.
   
News report said he was manhandled by local ruling party activists for explaining three characters of 'munafiques' or hypocrites and later handed him over to police who later showed him arrest and sent him to jail. The Imam was also blamed for criticizing Hindu Swami Dev Narayan in his khutba for his attempt to realize new interpretation of the Quranic sayings from the High Court on prophet Ibrahim's attempt to sacrifice his son Ismail to please God.
  
 Dev Narayan said Muslims faith is based on wrong basis, it needs to be corrected and the new version needs to be incorporated to textbooks for primary, secondary and higher secondary levels.
   His criticism of the matter was not taken well by the ruling party men as they feared it may create bad impression about the government, so they put him to police custody.
   This is why the government is already working on the scheme to establish control on the mosques and its Imams from discharging any voice of dissent. The government is however justifying such move as part of its anti-terrorism campaign throughout the country to stop terrorists' activities.
   
As things are now on the move, Imams of the mosques have already received a model khutba for the Friday Jumma sermon. The government has also nominated Islamic Foundation in the meantime to monitor the mosque-based activities of suspected groups and specially that the Imams are complying anti-terrorism guidelines in their Friday khutbas.
   
   Ministry of Home
   On the other hand, to arrange fund to run the mosque-based anti-terrorism campaign the government has made the Ministry of Home as its contact point and in that process the Inspector General of Police (IGP) has been asked to provide necessary fund to the campaign, news reports said.
   Thus mosques have in a sense have come under direct supervision of the Ministry of Home in general and the IGP in particular. There will be nothing left unnoticed in the mosques in the new environment to stop fundamentalist groups and Imams having political leaning.
  
 The fifth meeting of the committee on combating terrorism and developing protective mechanism took the decision recently to strengthen monitoring the mosques and Imams at its meeting in the city, said a report.
   The meeting has asked the director general of Islamic Foundation to develop the monitoring strategy and a working mechanism and also to present the budgetary estimate for the scheme to the IGP for mobilization of necessary fund.
   
News reports further said the committee has also decided to take steps to monitor whether Imams are following the model khutba of the Friday prayer. Its guideline has demanded that Imams should speak on religious injunctions and prohibitions to avoid and resist terrorism as part of religious faith in one hand and should keep them away from speaking in a way that may inspire people to jihad and such other activities that may ultimately lend support to terrorists and fundamentalists.
   
   Model text
   Meanwhile, Islamic Foundation has also set up a seven-member national monitoring committee to keep watch on the Imams of the mosques throughout the country through their local monitoring cells, in addition to grassroots support of the ruling party activists.
   They will ensure that the Imams are speaking in terms of the model text of Friday khutba without derogatory remarks and in the process will see that they are not speaking on political issues from religious context that may cause or inspire anti-government feeling.
   
The government decision is that the national monitoring cell will periodically present reports to the Ministry of Home to inform authorities whether Imams are effectively running the anti-terrorism and anti-jihadist campaign or not and what improvement may be brought in the system.
   This is how the government has extended its monitoring network over the mosques throughout the country to prevent Imams in the first place from becoming the mouthpiece of the pro-religious political forces and turn mosques into centres of anti-government political activism.
   
And secondly, the authorities are working in a way to take control of the mosques and neutralize Imams to keep them under pressure to become part of the government campaign against religion-based politics. The sources said the government's focus on the mosques has intensified following the annulment of the 5th amendment to the Constitution which has paved the way to remove religion-based politics in a secular society.
   
Critics say attempt to hold control on mosque in a secular state system is nothing new. But the results always remained counterproductive. Egyptian president Anwar Sadat became seriously apprehensive in mid-1977 of the growing power of the Muslim Brotherhood challenging his authority from all over including the mosques. He passed decree taking over power to nominate Imams at the mosques on the state pay rolls and presented copies of model khutba to mosques to stop Imams speaking on derogatory political issues.
 


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