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Thursday, October 14, 2010

[ALOCHONA] Zinnah's Urdu !



Lahore HC dismisses Urdu as Pak official language

Wednesday, October 13, 2010
 
Lahore High Court Chief Justice Khawaja Muhammad Sharif on Tuesday, Oct 12 dismissed a petition seeking direction to the Islamabad government to make Urdu as official language of the country.

The petition was moved by a local resident, Sana Ullah and stated that the father of the nation, Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, during his address to students in Dhaka in 1948 had announced making Urdu the official language of Pakistan.

He further added that this was not done even after over 62 years and English was made official language of the country.However, the petitioner and his counsel did not appear before the court to pursue the matter.



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[ALOCHONA] Successful electricity management



Electricity position
 
 
 
 

Four lakh applications pending

 
At least four lakh applications have been filed with five power distribution companies seeking new electricity connections.
   The new connections would need additional 1,200MW electricity while the country is facing at least 2,000MW power shortfall against the existing demand.
   Experts and officials in the power sector said that such high volume of additional power demand would compel the distribution companies to increase load shedding on the existing consumers.
   
Mohammad Abdus Sobhan, managing director of Dhaka Power Distribution Company (DPDC) said, present power demand in the DPDC area is 1150MW to 1200MW whereas the supply was on average 650MW.
   If the production grows significantly, the load shedding situation would remain the same. But if the increment of production rate cannot follow the demand rate, power outages would increase further.
   Ijaz Hossain, an expert on power sector and Professor of Chemical engineering department of Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (BUET) said that the coming power demand would not be met by the projected additional power generation.
   
Officials of Rural Electrification Board said, 60,124 new electricity connections were pending in 70
   PBSs before April, 2010. Consumers already paid money for their connections, demanding 186.295MW power.
   Another 280,762 more applications have been submitted to the PBSs across the country from April to September this year, but the authorities did not receive money with the applications since the process has been stopped through a government order.
   
Power secretary Mohammad Abul Kalam Azad said that this huge number of electricity connections would not be provided immediately.
   'We are considering maintaining equilibrium between production and demand for new electricity connections. We are not going to provide electricity connections to all consumers immediately. Applicants will get connections step by step considering the improvement in power generation', he added.
   But this would breed nepotism in power distribution companies and sufferings to the consumers, said concerned experts.
   
Bangladesh Power Development Board chairman ASM Alamgir Kabir at a workshop on October 7 said that new power connections would be conditional while one would have to meet 5 percent of his/her demand by own initiated solar power, considering the consumer's affordability.
   Concern experts said that such provision would not bring any solution to the huge power shortfall since solar power is still much expensive and needed much space that is not available in urban areas.
   Apart from these, the present government has initiated establishing high cost short term Quick Rental Power plants of a total capacity of 1633MW in the private sector to solve the power crisis on a fast track basis.
   
Former Power Cell Director General BD Rahmatullah was critical of the rental power plant projects, saying that these plants would not come into production in time and fail to produce electricity sufficiently as they would use run down plants.
   
The government should have emphasized on improving the efficiency of the old power plants that would give additional 700MW power on the national grid within six months at a cost of Tk. 1,500 million, he said.
   Rahmatullah put stress on strengthening oil, gas and mineral resources corporation (Petrobangla) for exploration and extraction gas from potential blocks for ensuring safe and cheap primary fuel for power generation.
   With regard to utilization of coal in Bangladesh context, he proposed to use coal gasification method rather than underground or open pit mining.

http://www.newagebd.com/2010/oct/15/front.html



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[ALOCHONA] Law and order improving after Hasina came to power: Sahara



Law and order improving after Hasina came to power: Sahara

 
The people of Bangladesh are flabbergasted at Home Minister Sahara Khatun's outlandish claim that the country's law and order situation has been improving since Sheikh Hasina came to power in January 2009.
   The woman Home Minister made the comment when her attention was drawn to the recent killings in Natore and Sirajganj and also in Dhaka, and the brandishing of firearms in political conflicts, which indicate worsening of the law and order situation.
   
Sahara made the disclosure on Wednesday when the garment sector leaders went to her office to seek effective measures against the pilferage of exportable goods from containers on the way to Chittagong from Dhaka and also at the Chittagong Port.
   
   Army deployed at Ctg. Port
   Sahara's complacence about law and order situation, however, was not recongised by her government that had to call in army to restore order at Chittagong port following a miserable failure on the part of civil administration.
   Home Minister's utterance was invalidated by her own party men in Munshiganj who were locked in a fierce clash with firearms, lethal weapons and homemade bombs injuring at least seven persons on the same evening of Wednesday.
   Villagers said the clash triggered from differences in selection of party candidates for the ensuing Union Parishad election.
   Home minister's claim was also disproved by the attack on joint forces' camp at Sharafpur under Dumuria upazila in Khulna early Thursday. Some robbers attacked the camp and looted a submachine gun injuring a policeman, Nayek Abul Basar who was later admitted to hospital.
   
On October 11, four outlaws were beaten to death by a mob at Nolkola village of Kushtia Sadar upazila. Police claimed that they were members of Purbo Banglar Communist Party (PBCP-ML) -Janajuddho faction. Police may feel happy that they were not killed in encounter but in mob beating.
   On the following day, a UP member and acting chairman of Chuadanga failed to escape death, despite alerting the police before he was attacked at his home at midnight.
   "He had alerted the Damurhuda police and Hogladanga police camp over mobile phone immediately, but by the time the police reached the spot, the gang had entered the house forcibly and hacked him to death in front of his wife and daughter," police said.
   
   3 tribal youths killed
   In the hill districts of Khagrachari and Rangamati, three tribal youths belonging to pro-peace group were killed by their rivals last week indicating a fragile law and order situation in the hills.
   A Juba League leader Yusuf Ali Sardar, 35, was beaten to death allegedly by the rival group in Moghbazar in the city on October 7. Police said row over dropping of tender had led to the incident.
   
   RMC closed
   The Rangpur Medical College (RMC) has been shut till Oct 22 after a clash of cadres of the Bangladesh Chhatra League, the student wing of the ruling Awami League.
   Ruling Awami League activists on Wednesday vandalised the office of the Kahalu Upazilla Nirbahee Officer (UNO) in Bogra after his reported refusal to award them dealership for government's open market sale of goods.
   The UNO told reporters that the local Awami League activists, led by party's upazila unit joint-secretary Kamaluddin Kabiraj, entered his office room in his absence and vandalised it.
   These are some of the incidents of the week that tells something contrary to Home Minister's claim about improvement in law and order situation in the country.
   
   Violence, killings
   Shahara Khatun may have the best answer as to why Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina had to withdraw her name as organisational chief of the BCL on April 4, 2009 for their involvement in violence and killings in the educational institutions throughout the country.
   The killing of Natore Upazila Chairman Sanaullah Noor Babu in broad daylight by the ruling party hoodlums, killing of seven people in a train accident and setting a running train ablaze at Sirajganj, and all the infightings of "Bajikars", as coined by ex-Chief Justice and former caretaker chief, definitely do not make the people satisfied like their contended home minister.
   
The newspaper cuttings relating to law and order situation is certainly placed on her table every morning but she does not go through them. Maybe she also does not get time to watch independent satellite TV news on law and order situation.
   If she did, she could sure get the news that law and order has deteriorated seriously across the country in recent weeks. She could also realize how alarmed are the people at the news of killings, attacks and extortions committed by her party men that her government failed to contol.
   
   Shaon's pistol
   Sahara Khatun definitely have certain arguments in defence about the action taken so far against ruling party lawmaker Nurunnabi Shaon whose licensed pistol was used in killing the ruling party man Ibrahim in the Sangsad Bhaban area on August 13.
   The Home Minister also might have been satisfied when the police rank and file about the incident of slapping the Sharsha OC by the local MP in Jessore. A DMP police officer who lost his gun in an attack by the ruling party goons in city's Nikunja last month. Arms not yet recovered nor the criminals have been arrested.
  
 People will be convinced when the frequent assurances made by Prime Minister, Home Minister and the ruling party ministers and leaders regarding actions against "whoever might be involved in crime" will be executed properly.
   But much to their frustration, the citizens hear from the civil society group like SHUJON that, "One-third of the tenure of the government has passed and most pledges remain unfulfilled. All pledges of the Awami League have been transformed into mere words which is the most fundamental failure of the government."
   The opposition BNP also alleged that under this government, precious life of the people had become of no value as the entire country has now become insecure. A BNP leader alleged that the police administration is aiding the government's illegal acts.
   
   Delwar surprised
   The BNP secretary general Khandaker Delwar Hossain wondered over the Prime Minister's remarks that the killing of Baraigram upazila chairman Sanaullah Noor Babu was the outcome of intra-BNP conflict, while her general secretary Syed Ashraful Islam stated that the killers would be arrested by watching the video footage.
   "Such statement from the Prime Minister is unfortunate. Now what the police will do -- investigate into BNP's internal conflict or arrest the killers?" Khandaker Delwar Hossain said at a press briefing at the party's central office Wednesday.
   
   Blaming others
   He said the Prime Minister should not make such statement that would impede the rule of law. "She (PM) is trying to shift the blame on others in a planned way to protect the killers," he said.
   "If the killers are protected by the government who will give security to the people," he asked. It is expected that a good government goes for punishing the offenders and secure the peace-loving people. But under the present government, people find that accused killers are being acquitted of charges and death row murderers are pardoned under political considerations.
 


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[ALOCHONA] Fwd: [Dahuk]: the state of rule of law in Bangladesh





---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Shimul Chaudhury honestdebater@yahoo.ca 


The State of Rule of Law in Bangladesh


Please read the news story below and see the picture that follows.


The Daily Star, Dhaka, 14 Oct 2010
http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=158425

AL in power, no worries

Party lawmaker assures accused in Sanaullah murder case at Natore rally

Awami League lawmaker of Baraigram-Gurudaspur constituency Abdul Quddus yesterday assured his party men accused in the BNP leader Sanaullah Noor Babu murder case of "trouble-free" future.

"There is nothing to be worried about. The Awami League government is in power. Nothing will happen to the accused of the murder case," he told a party rally on Bonpara bypass.

"Tuesday's statement of the prime minister is completely different from that of previous days. You must understand the reason. We are trying our best to make the premier understand the real story," said Quddus, senior vice-president of Natore district AL.

The PM initially said stern action would be taken against the killers irrespective of their identities. On Tuesday, she blamed BNP for the killing.

Yesterday's rally, organised by local Baraigram unit AL, was the ruling party's first showdown since Friday.

At the rally, Quddus asked the police and administration to act according to the PM's latest statement.

Terming the murder case false and fabricated, he said after several attempts he finally reached the premier and managed to convince her that AL was "not involved" in the murder.

Babu was killed during an attack by over 100 AL, Jubo League and Chhatra League activists on his procession on Friday.

"No Awami League or Jubo League leader has killed Babu," Quddus claimed, asking police, Rab and DB to find out the real culprits. He strongly warned the law-enforcement agencies about harassing party men in the name of investigation.

He claimed AL local leader Zakir was trying to save Babu. "If video footages are properly examined, it would prove Zakir's innocence."

The AL MP also bitterly criticised superintendent of police in Natore Rafiqul Islam for his "anti-ruling party stand". Rafiqul was made officer on special duty on Monday for his "failure" to prevent the incident.

Contradicting local police's claim that they were not aware of BNP procession, Quddus said the upazila nirbahi officer, additional SP and SP forbid Babu to bring out the procession.

Speaking at the rally, Upazila Vice-chairman Ataur Rahman Ata said nothing would happen to AL if one or two Babu is killed. He asked the police to listen to AL leaders and act accordingly.

Shamshuzzoha Shaheb, Baraigram upazila AL publication secretary, urged party activists to prepare a list of BNP men who are still active in different unions. He asked them to tie up the police if they raid their houses in search of killers.

Chaired by elderly AL leader Aftabuddin Pintu, the rally was addressed, among others, by Natore unit president of Swechchha Sebok League Arifur Rahman Arif, Baraigram AL general secretary Mizanur Rahman Mizan, Zahidul Islam Zahid, Abdul Jalil Pramanik and wife of Zakir.

BABU'S WIFE ON MURDER
Babu's wife Mohuya Noor Kochi said the killers got inspiration after the PM's "disappointing" statement.

She alleged that Zakir's men killed her husband at the diktat of Quddus. "The video footages are the evidence. Everyone knows who killed my husband in broad daylight."

"The prime minister got justice for her father's killing. I hope I will also get justice," she told The Daily Star.

RAPPU REMANDED
A Natore court yesterday placed Russell Hossain Rappu, the lone arrestee in connection with the killing of Babu, on a three-day remand.

Baraigram Judicial Magistrate Mahmudul Hasan passed the order after Natore Detective Branch (DB) of police produced him before the court and sought a five-day remand.

Bangladesh Chhatra League (BCL) activist Rappu was arrested from his Mohisdanga village home on Saturday.

"We will start interrogating Rappu soon. We will try to confirm the identity of the attackers by showing him the video footages," DB Sub-Inspector Md Abdul Hannan, also the investigation officer (IO) of the case, told The Daily Star last night.

All the accused went into hiding after the murder, he said adding that drives are on to apprehend rest of the offenders.

UPAZILA CHAIRMEN'S CALL
A group of 50 upazila chairmen and vice-chairmen yesterday requested all not to do politics with the killing incident of Babu.

"Natore people are witnessing politics of killing for long. We want to see an end to it," Bodiuzzaman Badsha, chairman of Nalitabari upazila of Sherpur, told journalists.

Badsha, also the general secretary of Bangladesh Upazila Parishad, said they want exemplary punishment of the 'real' killers.The team also met Babu's wife and expressed their sympathy.


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







The ruling party Bangladesh Awami League musclemen brandishing their weapons after attacking a peaceful BNP procession and beating up Boraigram Upazila Chairman Mr Sanuallah Noor Babu (writhing in pain on the ground) in Natore, Bangladesh on 08 October 2010. Mr Babu died soon afterwards. For more information, please visit The Daily Star, Dhaka, 09 October 2010 at

http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=157755








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[ALOCHONA] Natore : MP's rally remarks upset probe, hunt



Natore : MP's rally remarks upset probe, hunt


 
The hunt for the suspected killers of Baraigram upazila chairman Sanaullah Noor Babu suffered a huge setback after the local Awami League leaders at a rally on Wednesday warned the law enforcers of not raiding the houses of the accused.

Talking to The Daily Star, a number of police officials yesterday said the drive to arrest the accused has already been slowed down since the AL leaders also asked party men to tie up the law enforcers if they raid their houses."Such statements are very frustrating when police are making raids without much success, even after a week of the murder," mentioned a senior police officer, seeking anonymity.

He said the entire police force in Natore is now in dilemma about its role in Babu murder case. "The words of the ruling party leaders will also hamper the investigation process," observed another police officer, admitting that police role here is already being questioned.

Local AL lawmaker (Baraigram-Gurudaspur) Abdul Quddus at a rally at Bonpara Bazar on Wednesday asked his party men, accused in Babu murder case, not to be worried. He blamed BNP for the killing and claimed no AL man was involved in it.

Sub-Inspector of Detective Branch (DB) of police Md Abdul Hannan, also the investigation office (IO) of the case, said he would carry on his duties."I will not listen to who is saying what. My duty is to take the accused into custody and I am just trying for that," asserted the DB official.

Meanwhile, police yesterday started quizzing the lone arrestee in the case, Russell Hossain Rappu, to know about his role in the incident. Chhatra League activist Rappu was placed on a three-day remand on Wednesday."We want to know who led the attack and what was the motive behind the gathering at the spot with lethal weapons," the IO said, adding they will also try to know whether the attack was pre-planned.

More than 100 Awami League, Jubo League and Chhatra League activists attacked a BNP procession with lethal weapons at Bonpara bazar on Friday, killing Babu and badly injuring 20 others, including four journalists.

Mahua Noor Kochi, wife of Babu, filed a murder case with Baraigram Police Station naming 27 persons and some 20 unnamed.Kochi expressed her disappointment over the police failure to arrest the killers of her husband, who was also president of Bonpara Poura unit BNP.

 http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=158530



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[ALOCHONA] Re: New BNP stance on war crimes trial unfair, unacceptable

[[The facts are plain:If Sheikh Hasina's father was not assasinated and if she was not Prime Minister - there would be no effort made at war crimes tribunals today.]]

What we can deduct from Ezaj's permis is that war-crime issue is relative to Sheikh Hasina being PM and for her father being assainated, other-wise it was not a criminal issue.

Is it sincere enough on Ezaj part to admit what he said above? Or am I finding sin in his sincerely admitting above relative truth?


--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, "ezajur" <Ezajur@...> wrote:
>
> Come now. Saying Farida is a paid by thugs is unfair. She is sincere and there are many like her. I urge you to save your name calling for the obviously insincere.
>
> Sincerity is not enough of course to resolve the plight of our troubled nation. But there are many sincere people in Bangladeesh who simply do not see the big picture, who cannot identify what their own role should be, who cannot correctly apply themselves to the politics of the day. Well. Everything is in chaos, as deliberately created and enjoyed, by the political classes. In this chaos we should not be surprised to see the sincere - including ourselves - in some chaos too.
>
> The facts are plain:
>
> If Sheikh Hasina's father was not assasinated and if she was not Prime Minister - there would be no effort made at war crimes tribunals today.
>
> Irrespective of the sincerest efforts of good people like Farida Majid. Which is why they won't hold the PM accountable for anything that is going on now.
>
>
>
>
> --- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, maxx ombba <maqsudo@> wrote:
> >
> >
> > war-criminals should have been punished many years ago.
> > so that we could have special tribunal, for the criminals of 1972 - 1975 period.
> > who will punish the tugs, who have looted public funds in the past ?
> > So easy...to create smoke screen, by postponing legal actions against war-criminals!!!!There are many farida majids in Bangladesh, being paid by these thugs.
> > best wishes.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
> > From: farida_majid@
> > Date: Mon, 11 Oct 2010 16:29:24 -0400
> > Subject: RE: [ALOCHONA] Re: New BNP stance on war crimes trial unfair, unacceptable
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Bangladesh. Where war crimes are unacceptable.
> >
> > And everything else is acceptable!
> >
> > By which, I presume, the writer means every crime is accaptable, even encouraged, in Bangladesh
> >
> > except War Crimes.
> >
> >
> >
> > Who talks like that? Who can be that insensitive to the justice-seekers of crimes and atrocities
> >
> > committed 39 years ago still unheeded? Only those pretending to care about 'law and order' and yet
> >
> > sneers and snarls at attempt to end the culture of impunity for the cruellest of the criminals walking free
> >
> > in Bangladesh.
> >
> >
> >
> > Let me try to explain to those who visibly shake in rage at the mention of "war crimes" of 1971.
> >
> > What we, and the international community, are attempting to call "war" crimes are these very heinous
> >
> > crimes --- killings, looting, vandalizing, arson, rape, etc.---- committed systemetically on a mass scale
> >
> > for the realization of a political/communal proposition. That proposition being that Muslim and Hindu peoples
> >
> > cannot live together anymore even though these peoples have lived side by side for centuries on this land.
> >
> >
> >
> > The realization of this irrational and idiotic proposition, first manufactured by the British colonial
> >
> > administrators for facilitating their purpose of 'divide and rule', was welcomed by neo-colonizers of
> >
> > Pakistan, and then, after 1971, by the neo-Pakistanis of Bangla origin.
> >
> >
> >
> > Equally irrational and ironic is the idea that the war crimes trials would divide rhe nation. It can
> >
> > only do so if we assume that close to half the nation holds the same criminal record as the Jamaati
> >
> > honchos and the grizzled old Muslim League razakars.
> >
> >
> >
> > Farida Majid
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
> > From: Ezajur@
> > Date: Mon, 11 Oct 2010 12:27:41 +0000
> > Subject: [ALOCHONA] Re: New BNP stance on war crimes trial unfair, unacceptable
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > The blank cheque given to criminals who support AL is such that I'm now begining to think that BNP is right to hamper the government's progress.
> >
> > Bangladesh. Where war crimes are unacceptable.
> >
> > And everything else is acceptable!
> >
> > --- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, Isha Khan <bdmailer@> wrote:
> > >
> > > New BNP stance on war crimes trial unfair, unacceptable
> > > THE opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party has visibly changed its position
> > > as regards the trial of the Bengali collaborators of the Pakistan army that
> > > committed war crimes against the people of Bangladesh in 1971. Until
> > > Tuesday, the party's spokespersons maintained that the BNP does not have any
> > > problem with the war crimes being investigated and the criminals tried,
> > > while warning the government that it must not victimise leaders and
> > > activists of the opposition camp, in the name of trying war crimes. Fair
> > > enough. But on Tuesday, the BNP chairperson, Khaleda Zia, told a gathering
> > > of a section of the freedom fighters, according to a report front-paged by
> > > New Age on Wednesday, that `attempts are being made to push the nation to a
> > > confrontation in the name of war crimes trial four decades after
> > > independence.' Referring to the clemency given to the guilty of the
> > > Pakistani army by the post-independence government of the Awami League, and
> > > subsequent `general amnesty' to the collaborators, Khaleda also said `such
> > > double standard' of the ruling party `must be resisted'. The BNP chairperson
> > > has taken a clear position against the `war crimes trial' in the name of
> > > consolidating `national unity'. We believe the new BNP stance on the issue
> > > of war crimes trial is unfair—and thus unacceptable—as it amounts to
> > > injustice towards those who were killed, tortured, raped and burnt by the
> > > occupation forces of Pakistan and their local collaborators during the
> > > country's liberation war.
> > >
> > > It is historically true that the post-independence government of the Awami
> > > League officially `forgave' the guilty officers of the Pakistan army, saying
> > > that `the Bengalis know how to forgive.' It is also true that the Awami
> > > League government of the day granted `general amnesty' to the local
> > > collaborators, of course, barring those involved in heinous crimes like
> > > killing, rape and arson. We believe such steps of the post-independence
> > > Awami League government were unjust, as those amounted to injustice towards
> > > those who sacrificed lives, underwent brutal torture, humiliation and
> > > enormous ordeal for the sake of national liberation. We believe the
> > > government of the day did not have the moral right to `forgive' the
> > > perpetrators of war crimes.
> > >
> > > However, the inability, or opportunistic reluctance, of the
> > > post-independence government to try the perpetrators of war crimes and their
> > > collaborators does not mean that the crimes cannot be investigated and the
> > > criminals punished now, forty years after the war of independence. There are
> > > instances in history that war crimes have been tried several years after the
> > > crimes were committed. It is better late than never, especially when it
> > > comes to justice. We have no reason to believe the mere trial of war crimes
> > > would divide the nation anew – the nation is already divided on political
> > > lines – as the number of `collaborators' in 1971 was very few as against the
> > > entire population of the day who stood for the country's liberation from the
> > > occupation forces.
> > >
> > > We, therefore, believe the government should go ahead with the trial of the
> > > collaborators of war crimes, and demand that the surviving officers of the
> > > Pakistan army who perpetrated war crimes in Bangladesh should be handed over
> > > to the war crimes tribunal for trial. Notably, the Pakistani authorities,
> > > while signing the tripartite agreement with Bangladesh and India for the
> > > repatriation of the guilty officers to Pakistan in 1973, promised to try
> > > their crimes in their homeland. But the Pakistani authorities failed to keep
> > > the commitment. It is time that Bangladesh demanded, at the least, that the
> > > guilty officers be tried in Pakistan in accordance with the commitment that
> > > its government had made four decades ago.
> > >
> > > Meanwhile, the country's democratically oriented citizens committed to
> > > justice require to keep an eye on the whole process of the trial in Dhaka,
> > > so that the trial is fair and transparent, and that the government of Awami
> > > League cannot victimise its political rivals in the name of trying the
> > > perpetrators/collaborators of war crime, nor can it prolong the trial unduly
> > > for politically using the issue for parochial partisan interests for the
> > > years to come, as it has done before.
> > >
> > > http://www.newagebd.com/2010/oct/07/edit.html
> > >
> >
>


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

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Re: [ALOCHONA] Transit, transshipment fees



This is the sort of journalism that makes me mad.

What were Dr Mashiur Rahman's arguments for waiving the fees?

Traitors in power and idiots reporting on them!

Emanur Rahman | m. +447734567561 | e. emanur@rahman.com


From: Isha Khan <bdmailer@gmail.com>
Sender: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Date: Wed, 13 Oct 2010 07:59:48 +0600
ReplyTo: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Transit, transshipment fees

Transit, transshipment fees -Foreign Office rejects India's waiver push


The Foreign Ministry continues to oppose India's insistence on waiver of transit and transshipment fees, saying Indian private sector already receives massive subsidies for transporting goods to the northeastern hinterlands.The ministry Monday drove home its message to the Indian High Commission officials and advised India's diplomats to lobby Bangladesh's National Board of Revenue (NBR) instead to seek the waiver.

The NBR has imposed transit and transshipment fee of Tk 10,000 per container and Tk 1,000 per tonne for bulk cargo.
"India should be prepared to pay a certain amount for using Bangladesh's land as corridor," a foreign ministry official said.

"The Indian central government subsidises its private sector for transporting goods to the northeastern part through the 'chicken neck' corridor," the official said, adding New Delhi can channel a part of that amount to ship goods through Bangladesh.

Bangladesh can earn an estimated Tk 1.0 to Tk 2.0 billion as transshipment fees and it is insignificant for Indians if they consider the broader economic benefits, he explained.Foreign minister Dr Dipu Moni and finance minister AMA Muhith supported the fees and both had earlier ruled out the waiver of transshipment fees, insisting those will be the country's income.

But economic adviser to the Prime Minister Dr Mashiur Rahman favours the withdrawal of fees and wrote a letter to the shipping minister to stop collecting the fees until "further decision."

Adding to the standoff, the customs authority has blocked the entry of two Indian ships carrying fly ash at the Bangladeshi border at Shekbaria as they didn't pay the transshipment fee. The ships destined for Assam were still not allowed to enter the Bangladesh territory.

Referring to the Protocol of Inland Water Trade and Transit (IWTT), the Foreign Ministry official defended the action, saying domestic laws will be applicable as cargoes entered the Bangladesh territory."In the agreement, it is not mentioned anywhere that transshipment and transit fees cannot be imposed," the official said.

The government signed the transshipment agreement in May to allow Indian goods to transship to Tripura through Ashuganj.According to the agreement, Ashuganj will be the second transshipment point and fifth port of call in Bangladesh, while India has declared Shilghat to be the port of call on the Indian side.

Sherpur in Sylhet was the first transshipment point under the 1972 protocol, but India never used the facility.Tripura border is only 49 kilometres from Ashuganj and the river port is navigable throughout the year.

The Indian authorities since '80s have demanded that Ashuganj become the second point and Bangladesh has agreed to the demand during the visit of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to India in January.The IWTT agreement stipulates that Narayanganj, Mongla, Khulna and Sirajganj are the port of calls in Bangladesh and Kolkata, Haldia, Pandu and Karimganj in India.
 
 


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RE: [ALOCHONA] 7 injured in fierce clash of rival groups of AL



Are Nominations to union parishad candidacy Chhatra League's  responsibility? News to me.
Now I know why the nation is going down the drain under awful leadership of Hasina Wazed Miah.
Shahadat Suhrawardy


From: bdmailer@gmail.com
Date: Thu, 14 Oct 2010 11:29:03 +0600
Subject: [ALOCHONA] 7 injured in fierce clash of rival groups of AL

 
7 injured in fierce clash of rival groups of AL
 
 
At least seven activists were injured in a fierce clash between two rival groups of ruling Awami League at Chardumuria in sadar upazila tonight.
 
Kamal, 30, was admitted to the Munshiganj General Hospital while Ameer, 20, and Sohag, 20, were undergoing treatment in private clinics to avoid police action.UNB correspondent Nasiruddin reporting from the spot said sounds of barrage of gunfire and blasts of homemade bombs were heard. The clash started at 9-30pm was continuing till 11-40pm.
 
Both sides are equipped with firearms, bombs and deadly weapons.
 
Villagers said the clash triggered from differences in selection of candidates for the ensuing union parishad election.District Awami League vice president Shah Alam Mallik is leading one group and sadar upazila Awami League vice president Mustafa Molla the other group.Heavy contingent riot gear police and elite force RAB reached the spot.
 




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[ALOCHONA] Re: New BNP stance on war crimes trial unfair, unacceptable

There were 195 people who had committed war-crimes according to muktijudha songshad and in that list there were not any names who are being tried for today as warcriminals.

All those names were Pakistani millitary.


--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, "ezajur" <Ezajur@...> wrote:
>
> Come now. Saying Farida is a paid by thugs is unfair. She is sincere and there are many like her. I urge you to save your name calling for the obviously insincere.
>
> Sincerity is not enough of course to resolve the plight of our troubled nation. But there are many sincere people in Bangladeesh who simply do not see the big picture, who cannot identify what their own role should be, who cannot correctly apply themselves to the politics of the day. Well. Everything is in chaos, as deliberately created and enjoyed, by the political classes. In this chaos we should not be surprised to see the sincere - including ourselves - in some chaos too.
>
> The facts are plain:
>
> If Sheikh Hasina's father was not assasinated and if she was not Prime Minister - there would be no effort made at war crimes tribunals today.
>
> Irrespective of the sincerest efforts of good people like Farida Majid. Which is why they won't hold the PM accountable for anything that is going on now.
>
>
>
>
> --- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, maxx ombba <maqsudo@> wrote:
> >
> >
> > war-criminals should have been punished many years ago.
> > so that we could have special tribunal, for the criminals of 1972 - 1975 period.
> > who will punish the tugs, who have looted public funds in the past ?
> > So easy...to create smoke screen, by postponing legal actions against war-criminals!!!!There are many farida majids in Bangladesh, being paid by these thugs.
> > best wishes.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
> > From: farida_majid@
> > Date: Mon, 11 Oct 2010 16:29:24 -0400
> > Subject: RE: [ALOCHONA] Re: New BNP stance on war crimes trial unfair, unacceptable
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Bangladesh. Where war crimes are unacceptable.
> >
> > And everything else is acceptable!
> >
> > By which, I presume, the writer means every crime is accaptable, even encouraged, in Bangladesh
> >
> > except War Crimes.
> >
> >
> >
> > Who talks like that? Who can be that insensitive to the justice-seekers of crimes and atrocities
> >
> > committed 39 years ago still unheeded? Only those pretending to care about 'law and order' and yet
> >
> > sneers and snarls at attempt to end the culture of impunity for the cruellest of the criminals walking free
> >
> > in Bangladesh.
> >
> >
> >
> > Let me try to explain to those who visibly shake in rage at the mention of "war crimes" of 1971.
> >
> > What we, and the international community, are attempting to call "war" crimes are these very heinous
> >
> > crimes --- killings, looting, vandalizing, arson, rape, etc.---- committed systemetically on a mass scale
> >
> > for the realization of a political/communal proposition. That proposition being that Muslim and Hindu peoples
> >
> > cannot live together anymore even though these peoples have lived side by side for centuries on this land.
> >
> >
> >
> > The realization of this irrational and idiotic proposition, first manufactured by the British colonial
> >
> > administrators for facilitating their purpose of 'divide and rule', was welcomed by neo-colonizers of
> >
> > Pakistan, and then, after 1971, by the neo-Pakistanis of Bangla origin.
> >
> >
> >
> > Equally irrational and ironic is the idea that the war crimes trials would divide rhe nation. It can
> >
> > only do so if we assume that close to half the nation holds the same criminal record as the Jamaati
> >
> > honchos and the grizzled old Muslim League razakars.
> >
> >
> >
> > Farida Majid
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
> > From: Ezajur@
> > Date: Mon, 11 Oct 2010 12:27:41 +0000
> > Subject: [ALOCHONA] Re: New BNP stance on war crimes trial unfair, unacceptable
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > The blank cheque given to criminals who support AL is such that I'm now begining to think that BNP is right to hamper the government's progress.
> >
> > Bangladesh. Where war crimes are unacceptable.
> >
> > And everything else is acceptable!
> >
> > --- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, Isha Khan <bdmailer@> wrote:
> > >
> > > New BNP stance on war crimes trial unfair, unacceptable
> > > THE opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party has visibly changed its position
> > > as regards the trial of the Bengali collaborators of the Pakistan army that
> > > committed war crimes against the people of Bangladesh in 1971. Until
> > > Tuesday, the party's spokespersons maintained that the BNP does not have any
> > > problem with the war crimes being investigated and the criminals tried,
> > > while warning the government that it must not victimise leaders and
> > > activists of the opposition camp, in the name of trying war crimes. Fair
> > > enough. But on Tuesday, the BNP chairperson, Khaleda Zia, told a gathering
> > > of a section of the freedom fighters, according to a report front-paged by
> > > New Age on Wednesday, that `attempts are being made to push the nation to a
> > > confrontation in the name of war crimes trial four decades after
> > > independence.' Referring to the clemency given to the guilty of the
> > > Pakistani army by the post-independence government of the Awami League, and
> > > subsequent `general amnesty' to the collaborators, Khaleda also said `such
> > > double standard' of the ruling party `must be resisted'. The BNP chairperson
> > > has taken a clear position against the `war crimes trial' in the name of
> > > consolidating `national unity'. We believe the new BNP stance on the issue
> > > of war crimes trial is unfair—and thus unacceptable—as it amounts to
> > > injustice towards those who were killed, tortured, raped and burnt by the
> > > occupation forces of Pakistan and their local collaborators during the
> > > country's liberation war.
> > >
> > > It is historically true that the post-independence government of the Awami
> > > League officially `forgave' the guilty officers of the Pakistan army, saying
> > > that `the Bengalis know how to forgive.' It is also true that the Awami
> > > League government of the day granted `general amnesty' to the local
> > > collaborators, of course, barring those involved in heinous crimes like
> > > killing, rape and arson. We believe such steps of the post-independence
> > > Awami League government were unjust, as those amounted to injustice towards
> > > those who sacrificed lives, underwent brutal torture, humiliation and
> > > enormous ordeal for the sake of national liberation. We believe the
> > > government of the day did not have the moral right to `forgive' the
> > > perpetrators of war crimes.
> > >
> > > However, the inability, or opportunistic reluctance, of the
> > > post-independence government to try the perpetrators of war crimes and their
> > > collaborators does not mean that the crimes cannot be investigated and the
> > > criminals punished now, forty years after the war of independence. There are
> > > instances in history that war crimes have been tried several years after the
> > > crimes were committed. It is better late than never, especially when it
> > > comes to justice. We have no reason to believe the mere trial of war crimes
> > > would divide the nation anew – the nation is already divided on political
> > > lines – as the number of `collaborators' in 1971 was very few as against the
> > > entire population of the day who stood for the country's liberation from the
> > > occupation forces.
> > >
> > > We, therefore, believe the government should go ahead with the trial of the
> > > collaborators of war crimes, and demand that the surviving officers of the
> > > Pakistan army who perpetrated war crimes in Bangladesh should be handed over
> > > to the war crimes tribunal for trial. Notably, the Pakistani authorities,
> > > while signing the tripartite agreement with Bangladesh and India for the
> > > repatriation of the guilty officers to Pakistan in 1973, promised to try
> > > their crimes in their homeland. But the Pakistani authorities failed to keep
> > > the commitment. It is time that Bangladesh demanded, at the least, that the
> > > guilty officers be tried in Pakistan in accordance with the commitment that
> > > its government had made four decades ago.
> > >
> > > Meanwhile, the country's democratically oriented citizens committed to
> > > justice require to keep an eye on the whole process of the trial in Dhaka,
> > > so that the trial is fair and transparent, and that the government of Awami
> > > League cannot victimise its political rivals in the name of trying the
> > > perpetrators/collaborators of war crime, nor can it prolong the trial unduly
> > > for politically using the issue for parochial partisan interests for the
> > > years to come, as it has done before.
> > >
> > > http://www.newagebd.com/2010/oct/07/edit.html
> > >
> >
>


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

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[ALOCHONA] China's 'New Cold War' puts democracies in danger



China's 'New Cold War' puts democracies in danger
 
Bharat Verma

The spread of two authoritarian streams, Chinese communism and the Islamic fundamentalism, in combination or otherwise, threaten the survival of democracies in Asia.

First, Beijing deftly sucked in most of the democracies in its economic orbit by making China a very cheap manufacturing destination of the world. This simultaneously created gigantic hard currency reserves and vast political influence. Second, from the inflow of foreign direct investments, a modern lethal military machine was forged. Third, Beijing skillfully invested in dictatorial or Islamic fundamentalist regimes in Asia like North Korea, Pakistan, and Myanmar.

Accretion of extraordinary power allows China to escape unscathed, bringing to an end, the phase of 'Peaceful rise of China'!

On one hand, this boosts Pakistan and North Korea's capability to tie down democracies like India, South Korea and Japan without the necessity of China being involved overtly. On the other, by transferring sensitive technologies to these countries, China deflects the attention of major powers from itself and conveniently shifts the debate to the rogue nations clandestinely supported by it. Thus the energies and resources of the other big powers are consumed handling the fall out in Pakistan, Myanmar, Iran and North Korea.

Accretion of extraordinary power allows China to escape unscathed, bringing to an end, the phase of 'Peaceful rise of China'! The ongoing coercive diplomacy against Japan marks the beginning of 'Rise of the expansionist China.'

The Islamic fundamentalists and other dictatorial regimes like the military junta of Myanmar by themselves do not constitute dire threat to democracies in Asia as they individually lack capabilities.

However, to gain supremacy in Asia, extreme ideologies supported by Chinese machinations constitute a dangerous tool that can cause mayhem.

To dominate Asia, China will ensure that Islamic regimes come under the Chinese tutelage. Their rigid philosophies have more in common with each other than with the democracies. This helps Beijing in two ways. First, it keeps the Islamic fundamentalists in check and prevents insurrection in Sinkiang inhabited by a large Muslim population.

Second, by way of investment, aid and transfer of sensitive technology, Beijing uses the 'barbarians', i.e., Islamic fundamentalists in Pakistan and Afghanistan, Maoists in Nepal or authoritarian regime in North Korea to tie up in knots democracies like India, Japan, South Korea or America and its allies within Asia.

These dark forces are an extension of the Chinese war machine to ensure that democracies become dysfunctional and ultimately redundant.

These dark forces are an extension of the Chinese war machine to ensure that democracies become dysfunctional and ultimately redundant.

If the multi-cultural democratic Indian role model succeeds in Asia, the single party Chinese model is bound to fail.

Pakistan is a classic example, which China treats as its colony. Beijing worries that its dreams to reach Gwadar port by land will come to a naught, if Pakistan splinters. This is the singular reason for the Chinese military to be inducted into Pakistan Occupied Kashmir, lest this area, which includes Gilgit and Baltistan, rejoin the Indian state of J&K.

Similarly, if North Korea unites with South Korea, China will feel threatened by the formidable new power equation in its vicinity.

Washington's attempts to woo Islamabad away from Beijing will not succeed as both nurture an anti-America and anti-India orientation.

The falling apart of Pakistan or uniting of the Koreas, therefore, will certainly curtail Chinese ambitions and enhance footprints of the democracies in Asia.

A win-win for democracies of all hues!

The battle in Asia in many ways, therefore, is poised between the forces of darkness led by China, and the light of freedom and hope being nurtured by the democracies.

The battle in Asia in many ways, therefore, is poised between the forces of darkness led by China, and the light of freedom and hope being nurtured by the democracies.

If the groups or nations with extreme philosophies led by China succeed, the economic powerhouse of the world in the twenty-first century, i.e., Asia will be under the control of authoritarian regimes. The Western influences led by America's global interests will be obliterated. Islamization of Europe will become a certainty. North America will feel the heat. India, the softest target, of course, will get the first jolt.

To contend with the American power, Beijing desires a multi-polar world, but in Asia it is determined to achieve China-centric unipolarity.

What should be India's game plan?

India can be to Asia what America is to the world- a symbol of hope, freedom, justice and liberty.

First, India must attract massive inflow of foreign direct investment by creating the requisite business environment. The red tape that is retarding India's economic growth should be immediately dispensed with. It is essential we emerge as the leading alternate manufacturing and technology research hub in Asia. Those who bring in the sunrise technologies in joint ventures must be rewarded and encouraged.

The cutting edge technological research requires huge investments, young skilled demographic profile and friendly business environment, where all partners profit in a variety of ways. India boasts of potential to lead Asia in all these parameters.

Keeping Indian societal characteristics in view, American economic model with minor modifications incorporating some of the social welfare features of Europe will be a huge success that can propel India to the top.

Less government and more governance will lead to creation of unprecedented wealth.

Second, New Delhi so far has grossly underutilized the potent geo-economic card held in the Indian arsenal. For example there is ban by the West in transfer of sensitive technologies to China. Many of such technologies can be transferred to India, if the FDI in defense sector is increased to 49 percent from the present unviable 26 percent! Further, to realize the full potential, if defense sector is opened to the private sector, India can be fairly self-sufficient in defense equipment in the next ten years.

Importantly, when other democracies are allowed substantial stakes in the Indian economy, which is mutually beneficial, there will be an automatic increase in New Delhi's international clout. Therefore, New Delhi must heal these self-inflicted wounds borne out of myopic policies.

Twenty-first Century will witness a robust partnership between India and the United States due to the extraordinary synergy of purpose.

Today India's appetite and the resources to modernize are gigantic. It has enough eggs to put in different baskets that can leverage influence to its benefit.

Third, 'Guest is not God!' as touted by Indians. The Chinese and Pakistani guests want a fair chunk of this country's territory. They have used every dirty trick in the trade to de-stabilize India. Guests must strictly be made to adhere to the passport control regime. More vital is the fact that New Delhi to survive the hostile two-fronts must create extraordinary military capabilities with the help of democracies of the West led by America.

Modern military power capable of dominance in space, air, land and sea in Asia is key to India's future. It should be able to defend the wealth we create as well as the democratic space.

Fourth, India must shape strong economic and military relationships with democracies like Japan, South Korea and others within Asia. This relationship can further acquire muscle by forming similar networked partnerships with the Western democracies led by America.

Twenty-first Century will witness a robust partnership between India and the United States due to the extraordinary synergy of purpose. The former to protect its democratic fabric and the territorial integrity, and the latter to defend its global stakes in Asia, which includes, access to this huge market.

This relationship between the two democracies can effectively compel Beijing to abandon New Cold War started by it in Asia and revert to 'Peaceful rise of China!"

http://www.indiandefencereview.com/IDR-Updates/Chinas-New-Cold-War-puts-democracies-in-danger.html



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Re: [ALOCHONA] 7 injured in fierce clash of rival groups of AL



This story gave me hope. I welcome the death of all politicians and their supporters when it is at their own ends. I am disappointed only in the RAB. A perfect opportunity for a crossfire incident was lost. The RAB should reconsider how they deal with such encounters.

After all, when you see trash in your home, you should really take it out.

Emanur Rahman | m. +447734567561 | e. emanur@rahman.com


From: Isha Khan <bdmailer@gmail.com>
Sender: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Date: Thu, 14 Oct 2010 11:29:03 +0600
ReplyTo: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ALOCHONA] 7 injured in fierce clash of rival groups of AL

7 injured in fierce clash of rival groups of AL
 
 
At least seven activists were injured in a fierce clash between two rival groups of ruling Awami League at Chardumuria in sadar upazila tonight.
 
Kamal, 30, was admitted to the Munshiganj General Hospital while Ameer, 20, and Sohag, 20, were undergoing treatment in private clinics to avoid police action.UNB correspondent Nasiruddin reporting from the spot said sounds of barrage of gunfire and blasts of homemade bombs were heard. The clash started at 9-30pm was continuing till 11-40pm.
 
Both sides are equipped with firearms, bombs and deadly weapons.
 
Villagers said the clash triggered from differences in selection of candidates for the ensuing union parishad election.District Awami League vice president Shah Alam Mallik is leading one group and sadar upazila Awami League vice president Mustafa Molla the other group.Heavy contingent riot gear police and elite force RAB reached the spot.
 


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