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Wednesday, October 27, 2010

[ALOCHONA] The danger of Grameenism



The danger of Grameenism

By: Patrick Bond

Far from being a panacea for fighting rural poverty, microcredit can impose additional burdens on the rural poor, without markedly improving their socio-economic condition. (Also below, Khorshed Alam on why microcredit initiatives inspired by Mohammad Yunus's vision and implemented by Grameen Bank and other NGOs have not gone nearly as well in Bangladesh as has been publicised worldwide.)
 

For years, the example of microcredit in Bangladesh has been touted as a model of how the rural poor can lift themselves out of poverty. This widely held perception was boosted in 2006, when Mohammad Yunus and Grameen Bank, the microfinance institution he set up, jointly received the Nobel Peace Prize. In Southasia in particular, and the world in general, microcredit has become a gospel of sorts, with Yunus as its prophet.


Consider this outlandish claim, made by Yunus as he got started in the late 1970s: 'Poverty will be eradicated in a generation. Our children will have to go to a 'poverty museum' to see what all the fuss was about.' According to Milford Bateman, a senior research fellow at the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) in London who is one of the world's experts on Grameen and microcredit, the reason this rhetoric resonated with international donors during the era of neoliberal globalisation, was that 'they love the non-state, self-help, fiscally-responsible and individual entrepreneurship angles.'

Grameen's origins are sourced to a discussion Yunus had with Sufiya Begum, a young mother who, he recalled, 'was making a stool made of bamboo. She gets five taka from a business person to buy the bamboo and sells to him for five and a half taka, earning half a taka as her income for the day. She will never own five taka herself and her life will always be steeped into poverty. How about giving her a credit for five taka that she uses to buy the bamboo, sell her product in free market, earn a better profit and slowly pay back the loan?' Describing Begum and the first 42 borrowers in Jobra village in Bangladesh, Yunus waxed eloquent: 'Even those who seemingly have no conceptual thought, no ability to think of yesterday or tomorrow, are in fact quite intelligent and expert at the art of survival. Credit is the key that unlocks their humanity.'


But what is the current situation in Jobra? Says Bateman, 'It's still trapped in deep poverty, and now debt. And what is the response from Grameen Bank? All research in the village is now banned!' As for Begum, says Bateman, 'she actually died in abject poverty in 1998 after all her many tiny income-generating projects came to nothing.' The reason, Bateman argues, is simple: 'It turns out that as more and more 'poverty-push' micro-enterprises were crowded into the same local economic space, the returns on each micro-enterprise began to fall dramatically. Starting a new trading business or a basket-making operation or driving a rickshaw required few skills and only a tiny amount of capital, but such a project generated very little income indeed because everyone else was pretty much already doing exactly the same things in order to survive.'

Contrary to the carefully cultivated media image, Yunus is not contributing to peace or social justice. In fact, he is an extreme neoliberal ideologue. To quote his philosophy, as expressed in his 1998 autobiography, Banker to the Poor,

I believe that 'government', as we know it today, should pull out of most things except for law enforcement and justice, national defense and foreign policy, and let the private sector, a 'Grameenized private sector', a social-consciousness-driven private sector, take over their other functions.
At the time as he wrote those words, governments across the world, especially in the United States, were pulling back from regulating financial markets. In 1999, for example, Larry Summers (then US Treasury secretary and now President Barack Obama's overall economics tsar) set the stage for the crash of financial-market instruments known as derivatives, by refusing to regulate them as he had been advised.

The resulting financial crisis, peaking in 2008, should have changed Yunus's tune. After all, the catalysing event in 2007 was the rising default rate on a rash of 'subprime mortgage' loans given to low-income US borrowers. These are the equivalent of Grameen's loans to very poor Bangladeshis, except that Yunus did not go so far as the US lenders in allowing them to be securitised with overvalued real estate.

Yunus has long argued that 'credit is a fundamental human right', not just a privilege for those with access to bank accounts and formal employment. But reflect on this matter and you quickly realise how inappropriate it is to compare bank debt – a liability that can be crushing to so many who do not survive the rigours of neoliberal markets - with crucial political and civil liberties, health care, water, nutrition, education, environment, housing and the other rights guaranteed in the constitutions of countries around the world.

Microcredit mantras
By early 2009, as the financial crisis tightened its grip on the world, Yunus had apparently backed away from his long-held posture. At that time, he told India's MicroFinance Focus magazine the very opposite of what he had been saying: 'If somebody wants to do microcredit – fine. I wouldn't say this is something everybody should have' (emphasis added). Indeed, the predatory way that credit was introduced to vulnerable US communities in recent years means that Yunus must now distinguish his Grameen Bank's strategy of 'real' microcredit from microcredit 'which has a different motivation'. As Yunus told MicroFinance Focus, 'Whenever something gets popular, there are people who take advantage of that and misuse it.'

To be sure, Yunus also unveiled a more radical edge in that interview, interpreting the crisis in the following terms. 'The root causes are the wrong structure, the capitalism structure that we have,' he said. 'We have to redesign the structure we are operating in. Wrong, unsustainable lifestyle.' Fair enough. But in the next breath, Yunus was back to neoliberalism, arguing that state microfinance regulation 'should be promotional, a cheerleader.'

For Yunus, regulators are apparently anathema, especially if they clamp down on what are, quite frankly, high-risk banking practices, such as hiding bad debts. As the Wall Street Journal conceded in late 2001, a fifth of the Grameen Bank's loans were more than a year past their due date: 'Grameen would be showing steep losses if the bank followed the accounting practices recommended by institutions that help finance microlenders through low-interest loans and private investments.' A typical financial sleight-of-hand resorted to by Grameen is to reschedule short-term loans that are unpaid after as long as two years; thus, instead of writing them off, it lets borrowers accumulate interest through new loans simply to keep alive the fiction of repayments on the old loans. Not even extreme pressure techniques – such as removing tin roofs from delinquent women's houses, according to the Journal report – improved repayment rates in the most crucial areas, where Grameen had earlier won its global reputation among neoliberals who consider credit and entrepreneurship as central prerequisites for development.

By the early 2000s, even the huckster-rich microfinance industry had felt betrayed by Yunus' tricks. 'Grameen Bank had been at best lax, and more likely at worst, deceptive in reporting its financial performance,' wrote leading microfinance promoter J D Von Pischke of the World Bank in reaction to the Journal's revelations. 'Most of us in the trade probably had long suspected that something was fishy.' Agreed Ross Croulet of the African Development Bank, 'I myself have been suspicious for a long time about the true situation of Grameen so often disguised by Dr Yunus's global stellar status.'

Several years earlier, Yunus was weaned off the bulk of his international donor support, reportedly USD 5 million a year, which until then had reduced the interest rate he needed to charge borrowers and still make a profit. Grameen had allegedly become 'sustainable' and self-financing, with costs to be fully borne by borrowers.

To his credit, Yunus had also battled backward patriarchal and religious attitudes in Bangladesh, and his hard work extended credit to millions of people. Today there are around 20,000 Grameen staffers servicing 6.6 million borrowers in 45,000 Bangladeshi villages, lending an average of USD 160 per borrower (about USD 100 million/month in new credits), without collateral, an impressive accomplishment by any standards. The secret to such high turnover was that poor women were typically arranged in groups of five: two got the first tranche of credit, leaving the other three as 'chasers' to pressure repayment, so that they could in turn get the next loans.

At a time of new competitors, adverse weather conditions (especially the 1998 floods) and a backlash by borrowers who used the collective power of non-payment, Grameen imposed dramatic increases in the price of repaying loans. That Grameen was gaining leverage over women – instead of giving them economic liberation – is a familiar accusation. In 1995, New Internationalist magazine probed Yunus about the 16 'resolutions' he required his borrowers to accept, including 'smaller families'. When New Internationalist suggested this 'smacked of population control', Yunus replied, 'No, it is very easy to convince people to have fewer children. Now that the women are earners, having more children means losing money.' The long history of forced sterilisation in the Third World is often justified in such narrow economic terms.

In the same spirit of commodifying everything, Yunus set up a relationship with the biotechnology giant Monsanto to promote biotech and agrochemical products in 1998, which, New Internationalist reported, 'was cancelled due to public pressure.' As Sarah Blackstock reported in the same magazine the following year: 'Away from their homes, husbands and the NGOs that disburse credit to them, the women feel safe to say the unmentionable in Bangladesh – microcredit isn't all it's cracked up to be … What has really sold microcredit is Yunus's seductive oratorical skill.' But that skill, Blackstock explains, allows Yunus and leading imitators
to ascribe poverty to a lack of inspiration and depoliticise it by refusing to look at its causes. Microcredit propagators are always the first to advocate that poor people need to be able to help themselves. The kind of microcredit they promote isn't really about gaining control, but ensuring the key beneficiaries of global capitalism aren't forced to take any responsibility for poverty.
The big lie
Microfinance gimmickry has done huge damage in countries across the globe. In South Africa in 1998, for instance, when the emerging-markets crisis raised interest rates across the developing world, an increase of seven percent, imposed over two weeks as the local currency crashed, drove many South African borrowers and their microlenders into bankruptcy. Ugandan political economist Dani Nabudere has also rebutted 'the argument which holds that the rural poor need credit which will enable them to improve their productivity and modernise production.' For Nabudere, this 'has to be repudiated for what it is – a big lie.'

Inside even the most neoliberal financing agency (and Grameen sponsor), the World Bank, these lessons were by obvious by the early 1990s. Sababathy Thillairajah, an economist, had reviewed the Bank's African peasant credit programmes in 1993, and advised colleagues: 'Leave the people alone. When someone comes and asks you for money, the best favour you can give them is to say 'no'… We are all learning at the Bank. Earlier we thought that by bringing in money, financial infrastructure and institutions would be built up – which did not occur quickly.'

But not long afterwards, Yunus stepped in to help the World Bank with ideological support. When I met Yunus in Johannesburg, not long before South Africa's April 1994 liberation, he vowed he wouldn't take Bank funds. Yet in August 1995, Yunus endorsed the Bank's USD 200 million global line of credit aimed at microfinance for poor women. However, according to ODI's Bateman, the World Bank 'insisted on a few changes: the mantra of 'full cost recovery', the hard-line belief that the poor must pay the full costs of any program ostensibly designed to help them, and the key methodology is to impose high interest rates and to reward employees as Wall Street-style motivation.'

Bateman also remarks on the damage caused to Bangladesh itself by subscribing to the microcredit gospel: 'Bangladesh was left behind by neighbouring Asian countries, who all choose to deploy a radically different 'development-driven' local financial model: Taiwan, South Korea, Thailand, China, Vietnam.' And the countries that were more reliant on neoliberal microfinance soon hit, Bateman insists, 'saturation, with the result of over-indebtedness, 'microcredit bubbles', and small business collapse.' Just as dangerous, Yunus's model actually 'destroys social capital and solidarity,' says Bateman. It is used up 'when repayment is prioritised over development. No technical support is provided, threats are used, assets are seized. And governments use microfinance to cut public spending on the poor and women, who are left to access expensive services from the private sector.' The Yunus phenomenon is, in short, a more pernicious contribution to capitalism than ordinary loan-sharking, because it has been bestowed with such legitimacy.

Bateman records extremely high microfinance interest rates 'everywhere'. In Bangladesh, for instance, these are around 30 to 40 percent; in Mexico, they go up as high as 80 percent. No wonder that in the most recent formal academic review of microfinance, by economist Dean Karlan of Yale University, 'There might be little pockets here and there of people who are made better off, but the average effect is weak, if not nonexistent.'

As the Wall Street Journal put it in 2001, 'To many, Grameen proves that capitalism can work for the poor as well as the rich.' And yet the record should prove otherwise, just as the subprime financial meltdown has shown the mirage of finance during periods of capitalist crisis.


The latest figures suggest that nearly 70 million people (out of 150 million total) in Bangladesh are still living below the poverty line; of those, about 30 million are considered to live in chronic poverty. Grameen Bank now has around seven million borrowers in Bangladesh, 97 percent of whom are women. Yet after decades of poverty-alleviation programmes what effect has Grameen had in its home country? The microcredit initiatives inspired by Mohammad Yunus's vision and implemented by Grameen Bank and other NGOs have not gone nearly as well in Bangladesh as has been publicised worldwide.

To start with, the terms of microcredit in Bangladesh are inflexible and generally far too restrictive – by way of weekly repayment and savings commitments – to allow the borrowers to utilise the newfound credit freely. After all, with a first repayment scheduled for a week after the credit is given, what are the options but petty trading? The effective interest rate stands at 30 to 40 percent, while some suggest it goes upwards of 60 percent in certain situations. Defaulters, therefore, are on the rise, with many being compelled to take out new loans from other sources at even higher interest rates.

Worryingly, in the families of some 82 percent of female borrowers, exchange of dowry has increased since their enrolment with Grameen Bank – it seems that micro-borrowing is seen as enabling the families to pay more dowry than otherwise.

Only five to 10 percent of Grameen borrowers have showed improvement of their quality of life with the help of microcredit, and those who have done will tend to have other sources of income as well. Fully half of the borrowers who could not improve were able to retain their positions by taking out loans from multiple sources; about 45 percent could not do so at all, and their position deteriorated. Many are thus forced to flee the village and try to find work in an urban area or abroad. It has now become clear that most Grameen borrowers spend their newfound credit for their daily livelihood expenditure, rather than on income-generating initiatives.

The main difference between microcredit lenders and feudal moneylenders was that the latter needed collateral. It is true that microcredit has created money flows in rural areas, but also that it created a process through which small-scale landowners can quickly become landless – if one cannot pay back the money at high interest rates, many are forced to sell their land. In cases of failure of timely repayment, instances of seizure by Grameen of tin roofs, pots and pans, and other household goods do take place – amounting to implicit collateral.

This does not mean that credit is not useful to the poor and powerless. The problem lies in the approach taken. Poverty is conceptualised extremely narrowly, only in terms of cash income; when in fact it has to do with all aspects of life, involving both basic material needs such as food, clothing and housing; and basic human needs such as human dignity and rights, education, health and equity. It is true that the rural economy today has received some momentum from microcredit. But the questions remain: Why has this link failed to make any significant impact on poverty? Why, despite the purported 'success' of microcredit, do people in distress keep migrating to urban centres? Why does a famine-like situation persists in large parts of Bangladesh, particularly in the north? Moreover, why does the number of people under the poverty line keep rising – alongside the rising microcredit?

In fact, poverty has its roots and causes, and expanding the credit net without addressing these will never improve any poverty situation. Experience shows that if countries such as Bangladesh rely heavily on microcredit for alleviating poverty, poverty will remain – to keep the microcredit venture alive. Grameen Bank's 'wonderful story' of prosperity, solidarity and empowerment has only one problem: it never happened.

~ Khorshed Alam

~ Patrick Bond is a senior professor at the University of KwaZulu-Natal School of Development Studies Centre for Civil Society in Durban, South Africa. Khorshed Alam is executive director of the Alternative Movement for Resources and Freedom Society, based in Dhaka.


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[ALOCHONA] Re: Trade gap with Delhi increases to $2.91b

An hour of Faruk's valuable time at the Indian ministry should soon solve the problem.

Also, with a bit of luck we could sell enough fish and gadha marka batteries at the border haats to really close the trade gap.

--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, Isha Khan <bdmailer@...> wrote:
>
> Trade gap with Delhi increases to $2.91b
>
>
> A high-powered team headed by Commerce Minister Faruk Khan left for
> India Thursday to find out ways to address the huge trade gap with
> India.The 23-member delegation including 16 business leaders will take
> up issues related to increasing bilateral relation between the two
> neighbouring countries.
>
> It may be mentioned that Bangladesh's trade imbalance with India has
> widened by $1.37 billion over the last five years mainly due to
> imposition of para-tariff and non-tariff barriers on Bangladeshi
> products by Indian authorities.
>
> The country's trade gap with India increased to nearly $ 2.91 billion
> in 2009-10 fiscal year against $ 1.62 billion in 2005-06 fiscal, a
> Commerce Ministry statement said.
>
> The statement, however, said Bangladesh's trade imbalance continued to
> rise in the last five fiscal years following a mismatch between the
> country's exports to India and imports from its neighbour.
>
> Bangladesh exported products worth of $ 241.96 million in 2005-06
> fiscal year against its imports of $ 1868 million.
>
> On the other hand, the country's total exports to India marked a
> marginal rise to $ 304 million in 2009-10 fiscal as against its
> imports from India amounting to $ 3213 million, the commerce ministry
> figures showed.
>
> Terming various para-tariff and non-tariff barriers main hindrances to
> the growth of Bangladesh's exports to India, the commerce ministry
> statement said exporters and businessmen said they often face a good
> number of non-tariff and para-tariff barriers while exporting to
> India.
>
> These include education tax at 0.08 per cent and 0.16 per cent on
> tariff value for cotton items and non cotton items, Indian customs
> authority asks for laboratory test for each and every consignment of
> food products, cosmetics, leather and textile products. Exporters are
> subjected to pay Rs. 3000 as laboratory test fee for each type of food
> items. The laboratory report normally takes 15-20 days as the samples
> are sent by ordinary mails to the laboratories located far from the
> land customs stations which delays the clearance of consignment.
>
> Furthermore, the Indian authorities have recently imposed 18 per cent
> tax and value added tax (VAT) as central value added tax, Special
> Central Vat and Education Tax on apparels of Bangladesh origin defying
> the SAFTA agreement.
>
> Under the SAFTA list of sensitive goods, India is supposed to provide
> duty-free access to 8.0 million pieces of apparels originating from
> Bangladesh from 2008.
>
> Original SAFTA certificate issued by the Export Promotion Bureau (EPB)
> is not accepted by Indian customs at Agartala. Indian customs men ask
> both the exporters and importers to submit details of rules of origin
> calculation along with the documents, ignoring the set criteria of the
> regional agreement, according to the list.
>
> Sanitary import permit has been made mandatory for Indian importers of
> processed food, toiletries and cosmetics from Bangladesh.
>
> Indian government has recently imposed 18 per cent extra duty on
> cement imports from Bangladesh, affecting cement exports to India's
> North Eastern region.
>
> Packaging requirement has been specified for food items with maximum
> retail price, standard unit, month and year of packaging to be
> inscribed on the packets. All pre-packaged commodities like processed
> foods, cosmetics, toiletries, spices imported by India requires
> generic and common name of the commodity packed, net quantity in terms
> of standard unit of weights and measures.
>
> Non-tariff barrier like inordinate delay in clearance of Bangladeshi
> goods from customs for various reasons, including non-availability of
> their designated officers and certificates from departments concerned
> of the Indian government causes problems for Bangladeshi exporters.
>
> Besides, inadequate physical facilities like warehousing,
> transshipment yard, parking yard and connecting roads at land customs
> stations of India also hinder exports from Bangladesh, the list
> pointed out.
>
> The Bangladesh delegation now in India will sign two agreements on
> border hat and standard operating procedures (SOP) on truck movement
> between the two countries on October 23.
>
> Two places in both the countries have been initially selected for the
> hat. The hat will be located at Baliamari in Kurigram district and
> Lawar Ghar in Sunamganj district in Bangladesh and Kalai Char and Bala
> in Meghalaya in India. It is expected that the hat will start by
> December this year.
>
> A number of issues including removal of tariff and non-tariff
> barriers, duty-free access to Indian market, further reduction of 61
> items from India's negative list, Free Trade Agreement (FTA) and
> investment, relaxing universal Indian ban on cotton export to
> Bangladesh are likely to dominate official talks between Bangladesh
> and India.
>
> The list of 61 items includes 49 ready-made garment (RMG) products.
> The major goods under 61 items of the Indian sensitive list include
> different kinds of RMG, soybean oil, refined palm oil, aviation
> turbine fuel and fuel oil, natural rubber (smoked sheets), toilet or
> facial tissue stock, sanitary napkin, all kinds of paper or paperboard
> labels and silk fabrics.
>
> Meetings will be held between Commerce Minister of Bangladesh and
> Industries Minister Ananda Sharma and Minister for Development of
> North Eastern Region PK Handik of India.
>
> The delegation will also participate in discussions with the leaders
> of Federation of Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) and
> Confederation of Indian Industries (CII), among others.
>
> The team is expected to come back on October 24 after the four-day visit.
>
> http://www.thefinancialexpress-bd.com/more.php?news_id=115426&date=2010-10-22
>


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[ALOCHONA] Re: A topic that needs our attention

Dear QR

I hope you are keeping well.

This is not virtual adda. If it is, then it is virtual adda that drives Bangladeshi politics coupled with violence on our streets and the antics of our leaders in our media. As we can neither join the fray on the street, nor buy time in the media, we must argue where we can. I assure you, your arguments are nothing like adda.

I respectfully suggest to you that getting bogged down in the water supply issues of Badda is a mistake. This is the responsibility, and failing, of the government. Politicians would love to see you busy carrying water to and fro. They might grant you a photo opportunity with them. They might tell their gangsters to leave you alone as you go about your business.

Anything to stop you from doing what you call 'virtual adda'.

Look at independent commentators on tv. Look at neutral citizens writing into the press. Look at the mood in the next dinner party you attend. And look how AL and BNP activists online avoid arguing with you or try to change the subject. Politicians are under pressure inspite of their stubborn facade. Its time to keep the pressure up and time to encourage others to contribute to this pressure. This, I believe, is the calling for you and me - and for all who place our beautiful country above party interests.

If anything you should help the people of Badda protest, in public and in the media, against the proper authorities for the problems they face. This is what you can do:

- Contact newspapers and demand they send journalists to Badda
- Write your own aritcles, with photos, and send to newspapers
- Visit the MP and water authorities and publish their repsonses
- Take video evidence and send to the tv channels
- Take the locals to the MP's house and WASA offices
- Encourage the locals to block a road now and then in protest
- Get a petition signed by locals
- Organise the locals and empower their leaders
- Try to engage international media
- Take a load of sewage and deposit in front of the MP's house

This is the fight. And you are a part of it. Drop your bucket and pail. Pick up your pen and phone.

There is misery everywhere. Go to the source of the problem.

I have long known about the contribution of our popular culture to our national malaise. But I never wrote about it because it seemed the greatest taboo of all. For the first time in my life I have seen someone else refer to it - in your recent mail. I am liberated. Thank you. I shall now attack our popular culture with all the malice I can muster - because I know that one other person has dared to write about it before me. Your thoughtful words are far more important than my bile. So you see - drop the bucket and keep your pen.

Best wishes

Junel


--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, qrahman@... wrote:
>
>
> Dear all,
>
> I have been participating in 'Virtual adda" with all of you for many years. We passionately discuss and debate our ideas and argue about how best to improve [ Most of the time] our country and politics. Recently some friends of mine asked my help to solve a read problem in part of Dhaka. I felt real bad after learning that, large part of Badda [ An highly populated area near Gulshan] people are without water supply near about a month. Somehow the sewer line and line for drinking water got mixed and thousands of people are without drinking water. It is hard of many of us to imagine to live without water supply for even one day. I was very upset to discover that, Dhaka WASA has not taken any steps to "Fix" this issue. These people told me although they are not getting clean water and forced buy water at a very high price, they are forced to pay for the stinky dirty water they are getting at the same time.
>
> I have taken time to talk to some of these people are various issues that impacts our country. Like the virtual world, we discussed ways to improve our politics, communal harmony, business etc. But how in God's name people can think about these lofty ideas when our nation fail to provide clean water to these people? I was very disturbed when I heard what they have to go through to earn a living in Dhaka. As most of you know public transportation in Dhaka is horrible. You have to spend at least 2-3 hours every day to get CNG gas and safety of Dhaka roads can compete with roads of Kabul in Afghanistan.
>
> These people did not forget to remind me that, WASA employees forced them [ Extortion] to pay extra money when they received water connection in the first place.
>
> We had many discussion about "Pie in the sky matters" here. I like to hear your ideas about this one. Water shortage is bound to hit us harder in the coming days.
>
> It will be very nice if any of our members can do something to help these people. No one from the media came to talk about it yet. This can be a real opportunity for Alochona members to make a tangible contribution to people of Dhaka. Even if you know someone in the media, you can ask them to talk to these people.
>
>
>
> --qr
>


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[ALOCHONA] Danger of Destiny 2000 looting all money from poor



Dear all
 
Be awaken about the danger of Destiny 2000; we need more write-ups on the web onto them.
 
Mohammed Ramjan Ali Bhuiyan
Kuwait


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[ALOCHONA] Crisis of confidence



Crisis of confidence
 
 
 


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[ALOCHONA] 'AL turning us into another Sikkim'



'AL turning us into another Sikkim'
 
Dhaka, Oct 26 (bdnews24.com) — BNP chief Khaleda Zia has accused the government of conspiring to obliterate the opposition following the same tactics pursued by the previous military-installed interim government. Drawing an analogy to Sikkim, which was gobbled up by India in the 1970s, Khaleda said that the government was trying to turn Bangladesh into another Sikkim.

The former prime minister criticised many accords the government signed with India, terming them harmful to the country. "This government has done nothing but protect the interests of its masters. Every day at the border there is killing and land-grabbing, and yet they do not protest." Khaleda made the allegations at a meeting of the Jatiyatabadi Swechchhasebak Dal, BNP's volunteer wing, at her Gulshan office on Tuesday.

Terming those who jeopardise the country's interests and sovereignty as 'vultures', she said, "These vultures must be stopped at all costs. We must prepare for a movement. I will most certainly lead people to a movement."

The opposition leader said she believes that a good relationship between the government and the opposition is necessary to sustain democracy. "But this government does not share that belief. So, they are pursuing an oppressive policy."


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[ALOCHONA] Re: MADAM PLEASE HAND OVER THE HOUSE !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Not for Manik the murder and mayhem caused by those in his own party. Not for him debates about maritime boundaries and sovereignty. Not for him the negligencies and mistakes of government. Not him the suicides of 12 year old girls given away as brides. Not for him the bribes required for licences and permits. Not for him the corruption at Dhaka Airport even though renaming him after a saint. Not for him the stuff of everyday life - the traffic, the schools, the campuses, the price of food, the power supplies. Oh no!

For him, as a political activist of Bangladesh -

MADAM PLEASE HAND OVER THE HOUSE!

Yeah Manik. I also hope, like you, that she is dragged out by her hair and thrown on the streets in front of the Army.

Because, the way things are going, one day a small group of men are going to say enough is enough. And the sooner the better.

But please keep worrying about the house where Madam resides.


--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, Muhammad Ali <manik195709@...> wrote:
>
> এক সময় এই উপমহাদেশ রাজা-বাদশাহ এবং গরিব-দুঃখী সাধারণ মানুষের সম্পদ লুণ্ঠনকারী
> কিছু লà§&lsqauo;ভী ক্ষমতালিপ্সু জমিদার ছিল। এদের বিরাট বিরাট অট্টালিকাসমেত অনেক জায়গার
> à¦"পর ছিল বিশাল বিশাল বাড়ি। যেগুলà§&lsqauo; সাধারণ মানুষের কাছে রাজপ্রাসাদ বলে পরিচিত ছিল।
> সেখানে রাজা-বাদশাহ, রানী-মহারানী à¦" রাজকন্যা-রাজপুত্র বাস করতেন। এছাড়া প্রাসাদের
> ভেতরে এবং তার আশপাশে তাঁদের পাইক-পেয়াদা এবং অন্য কর্মচারীরাà¦" থাকতেন। তাদের
> অনেকের বাড়িà¦" হয়ত কয়েক শ' শতকের à¦"পর ছিল না। এটা শত শত বছরের আগের ঘটনা। কিন্তু
> বিংশ শতাব্দীর শেষভাগে বা একবিংশ শতাব্দীর প্রথমভাগে এ অঞ্চলের একটি দেশের
> রাষ্ট্রপতি বা প্রধানমন্ত্রী বা কà§&lsqauo;ন গণতান্ত্রিক রাষ্ট্রে কà§&lsqauo;ন বড় রাজনৈতিক দলের
> নেতা-নেত্রী বা বিরà§&lsqauo;ধীদলীয় নেতা-নেত্রী যদি প্রায় à¦"রকম একটি প্রাসাদà§&lsqauo;পম বাড়ির মালিক
> হন, সেটাà¦" যদি আবার হয় রাষ্ট্রীয় অনুদান বা আনুকূল্যে তা হলে তà§&lsqauo; সঙ্গতকারণেই
> গণমানুষের কাছে একটু বেখাপ্পা লাগারই কথা। সামনত্মযুগের চাল-চলন আর আরাম-আয়েশে
> বিলাসী জীবনযাপনে গা ভাসিয়ে দিয়ে দেশ শাসন, গণতান্ত্রিক শাসন ব্যবস্থায় একেবারেই
> বেমানান। সে সময় প্রজাপালনের নামে প্রজাদের à¦"পর শুধু খবরদারিই নয়,
> অত্যচার-অনাচার-জুলুম করে কঠিন শ্রমে তাদের উৎপাদিত ফসলের à¦"পর ভাগ বসিয়ে তারা
> সম্পদের পাহাড় গড়ত। সেটা ছিল বর্বরতা à¦" অসভ্যতার কথা। তাই সে যুগের পতন হয়েছে অনেক
> আগেই। এখন সভ্যতার উন্মেষ ঘটেছে। মানব সমাজে অনেক পরিবর্তন-বিবর্তন সাধিত হয়েছে।
> প্রতিষ্ঠিত হয়েছে গণতান্ত্রিক শাসনব্যবস্থা। রাষ্ট্রব্যবস্থা। মানুষের অধিকার
> প্রতিষ্ঠিত হয়েছে। হাজার বছরের শ্রেষ্ঠ বাঙালী বাংলা দেশের স্বপ্নদ্রষ্টা স্থপতি
> বঙ্গবন্ধু শেখ মুজিব এদেশের সর্বসত্মরের মানুষদের সঙ্গে নিয়ে দীর্ঘ
> আন্দà§&lsqauo;লেন-সংগ্রামের মাধ্যমে আমাদের প্রিয় মাতৃভূমি বাংলাদেশকে স্বাধীন সার্বভৌম
> একটি দেশে পরিণত করেছেন। লাজশরমের মাথা খেয়ে একশ্রেণীর ঘৃণ্য মানসিকতার মানুষ অবশ্য
> এ অনন্য কাজটিতেà¦" ভাগ বসাতে এখনà¦" তৎপর। বঙ্গবন্ধুর বাংলাদেশে অনেক চড়াই উৎরাই পার
> হয়ে অবশেষে গণতন্ত্র প্রতিষ্ঠিত হয়েছে। এখান যারা রাষ্ট্র চালাবেন, দেশ চালাবেন এবং
> তারাই তà§&lsqauo; দেশের গণমানুষকে নেতৃত্ব দিয়ে দেশকে সাফল্যের স্বর্ণশিখরে নিয়ে যাà¦"য়ার
> চেষ্টা চালাবেন। মানবকল্যাণ সাধন à¦" দেশের উন্নয়নের কথাই তাদের কর্মকা-ে পরিষ্কার
> ফুটে উঠবে। পরিবর্তে যদি আচার-আচরণে কথাবার্তায় জীবনযাপনের অভ্যাসগত কারণে
> সামনত্মবাদী মনà§&lsqauo;ভাব এখনà¦" অাঁকড়ে ধরে থাকে তা তà§&lsqauo; শুধু বেমানানই নয়, অশà§&lsqauo;ভনীয়à¦"।
> দুঃখিত. ভূমিকাটা একটু বড়ই হয়ে গেল। আসলে বিষয়টি গুরম্নত্বপূর্ণ বলেই আমার এত কথা
> বলতে হলà§&lsqauo;।
>
> মহামান্য আদালত বিরà§&lsqauo;ধীদলীয় নেতার পক্ষ থেকে পেশকৃত রিট খারিজ করে দিয়ে তাঁকে ৩০
> দিনের মধ্যে বাড়িটি ছেড়ে দেয়ার নির্দেশ দিয়েছে। সন্দেহ নেই, বর্তমান বিরà§&lsqauo;ধীদলীয়
> নেতা এর আগে তিন তিনবার (অবশ্য, ১৯৯৬ সালের ভà§&lsqauo;টারবিহীন নির্বাচনে ভুয়া
> প্রধানমন্ত্রী হà¦"য়াসহ) দেশের প্রধানমন্ত্রী নির্বাচিত হয়েছেন। ১৯৮১ সালে
> ক্যান্টনমেন্টের ভিতরে অবস্থিত ৬ নম্বর মইনুল রà§&lsqauo;ডের বাড়িটি মরহুম রাষ্ট্রপতি
> জেনারেল জিয়াউর রহমানের পত্নী বেগম জিয়াকে নামমাত্র মূল্যে বরাদ্দ দেয়ার বিষয়টি
> নিয়েই মূল কথাটি। এরইমধ্যে দেশের অনেক লেখক-কলামিস্ট à¦" আরà¦" অনেক নামী-দামী বিভিন্ন
> পেশার মানুষ বিষয়টি নিয়ে অনেক লিখেছেন। তাঁদের প্রতিক্রিয়া ব্যক্ত করেছেন। সাধারণ
> মানুষà¦" তাঁদের মতà§&lsqauo; করে তাদের মতামত ব্যক্ত করছে। কিন্তু মূল কথাটি হচ্ছে। ম্যাডাম
> খালেদা জিয়ার এই বাড়িটিতে থাকতেই হবে। কারণ, তা না হলে সামনত্মবাদের চিহ্ন এদেশ
> থেকে একবারেই মুছে যাবে যে! আর ম্যাডাম এ বাড়িটি ছাড়েনইবা কি করে, বাড়িটির সঙ্গে
> তাঁর যে অনেক স্মৃতি জড়িয়ে আছে। পরিবারপরিজন নিয়ে তিনি এ বাড়িতে অনেকদিন ধরে আছেন।
> তাই বাড়ি ছাড়ার বিষয়টি তিনি মেনে নিতে পারছেন না। অধুনা তাঁর à¦" তাঁর দলের প্রতি
> অনুরক্ত হয়েছেন এমন অনেকেই বলেছেন বেগম জিয়ার স্বামী জেনারেল জিয়াউর রহমান
> সেনাবাহিনীর ডেপুটি প্রধান হà¦"য়ার সুবাদেই এই বাড়িটির বরাদ্দ পেয়েছিলেন। কথাটি ঠিক
> বঙ্গবন্ধু জীবিত থাকা অবস্থায়ই জিয়াউর রহমান আর্মির ডেপুটি চীফ অবস্থায় এই বড়িটি
> পেয়েছিলেন। অনেকেই জানেন, আবার অনেক জ্ঞানপাপী বিষয়টি জেনেà¦" সত্যটি গà§&lsqauo;পন করার
> চেষ্টা করেন যে জিয়াউর রহমানকে কবে কিভাবে এবং কেন সেনাবাহিনীর ডেপুটি প্রধান করা
> হয়েছিল। ঐ ঘটনার সাক্ষী এবং যাঁরা জানতেন বঙ্গবন্ধু, বঙ্গমাতা বেগম ফজিলেতুন্নেছা
> মুজিব (বঙ্গবন্ধুর ভাষায় কামালের মা) à¦" জেনারেল à¦"সমানীসহ আজ তাঁদের কেউ বেঁচে নেই।
> তবে বেঁচে আছেন বেগম জিয়া নিজে à¦" বর্তমান প্রধানমন্ত্রী শেখ হাসিনা। কারণ জিয়াউর
> রহমানকে আর্মির ডেপুটি প্রধান করার আগ পর্যনত্ম এ পদটির কà§&lsqauo;ন অসত্মিত্বই ছিল না।
> একটি বিশেষ ঘটনাকে কেন্দ্র করে (যা আমি এখানে বলতে চাচ্ছি না) জিয়াউর রহমানকে
> কিছুটা খুশি করার জন্য বিশাল হৃদয়ের অধিকারী বঙ্গবন্ধু কিছু করার আগ্রহ প্রকাশ করলে
> জেনারেল à¦"সমানীর মতামত নিয়ে এ কাজটি করা হয়েছিল। জাতি যখন ভাঙ্গা রেকর্ড বাজানà§&lsqauo; এক
> খন্দকারের ঘ্যানঘ্যানানি শুনতে শুনতে বীতশ্রদ্ধ ঠিক তখনি মাঠে হাজির হয়েছেন আরেক
> খন্দকার মহà§&lsqauo;দয়। তিনি বলেছেন মুক্তিযুদ্ধে বীরত্বের জন্য জিয়াউর রহমানকে ঐ বাড়িটি
> দেয়া হয়েছিল। মুক্তিযুদ্ধের ইতিহাস বিকৃতির প্রয়াস চালানà§&lsqauo;র মতà§&lsqauo; এ সত্যটিরà¦" বিকৃতি
> ঘটানà§&lsqauo;রà¦" অপচেষ্টা চলছে। তিনি কিছুদিন মুক্তিযুদ্ধ করেছিলেন বলেই তাঁর পদের সঙ্গে
> সঙ্গতিপূর্ণ হà¦"য়ার কারণে তিনি বীরউত্তম খেতাবটি পেয়েছিলেন। মুক্তিযুদ্ধে অবদানের
> জন্য সব মেজরই বীরউত্তম খেতাব পেয়েছিলেন। মà§&lsqauo;দ্দাকথা, বিষয়টি এখন যেখানে এসে
> দাঁড়িয়েছে তাতে বেগম জিয়াকে শেষ পর্যনত্ম বাড়িটি ছাড়তেই হচ্ছে। সেনানিবাসের বাড়ি
> ছাড়তে সরকারের দেয়া নà§&lsqauo;টিসের বৈধতা চ্যালেঞ্জ করে বিরà§&lsqauo;ধী দলের নেতা এবং বিএনপির
> চেয়ারপার্সন বেগম খালেদা জিয়ার দায়ের করা রিট পিটিশন খারিজ করে দিয়েছে হাইকà§&lsqauo;র্ট।
> আগামী ৩০ দিনের মধ্যে তাঁকে বাড়ি ছেড়ে দিতে বলা হয়েছে। দীর্ঘ ২২ কার্য দিবস শুনানি
> শেষে হাইকà§&lsqauo;র্টের বিচারপতি নাজমুন আরা সুলতানা à¦" বিচারপতি শেখ হাসান আরিফের সমন্বয়ে
> গঠিত ডিভিশন বেঞ্চ গত ১৩ অক্টà§&lsqauo;বর বুধবার এ রায় প্রদান করে। তবে এই রায়ের বিরম্নদ্ধে
> আপীল করা হবে বলে বেগম জিয়ার আইনজীবীরা জানিয়েছেন। রায়ে বলা হয়েছে সেনানিবাসের বাড়ি
> ছাড়তে খালেদা জিয়াকে যে নà§&lsqauo;টিস দেয়া হয়েছে তা বৈধ। রায় ঘà§&lsqauo;ষণার পর বিএনপি সমর্থিত
> আইনজীবীরা আদালত প্রাঙ্গণে তাৎক্ষণিকভাবে বিক্ষà§&lsqauo;ভ মিছিল বের করেন।
>
> রায় ঘà§&lsqauo;ষণার পর এ্যাটর্নি জেনারেল মাহবুবে আলম সাংবাদিকদের বলেছেন ক্যান্টনমেন্টের
> ১৬৫ কাঠা (সà§&lsqauo;য়া আট বিঘা) মইনুল রà§&lsqauo;ডের à¦"পর অবস্থিত ডেপুটি চীফ অব স্টাফের বাড়িটি
> তৎকালীন সরকার নামমাত্র মূল্যে খালেদা জিয়াকে অবৈধভাবে লিজ দিয়েছিল। তিনি আরà¦" বলেন,
> এ রায়ের মাধ্যমে সত্য প্রতিষ্ঠিত হলà§&lsqauo; যে জনগণের সম্পত্তি অথবা আর্মির সম্পত্তি কà§&lsqauo;ন
> ব্যক্তিবিশেষকে দেয়া যায় না। কà§&lsqauo;ন রাষ্ট্রপতি বা অন্য কেউ এটা দিতে পারেন না।
> রাষ্ট্রপতি বিচারপতি সাত্তার 'অনুরাগবশত' তৎকালীন কà§&lsqauo;য়ার্টার মাস্টার জেনারেল আমজাদ
> আহম্মেদ চেীধুরীর সুপারিশের ভিত্তিতে বাড়িটি দিয়েছিলেন। ১৯৮১ সালের ৩০ মে জিয়াউর
> রহমান নিহত হà¦"য়ার পর ১২ জুন তৎকালীন মন্ত্রিসভা খালেদা জিয়াকে গুলশানে এক বিঘা জমির
> à¦"পর একটি বাড়ি, এককালীন ১০ লাখ টাকা, দু'ছেলের লেখাপড়ার যাবতীয় খরচ, একটি গাড়ির
> তেল, ড্রাইভার, রান্না করার জন্য বাবুর্চি সবকিছু দেয়ার সিদ্ধানত্ম নেয়। মাহবুবে
> আলম বলেন, এতকিছুর পরà¦" তৎকালীন রাষ্ট্রপতি বিচারপতি সাত্তার ১৬৫ কাঠার à¦"পর অবস্থিত
> এ বাড়টি প্রদানের যে আদেশ দিয়েছিলেন তা ছিল সংবিধান পরিপন্থী, অবৈধ à¦" বেআইনী।
> অবশ্য, বেগম জিয়ার আইনজীবী টিএইচ খান সাংবাদিকদের বলেছেন, একটি বাড়ির লিজ
> রেজিস্ট্রি দলিল এভাবে নà§&lsqauo;টিস দিয়ে বাতিল করা যায় না। তিনি বলেন, রায়ে আমরা হতবাক।
> বিষয়টি খালেদা জিয়ার সঙ্গে আলà§&lsqauo;চনা করে এ রায়ের বিরম্নদ্ধে আমরা আপীলের সিদ্ধানত্ম
> নেব।
>
> ২০০৯ সালের ৮ এপ্রিল বর্তমান সরকার মন্ত্রিসভার বৈঠকে ঐ বাড়িটির লিজ বাতিলের
> সিদ্ধানত্ম নেয়। গত বছরের ২০ এপ্রিল সামরিক ভূমি à¦" সেনানিবাস অধিদফতর খালেদা জিয়াকে
> সেনানিবাসের বাড়ি ছাড়ার জন্য প্রথম নà§&lsqauo;টিস প্রদান করে। বাড়ি ছাড়ার নà§&lsqauo;টিসের বৈধতা
> চ্যালেঞ্জ করে খালেদা জিয়া গত বছরের ৩ মে হাইকà§&lsqauo;র্টে রিট আবেদন করেন। পরে ৭ মে
> খালেদা জিয়াকে কতর্ৃপক্ষের তরফ খেকে একটি সম্পূরক নà§&lsqauo;টিস দেয়া হয়। ঘটনা এখানেই শেষ
> নয়। রিট দায়েরের হাইকের্টের চারটি ডিভিশন বেঞ্চের বিচারপতিরা ঐ রিট আবেদনের
> শুনানিতে বিব্রতবà§&lsqauo;ধ করেন। পরে পঞ্চম বেঞ্চের বিচারপতি সৈয়দ রেফাত আহমেদ à¦" বিচারপতি
> মইনুল ইসলাম চৌধুরীর সমন্বয়ে গঠিত ডিভিশন বেঞ্চ রিট আবেদনটি শুনানির জন্য গ্রহণ
> করে। আংশিক শুনানি শেষে গত বছরের ১৮ মে পরবর্তী শুনানির জন্য ২৫ মে দিন ধার্য করা
> হয়। এ সময়ের মধ্যে বেগম জিয়ার বাড়ি ছাড়ার ব্যাপারে কà§&lsqauo;ন পদক্ষেপ না নেয়ার জন্যà¦"
> হাইকà§&lsqauo;র্ট নির্দেশ দেয়। সংশিস্নষ্ট কর্তৃপক্ষ ২৪ মে খালেদা জিয়াকে ৩০ জুনের মধ্যে
> বাড়ি ছাড়ার জন্য তৃতীয় নà§&lsqauo;টিস প্রদান করে। রিট আবেদনটির à¦"পর প্রাথমিক শুনানি শেষে গত
> বছরের ২৭ মে হাইকà§&lsqauo;র্ট নà§&lsqauo;টিসের কার্যকারিতা স্থগিত করেন। বাড়িটি ছাড়ার নà§&lsqauo;টিসটিà¦" কেন
> অবৈধ à¦" বেআইনী ঘà§&lsqauo;ষণা করা হবে না তার কারণ দর্শাতেà¦" আদালত সরকারের à¦"পর রম্নল জারি
> করে। গত ১৩ অক্টà§&lsqauo;বর হাইকà§&lsqauo;র্ট স্থগিতাদেশটি তুলে নেয়। এ রম্নলের চূড়ানত্ম নিষ্পত্তির
> শুনানি শেষে ১৩ অক্টà§&lsqauo;বর হাইকà§&lsqauo;র্ট রম্নলটি খারিজ করে রায় প্রদান করে।
>
> গত বছর প্রধানমন্ত্রী শেখ হাসিনা পার্লামেন্টে এক বক্তৃতায় মইনুল রà§&lsqauo;ডের বড়িটি ছেড়ে
> দেয়ার আহ্বান জানিয়েছিলেন। তিনি বলেছিলেন, সেনানিবাসের এই জায়গাটি পাà¦"য়া গেলে
> সেখানে বিডিআর বিদ্রà§&lsqauo;হে নিহত সেনাসদস্যদের পরিবারগুলà§&lsqauo;র পুনর্বাসনের জন্য ফ্ল্যাট
> নির্মাণ করে প্রত্যেক পরিবারকে দু'টি করে ফ্ল্যাট দেয়া যেত। একটি ফ্ল্যাটে বসবাস
> করে অপরটি ভাড়া দিয়ে পরিবারগুলà§&lsqauo; তাদের জীবিকা নির্বাহ করতে পারত। এ রকম মহৎ
> উদ্দেশ্য প্রদত্ত আহ্বানে বেগম জিয়া সাড়া দিলে বিষয়টি আদালত পর্যনত্ম গড়াত না। অথচ
> আজ খালেদা জিয়ার পক্ষাবলম্বন করে সুপ্রীমকà§&lsqauo;র্ট বার এ্যাসà§&lsqauo;সিয়েশনের সভাপতি খন্দকার
> মাহবুব হà§&lsqauo;সেন বাড়ির বিষয়টি আদালতে নেয়ার কড়া সমালà§&lsqauo;চনা করে এর রাজনৈতিক সমাধানের কথা
> বলেছেন। আমাদের পেশার অনেকের সঙ্গে ঘনিষ্ঠভাবে পরিচিত এ লà§&lsqauo;কটি সম্পর্কে বলতে গেলে
> লেখার কলেবর দীর্ঘ হয়ে যাবে বলে বেশি কিছু আর বলছি না। এই আইনজীবী মহà§&lsqauo;দয়ের সঙ্গে
> একমঞ্চে বসে ১৯৮৯ সালের ১৫ আগস্ট বঙ্গবন্ধুর ধানম-ির ৩২ নম্বরের সামনে অনুষ্ঠিত ১৫
> আগস্টের শà§&lsqauo;কদিবসের সভায় বক্তৃতা দিয়েছিলাম। আমার এক অনুজপ্রতিম এক বিশিষ্ট সাংবাদিক
> à¦" সাংবাদিক নেতাà¦" সেদিন বলেছিলেন যে, মাত্র কয়েক বছর আগেà¦" আà¦"য়ামী লীগের এক
> অনুষ্ঠানে আমরা একসঙ্গে বক্তৃতা দিয়েছি। সুতরাং রঙ্গ বদলানà§&lsqauo; আর ভà§&lsqauo;ল পাল্টানà§&lsqauo; আর
> কাকে বলে। এরইমধ্যে, আবà§&lsqauo;ল-তাবà§&lsqauo;ল বক্তব্য দিয়ে মানুষের দৃষ্টি আকর্ষণ করতে à¦"সত্মাদ
> এবং যুদ্ধাপরাধের দায়ে অভিযুক্ত সালাউদ্দিন কাদের চৌধুরী তার স্বভাবসুলভ কায়দায় এই
> বাড়িটি নিয়েà¦" বেফাঁস মনত্মব্য করেছেন। তিনি বাড়ির বিষয়টি নিষ্পত্তির দায়িত্ব
> সেনাবাহিনীর à¦"পরই ছেড়ে দেয়ার কথা বলেছেন। আমাদের দেশপ্রেমিক সেনাবাহিনী দেশ,
> রাষ্ট্র, শাসনব্যবস্থা à¦" প্রশাসনেরই অংশ। তাই চৌধুরী সাহেবের বক্তব্য একানত্মভাবেই
> সারশূন্য à¦" উস্কানিমূলক।
>
> আà¦"য়ামী লীগ ১৯৯৬ সালে প্রথম ক্ষমতায় আসার পর কিছু অতি উৎসাহী লà§&lsqauo;ক প্রধানমন্ত্রী শেখ
> হাসিনাকে গণভবন নেয়ার জন্য চাপ সৃষ্টি করেছিলেন। কিন্তু বঙ্গবন্ধুকন্যা সে লà§&lsqauo;ভ
> সহজেই সংবরণ করতে পেরেছিলেন। তবে সবচেয়ে খারাপ লাগছে এ কথাটি মনে করে যে, খালেদা
> জিয়ার সরকার বঙ্গবন্ধুর ছà§&lsqauo;ট মেয়ে শেখ রেহানাকে দেয়া বাড়িটির বরাদ্দ বাতিল করে
> দিয়েছিল। তখন শেখ হাসিনা গণভবন লিখে নিয়ে যাচ্ছে বলে জাতীয়তাবাদীরা হৈ চৈ শুরম্ন
> করে দিয়েছিল। আর এখন বিএনপি নেত্রীর বেলায় বাড়ি রক্ষার্থে তারা আন্দà§&lsqauo;লনে যাà¦"য়ার
> হুমকি পর্যনত্ম দিচ্ছেন। এমনকি তারা পার্লামেন্ট অধিবেশনে যà§&lsqauo;গদানের শর্ত হিসাবেà¦"
> খালেদা জিয়ার বাড়ি আর তাঁর দুই ছেলের মুক্তির শর্তà¦" জুড়ে দিয়েছিলেন।
>
> কথিত কপর্দকহীন অবস্থায় ভাঙ্গা সুটকেস আর ছেঁড়া গেঞ্জিসহ দু'টি বাচ্চা নিয়ে
> বৈধব্যপ্রাপ্ত বেগম জিয়াকে তাঁর আর্থিক à¦" মানসিক দুরবস্থার কথা বিবেচনায় নিয়ে তাঁকে
> মইনুল রà§&lsqauo;ডের বিশাল বাড়িটি দেয়া হয়েছিল। যদিà¦" আগেই তাঁকে গুলশানে এক বিঘা à¦"পর জমিতে
> আরেকটি বাড়ি দেয়া হয়েছিল। এ তà§&lsqauo; তিন দশক সাড়ে তিন দশক আগের কথা। তারপর বেগম জিয়া
> দলের প্রধান হয়েছেন। তিনবার প্রধানমন্ত্রী হয়েছেন। নাবালক ছেলেরা লেখাপড়ায় তেমন
> কিছু না করতে পারলেà¦" টাকা-পয়সা কামাতে রেকর্ড গড়েছেন। টাকার পাহাড় গড়েছেন। বিদেশে
> টাকা পাচার করেছেন। হাà¦"য়া ভবনকে ক্ষমতা à¦" দুর্নীতির কেন্দ্রবিন্দুতে পরিণত
> করেছিলেন। তার বড় ছেলে তারেক রহমান দুর্নীতির 'বরপুত্র' বলে খ্যাতি লাভ করেছেন।
> তারা এখন বিত্ত-বৈভবে হাবুডুবু খাচ্ছেন। তাই এই বাড়িটি ছাড়তে এত কষ্ট কেন? রাজনীতি
> করবেন, আর সেনানিবাসে থাকবেন, তা তà§&lsqauo; হয় না। à¦"খান থেকে বেরিয়ে গণমানুষের কাছাকাছি
> আসুন। নাকি à¦"টা নিরাপদ জায়গা? আপনার দলের মানুষের কথা ভেবে এবং প্রধানমন্ত্রী শেখ
> হাসিনার উদাত্ত অহ্বানে সাড়া দিয়ে বাড়িটি ছেড়ে দেয়াই ভাল। আপনার নিজের জন্য, দেশের
> জন্য।
>
>
> লেখক : সাংবাদিক à¦" কলামিস্ট
>
>
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: Faruque Alamgir <faruquealamgir@...>
> To: dahuk@yahoogroups.com; wideminds <WideMinds@yahoogroups.com>; alochona
> <alochona@yahoogroups.com>; Sonar Bangladesh <sonarbangladesh@yahoogroups.com>;
> serajurrahman@...; Sattabadi Nagarik <sattabadi@...>;
> notun_bangladesh@yahoogroups.com; Dr. Abid Bahar <abidbahar@...>; Bangla
> Zindabad <Bangladesh-Zindabad@yahoogroups.com>; Amra Bangladesi
> <amra-bangladesi@yahoogroups.com>; Nayan Khan <udarakash08@...>; maxx
> ombba <maqsudo@...>; delwar <delwar98@...>
> Sent: Thu, October 21, 2010 7:10:44 AM
> Subject: [Bangladesh-Zindabad] Re: [Dahuk]: Major reshuffle sparks reaction in
> admin
>
>  
> "Aam kheyey Amaer Ati tachchillo bhorey churey feley deowa hoi"(after eating the
>
> mango the bone is thrown hatefully). 
>
>
> That is happening with the people(bureaucrats) who got their Dug Dugi sound too
> much after the changeover. BAL do not need experience,prudent,erudite,diligent n
>
> patriotic officers. They just mediocre juniors upgragde overnight as Secy's with
>
> total submission of heart n soul for the cause of establishing "DEMO CRAZY"
> So, why bother or be concerned about !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
>
> Faruque Alamgir
>
>
> On Thu, Oct 21, 2010 at 6:48 AM, Isha Khan <bdmailer@...> wrote:
>
>  
> >Major reshuffle sparks reaction in admin
> >BPATC rector plans voluntary retirement
> >
> >
> >The Bangladesh Public Administration Training Centre rector, Md Delwar Hossain,
>
> >who has been made chairman of the Land Reforms Board, has decided not to join
> >the office having the rank of joint secretary.
> >   He has planned to go on voluntary retirement under the Public Servants
> >(Retirement) Act 1974 if the government’s decision on his posting was not
> >changed, a BPATC official told New Age on Wednesday.
> >   The government on Tuesday transferred 21 secretaries and made four of them
> >officers on special duty at the establishment ministry.
> >   Before assuming office of the BPATC rector, Delwar had worked as secretary to
> >
> >the land ministry for six months from January 2009.
> >   He came to be discussed in various quarters for his efforts to check
> >irregularities and streamline administrative functions under the land ministry,
>
> >which is believed to have caused his transfer to the BPATC.
> >   Officials closed to the senior bureaucrat said Delwar had felt insulted as he
> >
> >had been transferred to the position of the rank of a joint secretary where even
> >
> >additional secretaries were posted for dumping.
> >   He was secretary to the land ministry and the Land Reforms Board was under
> >his jurisdiction. ‘This is unethical and also injustice to his position,’ said a
> >
> >secretary.
> >   The administrative
> >   reshuffle was made amid allegations that the bureaucracy had plunged into
> >sluggishness, affecting routine activities in various areas and also tarnishing
>
> >the image of the government.
> >   The reshuffle, which coincided with the Election Commission’s preparations
> >for holding local government polls by year end, sparked mixed reactions in the
> >bureaucracy as the people dumped to less important position or made officers on
>
> >special duty are believed to have been sidelined for their political leaning.
> >   The fisheries and livestock secretary, Sharful Alam, land secretary Md
> >Ataharul Islam, implementation, monitoring and evaluation division secretary Md
>
> >Abdul Malek and Planning Commission member Nasiruddin Ahmed were made OSDs on
> >Wednesday.
> >   Delwar was supposed to go on leave preparatory to retirement on December 19,
>
> >2011.
> >   According to the law, a public servant may opt to retire from service any
> >time after 25 years in service by giving a notice in writing to the appointing
> >authority at least 30 days before the date of the intended retirement.
> >
> >
> >http://www.newagebd.com/2010/oct/21/front.html
> >
>


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

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