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Sunday, April 10, 2011

[ALOCHONA] Re: Mukti Juddher Chetona

Mass Muslims are not going to retake Islam from the kaat mullahs when the government of the mass muslims is led by Hasina or Khaleda. There are as many half cooked blind AL and blind BNP nethrists as there are half cooked kaat mullahs. AL thugs at present kill more, steal more and burn more than Islamist thugs. Until you get the character to look in the mirror you will not have the character to beat the Islamist thugs. At best, you can claim that your thugs are better than their thugs.

To reclaim Islam we have to undo decades of indoctrination and decades of our own culpability.

Who is the bloody AL minister for religion anyway?

--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, "ShamimC" <veirsmill@...> wrote:
>
> Is Islam turning into militant religion? Probably not yet, however if
> mass
> Muslims do not retake hijacked Islam from mullahs then Islam surely will
> go into
> militants hand. In most Muslim countries terrorism is a common disease
> and it is
> growing like inferno.
>
> Uneducated half cooked mullah and their so called political parties has
> taken
> Islam from general mass and making it like something from another
> planet, so
> unfamiliar so strange that it is hard to call Islam anymore. A big
> number of
> madras no longer producing Aleem but mostly Jaleem who wants to go out
> with
> sword in one hand while the other carrying Holly Quran and the body
> rapped with
> bombs ready to blast to take life of common people Muslims and Others
> alike.Â
> Turning Mosque and Madrasa into insulated breading ground for terrorists
> and
> future terrorist. Muslim must claim their religion from so called
> Muslims like
> Amine who breathe nothing but violence. Free young Madrasa students from
> Jaleem
> like Amini and his hooligans.
>
> I must say the numbers of militant Islam follower are small but they
> prevail
> as the vast mass is either unaware or excavate their head into sand not
> to see
> the incoming express tsunami. Bangladesh today faced the barbaric forces
> of evil
> lead by mullah Amini and his so called Islamic Law Implementation
> Committee
> (ILIC) against proposed National Women Development Policy 2011, High
> Court ban
> on fatwa and the recently-formulated education policy. Mullahs and their
> political wings are against the Muslim women getting their rightful
> share of
> their family property. Amini and his gangs are out there to hijack our
> mothers
> and sisters God given equal right to acquire and exercise property
> right.
>
> Shamim Chowdhury
> Maryland, U.S.A.
>
> Watch this video where Amini says he will rip up the eyes if Police BDR
> Army
> or administration even looks upon his people with crooked eye (April
> 2011)
>
> Link: <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eZtEIbOvNE>
> <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eZtEIbOvNE>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eZtEIbOvNE
> <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eZtEIbOvNE>
>
> Watch this video from April 2008 on same issue:
> <http://www.youtube.com/user/usawamileague#p/u/17/wQ75JQnalBc>
> <http://www.youtube.com/user/usawamileague#p/u/17/wQ75JQnalBc>
> http://www.youtube.com/user/usawamileague#p/u/17/wQ75JQnalBc
> <http://www.youtube.com/user/usawamileague#p/u/17/wQ75JQnalBc>
>
> Note: I like to bring some very interesting point made by Mr. Akbar
> Hussain in reply to my earlier e-mail in this same issue.
> Please read his e-mail below.
>
> Thanks for your very pragmatic views expressed in the article. So far
> I understand a vast majority of Muslims are of the type you suspected.
> This is not ignorance alone, there is also fear. This ingredient of
> fear instilled in the mind of the Muslims, not by the prophet of
> Islam, but by some later over jealous mullahs to maintain their grip
> in the community. The brew of ignorance and fear has become a lethal
> force in Islam. Look at the hypocrisy when the mullahs claim that
> Islam is a faith of peace and compassion but can’t castigate
> those
> crazy souls who kill the innocent by killing themselves. Following
> your article I went to listen to some of the related YOUTUBE clips of
> the mullahs and astonished to see that these fellows are still living
> in the dark medieval times. The mountain of ignorance they are still
> professing is disgusting. If faith is used to distribute ignorance
> among the masses that faith needs serious reconsideration. Pastor
> Terry Jones of Gainesville, FL, is a fool and agitator, but killing of
> the innocent people to avenge his foolishness is totally unacceptable
> especially from the followers of a faith boasted as the perfect faith.
> It’s lamentable that after 1500 years of existence and followed
> by
> more than a billion people, Islam has come to a stage when its in need
> of a renaissance for revitalization.
>
>
> Akbar Hussain
>
> --- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, "ratri@..." <ratri@> wrote:
> >
> > You must be a moron , those so called Alems are using the Koran for
> their own agenda , wake up and smell the coffee !
> >
> > ----- Reply message -----
> > From: "Shahadat Hussaini" shahadathussaini@
> > To: "Bangladeshi American" bangladeshiamericans@googlegroups.com,
> "Alochona Groups" alochona@yahoogroups.com, "alapon yahoo"
> alapon@yahoogroups.com, "Khobor Yahoo" khabor@yahoogroups.com, "diagnose
> group" diagnose@yahoogroups.com, "com" aabeamail@yahoogroups.com
> > Subject: [ALOCHONA] Mukti Juddher Chetona
> > Date: Tue, Apr 5, 2011 8:48 am
> > Mukti Juddher chetona was only and absolutely only "Self Rule" by the
> Bangladeshis. Other ingredients of partition of India were profoundly
> present in the political and economic atmosphere of the sub-continent.
> In 1971, Pakistani Razakars were defeated but a new class of Razakars
> got evolved in Bangladesh called "Hindutva Razakars". If these razakars
> are not defeated the costly earned 'independence' (lost lives of three
> lacs of people) will perish sooner than we think of. But Bangladeshis
> knows all the 'Jagat Seths' now, and will foil another Palashy for good.
> > Shahadat Suhrawardy
> >
> > For your reference ONLY !!!
> >
>


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

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[ALOCHONA] Frequent lynching points to restiveness in society



Frequent lynching points to restiveness in society

Editorial New Age 11/04/11

LYNCHING of as many as six people in two incidents in a single day tends to indicate that the country continues to plunge into lawlessness belying the claim, made on more than one occasions, by the key functionaries of the Awami league-Jatiya Party government that the law and order situation is under control. According to a report published in New Age on Saturday, exasperated by repeated robberies without any remedy, the villagers at Kuruhata of Kapasia in Gazipur on Saturday night beat a group of `strangers', suspecting them to be robbers, leaving four of them dead on the spot and five others critically wounded. Moreover, another suspected robber was beaten to death on April 6 by the mob in the same area. Meanwhile, according to another report published in New Age on the same day, two suspected robbers were beaten to death at Dharmapur village in Lakhai upazila of Habiganj early Saturday.

It is unlikely that people are unaware of the fact that beating anyone to death is a culpable offence. Yet, lynching is on the rise. According to the annual report of Odhikar, a human rights organisation, 174 people were beaten to death across the country in 2010, compared with 127 in 2009. Besides, as Odhikar says in its first quarterly report of 2011, 37 people were killed in mob violence around the country from January 1 to March 31.

The failure of the law enforcement agencies to stem unrelenting slide in law and order ever since the assumption of power by the Awami League-Jatiya Party government in January 2009, along with their continuous denial of the reality on the ground regarding law and order, may well have touched off a pervasive sense of insecurity among the people at large. It may also have led them to believe they are on their own when it comes to their safety and security. Meanwhile, the unabated extrajudicial killing by the law enforcers may have given rise to the impression in some sections of society that it is alright to take law in their hands or to execute summarily the alleged criminals.

The government needs to realise that the extrajudicial killing, be it by the law enforcers or by the angry mob, eventually undermines its self-professed commitment to the rule of law. Hence, it needs to be decisive in reining in crime on one hand and putting an end to all kinds of extrajudicial killings, including lynching, on the other.



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[ALOCHONA] Re: On Indian Cultural Aggression: Dr. Serajul Islam Chowdhury



Indian Satellite Channel Aggression

http://dailynayadiganta.com/2011/04/10/fullnews.asp?News_ID=271715&sec=2

--------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Zoglul Husain <zoglul@hotmail.co.uk>
Date: Mon, Apr 11, 2011 at 4:56 AM
Subject: On Indian Cultural Aggression: Dr. Serajul Islam Chowdhury
To: Isha Khan <bdmailer@gmail.com


Professor Serajul Islam Chowdhury: Indian cultural aggression is a threat to our sovereignty. It is aimed at controlling the politics and commerce of Bangladesh. Professor Amartya Sen is assessed to be communal. Indian porno culture, religious practices and Indian National anthem are being imposed on Bangladesh.
 
Please click to read:

http://www.amardeshonline.com/pages/details/2011/04/11/76380
 
I extend my full support to his views and only hope that he is not politically persecuted like Mahmudur Rahman!!
 




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[ALOCHONA] Gendercide in India



Gendercide in India

Add sugar and spice

India's sex ratio is getting worse. The trend can be reversed

THE news from India's 2011 census is almost all heartening. Literacy is up; life expectancy is up; family size is stabilising. But there is one grim exception. In 2011 India counted only 914 girls aged six and under for every 1,000 boys.

Without intervention, just a few more boys would be born than girls. If you compare the number of girls actually born to the number that would have been born had a normal sex ratio prevailed, then 600,000 Indian girls go missing every year. This is less distorted than the sex ratio in China, but whereas China's ratio has stabilised, India's is widening, and has been for decades. Sex selection is now invading parts of the country that used not to practise it.

India's sex ratio shows that gendercide is a feature not just of dictatorship and poverty. Unlike China, India is a democracy: there is no one-child policy to blame. Although parts of the country are poor, poverty alone does not explain India's preference for sons. The states with the worst sex ratios—Punjab, Haryana, Gujarat—are among the richest (see article), which suggests distorted sex selection will not be corrected just by wealth or government policy. But it can be corrected.

Parents choose to abort female fetuses not because they do not want or love their daughters, but because they feel they must have sons (usually for social reasons); they also want smaller families—and something has to give. Ultrasound technology ensures that this something is a generation of unborn daughters, because it lets them know the sex of a fetus. Sex selection therefore tends to increase with education and income: wealthier, better educated people are more likely to want fewer children and can more easily afford the scans.

But whereas sex selection may be understandable for a family, it is disastrous for a nation. It is an extreme expression of an attitude that says daughters are worth less than sons—a belief that is damaging both to women and to the next generation, since healthier, better educated mothers have healthier, better-educated children.

If sex ratios stay the same, 600,000 missing girls this year will become, in 18 years' time, over 10m missing future brides. Robbery, rape and bride-trafficking tend to increase in any society with large groups of young single men. And because in China and India men higher up the social ladder find wives more easily than those lower down, the social problems of bachelorhood tend to accumulate like silt among the poorest people and (in India) the lowest castes. This is unjust as well as damaging.

Over time, the problem may right itself—as the experience of South Korea, where a sex ratio that was highly distorted in the 1990s and is now approaching normality, suggests. In India, attitudes are changing. According to the latest census, "female literacy, improving general health care, improving female employment rates [are] slowly redefining motherhood from childbearing to child rearing. Census 2011 is perhaps an indication that the country has reached a point of inflection"; and in the worst-affected areas, sex ratios are becoming less distorted. But governments need to hurry the process along.

Cherish the girls

India and China, to their credit, are trying to do so. India, for example, bans ultrasound scans from being used merely to identify a fetus's sex; it also makes sex-selective abortions illegal. But gendercide cannot be reduced just by coercive laws. In middle-income places, ultrasound scans are becoming basic prenatal procedures; it is all but impossible to stop parents from getting to know their child's sex. If a government cracks down on legal abortions, families will get illegal ones—risking the life of the mother, as well as that of her unborn daughter.

Far more effective would be to persuade parents that their daughters are worth as much as their sons. Changing social attitudes is a difficult thing for governments to do; but ensuring that girls get their fair share of education, and women their fair share of health care, would be a start.

http://www.economist.com/node/18530101
---------------------

India's skewed sex ratio

An aversion to having daughters is leading to millions of missing girls

"WE'RE going for a trip", Sakina remembers her older sister saying. Orphaned and poor, the girls were happy to leave their home in Kolkata. Taken 1,300km to Kotla, a village on the wheat plains south of Delhi, the 12-year-old Sakina was dumped in the arms of an older man while her sister fled. The man, a wage labourer, had paid over 5,000 rupees ($100, today) to a dalal, or broker, who arranged to ship unwanted girls to places short of them.

Sakina, now taking a break from the first harvest of the year, recalls the early misery of her new home. A Bengali forced into marriage, she was jeered at as a paro, a term for female outsider in Haryana, and shunned. We are treated as goats, mutters another woman, imported from Hyderabad. "It was when I started having children that I realised I had no time to be upset," Sakina says. She has produced nine offspring, eight of them boys. Now she worries about getting brides for them—and says she is even ready to repeat her own sad history by contacting a dalal.

She may have to. Early data from February's national census, published on March 31st, show India's already skewed infant sex ratio is getting worse. Nature provides that slightly more boys are born than girls: the normal sex ratio for children aged 0-6 is about 952 girls per 1,000 boys. Since 1981, the ratio has steadily fallen below that point: there were 945 girls per 1,000 boys in the 1991 census, 927 in 2001 and now 914. Fast growth, urbanisation and surging literacy seem not to have affected the trend.

The ratio is most distorted in the states of the northern Gangetic Plain, such as Punjab. Haryana, Sakina's home, remains the direst of all, with only 830 girls per 1,000 boys. More worrying, places that used not to discriminate in favour of sons, such as the poorer central and north-eastern states, have begun to do so. Economic success, argues Alaka Basu, a demographer, "seems to spread son preference to places that were once more neutral about the sex composition of their children." The new census showed a worsening sex ratio in all but eight of India's 35 states and territories (though those eight include some of the most extreme examples, for instance, Punjab).

The "missing girls" are usually aborted, shortly after the parents learn of their sex. A short drive from Kotla to Nuh, a typical trading town, shows how. The main road is dotted with clinics that boast of ultrasound services. Requests for a scan to check the sex of a fetus are turned down at "Bharat Ultrasound" and "City Care Hospital", but a nervous medic at one does recommend a place that would do it.

In fact, says Gaushiya Khan, a local activist, medics are ready to reveal a fetus's sex for as little as 600 rupees. Doing so is illegal, and discouraged by various campaigns, but the law is almost impossible to enforce. Slapping the father on the back and saying "you're a lucky man" is hint enough. Demand for scans is rampant. Entrepreneurs are said to tour villages with scanners on bicycles.

The impact on Indian society is grim. You might have thought that scarcity would lead to girls being valued more highly, but this is not happening. One measure is the practice of giving dowries. Almost no one, rich or poor, urban or rural, dreams of dispensing with these. Rather, as Indians grow wealthier, dowries are getting more lavish and are spreading to places where they were once rare, such as in Tamil Nadu and Kerala, in the south. In Kotla women huddled around Sakina shake their heads when asked to imagine life without dowries: "then nobody would find a husband", they say.

A skewed sex ratio may instead be making the lot of women worse. Sociologists say it encourages abuse, notably in the trafficking of the sort that Sakina first suffered from but is now ready to pay for. Reports circulate of unknown numbers of girls who are drugged, beaten and sometimes killed by traffickers. Others, willingly or not, are brought across India's borders, notably from Bangladesh and Myanmar. "Put bluntly, it's a competition over scarce women", says Ravinder Kaur of the Indian Institute of Technology in Delhi.

Men, especially if poor and from a low caste, suffer too. Women in India are sometimes permitted, even encouraged, to "marry up" into a higher income bracket or caste, so richer men find it easier to get a bride. The poor are forced into a long or permanent bachelorhood, a status widely frowned upon in India, where marriage is deemed essential to becoming a full member of society. Poor bachelors are often victims of violent crime.

Yet, bad as things are, sex selection may slowly be turning around. Though the sex ratio has been worsening for decades, it is doing so more slowly. The figure in 2001 was 1.9% worse than it had been in 1991. The figure in 2011 was 1.5% worse than in 2001—an improvement of sorts.

Moreover, the ten-year census may not capture what has been happening recently. For that, go to the sample surveys that India carries out more often. These show a different pattern. The figures are not strictly comparable, because sample surveys show the sex ratio at birth, whereas the census gives it among infants up to the age of six. Still, it is significant the sex ratio at birth is improving, not worsening. In 2003-05 the figure was 880 girls born per 1,000 boys. In 2004-06, that had risen to 892 and in 2006-08, to 904. It is not clear why this should be. The samples could be misleading. But perhaps they reveal a recent change in Indian attitudes towards the value of daughters.

The fears about India's sex ratio are not merely of the harm that today's level will cause when children become adults. People also worry that the ratio will get ever worse, deteriorating towards Chinese levels (which are even more extreme: on a comparable basis, China's sex ratio at birth is about 833). This fear, thinks Monica Das Gupta of the World Bank, may be exaggerated. Not only are there signs of an incipient national turnaround, but regional figures give further reasons for hope. The states with the worst ratios, Haryana and Punjab, seem to have had skewed ratios for decades, going back to the 1880s. They now show some of the biggest improvements.

The national average is worsening thanks to states which once were more neutral with regard to sex, such as Tamil Nadu and Orissa. But because they have not had the historical experience of a strong preference for sons, Ms Das Gupta suggests, they also seem less likely to push the sex ratio to the extremes that it reached in Punjab or China. If so, the next census in 2021 could show the beginnings of a shift towards normality. With luck, the deterioration in north-east and central India—damaging though it will certainly be—may not mark the start of a fresh erosion in the value of Indian girls.

http://www.economist.com/node/18530371

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[ALOCHONA] Re: All-in-the-family trading to fore

Perhaps those who have lost so much due to the manipulation of the stock market should sue the Government for negligence.

As usual the common man will probably be forced to live with his misery whilst those responsible for his misery will prosper.

I wish we could get some of the victims to file a lawsuit against the government.


--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, Isha Khan <bdmailer@...> wrote:
>
> All-in-the-family trading to fore
>
> Dhaka, Apr 11 (bdnews24.com) — The stocks probe committee has found evidence
> of artificial hiking of share prices through syndicated trading.
>
> The committee outlined three cases where trade between accounts of close
> relatives or multiple organisations owned by an individual led to
> overpricing of shares of People's Leasing and Financial Services Limited
> (PLFSL).
>
> Bangladesh Krishi Bank chief Khondker Ibrahim Khaled – led probe body
> pointed out that a section of traders hyped share-splitting and managed to
> hike share prices through internal bulk transactions.
>
> The Report <http://av.bdnews24.com/file/all/report.pdf> :
> http://av.bdnews24.com/file/all/report.pdf
>
> The market value of shares continued to rise, thus allowing the manipulators
> to reap benefits by selling off the shares at inflated prices.
>
> The investigators traced internal trade worth Tk 60.3 million between Syed
> Sirajuddaula, his wife Rasheda Akter and account-introducer Habibur Rahman
> from Sep 15 to Nov 4, 2010 through PFI Securities brokerage house.
>
> The report also outlined similar syndicated efforts by Yukub Ali Khandker,
> his daughter Sarah Khandker and brother Yasin Khandker via Prime Bank
> Securities. Their internal trade from Sep 6 to Oct 24, 2010 amounted to Tk
> 29.3 million.
>
> Meanwhile, trade by three organisations owned by Anwar Hossain Khan—Anwar
> Khan Modern Hospital, Modern Farm Industries and Hazi Shakhawat Anwar Eye
> Hospital—amongst themselves between Sep 2 and Oct 24, 2010 led to the price
> hike of PLFSL shares.
>
> The first two organisations were clients of Prime Finance and Investment
> Limited, while the third traded shares through National Bank.
>
> http://bdnews24.com/details.php?id=192608&cid=2
>
> http://av.bdnews24.com/file/all/report.pdf
>


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

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[ALOCHONA] Re: Summit's corruption



More in Amader Shomoy:

http://www.amadershomoy1.com/content/2011/04/11/news0083.htm




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[ALOCHONA] Cricket: Shakib's perfect approach surprises Clarke



Shakib's perfect approach surprises Clarke

Michael Clarke swung from his hips at a Mashrafe Bin Mortaza half-tracker in the final over of the Australian innings to reach his century. It was not his first as a captain but certainly his first after getting the job full-time, and his cry of delight and punching of the air said as much about its significance.

Mashrafe, who was evidently making a reluctant return in Bangladesh colours, had lost his shape by then, leaking 25 runs in his final two-over spell. But Shakib decided on him despite the paceman looking completely out of his depth.

Australia made 270-7 and on a dead Mirpur track, the Tigers batsmen were always climbing up the wrong escalator, and their vigilance smelled more like trepidation.

"When we lost wickets early, our target was to play all the overs. When I was batting with Tamim (Iqbal), we wanted to bat till the 40th over and then take it from there. But that didn't happen," said Shakib in what turned out to be a heated post-match press conference at the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium yesterday.

Shakib went on to blame bowling in the slog overs and overall fielding but it was quite simple: recent history had tied them down.

"It wasn't just those two (58 and 78 all out in the World Cup) but because we didn't perform with the bat in the World Cup overall. I think everyone was conscious of that.

"This is the right approach but I think if we could have scored 15, 20 or 25 more runs, it would have been perfect," he said.

His use of the word "perfect" sounded misplaced as the Bangladesh chase never took off. One would think that losing three quick wickets would peg back the batsmen but present at the crease in that crucial stage were Bangladesh's best. Shakib and Tamim's fourth wicket stand of 67 runs came at 3.90 runs an over and regardless of Shakib's insistence on pointing out the nature of the Mirpur wicket (and how slow it got later in the day), those two batting nightmares still had its effects on the Tigers who only seemed to score freely when the opposition had wrapped up the game.

It was actually Clarke who first expressed his bewilderment at Bangladesh's approach with the bat. "I was very surprised that they didn't have more of a go at the end there. They might have played a few more shots; they had a few more wickets in hand."

"To me I'd rather have everybody get out than have five wickets and fall 70 runs short so that surprised me more than anything else. You have to ask the Bangladesh captain what they were thinking," said Clarke.

The first one-day against the Tigers was shaping to be an even more testing time for Clarke, who recently turned 30, but his manoeuvring of the spinners and squirming out of tight spots (90 for three, 138 for four) showed how responsibility can enhance performance. Though Australian captains are not judged by winning three-match one-day tours, if one were to draw comparisons with the home captain (and some of us are likely to fall into that trap given Shakib Al Hasan's regular tiff with the media), it was a serene ride for Clarke.

Of course it was all his doing. He batted beautifully throughout his 111-ball 101, hammering six boundaries and tonking two sixes in the process but his method of pacing the innings was eye-catching.

"Anytime you make a hundred it is very nice. More important for me was the way we played today. As I said yesterday (Friday), our goal is to win every game we play here, improve in all areas," said Clarke.

After reaching the ton, Clarke was expressive enough to bring back some memories of his debut century in Bangalore where he famously donned the baggy green as he approached the three-figure mark. When asked, he shrugged aside any cause to remember that day. "Bangalore was a long time ago. Like I say, it is always nice to make a hundred, anywhere in the world, if you make a century and playing well and for your country, it is very special. But it is hard to compare," he said.



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[ALOCHONA] Cricket: Delving into the 'give-up'



Daily Star Monday, April 11, 2011

Zoom Ultra Australia vs Bangladesh ODI Series 2011

Delving into the 'give-up'

At the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium yesterday, it was all about "yesterday" although a match was to be played "tomorrow". It was clear that answers were to be given, or found, on what exactly the team management thought of Saturday's abject performance with the bat.

Some brutal truths awaited to be told and Jamie Siddons, the head coach, did not hide his displeasure at the Tigers batsmen's meek surrender in the first one-day international against Australia.

The home side made only 210-5 from 50 overs after Australia had set them a target of 271 runs. After losing three wickets by the 13th over, skipper Shakib Al Hasan and his deputy Tamim Iqbal added 67 runs for the fourth wicket but they scored at less than four an over and after Tamim's dismissal, the Shakib-Mushfiqur Rahim partnership yielded just 33 runs from 67 balls with the required rate climbing. Between overs 30 and 40, the Tigers scored only 32 runs, resulting in the run-rate jumping from 7.5 per over to 12.3 runs an over.

Siddons was particularly unhappy about this period, confirming that he too believed the Tigers had in fact given up much before they reached the 50th over.

"At about the 35th over, definitely. We went too slowly in the middle but we lost three wickets in a real hurry," said Siddons during yesterday's optional training session in Mirpur.

"I think it is unacceptable. You can't make 270 when you have that sort of score.

"Shakib didn't really have a lot of answers for me why they went so slow, other than the wicket was very difficult. I didn't like the running between wickets, didn't like them walking between wickets.

"We had three guys score runs and that's a good improvement. We got 200 but we should have used up our ten wickets and got 240 and given 270 a chase. I was disappointed in that. Don't think I was supportive of Tamim and Shakib," he added.

He also revealed that the moment a message was sent off to Shakib, he was caught in the deep for 51 off 89 balls, his team at 149 for five in 41.1 overs.

"I tend to try to let them grow and learn as captain and vice-captain, and didn't want to send messages out there; as soon as I sent a message out, Shakib got caught at long on the next ball. So that's my fear: as soon as I say hit the odd boundary, get the ones but hit the odd boundary, that [a dismissal] happens, so I tend to stay away from it," he said.

He pointed out the fifth wicket partnership's inability to find the boundaries when all that was required for them was to find one every over.

"Mushfiqur and Shakib followed on from Shakib and Tamim and didn't score enough boundaries. We ended up 60 runs short which probably is a bit disappointing with only five wickets gone, no doubt," he said.

Another point of contention was the selection of Mashrafe Bin Mortaza who admitted before the game of being not fit enough. Siddons said that the lack of pace clearly showed how he was faring, fitness-wise.

"When Mash is fit he bowls around 135 so that should tell it all," he said. "I think Mash survived yesterday on his skills, experience and big heart. So something's missing and I've talked to Mash about it yesterday and we need to have a selection meeting today. But Mash I thought besides the last two overs was very good," said Siddons, adding that he would be retained if he's still fit.



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[ALOCHONA] Re: One Tawfique Newaz and our national interest

It is Tawfique Nawaz who is helping to ensure that the Government and AL continue their policy of assasinating the character of Dr Yunus. He has access to power and exercises that power accordingly.

--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, Isha Khan <bdmailer@...> wrote:
>
> *One Tawfique Newaz and our national interest*
>
> Posted by Rumi
>
> In 2003-04, when Petrobangla faced an arbitration case against Petroleum
> giant Cairns in the International Centre for Settlement of Investment
> Disputes (ICSID), the lawyers who were selected to represent Bangladesh and
> PetroBangla had no experience in international commercial arbitration. The
> second Khaleda Zia government made that selection based on the lawyers
> pro-BNP lebel. The result was expected, PetroBangla lost the winnable case
> and Bangladesh lost a substantial amount of money. The defeat was attributed
> to poor legal representation and lack of understanding between Petrobangla
> and its lawyers.
>
>
> However, in early 90s Bangladesh government and petrobangla won an
> international arbitration against Canadian petroleum giant Scimitar. The
> lawyer representing Bangladesh Government was Dr Kamal Hossain and
> Associates.
>
> So, when Bangladesh was again forced to go to the International Centre for
> Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) in March, 2006 for another dispute
> involving Chevron, Dr Kamal Hossain Associates were called back in to
> represent Bangladesh and PetroBangla. The hearing took place between
> 2007-2009. Although similar case against Cairns went against Bangladesh in
> 2004, this time the international arbitration court turned down
> <http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=139124>US oil
> giant Chevron's claim of around $240 million from Petrobangla. Dr Hossain's
> able representation did not only save Bangladesh $240 million dollars of
> back pay, it also ensured $320 million more savings over the next 20 years
> contract period.
>
> Based on the above experience, when Bangladeh was forced to go to ICSID to
> press it's claims from another petroleum giant Niko, it was expected that Dr
> Kamal Hossain Associates would be representing Bangladesh. Especially when
> the stakes were very high, to be precise, Tk 7.64 billion. However, to the
> surprise of many, Newspaper reported
> <http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=173837>that
> Advocate Tawfiq Newaz and his junior associates were given the job.
>
> *Who is this Advocate Tawfiq Newaz?*
>
> Mr Tawfiq Newaz was presented this way in Dipu Moni.com website. Married to
> Bangladesh Foreign Minister Mrs Dipu Moni, Advocate Tawfiq Newaz "is one of
> two Oxbridge educated Senior Advocates of the Bangladesh Supreme Court, Head
> of an internationally reputed law firm and a parampara (generational)
> exponent of at least a 2000 year old Indian Classical Musical form, namely
> Alaap, on the Grande Flute."
>
> However random query made by this blogger to members of Bar in Bangladesh
> gave a whole different picture.
> Based on the perception around Bangladesh Supreme Court premises, it is
> important Advocate Tawfique Newaz and those hiring him clarify several
> questions including,
>
> 1. What is bar exam status of Advocate Tawfique Newaz.
> 2. What is is reputation and perceived capability that will qualify him for
> Niko and other international arbitration over Dr Kamal Hossain.
> 3. What is his experience in related litigation cases?
> 4. Why Mr. Newaz is representing Bangladesh Government in every single high
> profile case bangladesh Government need legal representation?
>
> In present day Bangladesh when inefficiency, dishonesty, personal
> loyalty-connection trump over quality, efficiency, honesty — Advocate
> Tawfique Newaz definitely would be The chosen lawyer by government of
> Bangladesh. Over the last couple of years Advocate Tawfique Newaz has been
> selected to represent Bangladesh Government in all possible need of legal
> representation. The following is a preliminary list
>
> 1. Government's chosen lawyer to represent Bangladesh in Niko arbitration
> case. <http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=173837>
> 2. Government's lawyer to represent Bangladesh Bank against Dr Muhammad
> Yunus.
> 3. Governments lawyer in Bangabandhu murder trial.
> 4. Government lawyer panel member in 5th amendment case and upcoming 5th
> amendment review cases.
> 5. Member of The 7-member expert committee formed to review the ordinances,
> promulgated by the military-backed caretaker
> government<http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=71089>
> 6. And most ominously it is being heard that Advocate Tawfique Newaz is
> being selected to represent Bangladesh in the arbitration court setup to
> resolve the differences with India over our maritime boundary.
>
>
> The appointments of Tawfique Newaz raises some serious questions:
> 1. Is Bangladesh being represented by the most capable/ experienced lawyer
> when exceedingly important matters of national interest like our energy
> future ( maritime boundary) are at stake?
> 2. In commissioning legal firms in high-profile and high value ( both
> monetary and non monetary) cases, why can't we have the minimal
> transparency? On what rationale and basis, Advocate Tawfique Newaz is
> getting all the government contracts.
> 3. How a foreign minister can commission her husband for such financially
> lucrative legal assignments? What is our conflict of interest policy?
>
> I will finish this piece with a very passionate email pertaining to this
> matter, I recently received from a wel-informed friend,
>
> *Tawfik Newaz, the foreign minister's husband, a failure of a lawyer, has
> been hired to rep BD in the niko arbitration case and either has/or is about
> to be (reports differ) hired to rep BD in the maritime boundary delimitation
> case. this strikes me as a huge conflict of interest … the possible
> repercussions are dire. these are not commissions to be handed out like
> candy, they need to be handled by competent parties and Tawfique Newaz does
> not have the experience for them at all (unarguable fact) nor is he legally
> skilful enough to do so (opinion, but one that is pretty much unanimous). Of
> course, the fee are monstrous. kamal hossain, by contrast, …recently won a
> $238 million settlement and is internationally recognized as one of the top
> commercial arbitration/oil and gas/law of the sea experts in the world.
> Patronage is one thing. But when it is the honor and responsibility of
> representing the GoB on matters of utmost gravity and importance, there is
> no room for this kind of fooling around.*
>
> [ Disclaimer: This post is not intended to slander or defame any anybody.
> All the information presented are checked and double checked from informed
> sources. If any information is wrong or unfounded, the corrections will be
> published and the blog will remove the unfounded remarks.]
> http://rumiahmed.wordpress.com/2011/04/06/one-tawfique-newaz-and-our-national-interest/
>


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[ALOCHONA] Flew Higher On Doctored Figures



The probe report on the stockmarket scam found massive irregularities in the valuation of GMG Airlines shares, majority of which are owned by Salman F Rahman's Beximco Group.

Anomalies in all heads of the accounts -- from sales revenue to operating expenses, gross profit, agency commission and tax -- have been found in GMG Air's share valuation.

Its issue manager Janata Capital and Investment, a subsidiary of state-owned Janata Bank, and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) authorised the manipulated price, revealed the probe report submitted to Finance Minister AMA Muhith Thursday.

Surprisingly, the shares of GMG Airlines were compared to those of Samorita Hospital, Eastern Housing, Summit Alliance Port and Ocean Container, which are completely different type of stocks.

"It was a comparison between a sparrow and an elephant," observed the report.

This comparison has helped the shares to be overpriced, and neither the issue manager nor the SEC raised any question on it. The indicative price of a share of GMG Airlines was set at Tk 150.

According to the balance sheet submitted to the issue manager and the SEC, sales revenue for the first nine months of 2010 grew by 35 percent compared to the entire 2009 (12 months).

On the other hand, travel agency commission and Vat and tax went down by 60 percent to Tk 6 crore only.

"This is unrealistic as a rise in sales will also mean more commission and tax. Otherwise, the company has evaded tax," cited the probe report.

Gross and net profits of the company were shown to have increased by 120 percent and 133 percent respectively during the first nine months of 2010 compared to those of 2009. Nine percent and 92 percent reduction in operating and phone-fax expenses also did not match the booming profit of the company.

Accordingly, earning per share (EPS) was shown at Tk 10.31 for 2010 by inflating the income and reducing the expenses. The company's EPS was at Tk 0.26 and Tk 0.31 in 2006 and 2007 respectively. The probe body found EPS at Tk 7.69 for 2009 was also inaccurate.

The report also revealed that two issue managers had declined to manage the GMG shares due to the serious price manipulation.

These two managers set the indicative price at Tk 70 considering the EPS and book value. As the company had pressed them to set the price at Tk 150 per share, they declined to accept the mandate.

Later, the state-owned Janata Capital and Investment calculated the indicative price of per share at Tk 203.75 and from a conservative viewpoint it recommended the price at Tk 150.

In the calculation, Janata Capital considered 6.30 times of book value, 10 times of EPS and 56.55 times of annualised EPS to set the indicative price. "None of these is realistic and the SEC has approved the valuation and information memorandum," found the probe report.

GMG has also manipulated retained earnings, reserve and surplus and revaluation of assets, according to the probe report.

GMG is one of the case studies the probe committee headed by Khandkar Ibrahim Khaled found.

GMG Airlines commenced operation in 1997 as the country's first private carrier. The economic crisis of 2008-2009 resulted in severe losses for the global airlines industry and Bangladesh was no exception, says the company's website. Beximco Group bought majority stake in the company in June 2009.



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[ALOCHONA] Stock market report 'published'



Stock market report 'published'

bdnews24.com has obtained a copy of the much-talked-about investigation report, submitted to the government on Apr 7. Of the 300-odd pages, including the appendix, just a few are missing. We publish the report in the public interest. And we promise to bring to our readers the missing pages as soon as we get them. - Chief Editor


THE REPORT

Introduction

Stakeholder's Opinion

Regulator's Role

Case Study

Special Observation

Recommendations


THE APPENDICES

Appendix-A

Appendix-B (1)


Appendix-B(2)

Appendix-C

http://www.bdnews24.com/details.php?cid=4&id=192615


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[ALOCHONA] Bangladesh can earn more than $10 Billion from the pharmaceuticals sector



Amreteck Pharma USA believes that political calm, stability and low manpower cost could make Bangladesh a potential of Pharma outsourcing. M M Chowdhury, CEO of Amreteck Pharma USA has been interviewed by various well-known Pharma Outsource media and put a bright picture for Bangladesh (see below the links). However, Bangladesh Govt and Pharmaceuticals Industries will have to implement few recommendations that were communicated by CEO. The following Amreteck Pharma USA proposals need to be implemented immediately:

I. Developing Independent Drugs Testing Laboratories - Amreteck Pharma USA plans to propose current BD Govt to build an Independent Drugs Testing Laboratory with 50-50% joint-venture. This lab must be independent from the Bangladesh Pharmaceuticals companies to earn the trust from the export countries. This is one of the pillars that are needed to enhance export countries trust and bring down the cost of drugs potency & safety testing.

II. Pharmaceutical companies must develop Quality Management Systems and continue monitoring the systems. Amreteck Pharma has proposed various BD Pharma companies to build the Quality Management Systems and plan to work every step of the process to implement the Quality Management  System. Check www.amreteckpharma.com for more details.

III. BD Govt should provide 0% corporate tax for 5 years when foreign and local companies and or investors invest in the Pharmaceuticals sector. BD needs state of art pharmaceutical plants with right equipment and quality system to manufacture quality medicines. This can create 5 lack high paid jobs in the pharmaceuticals sector within 5 years.

IV. BD Govt should modify policy to expand oversees offices expense from US$2500 to US$1MM. Companies need this expanse cushion to expand their export market in the foreign countries.

V. BD Govt should provide incentives to small and medium pharmaceutical companies to be consolidated. There are more 250 small and medium sizes pharmaceutical companies and most of them does not have or can not afford to have quality Management system in place to manufacture quality medicines. They should be allowed to consolidate with providing bigger incentives. Amreteck Pharma USA can help companies with proposal and information during this consolidation and joint-venture process. Visit www.amreteckpharma.com for more info.

VI. BD Govt should bring foreign Consulting Companies to provide GMP (Good Manufacturing Practices) training and Audits techniques per USFDA. Amreteck Pharma has offered current BD Govt to train its Health Inspectors and is waiting for their response.

VII. BD Govt should implement curriculum in Colleges and Universities to add Pharmaceuticals Job training. Amreteck Pharma offers this training and BD Govt needs to come up with a plan how to implement Amreteck Pharma's proposal.

VIII. BD Govt needs to pay this down payment now to achieve $10 Billion dollar medicines export earning level in the next 10 years and this can create 5 lack high paid job within 5 years. There will be competition from India and China , but BD low cost manpower and low cost quality medicines will trump over them. Amreteck Pharma USA will formulate this plan if asked.

IX. This is not Garments industries, lots of investment and experts are needed to make this sector attractive and achievable. Amreteck Pharma USA also plans to provide Investment Seminars in various countries to bring NRB (Non-Resident Bangladeshi) investment in the BD pharmaceuticals sector. BD Govt should be teamed up with Amreteck Pharma USA to achieve this goal. See www.amreteckpharma.com for more details. Spread the news about the NBR investment opportunity in Bangladesh .

M M Chowdhury, CEO of Amreteck Pharma USA is supporting Bangladesh Pharmaceuticals Sector since 2007 and plays an important role to help this sector.  M M Chowdhury's working experience (six times) with US FDA will provide needed help to Bangladesh Pharmaceuticals companies to bring required GxP and regulatories compliance. Amreteck Pharma USA will open Branch Office at Dhaka on January 20, 2012.
 
Amreteck Pharma USA has three types of businesses as below:
1. Pharmaceuticals Consulting Group
2. Medical Devices Distribution Group
3. Laboratories & Clinical Trials Services Group 
 
Please visit us at www.amreteckpharma.com (The website is under updates/construction)

CEO of Amreteck Pharma interviewed by various newspapers in Europe and Bangladesh about Pharma-outsourcing. See below few of them:

1) Shortcut to: http://www.outsourcing-pharma.com/On-your-radar/Globalisation/Bangladesh-a-huge-opportunity-for-growth-CEO
 
Regards,
Mr. M. M. Chowdhury, ChE, Engineering, Validation, Quality & GMP Expert
Founder/CEO/Pharmaceuticals Consultant, Amreteck®  Pharma USA
 
               
Phone:   (678) 858-5952 - Office
              (307) 213-9878 - Office
              (307) 586-1840 - Office
Fax:       (541) 753-1626 - Office
 
 
 
Amreteck Sponsors of "Pharma in Bangladesh":



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[ALOCHONA] Story behind the scene - A Hidden Truth By William Gomes- A naked expose of Cross fire Game of RAB



http://www.srilankaguardian.org/2011/04/story-behind-scene-hidden-truth.html

Story behind the scene - A Hidden Truth

The Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), which is termed as an "elite force" by the Government of Bangladesh, did not bother for verifying the identity of a targeted person regardless whether the person concerned is innocent or involved in any kind of offence due to its extreme lack of minimum efficiency of law-enforcement.
by William Gomes in Dhaka

(April 11, Dhaka, Sri Lanka Guardian) Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) has shot a juvenile college student causing a permanent disability in Jhalkathi district. On 23 March 2011, a team of the RAB-8 stopped 16-year-old Limon Hossen, who was an examinee of the Higher Secondary Certificate near to his house and him in his thigh on the suspicion that he was a terrorist. As a result of this deliberate shooting the left leg of Limon has been amputated by the doctors of the National Institute of Traumatology, Orthopedic and Rehabilitation (NITOR) as all the tissues were found completely damaged.

The RAB, which is reputed to be the "official death squad of the Bangladesh Government", has now blocked off the whole ward of the hospital denying all the attendants of the patients at the hospital. The plain-clothed members of the RAB are intimidating and threatening the relatives, neighbours, journalists, lawyers and human rights defenders who are supporting the victim financially to receive treatment and express sympathy to the family. People of the victim's neighbourhood are now hiding to save their life in fear of extrajudicial killing at the hands of the RAB. Please intervene immediately into this matter urging the authorities of Bangladesh to stop harassment by the RAB and prosecute the perpetrators.

Md. Limon Hossen, a 16-year-old student of the Kathalia P. G. S. Multilateral High School and College and an examinee of the (currently ongoing) Higher Secondary Certificate (HSC) examination under the Bangladesh Technical Education Board of Dhaka. Limon's family lives in Saturia village under the jurisdiction of the Rajapur police station in Jhalkathi district. His father Mr. Tofazzel Hossen is a day-labourer by profession while his mother Mrs. Henoara Begum is a housewife.

On 23 March 2011, at around 3:30pm, Limon was asked by his mother to bring the family's cattle from the bank of the Sondha river where three cows were left for grazing. At around 4pm, while returning home Limon was stopped by a group of nine persons riding three motorbikes (three persons on each bike). Among them one man was plain clothed while the rest eight were wearing the black uniform of the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB).

The plain clothed man, who was later identified as Md. Lutfor Rahman, Deputy Assistant Director (DAD) of the Crime Prevention Company No. 01 of the RAB-8 based in Barisal city, asked Limon's name and started beating accusing him (Limon) to be a 'terrorist'. Limon, who used to manage his tuition fees by working as part-time labourer at local brick factory due to his family's unaffordability, claimed that he was student informing the name of his college. He also requested the RAB men to contact the principal of the Kathalia P. G. S. Multilateral School and College to verify his studentship. DAD Lutfor and his colleagues denied to accept Limon's statement and attempted to kill him by pointing gun at him. Limon cried in fear and requested the RAB personnel for not to kill him. Suddenly, DAD Lutfor shot him pointing gun in his left thigh. Limon fell on the ground and lost his sense. The news of Limon's shooting at Limon in broad day light reached his relatives and neighbours immediately. Limon's mother Mrs. Henoara Begum along with his uncle Moazzem Hossen rushed to the scene and saw that Limon was bleeding from his left leg. When the mother and uncle cried out for help for saving the life of Limon the members of the RAB prevented them from approaching Limon. The RAB members started beating Moazzem. DAD Lutfor grounded Moazzem and stood on Moazzem's head and neck with Lutfor's boot while the other colleagues held his hands and legs in order to stop Moazzem's movement.

The RAB personnel took off the lungi (a clothed worn by males in Bangladesh and few neighbouring countries) from Limon's body making his body naked. They put the lungi on the blood, which came out from Limon's body, and stamped with their boots to wipe the blood from the ground with the lungi and threw the blood-soaked cloth into the river.

The RAB personnel took off Limon's shirt to tie up the bullet wound.After about two hours four persons carried Limon's body to a boat at a nearby boat pier and asked the boatman Mr. Munsef to ply the boat, which left for unknown place.

The family became worried about Limon's fate and the deteriorating health condition of Moazzem, who was critically injured due to torture by the RAB. They took Moazzem to the Kawkhali hospital for treatment. They learned from the eyewitnesses that a black pickup van of the RAB took away Limon's body from a pier near to Jamaddar Bari. Since then, Limon whereabouts remained unknown to the family. Later, in the
evening, Limon found himself at the Sher-E-Bangla Medical College Hospital in Barisal city when he returned to his sense.

In the late night, DAD Lutfor filed two criminal cases (No. 10 and 11)with the Rajapur police station accusing Limon and seven others claiming an incident of encounter between a so called group of terrorists and the RAB-8, which is abituated to publicize fake stories of encounter since its inception.

The first case (First Information Report- FIR No. 10 of the Rajapur police station, dated 23 March 2011) was registered under Sections 19 A and 19 F of the Arms Act-1878. In this case DAD Lutfor claimed that a group of terrorists of the Shahid Jomaddar's gang opened gun fire targeting the RAB team when the latter reached Shahid Jomaddar's house. RAB responded the gunshots by firing from their own pistols and Stenguns. The terrorists escaped except one person named Limon, who
had a bullet wounds in his left thigh, with a USA-made pistol and magazines in his possession.

The second case (First Information Report- FIR No. 11 of the Rajapur police station, dated 23 March 2011) was registered under Sections 322, 353, 307 and 34 of the Penal Code-1860 for obstructing the law-enforcement agencies to discharge their duties and attempting to murder.

In both complaints the RAB's DAD Lutfor claimed Limon's age as 25 years despite the fact that according to the official records Limon's age is 16 years and 3 months only. They have also insisted the hospital staffs to record the same age of Limon when he was brought to the Sher-E-Bangla Medical College Hospital in Barisal.

On 24 March, at 10am Limon's family came to know that Limon had been admitted to the Sher-E-Bangla Medical College Hospital in Barisal. When the relatives went to the hospital they saw four armed men of the RAB cordoned Limon at Bed No. 11 of the Surgical Ward No. 27. The RAB men refused Limon's father Mr. Tofazzel to see his son. Limon's mother Mrs. Henoara, as a form of extreme submissiveness and request, the held legs of the on-duty RAB personnel requesting them to allow her to see her son. Then, they allowed Henoara to go her son, but after a short while they kicked out her from the hospital. The family learned that Limon was admitted to the Sher-E-Bangla Medical College Hospital at 8pm on 23 March, after four hours of the shooting Limon by the RAB.

After the midnight of 24 March, the doctors of the Sher-E-Bangla Medical College Hospital confirmed that they were unable to cure Limon, who had a perforation in his left thigh due to bullet wounds. On 25 March, the doctors referred Limon to the National Institute of Cardiovascular Disease (NICVD) for better treatment. The doctors of the Sher-E-Bangla Medical College Hospital implied that Limon's condition was critical and life-threatening for which huge amount of money will be required to save his life. The family became worried about money. The people of Limon's neighbourhood donated money for his treatment although it was not enough that compelled the helpless family to borrow money mortgaging a piece of land.

On 26 March evening, the Rajapur police cordoned by Constables Aftab and Abdur Rashid took Limon to the NICVD in the city of Dhaka by an ambulance forcing Limon's family to pay BDT 5,500.00 for the fare of the ambulance. When Limon was taken to the NICVD early in the morning of 27 March the doctors further referred him to the National Institute of Traumatology, Orthopedic and Rehabilitation (NITOR) for required
treatment.

On 27 March, the doctors of the NITOR operated on Limon's left and finally amputated it from the thigh of which all the tissues were found completely damaged due to bullet wounds. Limon has been under treatment of the doctors of the NITOR, who imposed all the expenditure of Limon's surgery upon the family.

The members of the RAB cordoned the hospital after Limon had been taken to the ITOR and continued surveillance.

On 6 April, a leading national daily newspaper published a detailed report about the incident with a picture of Limon's amputated leg. Since the media report the RAB and police forced the authorities of the NITOR to lock the hospital ward where Limon was admitted. All the doors of the ward were locked from inside expelling the relatives of other patients and denying entry to visitors at that ward. The journalists, human rights defenders and lawyers were refused entry to the hospital by the uniformed and plain-clothed members of the RAB and the police. The Chairman of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) of Bangladesh Prof. Mizanur Rahman has only been allowed to visit Limon, who described the story to him. The NHRC Chairman suggested the parents of Limon to file complaints to seek justice from the court of law.

Following the suggestion of the NHRC Chairman when Limon's relatives tried to consult with lawyers regarding filing complaint with the local Court of Magistrate of Jhalkathi district the members of the RAB have started intimidating and threatening everyone of the whole area in Jhalkathi including the journalists, lawyers, relatives and neighbours for expressing their opinion regarding the barbarity of this paramilitary force, which has earned reputation of an "official death squad of the Bangladesh Government".

Moreover, the officials of the RAB have been calling many people over cell phones asking them to go to the office of the RAB-8 and keep silent about the case of Limon. A large number of plain-clothed members of the RAB have been staying in Saturia village and collecting the names of and other particulars of the persons, who have already shared their views with the newspapers and donated money to Limon's family for his treatment. The well-wishers and neighbours of Limon have now been forced to go in hiding in fear of extrajudicial killing by the RAB.

Additionally, the plain-clothed members of the RAB have cordoned the Ward of the NITOR denying entry of the attendants of the patients, who have been helpless for getting food, medicine and assistance for using washrooms while hospital does not provide adequate support and care of the patients.

Limon's father Mr. Tofazzel Hossain told that his family has seen an unimaginable disaster due to the atrocities of the RAB (Tofazzel's audiovisual interviews are available here: video clip-1 and video clip-2). He pointed out that, firstly, his son, who had passion of maintaining study by part-time working in brick factory, has been a physically disabled for his whole life. Secondly, as a day labourer Tofazzel cannot afford the high expenditure of medical treatment of his son as the public hospital asked his family to buy all medicines and necessary tools for the surgery and the post-operation medical treatment. He has already spent BDT 150,000.00 for his son's treatment, which has also been cordially supported by the people of all walks of his native village and by selling a piece of his land. He is highly confused about the fate of his son as the family's affordability is on the verge of its last limit. Thirdly, Tofazzel's hope for getting justice has been diminishing due to continuous threats and intimidations by the RAB to his relatives, neighbours and other professionals who have expressed their sympathy to his family. Tofazzel asked when the AHRC interviewed him, "Can anyone imagine how we have been suffering from this disastrous situation? Is there any mechanism to stop the barbarity of the RAB in this country?"

We have learned that there is another person named Limon Hossain Jamaddar, who lives in Dhaka and reportedly employed in a private company, in the area where Limon was shot by the RAB-8 on 23 March 2011. This Limon Hossain Jomaddar, aged around 25 years, is a son of Mr. Kamrul Jamaddar, having a relationship with Mr. Shahid Jamaddar whom the RAB team accused in the two criminal cases lodged after
shooting Limon Hossen, who is 16-year-old college student.

The Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), which is termed as an "elite force" by the Government of Bangladesh, did not bother for verifying the identity of a targeted person regardless whether the person concerned is innocent or involved in any kind of offence due to its extreme lack of minimum efficiency of law-enforcement.

Meanwhil On 10 April 2011, The mother of Limon Hossain, Henoara Begum, has sued 12 people, including six RAB personnel.

Henoara Begum on Sunday filed the case with the District Judicial Magistrates' Court, Jhalakathi bringing 'attempt to murder' charge against the six RAB-8 men and six unidentified people, her lawyer Nasimul Hasan told journalists.

While communicated with Inspector general of police Hassan Mahmood Khandaker, he said investigation into the incident was underway.

Human rights watchdog Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has urged the authorities of Bangladesh to launch a thorough investigation into the matter immediately asking them to prosecute the perpetrators for the crime beyond any impunity. The victim, his relatives and well-wishers must be protected from any further attacks or harassment by the Rapid Action Battalion or the police. Adequate compensation should be afforded to the victim. The two fabricated cases that have already registered against Limon Hossen by the RAB must be dropped. The RAB should be disbanded immediately for committing such heinous crimes.

AHRC has already written separate letters to the UN Special Rapporteurs on Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Punishment or Treatment and Rights of the Children calling for their intervention into this matter.

http://www.srilankaguardian.org/2011/04/story-behind-scene-hidden-truth.html
Video:
1.The statement of Limon's Father Part one
2.The statement of Limon's Father Part Two



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