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Sunday, December 15, 2013

[mukto-mona] বিজয় দিবসের ; কোনো অনুষ্ 64;ানে যোগ দিচ&# 2509;ছেন না ইইউ র ;াষ্ট্রদূতর ;া



বিজয় দিবসের কোনো অনুষ্ঠানে যোগ দিচ্ছেন না ইইউ রাষ্ট্রদূতরা
 
কূটনৈতিক প্রথা ভঙ্গ করেই ১৬ ডিসেম্বরের কোনো অনুষ্ঠানেই অংশগ্রহন না করার সিদ্ধান্ত সরকারকে জানিয়ে দিয়েছে ঢাকায় নিযুক্ত ইউরোপীয় ইউনিয়নের (ইইউ) রাষ্ট্রদূতরা।

আর তাদের সিদ্ধান্ত অনুযায়ীই জাতীয় স্মৃতিসৌধে ফুল দিতে যাননি ঢাকায় নিযুক্ত ইউরোপীয় ইউনিয়ন ভুক্ত কোনো রাষ্ট্রদূত। তাছাড়া সোমবার বিকেলে বিজয় দিবস উপলক্ষে বঙ্গভবনে রাষ্ট্রপতির দেয়া সংবর্ধনা অনুষ্ঠানেও তারা যোগ দিবেন না বলেই মনে করছেন সশ্লীষ্টরা। 

সোমবার নিজেদের এক সমন্বয় সভার অযুহাত দেখিয়ে বিজয় দিবসের কোনো অনুষ্ঠানে যোগ দিতে পারবেনা উল্লেখ করে রোববার বিকেলেই পররাষ্ট্র মন্ত্রণালয়ে এক ফ্যাক্স পাঠায় ইইউ। 

পরে সরকারের পক্ষ থেকে ইইউ-কে তাদের সিদ্ধান্ত পুনর্বিবেচনা করতে অনুরোধ করা হয়। সরকারের পক্ষ থেকে তাদেরকে অন্তত স্মৃতিসৌধে ফুল দিতে যাওয়ার অনুরোধ জানানো হয়। কিন্তু সোমবার সকালে ফুল দিতে যাননি ইইউ রাষ্ট্রদূতরা। 

বাংলাদেশের কোনো রাষ্ট্রীয় অনুষ্ঠাননে ইইউ রাষ্ট্রদূতদের দল বেঁধে যোগ না দেয়ার ঘটনাটি নজিরবিহীন একটি ঘটনা।

সূত্রে জানা গেছে, দেশে চলমান রাজনৈতিক অচলাবস্থা নিরসনে ইইউ রাষ্ট্রদূতদের নেওয়া কোনো পদক্ষেপের ভ্রুক্ষেপ করেনি ক্ষমটাসীনরা। আর এতেই তাদের সাথে তৈরী হয় দূরত্ব। সোমবার বিজয় দিবসে সরকারী কোনো অনুষ্ঠানে যোগ না দেয়াটা তাদের ক্ষোভের বহি:প্রকাশ বলে মনে করছেন সংশ্লীষ্টরা।
 
 


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




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Re: [mukto-mona] Fw: MCB Press Release: 'Muslim Council of Britain condemns the execution of Bangladesh’s opposition Leader'



Is the 'Muslim Council of Britain' an al-Quada organization?


On Mon, Dec 16, 2013 at 4:40 AM, ANISUR RAHMAN <anisur.rahman1@btinternet.com> wrote:
 

We, the Muslims in Britain, condemn the blatant partial attitude adopted by the so-called 'Muslim Council of Britain'. What authority has this 'Muslim Council of Britain' got to claim the voice of all Muslims in Britain? 
Where was this 'Muslim Council of Britain' when this Quadir Molla along with his henchmen killed a number of families - Muslims as well as Hindus? One Muslim family member (who was in hiding) gave a vivid account how Molla men dragged family members, one by one, out of the house and killed by striking with machetes. These barbarians then shouted the Pakistani slogans and asked if there were any more AL supporters. 
This Muslim Council should apologise for its totally one sided view.

- AR 



From: Totonji Al Hajj <ahmadtotonji@yahoo.com>
To: mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sunday, 15 December 2013, 17:08
Subject: [mukto-mona] Fw: MCB Press Release: 'Muslim Council of Britain condemns the execution of Bangladesh's opposition Leader'

 


On Sunday, December 15, 2013 8:06 PM, Totonji Al Hajj <ahmadtotonji@yahoo.com> wrote:


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: <mcbnews@mcb.org.uk>
Date: Fri, Dec 13, 2013 at 2:45 PM
Subject: MCB Press Release: 'Muslim Council of Britain condemns the execution of Bangladesh's opposition Leader'
To: "mcbmedia@mcb.org.uk" <mcbmedia@mcb.org.uk>, "mcbnews@mcb.org.uk" <mcbnews@mcb.org.uk>


Press Release

Muslim Council of Britain condemns the execution of Bangladesh's opposition Leader

13th December 2013

The Muslim Council of Britain adds its voice in condemning the execution of a Bangladesh opposition leader, Abdul Quader Molla, on Thursday 11 December.

The Bangladesh government has defied calls from the international community to act justly.

The United Nations made a last ditch attempt to call a halt to the execution. Human rights groups such as Amnesty International condemned this state murder, others, such as Human Rights Watch, criticised the trial of Mr Mollah that led to his execution.

And in Britain, the Foreign Office Minister Sayeeda Warsi had urged the Bangladesh government not to proceed. Baroness Warsi was joined by shadow Foreign Secretary Douglas Alexander.

Farooq Murad, Secretary General of the MCB said:

"It is a sad day for Bangladesh and sad day for democracy and justice. The trial process of Abdul Quader Molla was fraught with flaws and the international community including the UN and all respected Human Rights organisations world over strongly criticised the trial as unfair, biased and politically driven."

"Many British Bangladeshi Muslims still have ties to that country and there is deep unease that this act will propel Bangladesh, a country of some 155 million, into further instability at best, anarchy at worst."

"Bangladesh has a proud tradition of religious pluralism. We call on all Bangladeshis to exercise dignity and wisdom to preserve this pluralism following this unjust execution."

"Abdul Quader Mollah was tried for crimes committed during Bangladesh's war of independence in 1971. We agree that those guilty of such crimes should be brought to book. However, Mr Mollah vehemently contested the charges put to him, and he was not allowed to properly defend himself in an open and transparent judicial process, supervised by international jurists."

"We now have a situation where there will be more bereaved families, more impunity and more unanswered questions for justice."

The Muslim Council of Britain expresses its sincere condolences to the family of Abdul Quader Molla and call on the British government to urgently review its relationships with the Bangladeshi authorities. These include a review of aid delivered to Bangladesh, and a review of Bangladesh's position within the Commonwealth.

[ends]


Notes to Editors:

The Muslim Council of Britain is the UK's largest Muslim umbrella body with over
500 affiliated national, regional and local organisations, mosques,
charities and schools.

For further information please contact:
The Muslim Council of Britain
PO Box 57330
London
E1 2WJ
Tel: 0845 26 26 786
Fax: 0207 247 7079
media@mcb.org.uk
 
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Mukto Mona plans for a Grand Darwin Day Celebration: 
Call For Articles:

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

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

****************************************************

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

****************************************************

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




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[mukto-mona] Victory Day with a different taste!



The whole nation celebrates the 43rd Victory Day today, paying tributes to the three million martyrs for their supreme sacrifice and with a renewed call for executing all the verdicts against war criminals.

I wrote a piece in Bangla at Mukto-Mona Bangla blog:

================================

ভিন্ন স্বাদের বিজয়, এবং নতুন সাজে মুক্তমনা

সুমনের একটা গানের লাইন আছে – 'কয়েকটা দিন ভীষণ রঙিন'।  খুব প্রিয় একটি গানের লাইন।  আজ বিজয় দিবসের দিনে এই লাইনটি বারে বারেই মনের আঙিনায় উঠে আসছে।

এ যেন এক অন্যরকম বিজয়। 'যুদ্ধাপরাধীদের বিচার' – যে আপাত অসম্ভব ঘটনাকে চিরসত্য  ভেবে নিয়ে দেশে বড় হয়েছিলাম আশি এবং নব্বইয়ের দশকে, যে সময়গুলোতে 'জয় বাংলা'কে দেখা হত অস্পৃশ্য অচ্ছুৎ এক শব্দাবলী হিসেবে, সেই সময়ের এক কৈশোর অতিক্রান্ত তরুণ ছিলাম আমি। এ এক অলুক্ষণে সময় – যে সময়টাতে আমার চারপাশের বন্ধুবান্ধবেরা জোর গলায় বিএনপি করার কথা বলত, ইসলামী ছাত্র শিবির আর জামায়েতে ইসলামীর 'হে তরুণ এস সত্যের পথে' টাইপের চিকা মারা থাকতো বাড়ির আশে পাশের দেয়ালগুলোতে, আর আওয়ামিলীগকে দেখা হত 'রুশ ভারতের দালাল হিসেবে',   কিংবা 'হিন্দুদের পার্টি' হিসেবে। বঙ্গবন্ধুর সাতই মার্চের ভাষণ ছিল রেডিও টেলিভিশন থেকে পুরোপুরি নিষিদ্ধ। নিষিদ্ধ ছিল 'জয় বাংলা, বাংলার জয়' এর মত অসংখ্য গানও। টিভির নাটকে আর চলচ্চিত্রে রাজাকার শব্দটি পারতপক্ষে মুখে তোলা হত না। পাকিস্তানের নাম না নিয়ে বলা হত 'শত্রুরা'। … সেই সময় এক অখ্যাত তরুণ বুকের মধ্যে লালন করছিল  যুদ্ধাপরাধীদের বিচারের স্বপ্ন। মনের গহীন কোনে আশা করে যাচ্ছিল  ঘুরে দাঁড়াবার। কিন্তু ঘুণাক্ষরেও কি ভাবতে পেরেছিল সেই স্বপ্নগুলো সত্যি হয় উঠবে দুই দশকের মধ্যেই?

একাত্তরে জন্মেছিলাম আমি। আমার বাবা ঢাকা বিশ্ববিদ্যালয়ের সেইসব গুটিকয় শিক্ষকদের অন্যতম যিনি পঁচিশে মার্চের কাল রাত্রির পর  শহীদ সহকর্মীদের রক্ত ছুঁয়ে শপথ করেছিলেন যুদ্ধ করে দেশকে স্বাধীন করে বিশ্ববিদ্যালয়ে ফিরবেন। তা তিনি ফিরেছিলেন বটে। কিন্তু সেই যুদ্ধের সুফল কি তিনি তার ছেলের প্রজন্মের হাতে তুলে দিয়ে যেতে পেরেছিলেন?  তার ছেলেরা বড় হয়েছে বঙ্গবন্ধুকে এক ঘৃণ্য পতিত রাষ্ট্রনায়ক হিসেবে দেখে, আর জেনেছে বঙ্গবন্ধুদের হত্যাকারীরা সবাই 'সূর্যসন্তান'। বড় বড় রাজাকারেরা কেউ মন্ত্রীসভায়, কেউবা লাখ লাখ মুরীদ জুটিয়ে ওয়াজ মাহফিলের দোকান খুলে বসেছে, কেউ বা দাঁড়িতে মেহেদী লাগিয়ে দাপিয়ে কুপিয়ে ইসলামী অনুষ্ঠান করে যাচ্ছে বিটিভিতে।  মুখচেনা রাজাকারদের মধ্যে কেউ কেউ এমনকি চোখের সামনে পেয়ে যাচ্ছে স্বাধীনতা পদকও।  দেশের মিডিয়াগুলোতে মুক্তিযুদ্ধের কথা যত না শোনা যাচ্ছিল, তার চেয়ে বেশি প্রচারিত হত এক রাষ্ট্রপতির চোখে রেবন সানগ্লাস পরে খাল খনন বিপ্লবের কথা, কিংবা এক প্লেবয় রাষ্ট্রপতির প্রেমের কবিতা আর আবেগাপ্লুত দেশাত্মবোধক গানের কথা। মুক্তিযুদ্ধ যেটা কিনা বাঙালি জাতির জন্য হাজার বছরের শ্রেষ্ঠতম অর্জন বললেও অত্যুক্তি হয়না, তার চেতনা এবং ইতিহাস যেন ক্রমশঃ বিলীন হয়ে যাচ্ছিল মহাশূন্যে।

সেখান থেকেই, সেই ধ্বংসস্তূপ আর ছাইভস্ম থেকে যেন ফিনিক্স পাখির মতোই উত্থান আমাদের। শুরুটা করেছিলেন শহীদ জননী জাহানারা ইমাম; নব্বইয়ের দশকে গোলাম আজমের জন্য গণআদালত গঠন করে। শেষটা করলেন শাহবাগ প্রজন্ম চত্বরের অসম সাহসী উদ্দীপ্ত তরুণ তরুণীরা। কাদের মোল্লাকে ফাঁসির দড়িতে ঝুলিয়ে।  হাতের ফাঁক গলে বেরিয়েই যাচ্ছিলেন কাদের মোল্লা। অজস্র গুমখুন, হত্যা ধর্ষণের নায়ক, কসাই কাদেরের সেই বিখ্যাত দাম্ভিকতাপূর্ণ  'ভি' সাইনের ব্যাপারটা কেউ সহজভাবে নিতে পারেননি। মোল্লাজি ভেবেছিলেন একাত্তরের পর যেভাবে মানুষকে ঘোল খাইয়ে ক্ষমতার রাজনীতিতে পুনঃপ্রতিষ্ঠিত হয়েছিলেন, এবারেও তাই হবে। কিন্তু বিধিবাম। ফুসে উঠা তারুণ্য তৈরি করল শাহবাগে এক অমর ইতিহাস।


সেই শাহবাগ। শাহবাগকে নিয়ে একটা স্ট্যাটাস দিয়েছিলাম মনে পড়ে –
 নোনা স্যাঁতস্যাঁতে দেওয়াল, ঘুপচি ঘুপচি ঘর, আর রাস্তার ধারে নর্দমা, আর উসকোখুসকো অপরিচ্ছন্ন ভ্যাগাবণ্ড টাইপের লোকজনের আড্ডা – মনোমুগ্ধকর স্থান হিসেবে কারো মনে উঠে আসবে না নিঃসন্দেহে। কিন্তু আমাদের কাছে সেই এলাকাটাই ছিল পরম পূজনীয়, সবচেয়ে আকর্ষণীয় জায়গাগুলোর একটি। দেশে গেলে বসুন্ধরা সুপারমার্কেট আমার যাওয়া পরে না, কিন্তু আজিজে ঢু মারা হয় ঠিকই। ভাবতেই ভাল লাগছে ঢাকাশহরের সবচেয়ে প্রিয় স্থানটি থেকে বিদ্রোহের বারুদ জ্বলেছে, আর এখন তো তা অগ্নিস্ফুলিঙ্গে রূপ নিয়ে ছড়িয়ে পড়েছে সাড়া দেশে।
আরো আনন্দের ব্যাপার, কোন রাজনৈতিক দল এর নেতৃত্ব দেয়নি, দিয়েছে -আমরা যারা লেখালিখি করি তাদের মধ্যে থেকে উঠে আসা ব্লগার এবং ফেসবুক এক্টিভিস্টরা। যারা এতদিন ভার্চুয়াল লেখালিখি আর ইন্টারনেটে চেঁচিয়ে কিছু হবে না বলে কথার তুবড়ি ফোটাতেন, তাদের চোখে আঙ্গুল দিয়ে আজ দেখিয়ে দেয়া হয়েছে – 'আমরাও পারি'।
 
আমরাই পারি!

হ্যা যে কাজটি আমাদের পূর্ববর্তী প্রজন্ম করতে গিয়েও ব্যর্থ হয়েছেন, আবদ্ধ হয়েছিলেন, বিক্ষত হয়েছিলেন রুদ্ধ হতাশ্বাসে, সেই কাজটি আমাদের প্রজন্ম সমাধান করেছে, খুব সুচারু ভাবেই।  আমরা পুরো জাতিকে উপহার দিতে পেরেছি এক ভিন্ন স্বাদের বিজয়।  এই বিজয়ের জন্য যে আমাদের আজকের এই তরুণ প্রজন্ম কৃতিত্ব দাবী করতেই পারে, তার প্রমাণ মেলে বিশিষ্ট লেখক ও এক সময়কার ডাক সাইটে টিভি প্রযোজক বেলাল বেগের স্ট্যাটাসে –
এই ভিন্ন স্বাদের বিজয়ের উদযাপনে  মুক্তমনাও সেজেছে নতুন সাজে।  অনেকেই দেখছেন আজ মুক্তমনায় লাল সবুজের সমারোহ। সেই ম্যাড়মেড়ে নীল রঙের সাইডবার আর মেনুর জায়গায়  খেলা করছে সবুজের স্পন্দন। সে সমস্ত জায়গায় মাউস নিলে দেখবেন লালের চোখ রাঙানি ভেসে উঠছে। জাতীয় পতাকে খুঁজে পাবেন পাঠকেরা এই সাইটে যেন। মুক্তমনার লেখক লেখিকারা চমৎকার  সব নতুন নতুন লেখার সমারোহ ঘটিয়েছেন দিনটিকে সামনে রেখে। আদিল মাহমুদ  লিখেছেন – 'মুক্তিযোদ্ধা জালাল ভাই ও সমকালীন বাংলাদেশ', ফরিদ আহমেদ লিখেছেন, রক্ত পলাশের রঙ, আরিফ রহমান  লিখেছেন, 'কসাই কাদের আর মোল্লা কাদের নাকি এক ব্যক্তি ছিলেন না; বীরাঙ্গনা মোমেনা বেগম আমায় ক্ষমা করবেন'।  সাব্বির হোসাইন  লিখেছেন 'একাত্তরে বুদ্ধিজীবি হত্যাকাণ্ড'। কাদের মোল্লার ফাঁসির পর পরই ব্লাডি সিভিলিয়ান লিখেছিলেন, 'আমার সোনার বাংলা, আমি তোমায় ভালোবাসি'।
চমৎকার কিছু কবিতাও এসেছে। কাজি মামুনের 'অন্য রকম সকাল', কাজী রহমানের বীরাঙ্গনা, শাখা নির্ভানার 'কুষ্ঠ বিকার' ইত্যাদি।
পাশাপাশি, ইংরেজি ব্লগে আছে রায়হান রশীদের 'We demand proceedings be brought against the Pakistani War Criminals of 1971 immediately',  ড. মোজাম্মেল এইচ খানের 'Quader Mollah: fact versus fiction' এবং ফরহাদের 'War Crime Trials and The Role of International Community' ইত্যাদি। সামনে নিশ্চয় এ ধরণের আরো লেখা আসবে।
মুক্তমনার জন্য খুব অল্প সময়ের মধ্যে চমৎকার কিছু ব্যানার করে দিয়েছেন গুণী চিত্রশিল্পী এবং মুক্তচিন্তক আসমা সুলতানা মিতা (তার কাজ সম্পর্কে  আরো জানতে হলে দেখুন এখানে)।  তার চমৎকার ব্যানারগুলো এখানে -
এই বিজয়ের দিনে যারা মুক্তমনাকে প্রাণবন্ত এবং স্পন্দিত করে তুলেছেন, সেই লেখক পাঠক, কবি, চিত্রশিল্পী সবাইকে জানাচ্ছি মুক্তমনার পক্ষ থেকে অভিনন্দন।  আজ গাইতে ইচ্ছে করছে সুমনের মতোই –
ইচ্ছে করে অন্য একটা আকাশ দেখি
একই মাটির উপর অন্য দিক দিগন্ত
অন্য শস্য অন্যরকম ফুল ফুটন্ত
অন্য সময় আসুক এবার ইচ্ছে করে
আমার দেশে সবার দেশে সবার ঘরে…
 
ফুল গুলোকে তাই বলে কি বাদ দিতে চাই?
শস্য এবং ফুলের জন্য গান গেয়ে যাই
ইচ্ছে করে স্বপ্ন ধরুক অন্য মানে
বেচে থাকার অন্য কথায় অন্য গানে।।
 
সবাইকে বিজয় দিবসের শুভেচ্ছা। সকল যুদ্ধাপরাধীদের বিচার এবং জামাত-শিবিরের রাজনীতি চিরতরে নিষিদ্ধ করার দাবী হয়ে উঠুক এবারকার বিজয় দিবসের অঙ্গীকার।


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[mukto-mona] Pak diplomat looks back





Remembering Dhaka by Talat Mahmud  *  16 Dec 13 (http://tribune.com.pk/story/645895/remembering-dhaka/)

The month of December takes me back to the lanes and labyrinths of the city of Dhaka, where I spent some early years of my life. Memories of chattering with the rickshaw-pullers at the entrance of my hostel early in the morning and heckling with the fruit vendors around sunset at the crowded Saddar Ghaat on the edges of Boorrhi Ganga still haunt me, despite the tides of time having overtaken so much of life.
I landed in Dhaka after the 1965 war as an undergraduate student. For the next few turbulent years up till 1970, Salimullah Muslim Hall close to the well known Plassey Barracks was my abode. This hostel, known for its architectural elegance, was built in the earlier part of the century and named after Nawab Sir Saleemullah, who hosted the historic Muslim League delegation in 1906. The 1965 war with India had equally charged our Bengali compatriots, who demonstrated exemplary spirit but that soon tapered off. People felt left out and defenceless, though the Indian forces did not launch a full-scale attack on the eastern front. In a quick succession of events, Sheikh Mujibur Rehman launched his historic six points underlining complete regional autonomy for East Pakistan. In a year or two, he was charged under the Agartala conspiracy case, which created a further wedge between the two wings.

During all these years, Dhaka University pulsated with a flurry of activities. As a West Pakistani student, I could hang out with the young disciples of Maulana Maududi and Maulana Bhashani at the same time. My quest to understand different cross currents quite often swung me across the spectrum.

The Bengali intelligentsia, since the 1950s, was clear in its mind that Pakistan was one polity, but with two separate economies, distinct dispensations were needed for them to survive and forge ahead. While immersed in the Bengali ethos, I realised that despite some convergences in our everyday lives, we were far apart both culturally and linguistically. The way we lived, our eating habits, our sources of joy and sorrow were different. Our sense of history and vision for the future also set us apart. There had been no meaningful effort to take these factors into account. As a country, we needed exceptional dispensation while harmonising deep-seated diversity with occasional flashes of unity. This dilemma did exist in many other parts of the world too and led to many other countries evolving a national construct where conflicting claims could be safely managed.
Pakistan, as a new Islamic Republic, inherited a centrist mode of governance despite a compact amongst the constituent units, which were pluralistic and stood out for diversity. Geographical incongruity, because of the huge Indian land mass, with an avowed adverse posture against Pakistan, was a ground reality. This should have been persuasive enough for the decision-making elite to work out a system, which could have enabled the constituents of Pakistan's federation to flourish along their distinct courses. Soon after independence, many other identities surfaced which were not acceptable to the centric leadership dominated by the Punjabi and Urdu-speaking elite of that time.
In a pluralistic society, language happens to be the most potent marker of group identity, which if duly recognised, gives access to opportunities and a space to blossom. The demand to accept Bengali as an official language was not only rubbished by the West Pakistani leadership, questions were also raised on the floor of the house of the Constituent Assembly regarding the patriotism of those pressing for this demand.

My stay in the hostel with Bengali students had been enriching. I dined and dressed like them, and spoke Bengali with ease and facility, which gave me a better understanding of the Bengali mind. As I reflect back, I feel that Bengal had never been a part of the mainstream subcontinent or the Indian land mass. Its rich, alluvial and deltaic character always marked this area with a sense of exclusiveness. Had there been no colonial sharing under the British, it may well have been yet another Muslim country on the fringes of Southeast Asia. This distinctiveness also ran through its political streams. The Pakistan movement did push this exclusivism into the background for a while but an average literate Muslim Bengali in that part was clear in his mind that his religion separated him from Hindu Bengalis, hence the quest for Pakistan, while his language and culture distinguished him from fellow West Pakistanis, all the more reason for complete regional autonomy.

The economic paradigm that we had been following largely focused on investment, capacity-building and incurring of huge expenditures in the western wing. The investment multiplier, which remained confined to the western wing, deepened the wedge between the two wings further. Empirical evidence of the growing economic disparity between the two parts can be found from the study of the five-year plans of the 1950s and 1960s.

What happened in 1971, among other reasons, was on account of the festering economic inequity, aggravated by cultural and linguistic cleavages, and lack of participation in key decision-making by Bengalis. Development economists, like Andre Gunder Frank and Samir Amin, had done a lot of work on uneven development and cultural cleavages by that time, but only a sensible leadership could have picked up these cues to avert disaster.

The creation of Pakistan, while riding on a religious crest wave, was indeed a defiance of geography; dismemberment of the country, on the other hand, was the revenge of this very geography for missing out on the building blocks so vitally needed in the process of nation-building.

On my last visit to Bangladesh a few years ago, I drove through the familiar roads of Dhaka along with an old Bengali friend, who had been a freedom fighter in the 1971 war. We drove to Shaheed Minar and sauntered there for a while. The place was buzzing with the presence of young university students. My host pointed towards the nearby classrooms. I was told that it was here in February 1952 that peaceful protestors of the language movement were fired upon on the orders of a maverick police officer from West Pakistan. The name of the officer was Masud Mahmood. He was the same maverick, who at one time was the eyes and ears of the late Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and then turned as an approver in the murder case against the former prime minister, resulting in his execution. Apart from monumental blunders, petty but violent acts like these at an individual level were also responsible for the agony and misery this country went through.

*Public policy analyst, a former interior secretary and an alumnus of Dhaka University  



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[mukto-mona] [মুক্তমনা বাংলা ব্লগ] 'ভিন্ন স্বাদের বিজয়, এবং নতুন সাজে মুক্তমনা'

মুক্তমনা বাংলা ব্লগ has posted a new item,
'ভিন্ন স্বাদের বিজয়, এবং নতুন
সাজে মুক্তমনা'

সুমনের একটা গানের লাইন আছে –
'কয়েকটা দিন ভীষণ রঙিন'।  খুব
প্রিয় একটি গানের লাইন।  আজ
বিজয় দিবসের দিনে এই লাইনটি
বারে বারেই মনের আঙিনায় উঠে
আসছে।

এ যেন এক অন্যরকম বিজয়।
'যুদ্ধাপরাধীদের বিচার' – যে
আপাত অসম্ভব ঘটনাকে চিরসত্য
 ভেবে নিয়ে দেশে বড় হয়েছিলাম
আশি এবং নব্বইয়ের দশকে, যে
সময়গুলোতে 'জয় বাংলা'কে দেখা
হত অস্পৃশ্য [...]

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Best regards,
মুক্তমনা বাংলা ব্লগ ।



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Re: [mukto-mona] মিশন ইম্পসিবল!!



Consider the role of Trilateral Commission and find out how independent countries and tinpot republic like ours really are.


On Mon, Dec 16, 2013 at 4:14 AM, ANISUR RAHMAN <anisur.rahman1@btinternet.com> wrote:
 

Reading the thread of comments made by various readers under this 'Mission Impossible', I cannot but make my comments known clearly.

First of all, I do not agree with Jiten Roy's assertion that no country is 'really independent'. By 'really independent' he possibly means a country which can ignore the rest of the world and do whatever it likes. This is a totally wrong definition of independence. There are loads of international agreements on various issues such as product standards imposed by International Standards Organisation (ISO), labour rules by International Labour Organisation (ILO), International Air Transport Authority (IATA) supervising rules on air transport, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) supervising regulations of nuclear energy etc etc. These are international regulations applicable on all signatory states. Abiding by these regulations does not curb the independence of a country, it rather reinforces independence. It is the way of living harmoniously within the comity of nations within a framework of internationally recognised rules.

This is not the same thing as abiding by Saudi Arabia's instruction not to have women police officers on the street in Banglaesh. This is subservience, loss of independence and slavish mentality. If somebody says that this is a pragmatic approach adopted by Zia, I would dispute that. What approach was that when Zia made Bangladesh an 'Islamic State'? What approach was that when Zia gave legal permission to the Islamic organisations like Jamaat to get involved in political system? If these were all under orders from Saudi Arabia, then Zia can call himself a slave of Saudi Arabia by being the dictator of Bangladesh and that is the true 'lack of independence'; not the previous compliance of internationally enforced regulations.

I also take issue with Jiten Roy that corruption should be taken out of consideration when dealing with politicians. He has produced the most illogical argument I have ever seen. He argues that holding corrupt politicians accountable makes politicians insecure and that makes them more corrupt! What a drivel! I have the feeling that he wants to remove corruption out of consideration as AL leaders are corrupt and hence removing corruption will vindicate AL leaders of one vice!

Corruption (of all types) is one of the most serious vices, if not the most serious vice, that politicians could have. However, one should distinguish between the various levels of corruption. If a politician claims extra few dollars in his travel expense, that is not in the same category of corruption when a politician who only awards a national contract on receiving a certain percent (such as 10%) from the contractor. Such corrupt practices siphon off resources from the national exchequer and thereby blunts national growth. Bangladesh had been consistently at the top five places among the 170 or so nations in the corruption league table. A relatively less corrupt government such as in Singapore or Malaysia had shown that national progress is much better than a corrupt government. 

- A Rahman


From: Jiten Roy <jnrsr53@yahoo.com>
To: "mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com" <mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, 15 December 2013, 17:10

Subject: Re: [mukto-mona] মিশন ইম্পসিবল!!

 
I believe, Shekh Mujib said – "We are Vikkhuker Jat (Beggers' Community); we do not have choices." That's the truth about our self-esteem and independence.

Kamal Das is right – geographic border represents very little of a country's independence; there is no country in the world that is really independent, and there is no Colony also (at least, I can't think of any at this time). The reality is - entire world is connected; you throw a stone at one place, it will ripple through the entire world. That's how independent we are.

Also, the reference about Indian administrator was a metaphor, anyway. Not much discussion is warranted on that issue. The point is – we are not able to run our country as we wish. That's a fact. This situation no one can deny or change significantly it until we can stop begging.

Under the circumstances, country needs to align socially, culturally, and ideologically with the right powers. That's the job of the prudent administrators of the country. Administrators can't do it alone; it's the responsibility of the citizens to force administrators to align with the right power players. The latter force is very week in Bangladesh. People are naïve, educated or un-educated; they usually make emotional decisions. I can hear their voices in this forum.

For example, many people talk about corrupt politicians, and they are looking for Saints. In that search – they are fluctuating between two major political parties. This process is making politicians unsecure in all respect. No political ideology can take root under such environment. This process basically makes politicians corrupt.

I know - some will say – good people should remain true to their principle in the face of all odds. That's mostly a BS statement, not a reality. As far as I know - everyone has greed. The reality is - most people are good because they do not have the opportunity to be corrupt. Real test is – when they are subjected to the opportunity to be corrupt; most people haven't gone through that litmus test. I know most people are not Saint.

So, what's the right thing to do? Let's agree that politicians are all corrupt, and take this common denominator out of our decision making process. What other factors are left – Ideology and Culture. Now, the selection process is not so complicated. We can select political parties based on our tastes.

Ideology and culture are the two very precious factors that should guide our political decision making process. We cannot sacrifice these issues in search of finding uncorrupt political Saints.

Jiten Roy


On Sunday, December 15, 2013 10:46 AM, Subimal Chakrabarty <subimal@yahoo.com> wrote:
 
The Zia example does not prove that he was a man of low self esteem. The opposite was true. With his high self esteem and iron rule he did and undid things to his people and the political system of Bangladesh which nobody else could do. He would have never welcomed physically a foreign agent to supervise his job as the head of the country and the head of the state. This is true for any ruler Bangladesh has ever seen. 

It is possible that under Saudi request Zia stopped deploying female police on the street. Now as nation heavily dependent on foreign aid and earnings, Zia simply took a pragmatic decision. And this is typical of any ruler we have seen so far. It has nothing to do with the self esteem of a particular leader. 

I was referring to those intellectuals who believe from heart that the people of Bangladesh are not capable of running their own show and hence they need a foreign ruler. 

Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 14, 2013, at 7:35 PM, Kamal Das <kamalctgu@gmail.com> wrote:

 
Mr. Chakrabarty is not aware that much of the administrative decisions
are apparently not homegrown. Not long ago, it came from Pindi; now
it comes from Delhi. A lot comes also from New York, Peking and
Washington. During the tenure of Zia-ur-Rahman, Female Police were
not allowed on the street by an order from Saudi Arabia.

Before SC measures the self esteem of someone else, he should do it to his own.







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Re: [mukto-mona] মিশন ইম্পসিবল!!



1."The opposite was true. With his high self esteem and iron rule he did and undid things to his people and the political system of Bangladesh which nobody else could do. He would have never welcomed physically a foreign agent to supervise his job as the head of the country and the head of the state."
2."the people of Bangladesh are not capable of running their own show and hence they need a foreign ruler. "
We have found a Gayeswar (gayasur) Roy here!  Zia was a thoroughly illegitimate ruler all along.  Even during the liberation war, he was about to face court martial by Osmani.  Luckily, he was saved by Tajuddin.  If he had any self esteem, he would not have accepted Khaleda being ordered by Mujib and actively participated in the conspiracy to slaughter his family, reward the killers etc... His self esteem was so low that he removed  all Quranic verses from the route of Morarji Desai tour during his rule.

Who needs a foreign administrator, when indigenous ones listen to foreign orders?  Henry Kissinger boasted once that he does not command events of only two countries in the world.


On Sun, Dec 15, 2013 at 8:32 PM, Subimal Chakrabarty <subimal@yahoo.com> wrote:
 

The Zia example does not prove that he was a man of low self esteem. The opposite was true. With his high self esteem and iron rule he did and undid things to his people and the political system of Bangladesh which nobody else could do. He would have never welcomed physically a foreign agent to supervise his job as the head of the country and the head of the state. This is true for any ruler Bangladesh has ever seen. 

It is possible that under Saudi request Zia stopped deploying female police on the street. Now as nation heavily dependent on foreign aid and earnings, Zia simply took a pragmatic decision. And this is typical of any ruler we have seen so far. It has nothing to do with the self esteem of a particular leader. 

I was referring to those intellectuals who believe from heart that the people of Bangladesh are not capable of running their own show and hence they need a foreign ruler. 

Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 14, 2013, at 7:35 PM, Kamal Das <kamalctgu@gmail.com> wrote:

 

Mr. Chakrabarty is not aware that much of the administrative decisions
are apparently not homegrown. Not long ago, it came from Pindi; now
it comes from Delhi. A lot comes also from New York, Peking and
Washington. During the tenure of Zia-ur-Rahman, Female Police were
not allowed on the street by an order from Saudi Arabia.

Before SC measures the self esteem of someone else, he should do it to his own.




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[mukto-mona] [Mukto-Mona Writers' Corner] 'We demand proceedings be brought against the Pakistani War Criminals of 1971 immediately'

Mukto-Mona Writers' Corner has posted a new item, 'We demand proceedings be
brought against the Pakistani War Criminals of 1971 immediately'

Written by - Rayhan Rashid

It is time to start proceedings against the Pakistani War criminals as well. We,
on behalf of ICSF, demand proceedings be brought against the Pakistani War
Criminals of 1971 immediately. It will be an interesting test to observe how
sincere this so-called 'international community' really is! Ironically, it is
this very [...]

You may view the latest post at
http://mukto-mona.com/wordpress/?p=2608

You received this e-mail because you asked to be notified when new updates are
posted.
Best regards,
Mukto-Mona Writers' Corner



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Re: [mukto-mona] মিশন ইম্পসিবল!!




Anis Rahman Said: "…I also take issue with Jiten Roy that corruption should be taken out of consideration when dealing with politicians. He has produced the most illogical argument I have ever seen. He argues that holding corrupt politicians accountable makes politicians insecure and that makes them more corrupt! What a drivel! I have the feeling that he wants to remove corruption out of consideration as AL leaders are corrupt and hence removing corruption will vindicate AL leaders of one vice!"
 
 
Anis Rahman did not understand my comments.
 
There are only two political ideological parties, pro- and anti- liberation. Ideological difference between AL and BNP/Jamat is very clear. When two major political parties are involved in corruptions, you cannot make decision based on corruption alone. If you do, you will buy the same wine in a different bottle.
 
How did I vindicate AL leaders of corruption, when I said both parties are involved in corruption?
 
Anis Rahman may not have problem supporting BNP/Jamat at this time, I do. I do not know if he is pro- or anti- liberation of Bangladesh, but - I am pro-liberation, and I have no reason to support equally corrupt anti-liberation BNP/Jamat. My decision is based on ideology, not corruption.

Jiten Roy


On Sunday, December 15, 2013 5:14 PM, ANISUR RAHMAN <anisur.rahman1@btinternet.com> wrote:
 
Reading the thread of comments made by various readers under this 'Mission Impossible', I cannot but make my comments known clearly.

First of all, I do not agree with Jiten Roy's assertion that no country is 'really independent'. By 'really independent' he possibly means a country which can ignore the rest of the world and do whatever it likes. This is a totally wrong definition of independence. There are loads of international agreements on various issues such as product standards imposed by International Standards Organisation (ISO), labour rules by International Labour Organisation (ILO), International Air Transport Authority (IATA) supervising rules on air transport, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) supervising regulations of nuclear energy etc etc. These are international regulations applicable on all signatory states. Abiding by these regulations does not curb the independence of a country, it rather reinforces independence. It is the way of living harmoniously within the comity of nations within a framework of internationally recognised rules.

This is not the same thing as abiding by Saudi Arabia's instruction not to have women police officers on the street in Banglaesh. This is subservience, loss of independence and slavish mentality. If somebody says that this is a pragmatic approach adopted by Zia, I would dispute that. What approach was that when Zia made Bangladesh an 'Islamic State'? What approach was that when Zia gave legal permission to the Islamic organisations like Jamaat to get involved in political system? If these were all under orders from Saudi Arabia, then Zia can call himself a slave of Saudi Arabia by being the dictator of Bangladesh and that is the true 'lack of independence'; not the previous compliance of internationally enforced regulations.

I also take issue with Jiten Roy that corruption should be taken out of consideration when dealing with politicians. He has produced the most illogical argument I have ever seen. He argues that holding corrupt politicians accountable makes politicians insecure and that makes them more corrupt! What a drivel! I have the feeling that he wants to remove corruption out of consideration as AL leaders are corrupt and hence removing corruption will vindicate AL leaders of one vice!

Corruption (of all types) is one of the most serious vices, if not the most serious vice, that politicians could have. However, one should distinguish between the various levels of corruption. If a politician claims extra few dollars in his travel expense, that is not in the same category of corruption when a politician who only awards a national contract on receiving a certain percent (such as 10%) from the contractor. Such corrupt practices siphon off resources from the national exchequer and thereby blunts national growth. Bangladesh had been consistently at the top five places among the 170 or so nations in the corruption league table. A relatively less corrupt government such as in Singapore or Malaysia had shown that national progress is much better than a corrupt government. 

- A Rahman


From: Jiten Roy <jnrsr53@yahoo.com>
To: "mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com" <mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, 15 December 2013, 17:10
Subject: Re: [mukto-mona] মিশন ইম্পসিবল!!

 
I believe, Shekh Mujib said – "We are Vikkhuker Jat (Beggers' Community); we do not have choices." That's the truth about our self-esteem and independence.

Kamal Das is right – geographic border represents very little of a country's independence; there is no country in the world that is really independent, and there is no Colony also (at least, I can't think of any at this time). The reality is - entire world is connected; you throw a stone at one place, it will ripple through the entire world. That's how independent we are.

Also, the reference about Indian administrator was a metaphor, anyway. Not much discussion is warranted on that issue. The point is – we are not able to run our country as we wish. That's a fact. This situation no one can deny or change significantly it until we can stop begging.

Under the circumstances, country needs to align socially, culturally, and ideologically with the right powers. That's the job of the prudent administrators of the country. Administrators can't do it alone; it's the responsibility of the citizens to force administrators to align with the right power players. The latter force is very week in Bangladesh. People are naïve, educated or un-educated; they usually make emotional decisions. I can hear their voices in this forum.

For example, many people talk about corrupt politicians, and they are looking for Saints. In that search – they are fluctuating between two major political parties. This process is making politicians unsecure in all respect. No political ideology can take root under such environment. This process basically makes politicians corrupt.

I know - some will say – good people should remain true to their principle in the face of all odds. That's mostly a BS statement, not a reality. As far as I know - everyone has greed. The reality is - most people are good because they do not have the opportunity to be corrupt. Real test is – when they are subjected to the opportunity to be corrupt; most people haven't gone through that litmus test. I know most people are not Saint.

So, what's the right thing to do? Let's agree that politicians are all corrupt, and take this common denominator out of our decision making process. What other factors are left – Ideology and Culture. Now, the selection process is not so complicated. We can select political parties based on our tastes.

Ideology and culture are the two very precious factors that should guide our political decision making process. We cannot sacrifice these issues in search of finding uncorrupt political Saints.

Jiten Roy


On Sunday, December 15, 2013 10:46 AM, Subimal Chakrabarty <subimal@yahoo.com> wrote:
 
The Zia example does not prove that he was a man of low self esteem. The opposite was true. With his high self esteem and iron rule he did and undid things to his people and the political system of Bangladesh which nobody else could do. He would have never welcomed physically a foreign agent to supervise his job as the head of the country and the head of the state. This is true for any ruler Bangladesh has ever seen. 

It is possible that under Saudi request Zia stopped deploying female police on the street. Now as nation heavily dependent on foreign aid and earnings, Zia simply took a pragmatic decision. And this is typical of any ruler we have seen so far. It has nothing to do with the self esteem of a particular leader. 

I was referring to those intellectuals who believe from heart that the people of Bangladesh are not capable of running their own show and hence they need a foreign ruler. 

Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 14, 2013, at 7:35 PM, Kamal Das <kamalctgu@gmail.com> wrote:

 
Mr. Chakrabarty is not aware that much of the administrative decisions
are apparently not homegrown. Not long ago, it came from Pindi; now
it comes from Delhi. A lot comes also from New York, Peking and
Washington. During the tenure of Zia-ur-Rahman, Female Police were
not allowed on the street by an order from Saudi Arabia.

Before SC measures the self esteem of someone else, he should do it to his own.








__._,_.___


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

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

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

****************************************************

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

****************************************************

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




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Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
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