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Al Jazeera: Bangladesh’s Most Wanted Criminal Operating Network from Budapest

Now after this scandal and how the media defended the govt. I’m not trusting journalists again. Bunch of lying pigs who will sing your praise for money.
no wonder the country is stable politically. Anything that opposition might do or does, people doesn’t know about. We only hear the good stuff, gdp 8% and BANGLADESH MILITSRY STONK
 
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Now after this scandal and how the media defended the govt. I’m not trusting journalists again. Bunch of lying pigs who will sing your praise for money.
no wonder the country is stable politically. Anything that opposition might do or does, people doesn’t know about. We only hear the good stuff, gdp 8% and BANGLADESH MILITSRY STONK

I am sure you will enjoy this Ekattor TV talk show on this!

 
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I am sure you will enjoy this Ekattor TV talk show on this!

Yeah I was shocked to see journalist kiss *** like this
Ekkattor is one I was talking about
I wonder what this feminist hijra activist journalist I know has to say about this.
 
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Kiyani was like this dog aziz?
First. let's stay civil.
Nothing is proven in court.

Second, Gen Kiyani was nothing compared to Gen Aziz but he had his fair share of wrongdoings, just as current COAS will be remembered, but it was only worse.

I think anyone close to Gen Aziz in recent times will be Gen Musharraf. Imagine Sheikh Hasina and Gen Aziz as a single person and viola! you have President Gen Pervez Musharraf. (Fun fact, Musharraf's time also saw better economic situation just like SH's tenure).

Police here too does extra'judicial killings.. In Punjab and Sindh... and missing people is famous worldwide regarding Pakistan.

I guess the difference is we don't accept any excuse for the crimes and thus, the culprits can't openly run and enjoy, or even claim of the things... but in BD, everyone knows yet look the other way.
The whole world knows people are fearful and don't speak much against BAL govt etc. Seems the fright of RAB is real.
 
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First. let's stay civil.
Nothing is proven in court.

Second, Gen Kiyani was nothing compared to Gen Aziz but he had his fair share of wrongdoings, just as current COAS will be remembered, but it was only worse.

I think anyone close to Gen Aziz in recent times will be Gen Musharraf. Imagine Sheikh Hasina and Gen Aziz as a single person and viola! you have President Gen Pervez Musharraf. (Fun fact, Musharraf's time also saw better economic situation just like SH's tenure).

Police here too does extra'judicial killings.. In Punjab and Sindh... and missing people is famous worldwide regarding Pakistan.

I guess the difference is we don't accept any excuse for the crimes and thus, the culprits can't openly run and enjoy, or even claim of the things... but in BD, everyone knows yet look the other way.
The whole world knows people are fearful and don't speak much against BAL govt etc. Seems the fright of RAB is real.
I don’t understand why Pakistanis hate pervez Musharraf, he seemed better than the lot that Pakistan ever had been ruled by. Maybe you can tell why?

gen aziz this sleezeball, god no one wanted him as chief, he skipped some seniors in line and became chief. There were better members with more experienced and distinction than him. I guess he trumps the list of the worst South Asia had to offer, to the likes of niazi and yahya

RAB is definitely boogeyman, was formed when I was a kid, you would hear of brush fires every day in the beginning. fun fact BNP made them to kill BAL, even the mullas were scared, the JMB surrendered without fight
 
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I don’t understand why Pakistanis hate pervez Musharraf, he seemed better than the lot that Pakistan ever had been ruled by. Maybe you can tell why?

bruh. there are many reasons. starting with him dragging Pakistan into this disastrous war on terror, led to a sort of civil war in Pakistan. 10s of 1000s of Pakistanis died, industries destroyed.
 
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Bangladesh bought mass-spying equipment from Israel, report says

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A closed-circuit security camera is seen by the Olympic Stadium at the Olympic Park in London, U.K., March 28, 2012. (AP Photo)

BY DAILY SABAH
FEB 03, 2021 1:14 PM

A new investigation led by Doha-based Al Jazeera revealed Monday that Bangladesh purchased Israeli-made surveillance equipment that can be used to track and monitor hundreds of people's cellphones, in spite of Dhaka not recognizing Tel Aviv.

According to the Qatari media outlet, its investigators obtained documents and statements showing that the Bangladesh army bought Israeli equipment in 2018 through an intermediary from Bangkok and that Bangladeshi intelligence officers were trained in Hungary by Israeli intelligence specialists.

The contract, which was acquired by Al Jazeera, states that both parties to the transaction signed a nondisclosure agreement. It also lists Hungary as the country of origin of the equipment, but Al Jazeera's classified records showed that the intermediary explicitly states that the equipment was from Israel.

“The contractor said no way that people in Bangladesh should know that this product comes from Israel,” Al Jazeera’s undercover source, named only as Sami, said.

Bangladesh has no diplomatic relations with Israel, and trade with Tel Aviv is prohibited.

Bangladesh, which is the fourth largest Muslim state in the world, does not allow its citizens to travel to Israel, citing the military occupation of Palestine. Dhaka officially announced that the country would not recognize Tel Aviv until the Israeli-Palestinian issue is resolved and Palestinians get an independent state.
According to the investigation, Bangladesh's army acquired the P6 Intercept, a type of technology often used by authorities to track participants during protests via their mobile phones, the day after Aziz Ahmed, head of the Bangladesh army, became chief of staff. The report said that Ahmed's brother, convicted criminal Haris Ahmed, plays a vital role in military procurement for Bangladesh.

The deal was signed between the Bangladesh military intelligence agency, the Directorate General of Forces Intelligence (DGFI), and PicSix, a firm headquartered in Israel and headed by former Israeli intelligence agents. According to Al Jazeera, James Moloney – the CEO of a Singapore-registered company called Sovereign Systems – acted as a middleman.

The Bangkok-based Irish national said in the interview with Al Jazeera that the P6 Intercept is “from Israel, so we don’t advertise that technology.”

"We put the cellular or WiFi interception on the website. We are very careful about our public profile,” Moloney added. “The technology is very aggressive and intrusive. You don’t want the public to know that you’re using that equipment.”

A technologist from the London-based Privacy International (PI), Eliot Bendinelli, asserted that the P6 Intercept is a tool of mass surveillance. It can track 200 to 300 mobile phones at the same time.

“It behaves like a cell tower, so all the phones in a certain area are going to connect to it, and it will be capable of intercepting communications,” Bendinelli told Al Jazeera. “Everything you’re doing on your phone – text messages, phone calls and websites you’re visiting – are going to be intercepted,” he added. “This specific model is also able to interfere with communications, so it’s able to change the content of a text message.”

“Knowledge is power, so if you know where people will be meeting up and what they are planning to do, you have the power to act,” Bendinelli said.

 
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I don’t understand why Pakistanis hate pervez Musharraf, he seemed better than the lot that Pakistan ever had been ruled by. Maybe you can tell why?

gen aziz this sleezeball, god no one wanted him as chief, he skipped some seniors in line and became chief. There were better members with more experienced and distinction than him. I guess he trumps the list of the worst South Asia had to offer, to the likes of niazi and yahya

RAB is definitely boogeyman, was formed when I was a kid, you would hear of brush fires every day in the beginning. fun fact BNP made them to kill BAL, even the mullas were scared, the JMB surrendered without fight
Yup, read Al-Jazeera piece on RAB just today. They were notoriously famous before too.

Musharraf was also selected by skipping many other senior generals before him. And, he did many good things but bad decisions too.
For me, the job of military is not to indulge into politics. They take oath, man!

In recent history, General Raheel Sharif is respected the most of COASes. The military still had influence in politics and state matters. But, he kept professional and minimized any participation in government matters. He did not take/requested extension too. There were posters in street inviting him to take over and run the country LMAO... How tempting would that be?

" You Either Die A Hero, Or You Live Long Enough To See Yourself Become The Villain"

I have respect of profession and professionalism, but not for whatever other activism they inclined towards.

Gen Niazi was a great military professional and distinguished officer. Alas! how vulnerable a human can be.

Reminded me of Shaytaan! He was once a very pious Jinn. But look at his fate.
 
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Look at this Bangladeshi editorial on the Al-Jazeera report. Mahfuz Anam has some steel balls....



12:00 AM, February 03, 2021 / LAST MODIFIED: 11:52 AM, February 03, 2021
EDITORIAL
Our take on the Al Jazeera Report

When can we do similar ones?

al-jazeera-1612236630380.jpg


Early yesterday, the Qatar based media organisation Al Jazeera published a story titled "All the Prime Minister's Men", to which our foreign ministry issued a quick response calling it a politically motivated "smear" campaign which is "false" and "defamatory" and instigated by extremists and their allies. The response zeroes in on two specifics, one that there is no shred of evidence linking the "prime minister and other institutions" and that the report's historical account "fails to even mention the horrific genocide of 1971".

We think it was a mature decision by the government not to disrupt or block in any way, the broadcasting of the Al Jazeera story or its spread on social media. Such actions are usually counterproductive and triggers more audience reactions. This departure from the usual knee-jerk response to such foreign media coverage is welcome. However, a similar maturity was not shown in formulating the response which questions the motive of the report, speculates as to their possible instigators and sponsors, criticises and questions Al Jazeera's aim in carrying such a report but does not address the points raised in it, which is what the public would really like to know.

We are facing the absurd situation of publishing the government response without publishing what the government is responding to. So far, we have neither carried what the Al Jazeera reported nor any synopsis of it. Even as we write this editorial, we do not mention any of the allegations raised, the persons named, the copies of documents exhibited, footage shown of two convicted but absconding criminals partying in Dhaka with very high-level people, and do not report what several people interviewed on record and under cover said.

However, we feel that allegations made in the report should not be ignored nor swept under the carpet. There are people who served the PM at various times, especially during her days of struggle, who are now taking full advantage of her sense of gratitude and indulging in influence-peddling for payment in some of our highly sensitive areas. There is reference to our purchase of sensitive listening devices from Israel, a country that we do not recognise. There are also the issues of false passports, NID cards and bank documents that should be looked into, especially as they involve institutions on whose integrity and honesty our security depends. There are also issues concerning our security and law enforcement bodies and their leadership that the government can ignore only at its peril.

Readers are fully entitled to ask why there is such an absence of similar reporting in the local media. While admitting to our own limitations, it is really the reflection of the environment in which we operate exemplified by the existence of the Digital Security Act (DSA), among others, which is perhaps among the most comprehensively restrictive and oppressive laws against the free press anywhere. It will not be lost on any reader that we did not mention above any names or any institutions. If one looks at the flood of totally groundless and unsubstantiated defamatory cases under the DSA against journalists and newspapers, and the promptness with which such cases were accepted and the accused sent to jail and refused bail for weeks if not months, the answer will be obvious—and we are not even mentioning the intimidation, threats and restrictions of advertisements and other tactics that are used. But even then, we must struggle on and, that's what we do.
 
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has this guy seen the likes to dislikes ratio on youtube?

Quader is a low class person, easily distinguishable by appearance, behavior and diction. A former cadre goonda leader, he survived several purges in Hasina's cabinet where she tried to 'civilize' the cabinet and expunge Goondas.

Not much else needs to be said, he and his words are best ignored.

To say he is unqualified to be in a position he is in - is an understatement.
Oh momen you incompetent baboon. 😏
Your actions will keep this in public consciousness for a long time.
please sue aljazeera and spent millions if you have to wash hasina’s sins

A baboon with a toupee... :lol:
I see this 'legal action ' in a positive light. This will ensure it remain in public consciousness for a long time. Nothing reveal the truth more than a debate of the opposing sides. So cheers to Bangladesh govt. taking legal action against Al Jazeera.:P

What Hasina should do is take this opportunity to 'clean house'. But we forget that she has no sense....
 
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The sad part is, if only there were better people, Bangladesh efforts regarding Rohingua Crises would be more effective, even more so after the recent coup development in Myanmar.

But with what face can SH, BAL, or even military in private discussions talk about that?

The documentary also hit the respect, integreity, dignity and love of armed forces in people's heart. It is not as much worse but there was a time People of Pakistan started loathing military. Those were the worst times we sailed through.

Today, we don't have the best economy and overall situation, but people have hope, trust and belief in our people; especially in Military.

It will be wise that Bangladesh Military take corrective measures immediately and devise a better damage control strategy then outright denying everything.

"People are fools... But, stop overestimating how much stupid they are."
 
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He claimed that the report was part of a conspiracy hatched from London.

i.e. hatched by BNP urf "Tareque Zia" urf "forces opposed to the liberation forces" urf "Chetona" urf "the <feeling> of 1971".

No one gives a $hit about these things, own up to your own crap, idiots!!!

This is getting more comical by the day... :lol:
 
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does Qatar have something to gain from all this reporting on Bangladesh, or is it just a coincidence?

I doubt it. Al-Jazeera is run by expert investigators looks like.

They followed these idiots all the way from Budapest to Kuala-Lumpur.

Seven more exposes are expected. Stay tuned. :-)
Any idea when the reports will be published?

No idea but they will time it well I'm sure. When things start to die down a bit on this one, then the next one I guess.
 
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i.e. hatched by BNP urf "Tareque Zia" urf "forces opposed to the liberation forces" urf "Chetona" urf "the <feeling> of 1971".

No one gives a $hit about these things, own up to your own crap, idiots!!!

This is getting more comical by the day... :lol:

on a sidenote. does Hasina have a successor lined up when she dies? i am sure she believe in dynasty politics, like Bhuttos, Zardaris, Sharifs and so on.
 
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