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Bangladesh Army holds exercise “Tiger Claw” on Gold Island

the title of the video killed the credibility, I know this conversation and he was not general Moeen U Ahmed

Nothing to do with title, content is what important. This exposed awami league as mastermind (one of them) behind killing 58 of Bangladesh army officers.
 
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RIGHT, so much secrecy in Bangladesh Army and so much power that forces from neighboring country came and killed 58 of their officers including general and Bangladesh army could not do jack to save themselves. Myanmar forces kindnap "BGB", violate airspace and commit aggression and Bangladesh army on order of awami regime twiddle thumb sitting in barrack. Who do you think you are kidding here with typical awami hukka hua blabbering???
Pillkhana tragedy wouldn't even harm a single officer if damn BAL govt would order army to attack those bastard BDR ( only who are criminals) who revolted against their authority.
And for the damn picture where awami thugs beating army ahahaha shoot me please..... Duniya ki etoi soja re Vai?
You believe such fake picture ? Oh boy!
Apnar mathay ze ghilu bole kichu nai seita eimatro bujhlam( I understood that your brain is completely empty)!

Ok let me tell you a real life story . Two of childhood fellow was student of DU after 1/11 incident. They directly saw an occurrence with a chatra league thug. Who was talking big when army personnels asked him some questions about his identity.
He was naming some leaders and thought if his escapist leader would come to protect him.
After some questions an army personnel just threw him on ground and directly kicked him on face. Instantly the thug lost his sense and they shifted him to hospital.
Hearing this story I felt a complete bliss .
I still believe that time was the best time in Bangladesh history or at least I have watched.
Really no terrorist was shown, neither in Dhaka nor in my own area.
The political thugs don't have any morals so they fled the area just seeing the olive dress.
However I never saw that army personnels dishonoring any common folks ,they are extremely respectfull to common folks .
But thugs should be treated with military boot. I salute those army guys who took care of political pimps.

I want that regime (directly) one more time to crush the chetona bastards under military boot. As it will ensure the happiness and prosperity of common poor hard working folks .

So finally your fake picture is screaming that oh Mr @idune ,you are too much imbecile to believe in such craps .
Do you think anyone with common sense will pay any attention to your any claim after that fake picture? Poor chap i am feeling pity now .

P.s ,another thing bangladesh army is a sun. Yes sun can be eclipesd sometimes ,( The pillkhana mutiny was perhaps that disaster of intelligence failure? Not sure ,no idea about that )

But bangladesh army is such a sun that will never set.


Here more of awami lie in face of army officers

Yes this video show your real standard.
People who believe in YouTube crap don't deserve honor .
 
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Pillkhana tragedy wouldn't even harm a single officer if damn BAL govt would order army to attack those bastard BDR ( only who are criminals) who revolted against their authority.
And for the damn picture where awami thugs beating army ahahaha shoot me please..... Duniya ki etoi soja re Vai?
You believe such fake picture ? Oh boy!
Apnar mathay ze ghilu bole kichu nai seita eimatro bujhlam( I understood that your brain is completely empty)!

Ok let me tell you a real life story . Two of childhood fellow was student of DU after 1/11 incident. They directly saw an occurrence with a chatra league thug. Who was talking big when army personnels asked him some questions about his identity.
He was naming some leaders and though if his escapist leader would come him to protect.
After some questions and army personnel just through him on ground and directly kicked him on face. Instantly the thug lost his sense and they shifted him to hospital.
Hearing this story I felt a complete bliss .
I still believe that time was the best time in Bangladesh history or at least I have watched.
Really no terrorists was shown, neither in Dhaka not in my own area.
The political thugs don't have any morals so they fled the area just seeing the olive dress.
However I never saw that army personnels dishonoring any common folks ,they are extremely respectfull to common folks .
But thugs should be treated with military boot. I salute those army guys who took care of political pimps.

I want that regime (directly) one more time to crush the chetona bastards crush under military boot. As it will ensure the happiness of common poor hard working folks .

So finally your fake picture is screaming that oh Mr @idune ,you are too much imbecele to believe in such craps .
Do you think anyone with common sense will pay any attention to your any claim after that fake picture? Poor chap i am feeling pity now .

P.s ,another thing bangladesh army is a sun. Yes sun can be eclipesd sometimes ,( The pillkhana mutiny was perhaps that disaster of intelligence failure? Not sure ,no idea about that )

But bangladesh army is such a sun that will never set.



Yes this video show your real standard.
People who believe in YouTube crap don't deserve honor .
baad den re vhaii..ei beda hoitese pure ekta lunatic..eidare bujhay laav naii..same jinish copy paste korte thake protita thread e..amr shondeho aseh eida asholei bangladeshi kina..
 
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Yes may be he is a false flagger!

No, he is not and I believe you are over reacting.

Bd army may be deviating from Islamic ideology and may be drifting away from its root. I wish to be wrong in my observation.

They should intervene if government in place undermine the sovereignty of the state however it is sad to be said that they are missing in action.
 
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So finally your fake picture is screaming that oh Mr @idune ,you are too much imbecile to believe in such craps ..

Now BBC exposing your fake self
Photo the Bangladesh army cannot stand
By John Sudworth
BBC News, Dhaka
999999.gif



_44083465_kick203.jpg

The image has caused the army much embarrassment
If a single image can sum up the thorny mess into which Bangladesh has once again stumbled, then this perhaps is it.
A sandaled demonstrator in mid-air kick and a hatless army officer in terrified retreat.

In the background, bystanders hurry away. Out of shot, a military vehicle burns and the security forces are in danger of losing control to the angry mob.

The photo gives a momentary glimpse of just how bad things got during three days of violent protest that rocked cities across Bangladesh last week.

But the picture is significant for another reason. As we found out on the first night of the curfew imposed to contain the trouble it was an image that deeply upset the Bangladeshi rank and file.



_44070519_students1_ap.jpg

Student protests quickly turned into a full-scale riot
Its publication was seen as a humiliation, every bit as great as if that flying sandaled foot had been aimed at the behind of the army chief himself.

Shortly after the curfew came into effect on Wednesday night, the BBC team was out filming.

No one was sure whether the media would be allowed to move freely.

Dhaka's streets, normally a round-the-clock festival of noise, were deserted.

Road blocks and checkpoints were being manned by the paramilitaries and the army was on patrol.



'Wrong message'

Sure enough our presence was soon noticed.

Two army jeeps pulled up sharply and a young officer jumped out. We were ordered to drop the camera as he radioed back to his base.

o.gif

start_quote_rb.gif
It's a very unfortunate situation when teachers are being interrogated and actually taken away in the middle of the night
end_quote_rb.gif
Sanjeeb Hossain, son of detained professor
inline_dashed_line.gif

After a tense stand-off the message was relayed that we could continue filming "as long as we didn't give the wrong message to the country".

But in true Bangladeshi style the officer and I were soon the best of friends.

In the middle of a deserted city I was invited to sit on the kerb with him, while his troops waited restlessly in their trucks.

He offered me a smoke and then, with his arm round me, he told me of his time training in the UK, of his sense of duty and his love of his country.

He told me of the dark forces at work behind the rioting.

And most of all he told me how he hated that photo, and how irresponsible it had been of the newspaper to publish it.

We shook hands and parted on good terms. But then I have a white face and an international press card.



_44082260_bangladeshkick_masud.jpg

Masud Parvez says he was badly beaten by the army
It's impossible to know whether it was this same officer and the same troops, but on that same evening a group of Bangladeshi journalists were left in little doubt about what the army thought about the role of the media.

Masud Parvez was one of a group of reporters from a national internet news service standing outside their office.

Two army jeeps pulled up and the reporters identified themselves as local newsmen.

"So what," came the reply.

Masud was given a prolonged beating on the steps of his office. He has an injury to his hand where he tried to fend off a rifle butt.

Some soldiers hit him with hockey sticks that they'd been carrying for exactly this kind of occasion.

Deepening rift

"I told them we were journalists from bdnews24.com. But despite giving our identity they started hitting us," he told me.



_44070517_police_ap.jpg

The protests brought the country to a halt
"It was a terrible experience. I can't make you understand how scared I was at the time."

Masud is just one of a number of reporters and cameramen beaten by the security forces over the period of the curfew.

The Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists puts the number at 30 or more.

Of course none of this can be blamed on a single image. But the photograph, and the reaction to it, gives a wider sense of a deepening rift between the military-backed authorities and civil society.

The army top brass has blamed what it calls evil forces and political opportunists for prolonging last week's rioting.

Five senior university professors, all distinguished academics, have been picked up by the army and detained.

One of them, Professor Anwar Hossain, is general secretary of the Dhaka University Teachers' Association.

His son, Sanjeeb, was at home when the army called in the early hours of the morning.

"It takes on a very sinister tone," he tells me.

"The teachers of Dhaka University are considered the heart and soul of this nation.

"It's a very unfortunate situation when teachers are being interrogated and actually taken away in the middle of the night."

An unknown number of students are also in custody. We visited one address, very close to where the photograph was taken, shortly after an army raid.

A dozen or so students had been arrested, and we saw clear evidence that a number of people had been interrogated and harshly beaten.

'Retribution and arrests'

This government came to power in January with the backing of the military on a wave of popular support vowing to reform politics and stamp out corruption.

But its reputation has been tarnished. A slum demolition programme, an attempt to exile two former prime ministers and its inability to contain the spiralling cost of food have all added to a growing sense of frustration.

Many newspapers have taken the view that the violence last week was a genuine expression of anger and frustration, rather than the work of shadowy forces of evil.

"Instead of retribution and arrests we suggest that dialogue be opened between teachers and students on the one hand and the caretaker government on the other," read one newspaper editorial this week.

Meanwhile, military intelligence units appear to be using media images to find and arrest those involved in the violence.

As for the photo that so upset the army, luckily for him at least, the protester doing the kicking is difficult to identify.

But they are looking for him.

Both the editor who published the image, and the photographer who took it, have been visited and questioned by the army.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6966467.stm
 
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No, he is not and I believe you are over reacting.
The problem is he is too quick to put blame on others and also champion when tagging others as Indian Dalal, it's hilarious.
He also tagged me 3 times in 2/3 days ( in another thread few days ago )as Indian Dalal because I told that, killing BSF captive is impossible. This type of act can trigger a full scale war between the two country. That make no sense .
If someone go against his opinion he tag them indian Dalal.
Yet I don't doubt anyone( including him) as false flagger, as there is no way for me to catch any false flagger, and also this is not my business.
( I am answering this part because you have quoted my post although mentioned his name!)

Bd army may be deviating from Islamic ideology and may be drifting away from its root. I wish to be wrong in my observation.
Um nah I don't think so. Actually this world is bad and here no country wants direct military rule or even military intervene. So they need to be neutral ( even as eye wash).

I believe you are a sensible person ,and wish you will enter in it's root . Army is just balancing . you know appearance can be deceving most of times.
And for rest part of comment I just don't want to say anything atm as it will trigger the old debate of indian dirty propaganda since the creation of pakistan.
It's not wise to start off topic discussion ,thank you .

Now BBC exposing your fake self
Photo the Bangladesh army cannot stand
By John Sudworth
BBC News, Dhaka
999999.gif



_44083465_kick203.jpg

The image has caused the army much embarrassment
If a single image can sum up the thorny mess into which Bangladesh has once again stumbled, then this perhaps is it.
A sandaled demonstrator in mid-air kick and a hatless army officer in terrified retreat.

In the background, bystanders hurry away. Out of shot, a military vehicle burns and the security forces are in danger of losing control to the angry mob.

The photo gives a momentary glimpse of just how bad things got during three days of violent protest that rocked cities across Bangladesh last week.

But the picture is significant for another reason. As we found out on the first night of the curfew imposed to contain the trouble it was an image that deeply upset the Bangladeshi rank and file.



_44070519_students1_ap.jpg

Student protests quickly turned into a full-scale riot
Its publication was seen as a humiliation, every bit as great as if that flying sandaled foot had been aimed at the behind of the army chief himself.

Shortly after the curfew came into effect on Wednesday night, the BBC team was out filming.

No one was sure whether the media would be allowed to move freely.

Dhaka's streets, normally a round-the-clock festival of noise, were deserted.

Road blocks and checkpoints were being manned by the paramilitaries and the army was on patrol.



'Wrong message'

Sure enough our presence was soon noticed.

Two army jeeps pulled up sharply and a young officer jumped out. We were ordered to drop the camera as he radioed back to his base.

o.gif

start_quote_rb.gif
It's a very unfortunate situation when teachers are being interrogated and actually taken away in the middle of the night
end_quote_rb.gif
Sanjeeb Hossain, son of detained professor
inline_dashed_line.gif

After a tense stand-off the message was relayed that we could continue filming "as long as we didn't give the wrong message to the country".

But in true Bangladeshi style the officer and I were soon the best of friends.

In the middle of a deserted city I was invited to sit on the kerb with him, while his troops waited restlessly in their trucks.

He offered me a smoke and then, with his arm round me, he told me of his time training in the UK, of his sense of duty and his love of his country.

He told me of the dark forces at work behind the rioting.

And most of all he told me how he hated that photo, and how irresponsible it had been of the newspaper to publish it.

We shook hands and parted on good terms. But then I have a white face and an international press card.



_44082260_bangladeshkick_masud.jpg

Masud Parvez says he was badly beaten by the army
It's impossible to know whether it was this same officer and the same troops, but on that same evening a group of Bangladeshi journalists were left in little doubt about what the army thought about the role of the media.

Masud Parvez was one of a group of reporters from a national internet news service standing outside their office.

Two army jeeps pulled up and the reporters identified themselves as local newsmen.

"So what," came the reply.

Masud was given a prolonged beating on the steps of his office. He has an injury to his hand where he tried to fend off a rifle butt.

Some soldiers hit him with hockey sticks that they'd been carrying for exactly this kind of occasion.

Deepening rift

"I told them we were journalists from bdnews24.com. But despite giving our identity they started hitting us," he told me.



_44070517_police_ap.jpg

The protests brought the country to a halt
"It was a terrible experience. I can't make you understand how scared I was at the time."

Masud is just one of a number of reporters and cameramen beaten by the security forces over the period of the curfew.

The Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists puts the number at 30 or more.

Of course none of this can be blamed on a single image. But the photograph, and the reaction to it, gives a wider sense of a deepening rift between the military-backed authorities and civil society.

The army top brass has blamed what it calls evil forces and political opportunists for prolonging last week's rioting.

Five senior university professors, all distinguished academics, have been picked up by the army and detained.

One of them, Professor Anwar Hossain, is general secretary of the Dhaka University Teachers' Association.

His son, Sanjeeb, was at home when the army called in the early hours of the morning.

"It takes on a very sinister tone," he tells me.

"The teachers of Dhaka University are considered the heart and soul of this nation.

"It's a very unfortunate situation when teachers are being interrogated and actually taken away in the middle of the night."

An unknown number of students are also in custody. We visited one address, very close to where the photograph was taken, shortly after an army raid.

A dozen or so students had been arrested, and we saw clear evidence that a number of people had been interrogated and harshly beaten.

'Retribution and arrests'

This government came to power in January with the backing of the military on a wave of popular support vowing to reform politics and stamp out corruption.

But its reputation has been tarnished. A slum demolition programme, an attempt to exile two former prime ministers and its inability to contain the spiralling cost of food have all added to a growing sense of frustration.

Many newspapers have taken the view that the violence last week was a genuine expression of anger and frustration, rather than the work of shadowy forces of evil.

"Instead of retribution and arrests we suggest that dialogue be opened between teachers and students on the one hand and the caretaker government on the other," read one newspaper editorial this week.

Meanwhile, military intelligence units appear to be using media images to find and arrest those involved in the violence.

As for the photo that so upset the army, luckily for him at least, the protester doing the kicking is difficult to identify.

But they are looking for him.

Both the editor who published the image, and the photographer who took it, have been visited and questioned by the army.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6966467.stm
My answer will be very short .if this is the picture of that time of Dhaka University unrest ,then either this picture can be fake or a single army can flee as showing heroism ( that's totally opposite to heroic act) isn't the act of professional soldiers.

( Heroism is an amateurish and childish act, as in my childhood I wanted to be a hero like Achilles when I read, 'The Illiad' for the first time.)
1/2 army personnel can't hold a full group and it was wise to flee and later come back with authority to take control.
And don't forget the rest of the story ,how effectively army took the mess under control.
And secondly if a report from BBC is like sacred scripture, then should we consider the word of Anthony mascarenhas' popaganda about 25 March night is true ? Certainly we shouldn't ,right ?
If we start taking any news as the word of holy scripture if it's favor us , and consider the work of devil if it goes against us , we ( human being ) will never ever find the real truth .
This type of blind Faith and uncontrollable emotion is always harmful and enemy will take chance as they have taken the chance and success fully divided and ruling the mind of hujuge bangal of bangladesh.
That's all no more argument on this picture. Thank you.
 
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You made claim that picture was fake and I have showed you how phony chapabaj (talkative) you are. Do not open your worthless mouth without knowing your place.
Better you know your place and don't try to dictate others .I know my place very well and you don't have to be concerned about this.
If you vowed that your comment should be the last comment so reply my comment with another rude word that may satisfy you. I will not reply.
And that time military was in power but when you have posted this fake picture( atleast your goal was fake) ,your sound was like , "it was awami regime and chatra league is abusing army " just ridiculous !
Now spew your poison to me another time and i will remain silent,you have my word . Mathamota kothakar ( lamebrain).
 
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Better you know your place and don't try to dictate others .I know my place very well and you don't have to be concerned about this.
If you vowed that your comment should be the last comment so reply my comment with another rude word that may satisfy you. I will not reply.
And that time military was in power but when you have posted this fake picture( atleast your goal was fake) ,your sound was like , "it was awami regime and chatra league is abusing army " just ridiculous !
Now spew your poison to me another time and i will remain silent,you have my word . Mathamota kothakar ( lamebrain).

The place I stand, I will always look down on you and your type. Only awami killers and their accomplices pose to be over the top well wisher of army conveniently sidestep the fact fly kick that started in DU campus in middle of Moeen U interim regime, later turned into a killing field of Bangladesh army officers in Philkhana. When officers asked Hasian in Cantonment about her party MP was boasting that that awami league will teach army a lesson, Hasian kept quiet. Investigation done by army was never allowed to be published.
 
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Please can we stay on fucking topic which is the exercise done by Bangladesh Army. Ignore the false flagger idune

@idune is a bonafide Bangladeshi. At least he is as bangladeshi as you can get on social media. Why don't you have tolerance for people with differing political views?
 
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Why don't you have tolerance for people with differing political views?

How do you tolerate a person when he keeps calling you "Awami-Indian" dalal, insults you, just because you disagree with him or you didn't even say anything, without any reason or provocation. Sometimes even the thread isn't remotely related what he barks for. Do you see Al-zakir's comment above?? His profile pic says he is a Jamati, did he abuse any of us when expressed his opinion. You can tolerate same things few times but if you hear the same shit over and over again then it becomes really REALLY annoying. So don't support that douchebag.
 
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