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Bangladesh: Coup??

The numbers claimed are not realistic. Roughly 1 out of 23 ( 3 miilion out of 70 million) were killed according to this claim, if you consider injured or rapes than the ratio becomes even smaller. It would be like 1 out of 20 were either injured, raped or killed. This means as a rule of the average I should know someone in the family or in the extended family who was either injured, raped or killed.

I have a fairly large size family on both side of my grandparents consisting more than a hundred members. I have not heard of deaths or rapes within the family or friends of the famiy members.

I do have folks in the family who actually fought in the war.

A close member of my family was picked up in 1976 ( Zia) by the military cause he had long hair. He would have been shot had it not been for a friend of the family who intervened. I also know some folks (Bihari) whose warehouses were burnt to the ground following independence. These guys remain bitter to this very day.

Just adding my two cents.
 
MORE INDIAN PROPAGANDA ON COUP ATTEMPT IN BANGLADESH -


Bangladesh survives yet another Military coup attempt

Rajeev Sharma

IDSA - January 23, 2012

An important development has taken place in Bangladesh which will obviously worry the Indian strategic and diplomatic establishments no end. On January 19, 2012, the Bangladesh army announced that it had thwarted a coup attempt against the government conceived and nearly executed by some mid-ranking army officials. A lieutenant colonel and two Majors have already been arrested in this connection, while a top army officer is under the scanner for his suspected involvement in the plot.
Announcing this development at a press conference at the Army Officers’ Club in Dhaka, Brig. Gen. Muhammad Masud Razzaq said: “Instigated by some non-resident Bangladeshis, a band of fanatic retired and serving officers had led a failed attempt to thwart the democratic system of Bangladesh by creating anarchy in the army banking on others’ religious zeal.”
Ever since the India-friendly government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina came into office after sweeping the general elections in December 2008, her arch-rival Begum Khaleda Zia and elements of Pakistan’s military and intelligence establishments have been plotting the ouster of the Awami League government through undemocratic means. Hasina’s overly friendly gestures to India and her government’s all-round cooperation with India in such diverse fields as security, counter-terrorism, trade, infrastructural linkages and, above all, her diplomatic outreach to India have worried her political opponents in Bangladesh and critics in the Pakistani strategic establishment. Hasina’s biggest “provocation”, as seen from the viewpoint of her detractors, came recently when Bangladesh embarked upon the war crimes trial to punish those army officers who committed excesses during the 1971 Liberation War.
The simmering disquiet in Bangladesh and the increasing nervousness of opponents of Sheikh Hasina has not come overnight. There is a historical perspective behind it. Bangladesh emerged in 1971 on the abnegation of ‘Two Nation Theory’ that had earlier paved the way for the Partition of India. Bangladesh’s liberation war marked a spectacular victory of secular Bengali nationalism and it was also a pronounced as a vindication of the indivisibility of Bengali language and culture. But, within four years, the assassination of Bangladesh’s founder President Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman by a group of pro-Pakistan army officers in collusion with Islamist groups resulted in the retreat of the secular nationalist forces and the resultant void came to be occupied by the pro-Pakistan Islamist forces who were earlier defeated in the liberation war. The assassination of the Bangabandhu completely reversed the direction of politics and society in the country and derailed the process of institutionalizing the spirit of Bengali language based nationalism.
Ever since its formation in 1949, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman’s Awami League (AL) has remained the most credible vanguard of secular-linguistic politics in Bangladesh. The party, despite all its inadequacies and shortcomings, has contributed to making Bangladesh a relatively liberal Muslim majority State with reasonably acceptable democratic credentials. The party still commands the widest popular support base in the country, even though in the major power structures of the State, like the armed forces, as well as in media and business, its penetration has so far remained limited. The legacy of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman confers a unique symbolic identity to the party, which is credited with the very creation of Bangladesh and laying the foundation of Bengali nationalism. However, for the most part of the country’s independent history, the AL has faced violent challenges from the so-called Islamic nationalist and pro-Pakistan forces which do not believe in the concept of democracy and which wish to capture state power in the name of religion. Certain sections of the armed forces, some mercenary elements and sections of pro-Pak political entities have often come together to subvert the institutions of democracy and hijack State power to use it for their own selfish ends. These groups have always found religion as a convenient tool and hence they advocate a strong Islamic nationalist identity for the country and paint India in a negative light to generate a sense of psychological insecurity among the masses. The last BNP-JEI rule (2001-06) was a clear demonstration of the fact that Islamic nationalism had only been used as a garb to capture power and hold on to it. Rising Islamist militancy marked by a country-wide synchronised terrorist bombing and the advent of suicide bombers that shook the country in 2005 was covertly patronised by the JEI, which was a constituent of the BNP-led alliance that ruled the country.
Bangladeshi mujahideen sent by JEI and other radical Islamic groups including Harkat- ul-Jehad-al-Islami (HUJI) and Bangladesh Khelafat Majlish to participate in the Afghanistan war came close to the Taliban and al Qaeda leadership who expressed the view that Bangladeshi Muslims were not practicing Islam in the true spirit and they needed to discard their love for the Bengali language and Bengali culture if they are to become true Muslims. Earlier, in the 1960s, when the founder President of Pakistan Mohammad Ali Jinnah visited East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), he rejected demands for the inclusion of the Bengali language as one of the national languages of Pakistan saying that Bengali language was not compatible with Islam.
The militant Islamic groups led by JEI that had opposed the Liberation War of 1971 and collaborated with the occupying Pakistani forces, have been making all out efforts to turn Bangladesh into a ‘Dar-ul-Islam’ (land of Islam) from ‘Dar-ul-Harb’ (land of non- believers) to bring it closer to the tenets of orthodox Islam.
Bangladesh has recently witnessed a mushrooming of madrassas of various sects and persuasions and also International Islamic Universities funded by generous contributions from international Islamic NGOs and so-called charity organisations based in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Pakistan. The Qaumi Madrassas in Bangladesh play an important role in promoting Islamic militancy. These madrassas adhere to orthodox Islamic teachings mainly focusing on Arabic, Hadis and Tafsir-e-Quran and do not teach subjects like Maths, Science, English and Bengali; nor do they allow the recitation of the National Anthem or the hoisting of National Flag on national days. Even Independence Day or Victory Day are not allowed to be celebrated. Foreign nationals having links with the al Qaeda and Taliban have been found imparting motivational and arms training to the students at regular intervals.
A new trend in the expansion of an Islamic music industry which aims to upstage secular Bengali music and culture has also come to notice. The cultural wings of JEI, HUJI and other radical groups are in the forefront of spreading music that propagates Jehad and eulogises Osama bin Laden and Taliban leader Mulla Omar. The Islamic Universities and madrassas funded by Saudi Arabia and the popularisation of jehadi music are contributing to a growing Wahhabization of the Muslim community in Bangladesh.
Given all this, Sheikh Hasina needs to keep a hawkish vigil on dubious elements within her military establishment in particular. She must exploit the failed coup to the fullest extent, take the top military brass into confidence and purge radical elements within the Bangladesh military. For its part, India should reach out to Bangladesh in this hour of crisis and share what intelligence is available to it about the black sheep within Bangladesh’s military. India also needs to be more diplomatically proactive with Bangladesh, more so because India’s north-east is Bangladesh-locked. In this regard, India must first send an able High Commissioner to Dhaka, preferably a Bangla-speaking career diplomat (India does not have a High Commissioner in Dhaka for the past four months).

Bangladesh survives yet another Military coup attempt | Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses

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Analysing the failed Coup in Bangladesh

Smruti S. Pattanaik

IDSA - January 23, 2012

The news of a coup attempt by ‘fanatic’ mid-level officers instigated and supported by some Bangladeshi expatriates and retired Army officials that was foiled by the Bangladesh Army did not come as a major surprise. There have been whispers about such a conspiracy in Dhaka’s power corridors for quite some time. The fear that such a possibility cannot be completely ruled out re-emerged after the 2009 mutiny by the Bangladesh Rifles, in which 59 Army officers were killed. There were indications that the BDR mutiny might have been instigated by Islamists who feared reprisals from the secular forces that had come to power in the December 2008 general elections. The Awami League government’s reluctance to allow an immediate Army operation against the mutineers was touted as a major source of anger among many army officers. Even though there were three inquiry commissions into the 2009 incident, the reason and motivations behind that mutiny have not been established in any conclusive manner.
There are reports that some officers involved in the recent plot were linked to the urban radical Islamist group -- the Hizb ut-Tahrir (HuT) -- which was banned by the Bangladesh government in 2009. HuT has been active in Bangladesh since 2001 and had been campaigning against the Awami League. Its activists were seen distributing pamphlets in various mosques during the military-backed caretaker regime. In spite of the crackdown on them during that period, they had remained active. It needs to be emphasised that like the Jamaat, the Hizbut Tahrir has strong links with Bangladeshi expatriates in the UK, who subscribe to its views. The HuT Bangladesh website reads “O Army Officers! Remove Hasina, the killer of your brothers and establish the Khilafah to save yourselves and the Ummah from subjugation to US-India” (Khilafat.org Home:: Hizb ut-Tahrir Bangladesh).
After assuming office in January 2009, Hasina has taken steps to deal with Islamic radicals. Regular raids, arrests of radicals and seizure of arms and ammunition have paralysed the Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) and other terrorist groups. The war crime trial for the purpose of which five Jamaat-i-Islami leaders and two BNP leaders were arrested is also in progress. Coupled with these efforts to address the rise of radicalism, the Bangladesh Supreme court declared the 5th and 8th amendments to the country’s Constitution as illegal and termed military coups as unconstitutional, thus facilitating the Awami League’s objective of restoring the 1972 constitution. The government, keeping in mind the present political reality, has restored the four foundational principles of liberation and Article 12 which dealt with secularism, while retaining Article 2 (b) pertaining to Islam as the state religion. It also retained the article that allowed religious political parties to operate on a non-communal basis.
All this has angered many Islamists who feel that their electoral base will shrink if Hasina continues in power. The Islamists hope that the Army will come to their rescue as they have openly supported military rule in the past.
The Army has always been politically divided along party lines, although traditionally its sympathies have been with the BNP. Nevertheless, in the past, the tussle between officers who fought for the liberation and those who did not has led to as many as 19 coup attempts; the previous unsuccessful attempt came in 1996 and was led by General Abu Saleh Mohammad Nasim, a freedom fighter.
Interestingly, the latest arrests of Army officials plotting a coup was made public against the backdrop of Begum Zia, Chairperson of the BNP, alleging at a rally held in Chittagong on January 9 that the government had a role in the disappearance of Army officers and is engaged in confining and torturing them. While Khaleda’s statement was publicly refuted by the Inter Service Public Relation (ISPR), the Army admitted that it was indeed trying some officers for dereliction of duty as per its rules. Perhaps, the Army felt compelled to admit to the coup attempt after various media reports revealed the arrest of some Army officials.
According to the ISPR statement, the coup was unearthed in December 2011 when some middle level officers numbering around 16, whom the Army termed as ‘religious fanatics’, were attempting to recruit sympathizers for carrying out a coup. Some of these officers who were approached informed senior Army officials about it.
At the centre of the controversy is a Lieutenant Colonel who has been arrested and a Major who is absconding. According to media reports, the Facebook profile of the main conspirator, Major Zia, noted that “Army is soon going to bring change”. This has to be seen against the backdrop of fears raised by certain quarters in Bangladesh that some cadres of religious parties recruited into the Army during the BNP-led coalition government rule may act as supporters in such a coup.
The coup attempt was not just aimed at derailing democracy but at stopping the ongoing war crimes trial. The BNP, which initially supported the trial, has come out openly against it. It has questioned the objectives of the trial and has been pressing the government to stop it. Initially, some Muslim countries had tried to dissuade Bangladesh from opening the cases in this regard. However, in the face of popular demand to try the people involved in war crimes, the government refused to buckle under such pressure from foreign countries.
To bring about any political change in the country which is currently ruled by a party that has overwhelming majority, it was imperative for the Islamists to enlist the support of the Army. But the fact remains that the Army itself is struggling to wriggle out of its historical legacy of military coups and the resulting stigma. The latest coup attempt by radicals within the army indicates the penetration of Islamists and more specifically that of the Hizb ut-Tahrir whose main support base is among the educated youth, who are highly motivated and belong to affluent families in urban areas. The coup attempt is also an indication of the nature as well as future direction of radicalism whose fulcrum lies in the relatively more affluent urban space rather than in the impoverished madrassas that are generally believed to be a source of fundamentalism in Bangladesh.

Analysing the failed Coup in Bangladesh | Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses
 
EVEN MORE INDIAN PROPAGANDA ON BANGLADESH COUP ATTEMPT -


Failed Coup

Ajit Kumar Singh

Research Fellow, Institute for Conflict Management

SAIR – January 23, 2012

Bangladesh has taken firm steps to quell violent Islamist extremist groupings operating on and from its soil, but it is clear that these groups have not abandoned their ideology or their objectives, and that they retain significant capacities, though pressure by intelligence and enforcement agencies has pushed them underground. The introduction of the 15th Amendment Bill of the Constitution on June 30,2011, which gives Islam the status of the 'State Religion', may well expand the spaces for radical Islamist politics in the country, legitimizing extremist formations and radical political parties such as the JeI. These are the very forces that have repeatedly jeopardized stability and development in Bangladesh in the past, and the state will have to remain extraordinarily vigilant if they are not to return to prominence in the proximate future.
HuJI-B: Potent Threat, SAIR, August 1, 2011

HuT's radical ideology, the propagation of hatred against 'infidels' and 'deviants', and the flirtation with violence and terrorism hold significant potential dangers within the far from stable South Asian environment.
HuT: Extremist Spectre, SAIR, October 24, 2011

In nearly three years of almost consistently positive news from Bangladesh, the revelation that a coup plot had been foiled by Dhaka has sent shock waves through the region, and underlined the dangers of residual Islamist extremism within the country.
On January 19, 2012, it was disclosed that the Bangladesh Army had discovered and neutralized a plot by some serving and retired Army officers, at the instigation of some Bangladeshi civilians at home and abroad, capitalizing on the sentiments of the Islamist extremists. The conspiracy was intended to overthrow the Awami League (AL) led civilian Government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed.
Revealing the details of the plot, Brigadier General Muhammad Mashud Razzaq, Director of the Personnel Services Directorate, and Lieutenant Colonel Muhammad Sazzad Siddique, acting Judge Advocate General of the Army, in a Press briefing on January 19, 2012, circulated a statement saying that “around 14 to 16 mid-level officers were believed to have been involved in the bid”, which came to notice when Lieutenant Colonel (retired) Ehsan Yusuf on December 13, 2011, instigated a serving Major (not named) to join him in executing his plan. The Major revealed the plot through the chain of command. Two retired officers, Ehsan Yusuf and Major Zakir, were arrested. Another plotter, a serving Major, Syed Mohammad Ziaul Haque alias Major Zia, is on the run. Meanwhile, a Court of Inquiry was constituted on December 28, 2011, to unearth further information about the plot.
Though it will take time to unravel all the facts, the revelation that at least two plotters have already admitted their links with the banned Hizb-ut-Tahrir (HuT, ‘Party of Liberation’) has once again brought focus on Islamist fundamentalist groups that continue to maintain their strong presence in the country’s military establishment. Indeed, on January 8, 2012, HuT had circulated provocative leaflets, based on the fugitive Major Zia's internet message, throughout the country. Zia had sent out two e-mails containing imaginary and highly controversial contents, styled “Mid-level Officers of Bangladesh Army are Bringing down Changes Soon (sic)”. The Bangladesh Security Forces (SFs) on January 20, 2012, arrested another five HuT cadres in connection with the failed coup attempt.
This is the second attempt military revolt by hardliners under the Hasina Government since it came to power after the elections of December 2008. On February 25 and 26, 2009, shortly after the Government took charge, members of the Bangladesh Rifles (BDR), since renamed the Bangladesh Border Guards, staged a mutiny against their commanding officers, killing more than 74 persons, including 52 officers, SF personnel and six civilians, including the Director General of the BDR and his wife. The mutineers, backed by the Islamists, wanted to create a rift between the Hasina Government and the military, in order to overthrow the civilian Government. They failed in the face of an effective and concerted response by the military top brass.
Interestingly, Sajeeb Wazed, an Information Technology specialist, political analyst and advisor to Sheikh Hasina, along with Carl Ciovacco, in an article titled 'Stemming the rise of Islamic Extremism in Bangladesh' published in the Harvard International Review on November 19, 2008, had underlined the ‘astronomical growth’ of Islamists in the military, claiming that madrassas (religious seminaries) supplied nearly 35 per cent of Army recruits. Indeed, the seminaries in Bangladesh have emerged as the principal medium for fundamentalists to propagate radical ideologies.
The radicalization process has been rooted in Bangladeshi politics since the bloody coup of August 15, 1975, which killed the country’s founding father, Prime Minister Sheikh Mujibur Rahman (Sheikh Hasina’s father). The coup leaders used Islam as an instrument to legitimize and secure their power. Succeeding regimes have collaborated with radical and fundamentalist Islamic political organizations. Indeed, the principal political parties, in their efforts to oust the military from power, maintained tactical relationships with fundamentalist political organizations, giving them unbridled power, which radicalised society and the polity to the core. The AL was guilty of such alliances in the past, though, in its current tenure, it has acted with determination and consistency against Islamist extremist elements in the country.
On April 2009, the AL Government blacklisted 12 extremist organisations – Harkat-ul Jihad Islami Bangladesh (HuJI-B), Jamaat-ul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh (JMJB), Shahadat-e-al-Hiqma (SAH), Hizbut Touhid, Islami Samaj, Ulema Anjuman al Baiyinaat, HuT, Islamic Democratic Party, Touhid Trust, Tamir-ud-Deen, Alla’r Dal. Four of these 12 groups, including HuJI, SAH, JMJB and JMB, had already been banned during the earlier Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP)-Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh (JeI) coalition regime.
Later, on March 25, 2010, the AL Government set up a special tribunal for the trial of "war criminals" of Liberation War of 1971. Five of the Jamaat's top leaders, including its 'chief' Motiur Rahman Nizami and Secretary General Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mojahid, were jailed in this connection. Subsequently, on January 11, 2012, former JeI 'chief' Gholam Azam was sent to jail by the International Criminal Tribunal (ICT), which, on January 9, 2012, had accepted formal charges against Azam and present 'chief' Nizami for their alleged involvement in war crimes.
Further, on June 27, 2011, 666 members of the 24th Border Guards Battalion were tried before the BDR Tribunal, a military court. All but nine were found guilty and sentenced to terms ranging from four months to seven years in prison.
In June 2011, the Government passed the Constitution (15th Amendment) Bill, 2011, restoring secularism as a ‘fundamental pillar’ of the Bangladesh Constitution.
An extremist backlash was almost inevitable.
Meanwhile, on January 19, 2012, Prime Minister Hasina accused the "desperate" opposition of "plotting" against her Government. Criticizing the BNP, she declared, "They are desperate to spoil the democratic process. They are threatening the Government to protect the war criminals." It is widely reported that the BNP is vehemently opposing the trial of war criminals to support its ally, JeI, and some of its own leaders. Notably, a former BNP Minister Abdul Alim and a BNP lawmaker Salahuddin Qader Chowdhury, have been accused of war crimes.
Though there is no conclusive report of direct BNP involvement in the attempted coup, some developments raise a finger of suspicion. Indeed, Abdul Hye Sikder (a former leader of the cultural wing of BNP) wrote a provocative article in Amar Desh, a vernacular daily, instigating the anti-Government sentiment of the Islamist forces within and outside the Bangladesh Armed forces. Apparently referring to BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia's remarks at a Chittagong rally on January 9, 2012, that 'even army personnel are being abducted', Brigadier Razzaq, while disclosing details of the coup plot, hinted at possible BNP involvement, stating, "Even a large political party sang along imaginary, misleading and propagandist news to bring allegations, which created unexpected and provocative debate among the Army and conscious citizens."
HuT has been gradually gaining grounds in Bangladesh, and is currently regarded as the strongest anti-state organisation in Bangladesh. Another such group, Hizbut Touhid, established in 1994 at Korotia village in the Tangail District, and led by Bayezid Khan Panni alias Selim Panni, who claims himself to be the Imam-uz-Zaman [Leader of the Age], has also extended its base. The Hizbut Touhid, which aspires to establish the ‘world leadership’ of the Imam-uz-Zaman, declares itself against democracy and democratic institutions, which it regards as ‘rules of evil’.
According to SATP data, the SFs have arrested 213 HuT cadres since March 10, 2000, (till January 22, 2012), out of which 96 have been arrested since the Hasina Government came to power in January 2009. 107 Hizbut Touhid cadres have also been arrested by the current Hasina regime. Nevertheless, these groups, in alliance with the JeI, continue to constitute a major threat for the Hasina Government, though the dangers have, in some measure, been minimised by sustained SF action.
These dangers have not, however, seized to exist, and even a group like the JMB, which was decimated in the aftermath of the serial bombings of August 2005, is reported to be exerting visible efforts to engineer a revival. Quoting Abu Talha Mohammad Fahim aka Bashar, a son of detained JMB chief Saidur Rahman, officials of the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) disclosed that the reorganisation attempts under the directives of JMB’s acting 'chief' Sohel Mahfuz, were being intensified.
The failed coup is a reminder that Islamist Forces in the country, while they have weakened, have not been entirely contained. Despite the tremendous gains of the past three years, the threat of an Islamist resurgence, of coup attempts, of terrorism and of engineered political violence, will persist as long as these groupings continue to have a base in the country.

South Asia Intelligence Review (SAIR), Weekly Assessments & Briefings
 
To them all pious people are mollah , remember how many " Mollah's" party supported Awamileague that time . They all are progressive & pro independence when they support BAL . Even prominant razakars are also became a freedom fighter when he support Awamileague .

AL = BNP

They are all opportunists ready to ally with mullahs anytime to grab power.

BAL is persecuting JI not because they're razakars (that's gotta be one of their least concerns!), but because they "think" they can damage BNP's popularity by proving the "razakarness" of some senior leaders of their 4-party allies.

That's why we need a third force in BD, one that can truly OBLITERATE all extremists elements in BD, including mullahs (self-induced schizophrenics) and ultra leftists (not many are left).
 
MORE INDIAN PROPAGANDA ON COUP ATTEMPT IN BANGLADESH -

So why are you spreading the propaganda? Isn't that the whole point of propaganda?

Sorry for the harsh language, but don't you think you're being an idiot here?

Or, maybe you're a RAW agent! We've all been suspecting for a while. :lol:
 
So why are you spreading the propaganda? Isn't that the whole point of propaganda?

Sorry for the harsh language, but don't you think you're being an idiot here?

Or, maybe you're a RAW agent! We've all been suspecting for a while. :lol:

Yes you Indians have been trying to paint me as a RAW agent. Anyway the reason I posted those articles is to show the propaganda effort India is expending behind this highly unpopular and discredited AL government.
 
lol bro i generally wake up at 5 30 and go to the gym. i was on the bike while i was typing most of the stuff through blackberry and yes this forum is kind of addicting, right now i am typing from my work :P through my playbook.

Dude you sure you ain't a hezbullah gureliia? They had a whole video of riding bikes and firing rocket launcher, you just went one step ahead in evolutionary cycle!

Anyway ain't blackberry kinda passe nowadays?
 
Dude I have 5 rape victims in my village only. multiply that with 68000 villages. I am talking about my village which seen no Muktis, no fighting nothing. Mr. Awal a muslim leaguer (a good guy) who kept peace among Bengalis Rajakars and PK army. Yet we have rape victims. Hamudur Rahaman never came to my village neither he knew its existence.

Dude you and EW were caught on your pants down by IDUNE at many times for lying. And you were now singing the chorus like my father was about to be shot, my aunt cut Pakistani soldier's penis and my three yrs old nephew kicked 7ft Panjabi's buttock types. Are we freaking story tellers or in a historic fact finding mission? Though I'm not completely rolling out that it hadn't happened in your village but that was just one village. I too knew 100s of villages, where Panjabi's baap o jete pare nai, dharsan to durer kotha. And you would be ashamed knowing that it was those AWAMY Muktis of yours that started more countable raping of Bihari, Urdu speaking women(Stateless in Bangladesh and Pakistan) than entire East Winging of PAK army. Ask Akmal Bhai on how AWAMY Muktis raped pious Muslim Leaguers, JI supporter's most beautiful daughters right after BD was created. So, don't try to be a story teller as I have grown up in BD's village, suburb, Big Cities, Cantonment to bury you by 100s of similar ones. And finally, stop painting rosy picture on BD's creation as it was an undisputed fact that Malauns took their revenge on thousand years old grudge against Muslims by giving birth of it.
 
yes there was genocide and rape.. I am not denying it. But believe me Awamileague doesn't care about those women... They just want to blackmail our emotion against Jamat.. You will understand the hypocrisy... They call Birangonas ' mother ' .at the same time they call Begum Zia girlfriend of janjua. Isn't it hypocrisy?
BRO, genocide is a very strong word that is dictionary defined as "the deliberate and systematic destruction, in whole or in part, of an ethnic, racial, religious, or national group". So, it didn't happen and the thing was done by W Pakistani army was known as heavy handed ness, disproportionate use of force etc. I'VE read the soldiers logs and the book named 'The way it was', authored by Brigadier Z. Alam, who had happened to led the Mujib's arrest and somehow 25th March's crack down. What I found that it was pure military operation against secessionist RAWAMY, Commie bastards. But as military opps. never went collateral damage less, it was no different in that regard. Please read 'Dead Reckoning' or Ms. Bose's articles on 71s wars to find out how much of exaggeration took place. Ekta simple Udaharan hoilo giye poran Dhakar Hindu parate W Pakistani army char hazar Hindu merechilo Bole rotona rotye shara deshe Pakistanider biruddhe dhikkar sristi kora hoyechilo. But later it was found out that the number was only 14 and 1 child's accidental death was made numerous by deliberately. Similarly in Jessore, massacred Bihari's skeleton’s pictures were disseminated by Banglar Bani, Ami Bijoy Dekhechi Te as Bengalir skeleton bole. Erokom Bohu Ghatana ke fulie, Fapiye amader post 71's generation ke Pakistani der grina korte shekhano hoyeche. But they don't understand, it's all Bharati’s plan to keep us fragmented, weak, hateful against brotherhood.

On a separate note, rapes had occurred sporadically, for which guilty should have been exemplary punished but not the 1/100 of the portion of disseminated figure, I.E. 1 Million.
 
সব সেনা অভ্যুত্থানে আওয়ামী লীগ জড়িত : মির্জা ফখরুল (AL was involved in almost all military coup in Bangladesh)

বিএনপির ভারপ্রাপ্ত মহাসচিব মির্জা ফখরুল ইসলাম আলমগীর বলেছেন, দেশে এ পর্যন্ত যতগুলো সেনা অভ্যুত্থান হয়েছে, তার সবক’টিতে আওয়ামী লীগ জড়িত ছিল। ১৯৭৫ সালে শেখ মুজিব হত্যা, ১৯৮১ সালে জিয়াউর রহমানকে হত্যা, ১৯৮২ সালে নির্বাচিত সরকার হটিয়ে সামরিক শাসন এবং ২০০৭ সালের অবৈধ অসাংবিধানিক সরকার গঠনে আওয়ামী লীগের লোকরাই জড়িত ছিল।
 
yes there was genocide and rape.. I am not denying it. But believe me Awamileague doesn't care about those women... They just want to blackmail our emotion against Jamat.. You will understand the hypocrisy... They call Birangonas ' mother ' .at the same time they call Begum Zia girlfriend of janjua. Isn't it hypocrisy?

Nobdoy cared about those women. At least AL acknowledged their existence and a step better than others who just deny them. I am not here for AL-BNP cockfight. Its out of my league.
 
Dude you sure you ain't a hezbullah gureliia? They had a whole video of riding bikes and firing rocket launcher, you just went one step ahead in evolutionary cycle!

Anyway ain't blackberry kinda passe nowadays?

lyeah man got me i am a hiezbullah guerilla on my workout bike shooting texts at PDF using a blackberry, you are a very very smart man. ol yeah man they changed their ceo and share fell from 89 dollars to 13 dollars in 8 months, but i like my crackberry i am a junkie.
 
BRO, genocide is a very strong word that is dictionary defined as "the deliberate and systematic destruction, in whole or in part, of an ethnic, racial, religious, or national group". So, it didn't happen and the thing was done by W Pakistani army was known as heavy handed ness, disproportionate use of force etc. I'VE read the soldiers logs and the book named 'The way it was', authored by Brigadier Z. Alam, who had happened to led the Mujib's arrest and somehow 25th March's crack down. What I found that it was pure military operation against secessionist RAWAMY, Commie bastards. But as military opps. never went collateral damage less, it was no different in that regard. Please read 'Dead Reckoning' or Ms. Bose's articles on 71s wars to find out how much of exaggeration took place. Ekta simple Udaharan hoilo giye poran Dhakar Hindu parate W Pakistani army char hazar Hindu merechilo Bole rotona rotye shara deshe Pakistanider biruddhe dhikkar sristi kora hoyechilo. But later it was found out that the number was only 14 and 1 child's accidental death was made numerous by deliberately. Similarly in Jessore, massacred Bihari's skeleton’s pictures were disseminated by Banglar Bani, Ami Bijoy Dekhechi Te as Bengalir skeleton bole. Erokom Bohu Ghatana ke fulie, Fapiye amader post 71's generation ke Pakistani der grina korte shekhano hoyeche. But they don't understand, it's all Bharati’s plan to keep us fragmented, weak, hateful against brotherhood.

On a separate note, rapes had occurred sporadically, for which guilty should have been exemplary punished but not the 1/100 of the portion of disseminated figure, I.E. 1 Million.

So your pakistani sources are all correct eh? good way of looking at the world through your pakistani tinted glasses. on the other note how come i never meet someone who denies the holocaust in dhaka? is it because they'd get a heavy beating?
 

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