What's new

BDR disbanding was revenge - says Shekhar Gupta in a letter to Naren Modi

kalu_miah

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jan 4, 2009
Messages
6,475
Reaction score
17
Country
Bangladesh
Location
United States
National Interest: Dear Narendrabhai - Indian Express

National Interest: Dear Narendrabhai
Shekhar Gupta : Sat Aug 31 2013, 11:09 hrs

You want a Bengali speaking Af-Pak or a liberal, secular Bangladesh? You can decide now

WHY am I not addressing this appeal to adarniya Advaniji or my old friend Sushma first? Or to dear Rajnathji or Arun (Jaitley), even though I might have known all four of them more closely than you, mostly because we all live in New Delhi? It is because, in their current mood, the first two are unlikely to give anybody a hearing on any thought that is remotely conciliatory. And the last two have tried, are trying, but sometimes seem like giving up. Which is scary for India's supreme national interest. That is why you, Narendrabhai, need to weigh in.

Because moments like these arrive only once in decades in a nation's history. And if we lose them, irrespective of whether our politics is broken at the inter-party level or, in this specific case, most regrettably, at the intra-party level, our future generations will not forgive us. Your intervention is needed because the matter rests within your party, and is caught within its messy, but utterly transparent, internal power tussle. Your party has messed up much virtuous, reformist legislation already, it has failed to live up to your own expectations on the food bill — in fact, Murli Manohar Joshi's speech on this in the Lok Sabha sounded like he had borrowed a pamphlet from the NAC, or Arundhati Roy had ghosted it. And if it now loses India this great opportunity, despite total political and strategic convergence, you will look a lesser leader within your party and, more importantly, on the national stage.

That long, somewhat rhetorical, preamble was necessary. Because the issue — and the country it refers to, Bangladesh — is a red rag to your party and the RSS, who see it as the Pakistan on our eastern borders. But here is an opportunity to change the story and the history with Bangladesh. Not one senior leader of your party has, as yet, produced an argument against the land boundary agreement that India and Bangladesh have signed and which now awaits ratification through a constitutional amendment. On several occasions, your party president, Rajnath Singh, has very sagaciously stated that his party supports the agreement. Yet, it hasn't been able to vote for it because of last-minute objections. The opposition of the BJP's Assam unit etc are just convenient excuses. The issue is caught in the strife within the BJP.

WE need to understand two key issues here. One, what does this agreement entail. And two, why does it represent a strategic opportunity not seen in our neighbourhood since the Simla Agreement (which, you will agree, Indira Gandhi lost in not having the LoC formally sanctified as our border). We are paying for that blunder on our western flanks now. Should we make a similar one on the east? And should India lose out just because Hastinapur maharathis of your party can't be seen to be thinking or working together? And if you fail to count now, what kind of leader are you?

Firstly, what is this agreement. India and Bangladesh (East Pakistan then) inherited a complex border from Sir Cyril Radcliffe, who gave each side enclaves deep inside the other's territory. These involve not much territory, but about 51,000 people. Because of our cussed bilateral relationship, neither side gives easy access to the other to its enclaves. As a result, these territories have become stateless sovereign republics. These are dens of thugs, smugglers, terrorists, gun-runners and illegal immigration mafias. Even j!hadi groups and the ISI have routinely used these as staging posts as these are permanent gaps in our border surveillance.

It was only now, with the rise of a friendly, liberal and courageous Sheikh Hasina government in Bangladesh, that the two countries have signed this historic agreement to exchange these enclaves and rationalise our border. Alongside, we have signed an agreement for joint border management. But that is not possible until the enclaves are sorted out. Effectively, there is no loss of territory for India. The government has held 17 meetings with the opposition leaders to brief them on the agreement, and barring staunch opposition from the Asom Gana Parishad (AGP), and a qualified one from Mamata Banerjee, the entire Parliament is behind this agreement. That includes the BJP, as confirmed by your party president in many public statements. But so broken is your party's relationship with the Congress (blame for which is shared equally), and so intense the antagonisms within your top brass , that the opportunity is being lost.

It was only after a wide consensus had been obtained on this agreement that our president, Pranab Mukherjee, in March this year, made a public commitment in his speech at Dhaka University that the agreement will be presented for ratification in India's Parliament. To not do so now will be a disgrace for India. It will also be the loss of a strategic opportunity that may not wait, or in fact may never come for a generation. Because in December, or latest by early January, Bangladesh also goes for general elections. Sheikh Hasina has been incredibly brave in turning around her India policy. But our inability to deliver on two solemn agreements, Teesta waters (blocked by Mamata) and now the land boundary pact, is already becoming her killer embarrassment. That she went down on her knees to India and got her proud country humiliated and so on. If she loses, and Khaleda, backed by Islamists, returns, India will be the biggest loser. You have no time to lose.

NOW the second point. Why is this agreement a once-in-a-generation strategic opportunity? Because the democratising of Bangladesh's politics, society and public discourse is as important to India as that of Pakistan's. And Sheikh Hasina has been doing just that. From being a sanctuary for our rebels, particularly the ULFA, and a playground for the ISI and j!hadi forces, Bangladesh is now an ally. Remember how it has handed over our fugitives, particularly Arabinda Rajkhowa, and is holding Anup Chetia, and the political risks this entails. If Tripura can convert some of its underground gas into power, it is only because Bangladesh has let you transport those giant generators by barge through its rivers. They would have never reached there through the narrow, winding mountain roads. Hasina has forced the ISI to shut shop. She has also disbanded the Bangladesh Rifles, which had become such a malevolent presence on our borders — remember that ghastly visual of the bodies of our BSF patrolmen, killed by the BDR, being carried, hanging by their limbs from bamboo sticks? The courts, under her, have given judgments holding both the martial law impositions (by Generals Ziaur Rahman and Ershad) unconstitutional, and thereby laws enacted by them, which effectively converted Bangladesh into an Islamic state, have been abrogated. Bangladesh is therefore restored to its original, secular, liberal constitution. One can always have a super-liberal argument against the government banning the Jamaat-e-Islami, on its handing out death sentences to old radicals and Jamaatis for complicity in the Pakistani army's atrocities in 1971. But, certainly, that cannot be your party's argument, or yours. The truth is, while the world celebrates the rise of secular Indonesia as a great liberal success story in the Islamic world, Bangladesh, with its 16.3 crore, mostly very poor, people, 89 per cent of whom are Muslim and 10 per cent Hindu, deserves that admiration first for the way it has transformed. Nothing underlines the positive change in Bangladesh better than the fact that its high commissioner, Tariq A. Karim, specially called on you in Ahmedabad on July 27 for an hour-long meeting to seek your support for the land boundary agreement, when Americans have not yet taken you off the blacklist, Europeans are engaging with you but still sort of gingerly, and diplomats of no other Muslim-majority country will like to be seen near you. He and his government got their share of abuse for this back home, but they did not flinch.

And you want to know how fragile these gains are? The first radical to be convicted and given the death sentence, Abul Kalam Azad, the red-bearded ideologue better known as Bachchu Razakar or Lal Daadhi, has already escaped, and where else but to Pakistan, now harboured by the jihadis there. Scores of others, under trial now, are praying for the defeat of Hasina's Awami League this winter and the rise on the streets of a group called Hefazat-e-Islam, which grew, like much Bangladeshi radicalism, from Chittagong and whose 13-point charter is borrowed straight from the Taliban. I may or may not agree with you, Narendrabhai, but I know you believe you are being swept to power next summer. What kind of Bangladesh would you rather be dealing with on your eastern borders? You have an opportunity to determine that now. And even your critics and adversaries, even the minorities that fear you, will bless you for this, hailing it as a great act of liberal foresight and a signal of your arrival as a truly national leader, and a patriot.

sg@expressindia.com
 
. .
We all knew about that, what's new ?

Its a frank admission by a editor-in-Chief (?) of Indian Express, a senior journalist, that India was happy about the outcome of the BDR mutiny. And the whole article is about Indian "legitimate" interference in Bangladesh politics, a virtual vassal state.
 
.
BDR was never disbanded, its just been renamed. And no where in the article it says that it was a "revenge" or whatever.
 
.
Well we all know what chanakyan bastards did with their awami dalal in 2009 mutiny. And being the type of low life filths they are, its perfectly inconsequential whether they openly admit it or not.

As for the rest of the article , I really find these recent articles by chanakyan low lives funny.:omghaha: They R losing sleep on the future of Hasina? How do they expect to prevent the ouster of Hasina from power? Even if they give up whole of WB and NE in LBA, Hasina ain't coming to power. :laughcry:The only long term option chanakyans have is to remove their ****** nose from BD before it gets flattened to rubble and deal with us as a sovereign country rather than wet dreaming of making it an awamidesh.


BDR was never disbanded, its just been renamed. And no where in the article it says that it was a "revenge" or whatever.

BDR have been destroyed not only renamed. The grin on Indian faces on the BDR mutiny was pretty apparent from the start.The world takes it as an open secret that India was involved in 2009 BDR mutiny just like how its a fact now (admitted by both US and UK) that CIA orchestrated 1953 coup in Iran.
 
.
Well we all know what chanakyan bastards did with their awami dalal in 2009 mutiny. And being the type of low life filths they are, its perfectly inconsequential whether they openly admit it or not.

You know who is called bastard ?? Only who dnt knw his real father... and you people are still searching for you father ... are they arab, turkish, mughal or any one else so it better for you to not use this term cause it suits you people like you :rofl::rofl:
 
.
Its a frank admission by a editor-in-Chief (?) of Indian Express, a senior journalist, that India was happy about the outcome of the BDR mutiny. And the whole article is about Indian "legitimate" interference in Bangladesh politics, a virtual vassal state.

Your hate, clouds not only your ability to see, but also your ability to reason.

Assuming the highlighted part is the one you refer to when YOU CLAIM admission on part of Mr.Gupta, it maybe missed your senses that he was talking about this:

2001 Indian

Giving you benefit of doubt,i re-read the whole of your post , again, and again and again. Looking for the word "Mutiny". Nope. Could not find it anywhere in the post , neither on Indian Express article. Mr.Gupta never wrote or referred to the shameful mutiny by your armed forces where this Bangladeshi gutless soldiers killed and raped unarmed.

Apparently, you continue shamelessly in your Anti India tirade. Lying ... as always.
 
.
You know who is called bastard ?? Only who dnt knw his real father... and you people are still searching for you father ... are they arab, turkish, mughal or any one else so it better for you to not use this term cause it suits you people like you :rofl::rofl:

Act Classy mate. You cant fight with pigs and stay clean. No matter what, reason with them. Class is forever, specially when your represent your nation on such Forums.
 
.
Your hate, clouds not only your ability to see, but also your ability to reason.

Assuming the highlighted part is the one you refer to when YOU CLAIM admission on part of Mr.Gupta, it maybe missed your senses that he was talking about this:

2001 Indian

Giving you benefit of doubt,i re-read the whole of your post , again, and again and again. Looking for the word "Mutiny". Nope. Could not find it anywhere in the post , neither on Indian Express article. Mr.Gupta never wrote or referred to the shameful mutiny by your armed forces where this Bangladeshi gutless soldiers killed and raped unarmed.

Apparently, you continue shamelessly in your Anti India tirade. Lying ... as always.

These are Mr. Gupta's exact words:
She has also disbanded the Bangladesh Rifles, which had become such a malevolent presence on our borders — remember that ghastly visual of the bodies of our BSF patrolmen, killed by the BDR, being carried, hanging by their limbs from bamboo sticks?

Of course Mr. Gupta was talking about the 2001 BSF-BDR incident, what else do you think he was talking about :lol::
2001 Indian

and the sweet revenge was Hasina disbanding BDR after 2009 Mutiny:
2009 Bangladesh Rifles revolt - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

BDR however was not disbanded, as another of your countrymen pointed out, it was merely renamed, which your editor got wrong.

If Mr. Gupta was not talking about the 2009 Mutiny, then which other BDR did Hasina disband? May be you can enlighten us.

Its no use denying the obvious. But that comes naturally to you, because ..... you guessed it, you are an INDIAN :lol:, delusional to the core.

Act Classy mate. You cant fight with pigs and stay clean. No matter what, reason with them. Class is forever, specially when your represent your nation on such Forums.

Sure you and your buddies are showing real class here and we are the pigs, openly defecating in this thread with our meaningless crap.:lol:
 
.
Hmmmm. A and B do not like each other as B is trigger happy and infected with communistic and jihadist ideas. B and C fight; given B's ideology, B targets senior officers and their wives and families. C finally wins and disbands / renames B. A is happy that C turned out to be the winner. From this sequence of events, how can one one conclude that A is responsible for B's facination with communistic and jihadist ideas.
 
. . . .
Well we all know what chanakyan bastards did with their awami dalal in 2009 mutiny. And being the type of low life filths they are, its perfectly inconsequential whether they openly admit it or not.

Perfectly said bro. Actually we get a clear idea of how a typical malaun psychology works. This malauns couldn't do sh!it when we killed those BSF streetdogs in 2001 but they backstabbed in 2008 and they have now openly started taking credit for it. Their BSF never had the balls to face BDR so they took their revenge by a falseflag operation. This is how the malaunic country India works, a venomous creature always looking to bite but never has the balls do it openly like a man. Indian Malauns are by nature a cunning vicious group of f!lths.
 
. .

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom