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Execution or a retrial ?

BanglaBhoot

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by MBI Munshi

The fear here is that in the process of all that is happening in
Shahbag that democracy will be murdered and also the rule of law and
all in the name of the people. This has happened so often in
Bangladesh in the past that it doesn't bear repeating.

If it is frustration that has driven these people to Shahbag I am also
deeply frustrated at the BSF killing our citizens on the borders or
over the construction of Tipaimukh Dam or even over the Tk. 15 000
Crore that has been embezzled by government officials in the last 3
years. These are all things that have happened under all governments
for the good part of 40 years but I am not allowed to sit down in the
middle of the street and protest. The police or the BDR or a BCL thug
will beat me or possibly shoot me and take my body away and dump it
elsewhere. These things are not happening in the case of the Shahbag
protesters but oddly and suspiciously no one else can hold such a
protest in Bangladesh. Where are my democratic rights and freedom of
speech and expression? Why are we applying these rights selectively?
This is absolutely undemocratic and unfair.

The obvious intellectual deficiency in these protests is however more
obvious. These protests were apparently sparked by a court issuing a
sentence of life imprisonment to one Abdul Kader Mollah for his
alleged involvement in war crimes in 1971. The court in its judgment
was unable to find any direct involvement of this man in any capital
offenses in 1971 and was presumably unable to accuse him of aiding,
abetting in such crimes or acting as an accomplice as the principle
perpetrators (198 Pakistani officers) were pardoned by Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman himself.

After the Skype scandal the entire ICT process now appears dubious and
politically tainted and motivated but such a court was still unable to
find any evidence or proof against Kader Mollah linking him to war
crimes. In that case why is he to be executed. Is it not just possible
that these allegations are spurious and wrong and all that we know
about 1971 may be a lie.

Already a book by Sarmila Bose titled 'Dead Reckoning' has cast doubt
on our understanding of what happened in 1971 but she has not been
allowed to testify in the cases and would probably be lynched if she
made an appearance in Shahbag. I have also done research into 1971 on
a different consideration not related to war crimes and found our
information and knowledge utterly defective.

These are things that the people at Shahbag will not listen to. They
have already made up their minds of what happened and who is guilty.
This attitude is both undemocratic and fascist. No one at Shahbag is
coming there with an open mind. They have already decided on a hanging
without the necessity of a trial.

Again, in reference to the ICT trials it may also be mentioned that in
one case a witness has been kidnapped and all the defence lawyers have
been threatened or intimidated and even under such unfair and
oppressive circumstances the court could find no direct link between
Kader Mollah and any capital crime in 1971. May it just be possible he
actually did nothing. The protesters at Shahbag are not interested in
such niceties but are forcing the hand of the government for an
execution. I believe that the government will be pleased to oblige.

God forbid that there be another trial resulting in further doubts
about what really happened in 1971. I want merely that the truth come
out and that the accused receive a fair trial and if the court
determines guilt and orders execution then so be it. The Shahbag
protesters should not be seeking execution but a retrial and that the
defence be left alone to conduct their case. What we are seeing
instead in Shahbag is mob justice ......

Execution or a retrial ?

My concluding comment on the Shahbag Movement posted on the US Embassy Timeline -

I am here going to give a simple and concise statement on this issue as my conclusion. It is my opinion that the Shahbag movement is not about the fate of Abdul Kader Mollah. The Shahbag movement is about whose version of 1971 is correct. If by any chance Abdul Kader Mollah is not guilty of any capital offence then that would mean our received understanding of 1971 is a lie. It is what we may call the 'Matrix' moment. In other words, everything that we know about 1971 is wrong. If that is the case then many people would have to answer for this lie and hence the need for this Shahbag movement so they may shirk that responsibility. To continue the propagation of this lie it is necessary that Abdul Kader Mollah be found guilty and executed under any circumstance fair or foul.

I am somewhat disappointed in the so-called new generation as their duty is to question and inquire and blow away myths but this generation represented in Shahbag are conformist and conservative and do not appear able to challenge and overturn received wisdom. My research on other issues other than on war crimes and Sarmila Bose's book suggest that what we know about 1971 is wrong and probably a national delusion and hence the court not finding any link between Abdul Kader Mollah and any alleged war crime. The following news item appears to further substantiate my points. Under no circumstances can the government allow any more doubts about the authenticity of 1971 history to continue and expand and so all the accused now have to receive death sentences whether they deserve it or not.

We are now witnessing the death of democracy (again) the rise of fascism and the squashing of the rule of law at the whims of the mob …..

http://www.bdtoday.net/blog/blogdetail/detail/1727/emdad/2365#.URg9k2fVJZw
 
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I am somewhat disappointed in the so-called new generation as their duty is to question and inquire and blow away myths but this generation represented in Shahbag are conformist and conservative and do not appear able to challenge and overturn received wisdom. My research on other issues other than on war crimes and Sarmila Bose's book suggest that what we know about 1971 is wrong and probably a national delusion and hence the court not finding any link between Abdul Kader Mollah and any alleged war crime. The following news item appears to further substantiate my points. Under no circumstances can the government allow any more doubts about the authenticity of 1971 history to continue and expand and so all the accused now have to receive death sentences whether they deserve it or not.

We are now witnessing the death of democracy (again) the rise of fascism and the squashing of the rule of law at the whims of the mob …..

Not all of them.

I think this "mob justice" approach is absolutely absurd. Even more absurd, they see themselves as "civilized", "tolerant", "intellectual"....:lol:

I wouldn't blame them to be honest. I blame their role models such as their parents, and even teachers. Did you see those older generation "intellectuals" calling for their execution? That's where a big part of the problem is - potential role models. The propaganda network is far vast than we can imagine.

It's also an issue of "fitting in" their network of friends so that they feel more accepted. Things like truth and facts do not come into these matters. It's called peer pressure.

Let the jury decide, and comply with the ICT conventions. And if things don't go their way, they can eat their hearts out.
 
. .
by MBI Munshi

The fear here is that in the process of all that is happening in
Shahbag that democracy will be murdered and also the rule of law and
all in the name of the people. This has happened so often in
Bangladesh in the past that it doesn't bear repeating.

If it is frustration that has driven these people to Shahbag I am also
deeply frustrated at the BSF killing our citizens on the borders or
over the construction of Tipaimukh Dam or even over the Tk. 15 000
Crore that has been embezzled by government officials in the last 3
years. These are all things that have happened under all governments
for the good part of 40 years but I am not allowed to sit down in the
middle of the street and protest. The police or the BDR or a BCL thug
will beat me or possibly shoot me and take my body away and dump it
elsewhere. These things are not happening in the case of the Shahbag
protesters but oddly and suspiciously no one else can hold such a
protest in Bangladesh. Where are my democratic rights and freedom of
speech and expression? Why are we applying these rights selectively?
This is absolutely undemocratic and unfair.

The obvious intellectual deficiency in these protests is however more
obvious. These protests were apparently sparked by a court issuing a
sentence of life imprisonment to one Abdul Kader Mollah for his
alleged involvement in war crimes in 1971. The court in its judgment
was unable to find any direct involvement of this man in any capital
offenses in 1971 and was presumably unable to accuse him of aiding,
abetting in such crimes or acting as an accomplice as the principle
perpetrators (198 Pakistani officers) were pardoned by Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman himself.

After the Skype scandal the entire ICT process now appears dubious and
politically tainted and motivated but such a court was still unable to
find any evidence or proof against Kader Mollah linking him to war
crimes. In that case why is he to be executed. Is it not just possible
that these allegations are spurious and wrong and all that we know
about 1971 may be a lie.

Already a book by Sarmila Bose titled 'Dead Reckoning' has cast doubt
on our understanding of what happened in 1971 but she has not been
allowed to testify in the cases and would probably be lynched if she
made an appearance in Shahbag. I have also done research into 1971 on
a different consideration not related to war crimes and found our
information and knowledge utterly defective.

These are things that the people at Shahbag will not listen to. They
have already made up their minds of what happened and who is guilty.
This attitude is both undemocratic and fascist. No one at Shahbag is
coming there with an open mind. They have already decided on a hanging
without the necessity of a trial.

Again, in reference to the ICT trials it may also be mentioned that in
one case a witness has been kidnapped and all the defence lawyers have
been threatened or intimidated and even under such unfair and
oppressive circumstances the court could find no direct link between
Kader Mollah and any capital crime in 1971. May it just be possible he
actually did nothing. The protesters at Shahbag are not interested in
such niceties but are forcing the hand of the government for an
execution. I believe that the government will be pleased to oblige.

God forbid that there be another trial resulting in further doubts
about what really happened in 1971. I want merely that the truth come
out and that the accused receive a fair trial and if the court
determines guilt and orders execution then so be it. The Shahbag
protesters should not be seeking execution but a retrial and that the
defence be left alone to conduct their case. What we are seeing
instead in Shahbag is mob justice ......

Execution or a retrial ?

My concluding comment on the Shahbag Movement posted on the US Embassy Timeline -

I am here going to give a simple and concise statement on this issue as my conclusion. It my opinion that the Shahbag movement is not about the fate of Abdul Kader Mollah. The Shahbag movement is about whose version of 1971 is correct. If by any chance Abdul Kader Mollah is not guilty of any capital offence then that would mean our received understanding of 1971 is a lie. It is what we may call the 'Matrix' moment. In other words, everything that we know about is 1971 is wrong. If that is the case then many people would have to answer for this lie and hence the need for this Shahbag movement so they may shirk that responsibility. To continue the propagation of this lie it is necessary that Abdul Kader Mollah be found guilty and executed under any circumstance fair or foul.

I am somewhat disappointed in the so-called new generation as their duty is to question and inquire and blow away myths but this generation represented in Shahbag are conformist and conservative and do not appear able to challenge and overturn received wisdom. My research on other issues other than on war crimes and Sarmila Bose's book suggest that what we know about 1971 is wrong and probably a national delusion and hence the court not finding any link between Abdul Kader Mollah and any alleged war crime. The following news item appears to further substantiate my points. Under no circumstances can the government allow any more doubts about the authenticity of 1971 history to continue and expand and so all the accused now have to receive death sentences whether they deserve it or not.

We are now witnessing the death of democracy (again) the rise of fascism and the squashing of the rule of law at the whims of the mob …..

???? ????? ?????? ??? ???????? ??? ?????????? ???? ??? ??? ??????, ??? ??? ?? ??????????
Munshi Bhai, great write up/article. U have inched toward to unveil the mother of all truth that the country named Bangladesh has been founded out of sheer 'Force and lies/deception'. Indira was the architect of it that happened to take the lead on BRIT'S laid plan for Muslims of Sub-Continent. The hedonistic generation of ours doesn't have time, patient and keenness to go through the painful process to unearth the truth. So, I'm going to to relay some videos here for the good-hearted, curious posters to get to the bottom of it. IMO, the reason for our generation's getting lost in transition is not to know the history of the creation of PAK because Bangladesh is the continuation of that process. I also think that we have been kept ignorant deliberately, so our judgmental delinquent takes place and we stay as slaves. Here we go with the videos.. BTW, the videos also cover the history of the world briefly..

1.

2.

3.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
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I am somewhat disappointed in the so-called new generation as their duty is to question and inquire and blow away myths

Reasoning can't convince a lot of people even though they are 'well-educated'. Number of people who investigate the development of their certain perception is even less. I vaguely remember of reading a drama by Ibsen- The Wild Duck. There Ibsen introduced a concept: "the saving lie". It's a lie essential to the existence of many a people or at least essential for their well-being. I just googled the phrase now and found this: Take the saving lie from the average man and you take his happiness away, too.
 
.
People here try very hard to picture the green army as saints and the massacres and atrocities they have done and claimed publicly as good things. And also wants their future generations to know that their oppressors are in fact victims.
 
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People here try very hard to picture the green army as saints and the massacres and atrocities they have done and claimed publicly as good things. And also wants their future generations to know that their oppressors are in fact victims.

This trial has nothing to do with Pakistan, nor will there ever be.
 
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by MBI Munshi

The fear here is that in the process of all that is happening in
Shahbag that democracy will be murdered and also the rule of law and
all in the name of the people. This has happened so often in
Bangladesh in the past that it doesn't bear repeating.

If it is frustration that has driven these people to Shahbag I am also
deeply frustrated at the BSF killing our citizens on the borders or
over the construction of Tipaimukh Dam or even over the Tk. 15 000
Crore that has been embezzled by government officials in the last 3
years. These are all things that have happened under all governments
for the good part of 40 years but I am not allowed to sit down in the
middle of the street and protest. The police or the BDR or a BCL thug
will beat me or possibly shoot me and take my body away and dump it
elsewhere. These things are not happening in the case of the Shahbag
protesters but oddly and suspiciously no one else can hold such a
protest in Bangladesh. Where are my democratic rights and freedom of
speech and expression? Why are we applying these rights selectively?
This is absolutely undemocratic and unfair.

The obvious intellectual deficiency in these protests is however more
obvious. These protests were apparently sparked by a court issuing a
sentence of life imprisonment to one Abdul Kader Mollah for his
alleged involvement in war crimes in 1971. The court in its judgment
was unable to find any direct involvement of this man in any capital
offenses in 1971 and was presumably unable to accuse him of aiding,
abetting in such crimes or acting as an accomplice as the principle
perpetrators (198 Pakistani officers) were pardoned by Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman himself.

After the Skype scandal the entire ICT process now appears dubious and
politically tainted and motivated but such a court was still unable to
find any evidence or proof against Kader Mollah linking him to war
crimes. In that case why is he to be executed. Is it not just possible
that these allegations are spurious and wrong and all that we know
about 1971 may be a lie.

Already a book by Sarmila Bose titled 'Dead Reckoning' has cast doubt
on our understanding of what happened in 1971 but she has not been
allowed to testify in the cases and would probably be lynched if she
made an appearance in Shahbag. I have also done research into 1971 on
a different consideration not related to war crimes and found our
information and knowledge utterly defective.

These are things that the people at Shahbag will not listen to. They
have already made up their minds of what happened and who is guilty.
This attitude is both undemocratic and fascist. No one at Shahbag is
coming there with an open mind. They have already decided on a hanging
without the necessity of a trial.

Again, in reference to the ICT trials it may also be mentioned that in
one case a witness has been kidnapped and all the defence lawyers have
been threatened or intimidated and even under such unfair and
oppressive circumstances the court could find no direct link between
Kader Mollah and any capital crime in 1971. May it just be possible he
actually did nothing. The protesters at Shahbag are not interested in
such niceties but are forcing the hand of the government for an
execution. I believe that the government will be pleased to oblige.

God forbid that there be another trial resulting in further doubts
about what really happened in 1971. I want merely that the truth come
out and that the accused receive a fair trial and if the court
determines guilt and orders execution then so be it. The Shahbag
protesters should not be seeking execution but a retrial and that the
defence be left alone to conduct their case. What we are seeing
instead in Shahbag is mob justice ......

Execution or a retrial ?

My concluding comment on the Shahbag Movement posted on the US Embassy Timeline -

I am here going to give a simple and concise statement on this issue as my conclusion. It my opinion that the Shahbag movement is not about the fate of Abdul Kader Mollah. The Shahbag movement is about whose version of 1971 is correct. If by any chance Abdul Kader Mollah is not guilty of any capital offence then that would mean our received understanding of 1971 is a lie. It is what we may call the 'Matrix' moment. In other words, everything that we know about is 1971 is wrong. If that is the case then many people would have to answer for this lie and hence the need for this Shahbag movement so they may shirk that responsibility. To continue the propagation of this lie it is necessary that Abdul Kader Mollah be found guilty and executed under any circumstance fair or foul.

I am somewhat disappointed in the so-called new generation as their duty is to question and inquire and blow away myths but this generation represented in Shahbag are conformist and conservative and do not appear able to challenge and overturn received wisdom. My research on other issues other than on war crimes and Sarmila Bose's book suggest that what we know about 1971 is wrong and probably a national delusion and hence the court not finding any link between Abdul Kader Mollah and any alleged war crime. The following news item appears to further substantiate my points. Under no circumstances can the government allow any more doubts about the authenticity of 1971 history to continue and expand and so all the accused now have to receive death sentences whether they deserve it or not.

We are now witnessing the death of democracy (again) the rise of fascism and the squashing of the rule of law at the whims of the mob …..

???? ????? ?????? ??? ???????? ??? ?????????? ???? ??? ??? ??????, ??? ??? ?? ??????????

Citing a single point among these all in facebook or somewherein you're gonna be termed as chagu, shibir or jamati by this progressive hypocrite projonmo bahini. Farce is Bangabir is already a r$zakar now :woot: !
 
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These are things that the people at Shahbag will not listen to. They
have already made up their minds of what happened and who is guilty.
This attitude is both undemocratic and fascist. No one at Shahbag is
coming there with an open mind. They have already decided on a hanging
without the necessity of a trial.


I am somewhat disappointed in the so-called new generation as their duty is to question and inquire and blow away myths but this generation represented in Shahbag are conformist and conservative and do not appear able to challenge and overturn received wisdom. My research on other issues other than on war crimes and Sarmila Bose's book suggest that what we know about 1971 is wrong and probably a national delusion and hence the court not finding any link between Abdul Kader Mollah and any alleged war crime. The following news item appears to further substantiate my points. Under no circumstances can the government allow any more doubts about the authenticity of 1971 history to continue and expand and so all the accused now have to receive death sentences whether they deserve it or not.

We are now witnessing the death of democracy (again) the rise of fascism and the squashing of the rule of law at the whims of the mob …..

???? ????? ?????? ??? ???????? ??? ?????????? ???? ??? ??? ??????, ??? ??? ?? ??????????

They are suffering from Proactive Inhibition (PI), Mula de Independence delusion (MDID), and Auto Intelligence Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS)!

Those so-called and hollow-skulled representative of new generation are completely unable to do any inductive reasoning that starts from identifying the patterns of facts to find the actuality being pragmatic!
 
.
Reasoning can't convince a lot of people even though they are 'well-educated'. Number of people who investigate the development of their certain perception is even less. I vaguely remember of reading a drama by Ibsen- The Wild Duck. There Ibsen introduced a concept: "the saving lie". It's a lie essential to the existence of many a people or at least essential for their well-being. I just googled the phrase now and found this: Take the saving lie from the average man and you take his happiness away, too.
Profundity of UR understanding on many controversial issues is just mind boggling. Please take my lal salaam , sir.

Eorl ⚔;3908590 said:
They are suffering from Proactive Inhibition (PI), Mula de Independence delusion (MDID), and Auto Intelligence Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS)!

Those so-called and hollow-skulled representative of new generation are completely unable to do any inductive reasoning that starts from identifying the patterns of facts to find the actuality being pragmatic!

UR sharpness seems amazing to me. Keep up the good work, BRO.
 
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Bangladesh: Quest For a New Progressive Era:

Paper No.5387 Dated 11-Feb-2013

By Kazi Anwarul Masud


In a harsh but realistic assessment of the US economy Columbia Professor Jeffrey Sachs observed that it was yet too early to predict that President Obama would be able to usher in a new progressive era for the US where policies would be legislated and implemented for the benefit of the large majority of the Americans who since the Reagan administration till now have been at the receiving end resulting in making the US one of the most inequitable advanced economies of the world.

"It is certainly too early to declare" writes Jeffrey Sachs "a new Progressive Era in America. Vested interests remain powerful, certainly in Congress – and even within the White House. These wealthy groups and individuals gave billions of dollars to the candidates in the recent election campaign, and they expect their contributions to yield benefits.

Moreover, 30 years of tax cutting has left the US government without the financial resources needed to carry out effective programs in key areas such as the transition to low-carbon energy..... Billed as a "free-market" revolution, because it promised to reduce the role of government, in practice it was the beginning of an assault on the middle class and the poor by wealthy special interests. These special interests included Wall Street, Big Oil, the big health insurers, and arms manufacturers. They demanded tax cuts, and got them; they demanded a rollback of environmental protection, and got it; they demanded, and received, the right to attack unions; and they demanded lucrative government contracts, even for paramilitary operations, and got those, too.

For more than three decades, no one really challenged the consequences of turning political power over to the highest bidders. In the meantime, America went from being a middle-class society to one increasingly divided between rich and poor." Are we any different? With gini coefficient of more than 33%( 2005) that measures the inequality of wealth distribution in a nation Bangladesh displays a picture of a mirage where the great majority of the people think the water is round the corner while the oasis is controlled by a small segment of the population where the large majority is denied entry.

Powerful interest groups were always opposed to progressivism because it meant more equitable distribution of national wealth. From a historical point Princeton Professor Charles Boix wrote: Big landowners have always opposed democracy, whether in Prussia, Russia, the American South of the nineteenth century, or Central America in the twentieth. By contrast, for democratic institutions to prevail, at least before industrialization, there had to be a radical equality of conditions. The Alpine cantons of Switzerland in the Middle and Modern Ages or the Northeastern states of the United States in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries are cases in point.

But assuming we have crossed the threshold of underdevelopment Bangladesh displays good macroeconomic indicators. In a situation of global meltdown where the developed economies are either in recession or just getting out of it Bangladesh is posting 6% growth rate, has comfortable foreign exchange reserve for a low income country, respectable remittance by Bangladeshis working abroad when employment of foreigners in traditionally manpower importing countries has shrunk, and export of our main foreign exchange earning commodities has remained steady.

Though agriculture accounts for less than 20% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) the sector employs 45% of the population. Industry accounts for about one third while services accounts for more than half. With GDP of Bangladesh of about $300 billion and per capita income $1770(PPP) Bangladesh is well placed to be one of the twenty post-emerging economies expected to do well if the challenges are met honestly and with dedication.

The question is shall we? Have we reached that level of societal development where we automatically understand our responsibilities to other members in society that the benefits we want for ourselves as citizens’ are circumscribed by the same rights and privileges that are due to them? Are we conscious of the rights of other motorists or passersby on the road while we are driving our vehicles or that we have to form a queue to get into a public transport or anywhere and not try to elbow out the persons ahead of us and who had come before we did? Are our leaders inherently conscious of not doing public work for private gains? We are now faced with the question of accountability that is the essence of good governance and democracy without which sustainable development would not be possible.

Professor Richard Sklar( of UCLA) points out that there are two principal forms of accountability that need to be distinguished: accountability of the leaders to their followers or democratic accountability as opposed to obligation of the office holders to be answerable to one another that Professor Sklar would call "constitutional accountability".

Regardless of the polemical debate on the form of government that is demanded in the name of the "people" one may wish to put more emphasis on development – a concept that embraces economic growth along with social development measured by a complex of indices. One may have constitution without constitutionalism as alleged by an African political scientist who claims of " simultaneous existence of what appears to be a clear commitment by African political elites to the idea of the constitution and an equal rejection of classical or at any rate liberal democratic notion of constitutionalism".

Basically we are talking of a society where a small segment of people through money and muscle do not dominate the larger portion of the populace. One can argue that from the beginning of human history there has always been domination of a segment over others in the society. In the ancient time and in the middle ages the system of absolute monarchy reflecting Louis the XIV’s famous words-l’tat c’est moi (I am the State) the subjects had to obey the king’s command however much capricious it might have been? In 1215 English barons forced King John to grant them certain rights that paved the way to later developments ushering in what today we now take for granted in democratic societies.

On Magna Carta famous British jurist Lord Denning described it as "the greatest constitutional document of all times – the foundation of the freedom of the individual against the arbitrary authority of the despot". On the issue of domination landed aristocracy has been replaced by the moneyed class some of whom have earned their wealth through questionable means.

But then the question arises whether economic development can be achieved without investment by the moneyed class. Many development economists would argue that development process has to include the moneyed class disregarding for an initial period the source of their wealth. Walt W Rostow’s Stages of Economic Growth stressed that Europe and North America were at a linear stage of development that the underdeveloped countries would eventually catch up with. He argued all countries must develop through a number of stages starting with traditional agrarian society and culminating in a modern industrialized society. The key to this transformation was seen to be mobilization of domestic and foreign resources for investment in economic growth.

Capital formation was considered as crucial to accelerate development. High savings leading to high growth as a "virtuous circle" and low savings leading to low growth and the reverse as a "vicious circle" that could be through governmental intervention ( Hans W Singer’s doctrine of balanced growth) . This robotic development presupposed fruits of growth to trickle through from the top to the lower parts of society that ignored the concept of equity and justice that every society demands.

Trickledown theory, however, has been found to be unsatisfactory as it failed to ensure justice in society. Despite the form of democracy practiced in Bangladesh we still have about 40% of the people living in poverty and millions of them in abject poverty. This is amply demonstrated whenever a part of our people are affected either by natural or manmade calamities they immediately ask for help from the government. This is because their existence is so fragile that by themselves they are unable to save themselves from economic ruin and provide for themselves and their families minimum sustenance. Food security is now universally recognized as a fundamental human right. The 1996 World Food Summit defined food security as "when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food which meets their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life".

Bangladesh has pledged to implement the UN Declaration on the Right to Development, which in 1986 made it the state’s responsibility to create "conditions favorable to the development of peoples and individuals". It also signed the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action adopted by the World Conference on Human Rights (which said everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for their health and well-being, including food) in 1993. The country is legally bound to implement the right to development after it ratified the International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights in 1998

According to the most recently published National Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) from 2011, 40 percent of children are too short for their age (known medically as "stunting"), a harbinger of lifelong development delays and one of the leading causes globally of brain damage. Some 36 percent of the surveyed children in Bangladesh under five were underweight for their age (showing signs of stunting, and/or "wasting" - weighing too little for their height) (Mubassha Hasan-22nd January 2013). Given the increase in population from 70 million in 1971 to 150 million today food production trebled in the same period. But there is always the specter of food insecurity looming on the horizon. If population goes on increasing at this rate then in the future it may become difficult to provide food to the total population in Bangladesh. As the international and domestic price of food items are expected to increase over the years the larger segment of the population could face both malnutrition and starvation.

Additionally one has to take into account reduced production and decrease in acreage for cultivation as result of climate change. Trans-border flight of climate refugees from Bangladesh to neighboring countries is likely to create problem along the border. So instead of becoming a middle income country is Bangladesh looking at a possible class stratification of wealthy and poverty stricken people. Could the absence of "living wage" of factory workers and logical price of farm produce ( middle men making abnormal profit) and consumers burdened with income-price disconnect while a group of plutocrats constituting an insignificant minority but owning incredible amount of wealth lead to socio-political instability in the country? In such a case can the government, regardless of the party in power at that time, be able to depend on the capacity of the law enforcing agencies to control mob violence?

It is so difficult to predict what and when people will lose their patience and take to street agitating against the authority that was thought to be impregnable. Did anyone in wildest dream could imagine that self immolation by a Tunisian vendor would cascade into Arab Spring dethroning decade old dictators in Egypt, Libya, Tunisia and now possibly in Syria?

In Bangladesh thousands of people have now taken their protest to the street demanding capital punishment for a convicted war criminal that has been given life sentence. The general expectation was that the convict, Abdul Quader Mollah, would receive capital punishment as he has been convicted of crimes against humanity. The current protest reflects peoples’ frustration over a sentence considered lenient in the light of the gravity of the crimes committed. This agitation does not have any political color nor is inspired by any political party. This is like the one in Tahrir Square, albeit of a smaller scale and is not directed against decades old dictatorial government. It is as said earlier venting peoples’ frustration over an unfulfilled expectation. In the avalanche of non-political peoples’ protests meeting some leaders of the ruling party were shouted down on suspicion that the government influenced the judgment of the War Crimes Tribunal. Such a belief may be construed as contempt of court. Yet the persistence of such opinion is a reflection of some reports by international bodies of corruption in our judiciary.

The agitators, young and old, are sitting down at the "New Generation Square" insistent on their demand that capital punishment must be given to those convicted of war crimes. The assembly is also cautious that their vigil should not be politicized. The government reportedly is considering amendment to the International Crime (Tribunals) Act 1973 to allow prosecution to appeal against any verdict especially inadequate sentences. But then unless done quickly the possibility exists that youngster-driven agitators may lose patience. Can it lead to civil commotion? Who knows?

One may also deduce that this protest is a signal to the authorities to ban religion-based political parties in Bangladesh who have now come out in their true color as an undemocratic, fascist, terrorist and communal party masquerading as a political party. While judicial recourse is still open one cannot be sure when the patience of the people will run out. It is to be understood that the trial of war criminals is to reaffirm our identity as a liberated country from bondage and aspiration for punishment to those who stood in the way to cleanse our conscience for once and for all time to come. This assembly of people from all walks of life and of all ages have sworn to continue agitation till war criminals are tried and punished, religion based political parties are banned, collaborator-financed banks and hospitals should be boycotted and facilities now being enjoyed by the collaborators should be cancelled. In short Bangladesh has to rid herself of the presence of these criminals.

Therefore a solution has to be found to promote Bangladesh’s quest for a new progressive era. It would be too easy and too quick to reach a conclusion that the agitation is centered around the demand for capital punishment for those accused of war crimes. But how can one be sure that the agitation is also not an expression of peoples’ frustration over the way the country has been ruled in the past decades—politicization of almost all segments of the society, pervasive corruption in private and public sectors, degrading moral values, selective implementation of law and order, decimation of middle class and pushing some middle class people into poverty. There can be a long list of failure of the successive governments that failed to come up to the expectations of the people and consequent feeling among the new generation of protestors of hopelessness about their future. The very fact that some Ministers were not permitted to address the gathering reflects the determined refusal of the assembly to be associated with any political party.

But for the moment the agitation is pure in its intent unspoiled by the Byzantine( in the Hegelian sense) political influence and determined to achieve their goal of a Bangladesh free of corrosive elements of a bitter past. Such a movement inspires one to believe in the success of Bangladesh’s quest for a new progressive era.

http://www.defence.pk/forums/bangladesh-defence/234547-execution-retrial.html

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Justice and Blood

Sanchita Bhattacharya
Research Associate, Institute for Conflict Management


On February 5, 2013, at least three people were killed and another 35 were injured when cadres of the Jamaat-e-Islam (JeI) and its student wing, Islami Chhatra Shibir (ICS), protesting against the ongoing War Crimes (WC) Trial, clashed with the Police during the party enforced country wide dawn-to-dusk hartal (general shut down) in Chittagong District. Two ICS cadres (Imran Khan and Afzal Hossain) and Shafiqu, a factory worker, were killed during a clash with Police. Police later arrested 15 ICS cadres from the same District. Protests and demonstrations, disrupting normal life and commercial activities, were also reported from other Districts, including Dhaka, Comilla, Rajshahi, Khulna, Sylhet, Satkhira, Bogra, Natore, Bhola, Chuadanga and Dinajpur, in which at least another 65 persons were reported injured.

Earlier, on January 31, 2013, six persons, including four JeI-ICS cadres, one Policeman and a civilian, had been killed during nationwide protests and demonstrations. In Bogra town (Bogra District), four JeI-ICS cadres were killed in a clash with Police; while another clash in the Manirampur sub-District of Jessore District saw one Police Constable killed. In Feni District, an auto rickshaw driver succumbed to his injuries after his vehicle was attacked by JeI-ICS cadres. In Jessore District, 20 people, including Policemen, were injured in clashes. Protests and demonstrations, disrupting normal life and commercial activities, were also reported from the Districts of Dhaka, Jhenaidah, Sylhet, Chittagong, Lakshmipur, Barisal, Moulvibazar and Sirajganj.

Since the constitution of International Crime Tribunal (ICT), on March 25, 2010, Bangladesh has experienced a resurgence of street violence and protests, resulting in the death of 13 people, including seven JeI-ICS cadres, five civilians and one Policeman, and injuries to another 818, including 404 Policemen, according to partial data compiled by the Institute for Conflict Management. As many as 2,691 JeI-ICS cadres have been arrested for their involvement in violence over this period.

Significantly, protests and demonstrations, culminating in street violence, have intensified in the aftermath of recent judgments pronounced by the ICT-2 against two of the seven JeI leaders indicted for war crimes during the Liberation War of 1971.

On January 21, 2013, a death sentence was meted to JeI leader Moulana Abul Kalam Azad alias Bachchu, by ICT-2 (constituted on March 22, 2012), for war crimes. The prosecution had stacked eight charges against the expelled JeI leader including: abduction and torture of Ranjit Kumar Nath; abduction and torture of Abu Yusuf Pakhi; murder of Sudhangshu Mohan Roy; murder of Madhab Chandra Biswas; rape of two Hindu women; murder of Chitta Ranjan Das; genocide of Hindu majority in Hasamdia village of Faridpur District and abduction and torture of an unnamed Hindu girl. Azad was found guilty on seven of the eight charges, including ‘genocide’, and was sentenced to be hanged by the neck till dead. However, the judgment noted, “Since the convicted accused has been absconding the ‘sentence of death’ as awarded above shall be executed after causing his arrest or when he surrenders before the Tribunal, whichever is earlier.”

Azad had escaped from Dhaka city on March 30, 2012, and went into hiding seven hours before an arrest warrant was issued by ICT-2, on April 3, 2012. According to an unnamed official of Detective Branch of Police, Azad fled to India crossing the Hilli border in the Dinajpur District of the Indian State of West Bengal illegally, and proceeded to Karachi, the provincial capital of Sindh in Pakistan, where he is currently believed to be staying. He was, however, indicted in absentia by ICT-2 on November 4, 2012.

Following the judgment, Bangladesh Foreign Minister Dipu Moni, on January 25, 2013, declared, “You know he (Bachchu) has been awarded death penalty… he’ll be brought back home as soon as possible through diplomatic efforts after being sure of his hideouts… We are carrying our coordinated efforts to that end.”

Meanwhile, on February 5, 2013, ICT-2 awarded life term imprisonment to another JeI leader Abdul Quader Molla on war crimes charge. Molla, who was arrested on July 13, 2010, in a criminal case and on August 2, 2010, was shown arrested in connection with War Crimes, was indicted by ICT-2 on May 28, 2012. The ICT-2 convicted Molla on five charges including the murder of a student, Pallab, of Bangla College; the murder of pro-Liberation poet Meherun Nesa, her mother and two brothers in the Mirpur area of Dhaka city; the murder of Khondoker Abu Taleb, also in Mirpur; the murder of 344 civilians in Alubdi village, in Mirpur; and the murder of Hazrat Ali, along with five members of his family in Mirpur area. The final verdict found the accused guilty of ‘crimes against humanity’ and sentenced him to imprisonment for life and for a second sentence of 15 years which was, however, ‘merged’ into the sentence of life imprisonment.

War crime trials for another seven indicted persons continue. They include five JeI leaders – nayeb-e-ameer (deputy chief) Delawar Hossain Sayeedi (indicted on October 3, 2011); former JeI chief Golam Azam (indicted on May 13, 2012); present JeI chief Motiur Rahman Nizami (indicted on May 28, 2012); JeI ‘general secretary’ Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mojaheed (indicted on June 21, 2012); JeI ‘assistant secretary’ Mohammed Qamaruzzaman (indicted on June 4, 2012); as well as two Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) political figures and lawmakers – Salauddin Quader Chowdhury (indicted on April 4, 2012) and Abdul Alim (indicted on June 11, 2012).

Conspicuously, reiterating that the ongoing WC trials cannot be stopped by the anti-Liberation forces by unleashing attacks and enforcing hartals, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed on January 31, 2013, categorically reiterated that the war criminals would not be spared. Sheikh Hasina said the present Government is pledge-bound to try the war criminals responsible for killing three million people and shaming many women during the Liberation War. Sheikh Hasina declared, “We’ve got a verdict against one war criminal…the verdicts against the other war criminals will come one after another and no war criminal would be spared.”

Significantly, massive and sustained protests, which commenced just hours after Molla’s sentencing, and that are still continuing, were initiated against the ‘leniency’ of the sentence imposed, and demanded the death sentence for the accused. By February 8, 2013, in what has been described as ‘Bangladesh’s Tahrir Square’, nearly 100,000 people had gathered in the Shahbag Avenue of Dhaka, demanding the death penalty for Molla. On February 10, Bangladesh Foreign Minister Dipu Moni joined the ongoing popular pro-WCT protests, even as protestors submitted a six-point demand, including the death penalty for Molla and all other war criminals, to the Speaker of the National Parliament, Abdul Hamid. The six point demand also included trial of all political parties, forces, individuals and organisations trying to save war criminals and conspiring to foil the WC trials; and revocation of the state's power to declare general amnesty for the persons convicted by the tribunals. Earlier, on February 6, 2013, residents of Thakurgaon, Chandpur, Nilphamari, Lalmonirhat, Mymensingh, Rangpur and Manikganj Districts formed human chains and took out processions demanding capital punishment for Molla.

With their very existence at stake, anti-Liberation forces can be expected to continue their efforts to discredit and subvert the WC trials and decisions. The country can, consequently, be expected to experience cycles of disruption and violence, certainly till general elections that fall due between October 26, 2013, and January 24, 2014. However, the recent and protracted mass demonstrations in favour of the trials and protesting against the ‘light sentence’ of life imprisonment imposed on the second convict, Abdul Quader Molla, have set a new dynamic into motion, and will give the Sheikh Hasina Government greater strength. The outcome of the elections of end-2013 or early 2014, however, will remain pivotal: if a hostile regime is, once more, elected, it would be likely to allow the WC trial process to fall into neglect, and to reverse the present judgments – unless the process of appeals and execution of sentences has already been completed by this stage. The present sentences are, of course, major milestones in the long, slow journey to justice for the atrocities of the 1971 Liberation War, but they are yet to secure their legitimate goal, and bring closure to this hideous phase of Bangladesh’s history.

http://www.satp.org/satporgtp/sair/index.htm#assessment2
 
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Bangladesh: Quest For a New Progressive Era:

Paper No.5387 Dated 11-Feb-2013

By Kazi Anwarul Masud


http://www.defence.pk/forums/bangladesh-defence/234547-execution-retrial.html
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This is poorly set plot to comapre Obama "progreeive era" to Shabagh fascist mob. Article left out real demands of Shahbagh mob and implication from it.




Indian propaganda machinery are at work...more to come I suppose.
 
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offtopic: i am new here , just joined today :D

topic: i need to read whole things , i need time lol
 
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Who are these SATP guys? they claim to be non government and a non profit organization @MBI Munshi
 
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