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Future Bangladesh-India relations

Indian asymmetric propaganda myth is exposed. India has been running non stop propagana on migration when infact Bangladesh became 10 destination for indian migrant workers. These workers mostly work illegally, pay no taxes and send huge amount of foreign currency through illegal channel.

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For Indians, the umbilical cord is never severed. India has now captured one-tenth of global remittance flows, making it the world's
largest single recipient.

An estimated $27.1 billion was remitted to India in 2006-2007. The Indian diaspora is estimated at 20 billion.

Migrant remittances have recently surged to the forefront of development agendas worldwide but the growth in India has been dramatic. Total remittances has grown steadily over the past 15 years, and dramatically in the past 10, skyrocketing from $2.1 billion in 1990-1991 to $27.1 billion in 2006-2007.

According to policy experts, factors responsible for the growth in remittances include the diminishing role of unofficial channels, shifting emigration patterns to high-skilled technology jobs, greater competition in the money transfer market and the strength of the Indian economy.

The top 10 destination countries for Indians include the UAE, Saudi Arabia, US, Bangladesh, Nepal, UK, Sri Lanka, Canada, Kuwait and Oman. Experts point out that softer immigration laws in the US and the search for better economic opportunities fuelled a surge in the overseas migration of Indians.

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India world's largest remittance recipient-India-The Times of India
 
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The top 10 destination countries for Indians include the UAE, Saudi Arabia, US, Bangladesh, Nepal, UK, Sri Lanka, Canada, Kuwait and Oman. Experts point out that softer immigration laws in the US and the search for better economic opportunities fuelled a surge in the overseas migration of Indians.

:rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
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Ok, on a serious note, here is data from world bank about emigration corridors

Top Migration Corridors, 2005
(number of migrants from to- in millions)

Mexico - US 10.3
Bangladesh - India 3.5
Turkey - Germany 2.7
India - UAE 2.2
Philippines - US 1.6
Afghanistan - Iran 1.6
Germany - US 1.4
Algeria - France 1.4
India - Saudi Arabia 1.3

India - Migration and Remittances Factbook 2008
 
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First this is a former Governor.. Second this not what I thought.
Did this writer just born yesterday? Did he not know that there were a mass interchange of refugee after 1947? You call them now a illegal migrant??? What a joke???



The problem of East Pakistan/Bangladesh migrants was first dealt with, after Partition, by the Nehru-Liaquat Pact of 1950. Consequently, about six lakh illegal migrants were sent back to East Pakistan.
They were illegal migrant or those are the muslim who had to run with their life from india?

Since the migrants in these districts have almost completely merged with the minority population there the problem can be seen only as part of the total minority population in these border districts.

Completely merged??? Who gave them place to stay? Where did they get the land? Did they buy them or kicked indian out of those land???

Mr. B.N. Mullik, the veteran Director of the Intelligence Bureau, had proposed a Prevention of Infiltration Programme which was implemented by the Government of India whereby about 1,50,000 illegal migrants were repatriated to East Pakistan during 1963-65.

Yes we still have the law in place (Enemy property). Any Bangladeshi who left Bangladesh after 1965 can anytime come back and claim their property. We still have them under government control. Nobody can buy or sell them. I know few cases when some indian descendant came to BD to claimed those property and sell them in open market.

he Illegal Migrants (Determination by Tribunals) Act effectively prevented even half-hearted attempts in this direction.

Is this a law?? Who made that? Don't you have faith on the legal system of your country.
Recently, our high court just gave citizenship on humanatarian ground to more than 3 lacs Indian (if i should call them as they were from India Bihar), who we used to call them as stranded pakistani as they shown allegiance to Pakistan in 1971..
Not a single person in BD raise a eyebrow on that outcome and everybody welcomed them and Govt pledged to rehabilitate them..

I hope this explanation will clear doubts among those who bought this Idiotic propaganda...
 
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Here is another old article on Illegal Immigration with focus on Assam

Bangladesh: Assam as Gateway for Illegal Immigrants

by Anand Kumar

The concern over illegal Bangladeshi immigrants has been growing in India . The state to suffer the most because of this is Assam . But what is worse, these illegal immigrants have not only got settled in Assam in large numbers, they are now using the local state machinery to legalize their status by procuring documents. And, after doing so, they are fanning out in other northeastern states. This is making the job of detection of illegal immigrants virtually impossible and has started changing the demography of even other northeastern states.

Assam shares nearly 270 km border with Bangladesh , most of which is riverine and hence difficult to fence. The lush paddy fields and the sandy, shifting plains of the mighty Brahmaputra river that divides the countries are natural transit routes. Hundreds of people come to India from Bangladesh by crossing the river with the help of rickety boats. This river is at some places about 15 km (9.5 miles) wide. As a result Assam has been acting as a gateway for Bangladeshis to enter India . This large-scale infiltration from across the border has been threatening the region's demographic profile.

Assam has been facing the problem of illegal immigration for a long time. But, its magnitude was realized only after the second reorganization of the state (1972). Between 1979 and 1985, the All Assam Students Union had spearheaded an agitation against the foreigners culminating in the August 15, 1985 Assam Accord. But, before this in 1983, the Congress government in Assam had imposed the IMDT Act which practically sealed the fate of state. Despite the signing of Assam Accord its clauses on the deportation of foreigners have still not been implemented and the issue was more or less relegated to the backburner.

There are no official figures of actual numbers of Bangladeshis in Assam . According to local estimates, their population could be six million of the state's 26 million people. According to a group of ministers on national security, there were 12 million Bangladeshi immigrants in the country in 2001 with 5 million in Assam alone. The UPA government has, however, rubbished this estimate, arguing that there is no basis for this figure. But it has acknowledged that the number is significant. Union minister of state for home Sri Prakash Jaiswal had earlier said in Parliament that there were 5 million Bangladeshi settlers in Assam . He, however, retracted the statement later under pressure.

Given the complex and politically sensitive nature of the problem, the state and central government want to go slow over the issue. But to their discomfort, this issue refuses to disappear as the magnitude of the problem is increasing.

The illegal Bangladeshis are not just beginning to emerge as a strong economic force, they are also gaining political muscle through larger numbers. A large number of them have got their names included in the electoral rolls of the state. They have become dominant in five districts of Assam and have become a decisive factor in at least 56 of the state's 126 assembly constituencies. Due to this, locals fear gradual transfer of power in the hands of these migrants as their number is increasing. Besides, the increasing number of Bangladeshi immigrants is also leading to law and order problem in many areas of Assam and elsewhere.

This problem was highlighted by Lt. Gen. (Retd.) S K Sinha, the then governor of Assam , in November 1998, in a report to the President. In his assessment he had said, "As a result of population movement from Bangladesh , the specter looms large of the indigenous people of Assam being reduced to a minority in their home state. Their cultural survival will be in jeopardy, their political control will be weakened and their employment opportunities will be undermined. This silent and invidious demographic invasion of Assam may result in the loss of the geo-strategically vital districts of Lower Assam . The influx of these illegal migrants is turning these districts into a Muslim majority region. It will then only be a matter of time when a demand for their merger with Bangladesh may be made. He feared that this may ultimately result in loss of entire northeast to India . But Tarun Gogoi, the then Assam Congress chief demanded his recall because he had cast an "aspersion" on the loyalty and the commitment of the Muslims to the country.

Similar report has been prepared by the present Assam Governor Lt. Gen (retd) Ajai Singh. This report also expresses concern over large-scale infiltration from across the border with Bangladesh . The outgoing judge of the IMDT Tribunal, which is supposed to detect and deport infiltrators, has also admitted that infiltration is continuing on a large scale.

The issue of illegal immigration figured prominently during the Chief Minister's Conference on Internal Security and Law and Order, held in New Delhi on April 15. In this conference serious differences emerged among the northeastern states on this issue and some states even openly accused Assam of contributing to the illegal immigration problem in northeast. The Nagaland Chief Minister virtually charged Assam for not taking any step to check it. He said, " Assam has almost become a breeding ground for illegal migrants as they are procuring documents like ration cards there and then coming to the hills, this is very dangerous." Rio also claimed that such migrants were being settled in disputed areas between Assam and several other states. He also urged Assam to settle the decades-long boundary disputes with Meghalaya, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland and Manipur in an accommodative spirit as it was the largest state in the region.

To deal with this alarming situation, the northeastern chief ministers asked the Centre to increase security along the international borders and help them strengthen their police forces. Meghalaya Chief Minister D D Lapang said, "The Centre should strengthen the presence of Border Security Force along the borders with Bangladesh should enhance its manpower and modernize its mechanism for checking immigration. We also expect financial support for modernizing our police forces." Similar sentiments were also expressed by Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Gegong Apang, Manipur CM O Ibobi Singh, Mizoram CM Zoramthanga and Nagaland CM Neiphiu Rio. They also stated that they were willing to consider the offer of centre of a unified command with an open mind.

The states argued that illegal migration has increased manifold and was posing a security threat. West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadev Bhattacharya even sought Central intervention, alleging that Pakistan s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) was making use of the porous border. It is believed that Pakistani ISI, encouraged by the findings of Census 2001, has launched Operation "PIN Code," to bring the Northeast under Islamic umbrella through demographic invasion. It is helped in this effort by the Bangladeshi policy of transferring its surplus population to India .

The complaints of northeastern chief ministers forced the Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi to contemplate some action. After a meeting with the Prime Minister on May 5, Gogoi said that all foreigners who entered Assam after March 24, 1971 the day before Mujibur Rehman made his call for an Independent Bangladesh will be detected and deported. He said, The state government, the Centre and the All Assam Students Union (AASU) are in agreement over this. There are no two opinions. The only difference is in the method we will use to find the foreigners. Gogoi said that the state government was in favour of using the Illegal Migrants Determination Tribunal (IMDT) for the purpose, since it provides for the natural justice of the judicial system. He also demanded at least two more BSF battalions to man an additional 18 outposts as a second line of defence against infiltrators from Bangladesh .

But towards the end of April, a youth organization, Chiring Chapori Yuva Mancha began a campaign against the illegal Bangladeshi immigrants. This organization of Dibrugarh announced economic sanctions against Bangladeshi migrants, triggering an exodus of suspected illegal settlers from the town. This development caused complete change in the stand of Assam Chief Minister.

With less than a year to go for assembly elections in Assam , Gogoi feared its implications on his political fortune. He lost no time in dubbing the campaign by the Chiring Chapori Yuva Mancha as a game plan of the BJP. He even went to the extent of saying that those who left Dibrugarh were not Bangladeshis but Indian citizens. However, he rhetorically repeated that his government was committed to detecting and deporting illegal migrants from Assam .

Just few weeks ago, Assam Chief Minister had informed the Supreme Court that "large-scale illegal immigration from Bangladesh " was a problem. But, now he changed his position and said that he does not consider the influx "threatening". He also claimed that infiltration was on the decline over the last three years.

Along with the Assam government, the central government also seems to have taken a U-turn on its resolve to deport at least 3,000 Bangladeshi migrants every month. The Union Home Ministry decided to do a rethink on the policy, as it felt the deportation exercise was unimplementable. Officials of the ministry say that this rethink was due to reluctance of Bangladesh Rifles to take back the migrant Bangladeshis. Besides, the ministry feels that pushing back of illegal migrants was an inhuman practice and will not be encouraged under any circumstances. It is now treating the issue of illegal migrants as a human problem.

The ministry also says that according to international law and convention, after an illegal immigrant is refused Bangladeshi citizenship, India has to allow them to stay on till a decision is reached on their citizenship status. The government is also reportedly planning to give them a resident card instead of a citizenship card.

Indian Home Minister Shivraj Patil on May 24 stated that the issue of illegal Bangladeshi immigrants in the country "should not be raised so much that it spoils relations with the neighbouring country" especially at a time when the country is engaged in confidence building measures with its neighbours like Pakistan and China . Earlier, after the chief ministers conference in New Delhi , Patil had declared that the problem of Bangladeshi immigrants had to be handled in a humane manner.

The Border Security Force is also now reportedly unwilling to take this exercise of deporting illegal immigrants. It argues that looking after the migrants once the BDR refuses to allow them in Bangladeshi territory is becoming a huge drain on its resources.

No doubt, the forcible pushing back of illegal Bangladeshi immigrants is not going to solve the problem, given its magnitude. But, at the same time, the government can not afford to give the message that it has given up. Moreover, the stringent measures taken by the BSF against the illegal migrants also acts as a deterrent and conveys the message that they are not welcome and may be punished if caught.

Though, the fencing of the border is the most effective way to check this influx, it will not eliminate the problem. This is because at least a thousand kilometer of the Indo-Bangladesh border can not be simply fenced as it is riverine. Thus the fencing, in any case would have to be complemented with a strong and effective border patrolling.

The difficulties of handling the problem of illegal immigration should not make the government give up. Instead, it calls for a greater preparation to deal with the issue. The magnitude of the problem and its spread beyond a state or two ask for creation of a special government department which handles only the issue of illegal migration from Bangladesh . To send these migrants back to their country would require a nodal agency which can coordinate with security forces, foreign policy establishment and local state machinery. This job can not be done only by the BSF. New departments were created even in the US after the attack on twin towers to handle the menace of terrorism. India also need better preparation to manage the problem of illegal immigration, which if ignored can seriously harm its internal security. It could also prove to be a big destabilizing factor by causing social tension in different parts of the country.

Unfortunately, so far state government has not done anything which inspires confidence in its sincerity. On the contrary, the statements given by both the state as well as central ministers give the impression that now they have assumed that the problem of illegal immigration is unsolvable. Probably, they now hope that the issue would die down with the passage of time. As the illegal immigrants spill over to the neighbouring states, it will be only a matter of time before they start calling shots in even those states. As of now, India appears to be ceding ground to these migrants. If no concerted effort is made to check the menace, it will not be long before our eastern neighbour fulfills its objective of greater Bangladesh .
 
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I hope this explanation will clear doubts among those who bought this Idiotic propaganda...

It is not a propaganda, it is a truth which no body wants to agree. Just search for Bangladesh Illegal immigration, yo will find plethora of articles on this.

Here is another article of immigrants who have even acquired voter IDs. This is all because of the endemic corruption in India which is allowing this to happen.

22 illegal immigrants from Bangladesh held

Staff Reporter
HYDERABAD: Twentytwo Bangladeshis, who illegally migrated to Hyderabad and even secured ration and voter identity cards, were arrested by the city police here on Monday.

While some of them had been living here for years, a few arrived in the past six months, Commissioner’s Task Force DCP V.B. Kamalasan Reddy said. The arrests were made during the raids at Jirra, Muradnagar and Zebabagh in Asifnagar and Mir Alam Mandi in the old city in the backdrop of an alert that four Bangladeshi nationals were planning terror strikes in the city.

The Bangladeshis confessed to the police that they managed to sneak into India by bribing brokers at the bordering towns like Raj Sahi and Murshidabad. The DCP said Bangladeshi brokers A.R. Mohammad and Doctor Saab helped them cross the border. Three of them - Ateeq, Saifuddin and Syed Anwar - married Hyderabadi women. The arrested illegal migrants included two women. Most of them were into the business of making bags. Mr. Reddy said the police were suspecting that many more Bangladesh nationals had migrated in a similar fashion and living here illegally.
 
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This is a century old problem in Asam. In 1947 when Sylhet got out of Asam through referendum there were a mass procession in Shilong as they saw that as if they were gotten rid of dominant Bengalis and they were happy. I could say that as I am a sylhety and we were a part of Asam once :smitten::smitten:

The problem now in Asam is just a conflict between dominant Bengalis and backward Asamis. Its easier to label somebody as Bangladeshi instead of Bengalis and gain sympathy from center..
India need to deal with that as it is your internal problem.. Dont label them as Bangladeshi.
 
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The Bangladeshis confessed to the police that they managed to sneak into India by bribing brokers at the bordering towns like Raj Sahi and Murshidabad. The DCP said Bangladeshi brokers A.R. Mohammad and Doctor Saab helped them cross the border. Three of them - Ateeq, Saifuddin and Syed Anwar - married Hyderabadi women.

Way to go.... Not even ration card, but they could even manage to get married in India??? They should be given heroes welcome in Bangladesh... Just a joke..:victory:
 
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AIDS Threat to Bangladesh from India

Mohammad Zainal Abedin - 10/24/2005

Indian demand for corridor, under the guise of transit must be thwarted to keep it free from HIV/AIDS, as it will spread the menace in the country rapidly. India is now the largest AIDs and HIV contaminated country in the world. According to Feacham, Executive Director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, India has outstripped South Africa and has more people living with AIDS than any other country. Being the second largest populous country in the world, it will not be strange if India have already outstripped South Africa. While UNAIDS puts the Indian figure at 5.1 million, Feacham said that, with the speed at which the disease was spreading, the figure in India must by now exceed the South African figure of 5.3 million. Feacham suspected that the figure in India might already have crossed 1 per cent of the population and what really set the alarm bells ringing, as WHO, UNAIDS and Indian Council of Medical Research, some experts put the figure at 8 million (India sitting on AIDS bomb?-India-The Times of India).

On the other hand the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency has forecast the number of people with HIV/AIDS in India could touch 20 million by 2010.

The rapid spreads of the menace among the Indian security forces, particularly deployed in the India's Northeastern states having common borders with Bangladesh, indicates how seriously the disease is spreading in India, which poses serious threat to Bangladesh. Indian security forces, particularly, Assam Rifles, officially admitted the presence of HIV/AIDS virus among many of its jawans. Sensing the imminent danger, Indian Defence authorities have asked soldiers battling violent separatist insurgencies in India's troubled northeast to carry condoms to prevent contracting HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

Assam Rifles jawans top in the list to have endured with AIDS/ HIV while among the three defence forces Army jawans rank highest to have contacted with this dreaded diseases, said Director General of Armed Forces Medical Services (DGFAMS), V.K. Singh.Assam Rifles Chief, Lieutenant General Bhopinder Singh revealed that 141 of his jawans have been tested AIDS/HIV positive and presently are undergoing medical treatment while 32 others have died(http://northeasttribune.com/4805.htm).

As a preventive measure, on the other hand, India's President A J Abdul Kalam said all new recruits to the country's armed forces would be tested for the HIV virus after the deaths of some 200 soldiers due to AIDS in the past two years.

"The military will be testing for HIV in new recruits and undertake pre-natal examination of wives of personnel in the services," President Abdul Kalam said recently at an army seminar in Shillong in India's restive northeast where thousands of troops are posted to "fight separatist rebels." Officials said the HIV testing would start this October.

"HIV/AIDS has become a security threat to India ," Lieutenant-General Bhupinder Singh told the seminar. "AIDS is no less destructive than war itself. We want to keep our force fighting fit." Government records show more than 300 soldiers are currently infected with the HIV virus (http://in.today.reuters.com/news/Ne...130634Z_01_NOOTR_RTRJONC_0_India-217221-1.xml).

To avert the disease, Vice Admiral V.K. Singh, Director General of the Armed Forces Medical Services, told soldiers at an army cantonment in the Meghalaya state capital Shillong to use condom during extra-marital sexual intercourses. "We have instructed our men to carry stocks of condoms to prevent contracting HIV-AIDS while working in vulnerable areas," he acknowledged.

The directive to carry condoms comes after army and paramilitary authorities in the northeast confirmed that scores of soldiers deployed in the region were struck by HIV, with promiscuous sex being the main reason for contracting the deadly virus.

The paramilitary Assam Rifles was the first to officially acknowledge the presence of a large number of soldiers afflicted with HIV-AIDS, although other army and paramilitary units in the Northeast are yet to come up with a formal
assessment(Condoms for troops battling N-E rebels-India-The Times of India).

The instruction for precautionary measures and warning from the head of the state did not come without sufficient reason. But they deliberately bypassed one reason of taking so much precautionary measures, including testing the wives of the jawans. The most serious reason was the threat of the Northeast rebels. The Times of India in a despatch on September 26, 2005, said, "Insurgent groups in the Northeast are now threatening to use a new weapon against India's security forces."

The Assam Rifles has received threats from the militants that they would let loose HIV infected women to spread the disease among jawans posted in the region. The
DG of Assam Rifles, Lt. Gen. Bhoopinder Singh acknowledged that they received threats from the insurgent groups fighting to secede their regions from India. "The insurgent groups will unleash women infected with HIV to spread the disease among our jawans as a way to neutralising the security forces. . Criminals groups are also trying to infect gullible young girls of this region with the virus in order to leave a trail of HIV in the region."

The Additional Project Director of National Aids Control Organisation (NACO) N S Dharmashaktu informed, "Insurgent groups are now trying new, less expensive ways to attack our forces. Biological warfare has become a reality. AIDS can be quite a deadly weapon. It does not need money, sophisticated weapons and manpower. All they have to do is infect young hapless girls of the region with AIDS and let them inflect our security forcers with the disease."

The precautionary measures taken by the concerned Indian authorities indicate that AIDS emerges as such a menace for Assam Rifles that it has already claimed the lives of 40 Assam Rifles jawans, while 139 other are lying infected. Assam Rifles is spending Rs. 2 crore annually on the caretaking programmme of the inflected jawans. It has established a three-tier HIV/AIDS control faciltieis in the regin. An AIDS centre at CPAR Hospital at Sukhoi is being set up. Over 40 treatment detection centres have also been established. It is also upgrading 30-bed existing unit to 50-bed nodal centres in Shilong of Meghalaya. Over 275 testing and reporting centres have also been built at all company posts where the samples will be collected. Knowledgeable sources believe that the situation in other branches of Indian security services are equally dangerous, which are kept hidden under the blanket of secrecy. Indian authorities for obvious reason do not disclose the deteriorating health situation in the Armed Forces. The comments of several officials, even the suggestion of the President, to test the jawans before their recruit and even their wives unveils the gravity of AIDS menace in the Armed Forces and the common people as well.

This also reveals the truth that Indian soldiers are morally bankrupt and India officially allows them to be bankrupt through commiting such immoral and illegal act of sexual relations. If the jawans are officially allowed to have illegal sexual transactions, the wives of these jawans will automatically indulge in same immoral acts with their boyfriends. The process will automatically lead India to a greater Bothell

Sex is now a booming industry in India. India now earns crores of rupees every by selling the flesh of its girls and young women. People of different age group from several countries particularly from Bangladesh and Middle Eastern countries throng India to buy sex. As a result, HIV and AIDS virus spread in India in an alarmingly way.

Security forces of any country, are to maintain generally restricted and regulated life. If the position of the Indian security forces is so serious the condition of the common people is more dangerous. The disease surely has spread among the common people more horribly. So being a neighbouring country Bangladesh faces a serious threat to HIV/AIDS virus. It can spread in Bangladesh in various ways. Indian truck drivers, helpers and labourers who illegally enter and stay inside Bangladesh territory near the land ports exchange sex with the local prostitutes.

About 2,000 Indian trucks enter Bangladesh daily. If even a microscopic number these Indian truckers, are infected with HIV or AIDS virus, it will surely spread in Bangladesh.

The disease can also spread in Bangladesh through the Indian businessmen and tourists and illegal Indians, who frequently enter Bangladesh. Indians can enter Bangladesh from three sides and all the states neighbouring Bangladesh have strong presence of HIV/AIDS.

Preventive measures should be taken immediately. Number of truckers, businessmen, tourists and illegal Indians must be restricted immediately.

Illegal intrusion should be stopped at any cost. Law enforcers should remain vigil to deter the entrance of the illegal Indians. Bangladesh missions in India must seek health certificates from the Indians before issuing visa.

HIV/AIDS virus testing machines, if possible, in all the entry point of Bangladesh to avert the spread of the disease.

Under this situation, if transit is given to India, Bangladesh will not be able to get rid of the menace of HIV/AIDS virus. So the pressure of providing corridor to India in the name of transit must be thwarted not only for economic and military reasons, but also keep Bangladesh free of the AIDS threat from India.
 
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I seriously doubt this...this is published in 2005 in BD site. No where else. Such incident could have catched indian media in no time. There would be bribe at local level for politics. But i really suspect at international level

For all thes indians in denial and habit of serial lying, link from South Asia Tribune already provided.

Indian Officials Harassing South Asia Tribune New Delhi Correspondent


Nadeem first tried to bribe Rajnath and offered to pay Rs10,000 per month for writing one story per month against Pakistan or Bangladesh or Nepal or Hurriyat Conference or Naxalites or any one else suggested by the security agencies.

http://antisystemic.org/satribune/www.satribune.com/archives/200507/P1_harass.htm
 
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I heard that bangladesh is thinking to help Indian east states by offering the service of its ports. If this goes through a big market opens between two countries. Once the finance comes to mind both countries try to maintain good relations..

Hope for the best
 
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Ok, on a serious note, here is data from world bank about emigration corridors

Top Migration Corridors, 2005
(number of migrants from to- in millions)

Mexico - US 10.3
Bangladesh - India 3.5
Turkey - Germany 2.7
India - UAE 2.2
Philippines - US 1.6
Afghanistan - Iran 1.6
Germany - US 1.4
Algeria - France 1.4
India - Saudi Arabia 1.3

you are seriously deceiving people when you left out rest of the data where it shows there one million migration from India -Bangladesh corridor.

India–Bangladesh 1.0 (million)

Besides, Bangaldesh became top destination for Indian migrants came from indian source - Times of India. Since you embarrass yourself already I will just leave it that.
 
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‘Indian agencies offer money to write against Bangladesh’


Indian intelligence agencies offer ‘handsome money’ to journalists to write articles against Bangladesh, and two other neighbouring countries, claimed an Indian journalist.
Arun Rajnath, New Delhi correspondent of the Washington-based online newspaper South Asian Tribune, said he was offered Rs 10,000 per month to write a story against Bangladesh, Pakistan or Nepal. Rajnath’s revelation was published in a special report of the newspaper headlined ‘Indian Officials Harassing South Asia Tribune New Delhi Correspondent’ on July 27.


The report, which had detailed description of the Indian intelligence agencies’ clout on Indian journalists, captures glimpses of the harassment towards journalists who refuse to comply with official directives.
After refusing to be on the payroll of an intelligence agency, Rajnath, who writes on the Indian army and Kashmir, was refused accreditation by the external affairs ministry, and he became the target of frequent intimidating phone calls from the intelligence men.
The correspondent claimed that many top Indian journalists covering news relating external affairs, home, and defence were on the payroll of the security agencies or the ministries concerned, and regularly receive ‘handsome compensation packages’.
Commenting on the report, a Bangladeshi intelligence expert said they have reports that not only Indian journalists, but also a number of Bangladeshi writers are on the payroll of Indian sources.
Mentioning a lack of resources and motivation on the part of Bangladesh’s intelligence agencies, he said, ‘Very little can be done in the existing situation.’

http://www.newagebd.com/2005/aug/08/front.html#e

thanks for the info...but these sort of news are not new thogh...
 
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