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India working to make Bangladesh a desert

Not even you and your BD government can prove that the dam which is being built by India will make BD a desert.

Any proof abt that allegation?? Not a single Bangladeshi has been killed on the other side of the fence. You guys shd be shameful to yourself. You kill your own people because you can not feed them and then say that they are killed by BSF...How pathetic your thinking is.

Its our land. We can build wall and we can have fencing. Whats your concern??? Our territory does not operate ob BD commands. If we think that there should be electric fencing with 30000V then we install that fencing also. Our citizens comes first for us.

And wat abt the BD rifles killing innocent Indian farmers and BSF jawans???

It you were able to take care of your citizen then perhaps we could have spent more money on our development instead of installing a fence.

I ve not seen a pathetic person like u, don't think every one has a mentality like u, BSF has not kiled any Bengali its jsut that BD kills it ppl, BSF is composed of angels or what wow, do u want me to quote hundreds of articles about the acts performed by BSF, have some sense for God sake....
Do have any proof that 3 crore BD ppl are in India?
If u accuse Bengali immigrants then this logic can also be applied to Indian ppl who migrate to other countries for better lives
Now for water Issue, my dear do u know about Farraka Dam, water is not need of Indians only, Humans do live outside Indian borders...

Farakka dam blamed as many rivers dying
Farakka dam

Over 80 rivers of the country dried up during last three decades due to the construction of the Farakka barrage on the Indian side of the river Ganges, reports BSS.

In addition, 100 other rivers in the Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna basins are also heading towards forced deaths as their existence is under great threat, LGRD and Cooperatives Minister Abdul Mannan Bhuiyan said in city Monday.

"Bangladesh has been put into a man-made disaster through the unilateral withdrawal of waters in the upstream by the Farakka barrage," Bhuiyan said at a seminar held at the DPHE Bhaban.

The NGO Forum for Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation in collaboration with the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the Department of Public Health and Engineering (DPHE) organised the seminar titled "Water: The Friend and Foe of Mankind' in observance of the World Water Day.

Mannan Bhuiyan said the unilateral withdrawal of waters from the upstream has posed serious threat to the ecology and biodiversity in Bangladesh.

The largest mangrove forest, the Sundarbans, is on the verge of destruction because of lack of sweet water and increase of salinity in the rivers, he added.

The LGRD minister, also the secretary general of BNP, said the government has raised strong protest against the Indian inter river-linking plan, which would jeopardise lives and livelihoods of over 10 crore people in Bangladesh.

Danish Ambassador to Bangladesh in his speech at the function said the dwindling surface water has posed a serious threat to crops and agriculture as well as environment of the country. He said the safe and reliable drinking water has also become a major challenge in today's Bangladesh.

The decline of sweet water invited intrusion of saline water in croplands, while the over extraction of ground water made millions inaccessible to safe drinking water especially with arsenic contamination
http://www.bangladesh-web.com/view.php?hidRecord=4336
 
False figures??? If you think that BBC gives wrong figure then ask your BD govt. to provide it.

If you will insult my country and in this case you are doing so you will not get flowers in return. If you will say anything against my country and the result will be brutal.

Because BD is a small country does not mean that what ever they are saying is correct.

---------- Post added at 07:20 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:19 PM ----------

IndiaDaily - Bangladeshi illegal immigrants start to flee Assam, India because of threats from anonymous groups – Manmohan Government could have avoided the chaos

Every day around 6,000 illegal Bangladeshi infiltrators cross the border and enter Assam, India. Many of these are Islamic militants with links to Al-Queda.

Right from beginning in order to get minority votes, the Congress led UPA Government in India have taken little steps to deport millions of illegal immigrants from Bangladesh. The local people in Assam have lost jobs, their cultural heritage and their national identity because of the se illegal immigrants. Their hatred has finally manifested towards India and especially towards Indian citizens from West Bengal.

The government and the students union signed a pact in 1985 for deportation of illegal Bangladeshi immigrants, but believe it or not, clauses on the deportation of foreigners have still not been implemented. Twenty years of inaction is taking violent shape now.

Now a new turn in the equation has taken place. According to media reports for Assam, thousands of Bangladeshis are fleeing Assam following threats by anonymous groups against migrants and a campaign asking locals not to employ foreigners, officials and residents said.

The unidentified groups in the troubled state's Dibrugarh district have circulated leaflets and sent text messages on mobile phones in the past week, warning Bangladeshi nationals to leave immediately or face unspecified action.

India has fenced parts of the 4,000-km border with Bangladesh, but officials say this has done little to deter migrants bent on leaving one of the world's poorest countries.

Assam shares a 272 km porous border with Bangladesh, a vast stretch of which is unfenced.

"Fencing along the border with Bangladesh in this sector has started to prevent illegal infiltration," said federal Home Secretary V.K. Duggal.

"Legal and judicial measures have also been adopted to deport illegal Bangladeshi settlers from the country."

"Every day around 6,000 illegal infiltrators cross the border and enter the state," said an intelligence official in Guwahati, the state's main city.

Mobile phones in Assam are being flooded with text messages saying, "Save the nation, save identity. Let's take an oath ... no food, no job, no shelter to Bangladeshis" while leaflets seeking an "economic blockade" of the migrants are also being distributed.

Congress Government could have taken appropriate actions coordinated with the Bangladesh Government to avoid these “citizen’s action and arrests”.

"Many laborers working in brick kilns, rickshaws pullers and construction workers have fled in the past one week due to the threat," said P.C. Saloi, superintendent of police in Dibrugarh.

Over the years, millions of illegal Bangladeshi migrants have swamped the tea-growing and oil-rich state in search for work and food.

Over two years ago, the government estimated there could be up to 20 million illegal Bangladeshi immigrants in India, and labeled some of them a security risk.

In the early 1980s, the powerful All Assam Students Union launched a bloody campaign to push Bangladeshis back to their homeland.

Indigenous people in Assam and other Northeastern states of India who feared they would be reduced to a minority in their own land massacred thousands of Bangladeshis, including women and children, across the state.

The campaign against the Bangladeshis has mushroomed into a full-fledged uprising against New Delhi's rule and many rebel groups are still battling for independence.

The lush paddy fields and the sandy, shifting plains of the mighty Brahmaputra river that divides the countries are natural transit routes. Hundreds take rickety boats across the river, which at some places is 15 km wide, into India.

The migrants become farmhands or river fishermen in villages. In towns they are often construction workers or rickshaw pullers, and the women work as maids.

Since the latest campaign against Bangladeshis began, rickshaw pullers in Assam have gone off the road, maids have stopped coming to work and there is a shortage of eggs and chickens as most vendors were Bangladeshi. Brick kilns have been closed due to shortage of labor.

Though there are no officials figures of actual numbers of Bangladeshis in Assam, locals say their population could be six million of the state's 26 million people.

Police said most of the fleeing Bangladeshi have now moved to districts close to the border with Bangladesh.

"The police have been put on maximum alert and instructions have been given that no genuine citizens are harassed and no communal clashes take place in disturbed areas," said Rockybul Hussain, Assam's minister for home.

This is only to be expected...if the government does not act the citizens will.India or any country in the world should not be overrun by illegal immigrants.
 
I ve not seen a pathetic person like u, don't think every one has a mentality like u, BSF has not kiled any Bengali its jsut that BD kills it ppl, BSF is composed of angels or what wow, do u want me to quote hundreds of articles about the acts performed by BSF, have some sense for God sake....
Do have any proof that 3 crore BD ppl are in India?
If u accuse Bengali immigrants then this logic can also be applied to Indian ppl who migrate to other countries for better lives
Now for water Issue, my dear do u know about Farraka Dam, water is not need of Indians only, Humans do live outside Indian borders...

Even I have not seen a pathetic person like you. I dont know abt others but I am quite sure that all Pakistanis and Bangladeshis have same mentality as you have. What do you expect from BSF?? To give a safe passage to BD'S?? Why on earth we will allow BD'S to ender our land. For what they are?? Now one in this forum was criticizing installing of fens on our land. Why?? If not a single BD is entering our land then why such protest. IF BSF is not composed of angels then I am quite sure an angel is not posting here. BD rifles at the same time killing Indians also and that too in large number.

And for your last line Humans live inside India as well............
 
False figures??? If you think that BBC gives wrong figure then ask your BD govt. to provide it.
Yes, your 30 million or 300 million figure is wrong and biased. Does your govt have any census on that, or you are just referring to BJP statements? Ask your govt to send the illegals back, if there are any. Otherwise they will capture your land and build another Muslim country in India. They are very dangerous.

So, be quick to send them back instead of making fuss here. Stick to the water issue. If you have other issues, then you are free to open a new thread. Why are you so intent on destroying this thread?
 
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Yes, your 30 million or 300 million figure is wrong and biased. Does your govt have any census on that, or you are just referring to BJP statements? Ask your govt to send the illegals back, if there are any. Otherwise they will capture your land and build another Muslim country in India. They are very dangerous.

So, be quick to send them back instead of making fuss here. Stick to the water issue. If you have other issues, then you are free to open a new thread. Why are you so intent on destroying this thread?

We tried to send it back but your govt. refused. Not possible to capture our land now because Indian Muslims are with India and not with BD.

Its you only who diverted the topic. You made allegations and got the answers and when you are not in a position to refute the arguments you simply said stick to the topic....

Well stick to the topic......
 
and plz dont say that my link is biased just because it has been provided by an Indian website.

India has barbed wire fences along the border. So, you want to say BD is technologically so advanced that it can fit all these illegals with motorized machines to fly over your fences and go to Assam. Perhaps, BD also has the stealth technology to hide them from BSF guns. Your news reporters must be smoking GANJA before writing unreal things.
 
India has barbed wire fences along the border. So, you want to say BD is technologically so advanced that it can fit all these illegals with motorized machines to fly over your fences and go to Assam. Perhaps, BD also has the stealth technology to hide them from BSF guns. Your news reporters must be smoking GANJA before writing unreal things.

Now thats the most crap reply in this forum. I do agree that BD can never provide any High tech machine to fly over the fences:yahoo: but you should keep in mind that fencing is not completed yet. It is going on and most of the boundary is still unfenced. I think your government must have smoked CHARAS before making such allegations.
 
The Daily Star - Details News

Saturday, July 11, 2009
India's water diversion policy may turn on itself
A. M. Ahad /driknews
Barrister Harun ur Rashid

THE Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna flow through Bangladesh from India until they fall into the Bay of Bengal, creating one of the biggest deltas in the world. It is estimated that 25,000 square miles within Bangladesh can be designated as delta, an area equal to Belgium and the Netherlands.

Unilateral water diversion or withdrawal of water from trans-boundary or international rivers has been the long-standing policy of India. Without any agreement with Bangladesh it has steadily embarked on constructing dam or diverting water from many trans-boundary rivers, such as Teesta, Gumti, Khowai, Dharla, Dudkumar, Monu. India had reportedly blocked streams of rivers such as Muhuri, Chagalnaiya, Fulchari, Kachua and many others in Tripura flowing into Bangladesh.

Since the trans-boundary rivers are within the territory of India, it did not discuss and come to agreement with Bangladesh on the blockage or diversion of use of waters of rivers, although the Indo-Bangladesh Joint River Commission exists since 1972.

On sharing of “common rivers”, Article 9 of the 1996 Ganges Water Treaty obliges India to conclude “water sharing treaties/agreements” with Bangladesh “on principles of equity, fairness and no harm to either party.”

Depletion of water in trans-boundary rivers in India has thrown Bangladesh in a very critical state, especially in navigation, agriculture, and way of life. Farmers, fishermen and forests are all adversely affected by depletion of water in rivers.

Bangladesh will need to increase its agricultural yield about 2% per cent per year to meet the needs of the population that will increase to 200 million by 2020. To cope with the situation, Bangladesh must rely on surface water from rivers instead of withdrawal of ground water presently being practiced.

It is noted that increased flow of waters in Bangladesh Rivers will be of great benefit to India as well. Under an agreement with Bangladesh, India has been given permission to transport its goods through river crafts to its seven eastern states that are landlocked.

The river routes Kolkata-Chandpur-Chilmari-Dubri and Kolkata-Chandpur-Bhairab Bazar-Zakiganj-Karimganj are hardly being used by India because of lack of depth of water in the rivers. Furthermore Chittagong and Mongla ports together with adequate channel-depth of Bangladesh rivers could be utilized by both Nepal and Bhutan.

Tipaimukh Dam

The construction of Tipaimukh dam for generating 1500MW on the trans-boundary Barak River has raised hue and cry both in Manipur state in India and in Bangladesh.

The construction of the proposed Tipaimukh dam in a geologically sensitive zone, adjacent to the well recognized Taithu Fault is a major concern. A major earthquake may cause the failure of the dam and endanger the lives, land and forest of both India and Bangladesh.

The risk of dam failure is a significant issue. A dam-break is a catastrophic failure which results in the sudden draining of the reservoir and a severe flood wave that may cause destruction and deaths downstream in Bangladesh.

It is reported that Dr. Soibam Ibotombi of the Department of Earth Sciences, Manipur University,(India), in an article, mentioned that the “Tipaimukh dam is a geo-tectonic blunder of international dimensions.”

Besides being criticised for technical and environmental grounds by many experts both in India and Bangladesh, it may be strongly argued the proposed dam is, among others, contrary to:

The 1997 UN Convention on the Law of Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses

Fourth preambular paragraph of the Indo-Bangladesh 1996 Ganges Water Treaty

Article 6 of the 1989 ILO Convention concerning Indigenous and Tribal Peoples

The 1992 Convention on Biological Diversity.

Although India may not be a party to the 1997 Convention or 1992 Biodiversity Convention, India as a regional power may demonstrate its leadership in South Asia by complying with the globally accepted Conventions.

It is good to note that a parliamentary delegation from Bangladesh is going to visit the site, assess the impact on Bangladesh and report to parliament in due course.

China's proposed diversion of water from the Tibetan plateau

According to an Indian Professor of Strategic Studies at Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi, Brahma Chellaney, China's intensive farming needs water and it is increasingly turning its attention to water reserves of the Tibetan plateau. China is presently toying with massive inter-basin and inter-river water transfer projects.

According to a report by the same Indian writer, China attempts to redirect northward the flow of waters from the Tibetan plateau. The Tibetan plateau is the Principal Asian Watershed and source of ten major rivers.

It is roughly estimated that 10-20% of the Himalayan region is covered by glaciers while an additional area ranging from 30-40% has seasonal snow cover. Himalayan glaciers cover around 100,000 sq km and store about 12,000 cubic km of fresh water: the most incredible water tank in the world.

Tibet water travel to eleven countries and are said to bring fresh water to over 85% of Asian population, approximately 50% of world's population. Four of the world's ten rivers the Brahmaputra, Indus, Yangtze, and Mekong have their head water on the Tibetan plateau.

South Asia is mainly concerned with Brahmaputra, Indus, Sutlej, Arun, Karnali, whose water is life line for more than one billion people living downstream. The Brahmaputra River is considered to be the highest river on earth with an average altitude of 4,000 meters. It runs 2,057 kilometres in Tibet before flowing into India, where it becomes the Brahmaputra. One of its interesting characteristics is the 'SHARP U-TURN' it takes at the proximity of Mt. Namcha Barwa (7,782 meters) near the Indian border.

Several Chinese projects in west-central Tibet have a bearing on river-water flows into India but it claims that China refuses to share information with it. Indian writer Chellaney has disclosed two Chinese projects that are likely to affect India adversely.

One is the proposed Great South-North Water Transfer project diverting Tibetan waters and the first phase for building 300 kilometres of tunnels and channels to draw water from the Jingsha, Yalong and Dadu rivers on the eastern rim of the Tibetan plateau.

The second phase of the project is more damaging because it proposes to re-route Tsangpo/Brahmaputra waters northward before it enters India.

Although Chinese government claims that the project is still at a conceptual stage, it is reported in foreign media that work of the project has already begun with the target to finish it in next five to seven years.

Now India became aware of its rights when China wants to divert waters from Tsangpo/Brahmaputra river. China is reportedly doing the same thing with India as India did with its rivers in relation to Bangladesh.

Water-related conflicts

Fresh water is becoming scarce according to a UNESCO study. Population growth, pollution and climate change will combine to produce a drastic decline in water supply in the years ahead. Underground water is diminishing rapidly. It has been reported that across Asia, Africa and Latin America, ground water level are dropping as much as three metres a year.

The study suggests that if pollution keeps pace with population growth, the world will in effect lose 18,000 cubic kilometres by 2050: almost nine times the amount all countries will lose for use for irrigation.

The average supply of water is expected to drop by one-third within twenty years. UNESCO points out that up to 7 billion people could face water shortages by 2020 and global warming may put 50 countries with severe water shortages. South Asia is one of the regions to be adversely affected.

Water experts believe that water disputes on intra-state and inter-state level may increase in future. It is the potential inter-state conflict over river-water resources that may be of greater concern.

The author is former Bangladesh Ambassdor to the UN, Geneva
 
Now thats the most crap reply in this forum. I do agree that BD can never provide any High tech machine to fly over the fences:yahoo: but you should keep in mind that fencing is not completed yet. It is going on and most of the boundary is still unfenced. I think your government must have smoked CHARAS before making such allegations.

Last time with our basic LMG we khatom 80 of the BSF by 7 BDR jawan. No need of high tech flying machine, we will simply march to Delhi to established subah Bangla sultanate in Red Fort.
Brother Al-Zakir is our Caliph. :)
 
Last time with our basic LMG we khatom 80 of the BSF by 7 BDR jawan. No need of high tech flying machine, we will simply march to Delhi to established subah Bangla sultanate in Red Fort.
Brother Al-Zakir is our Caliph. :)

Ha...ha...haha...haha...haha...haha...haha...haha...ha..

that was a gud one......ROFL....LMAO......
:rofl:
 
Sir with due respect plz dont build castles in the air. Even if we consider your allegations to be true then also you should that it was BSF and not the regular army of India which is way more advanced than BSF. Not to forget their AF and Navy power compared to yours.

Be realistic!!

Hello MadMax,

Here's a warning for you before you get banned from this forum. We have all sorts of information regarding our members. Ever heard of a little thing called an "IP" address? I'm sure you haven't, otherwise you wouldn't be surprised to read this information about your IP address.

IP address: 210.212.53.161 Copy
IP country code: IN
IP address country: ip address flag India
IP address state: Delhi
IP address city: New Delhi
IP address latitude: 28.6000
IP address longitude: 77.2000
ISP of this IP [?]: National Internet Backbone
Organization: National Internet Backbone
Local time in India: 2009-10-01 01:15


I remember this username from your previous ID. The least you could've done was to come back with a different screen name. Do us a favour and don't come back again, please.

Everyone, say goodbye to the troll. :wave:
 
Hello MadMax,

Here's a warning for you before you get banned from this forum. We have all sorts of information regarding our members. Ever heard of a little thing called an "IP" address? I'm sure you haven't, otherwise you wouldn't be surprised to read this information about your IP address.

IP address: 210.212.53.161 Copy
IP country code: IN
IP address country: ip address flag India
IP address state: Delhi
IP address city: New Delhi
IP address latitude: 28.6000
IP address longitude: 77.2000
ISP of this IP [?]: National Internet Backbone
Organization: National Internet Backbone
Local time in India: 2009-10-01 01:15


I remember this username from your previous ID. The least you could've done was to come back with a different screen name. Do us a favour and don't come back again, please.

Everyone, say goodbye to the troll. :wave:

welldone Bezerk:tup:, hope this wide opens the eyes of many smart a$$ geeks, who come up with fake nationalites.:blink:
 
Ha...ha...haha...haha...haha...haha...haha...haha...ha..

that was a gud one......ROFL....LMAO......
:rofl:
Why, ha ha and hi hi. Don't you know a saying that history repeats itself? So, better you stop your ha ha hi hi and ask you govt not to make us a desert.
 
Tipaimukh long march begins today

The route of the long march caravan is Dhaka-Brahmanbaria-Sylhet-Zakiganj-Tipaimukh


Thursday December 24 2009 02:13:08 AM BDT


The three-day Tipimukh Long March, led by Peer of Charmonai and Ameer of Islami Andolon Bangladesh (IAB) Mufti Syed Rezaul Karim, will begin from Muktangan in the city today.(The New Nation )

'The preparation to make success the programme is at the final stage. Thousands of people from 72 organising district units of IAB and the thana units will participate in the long march towards Tipaimukh in Monipur state in India,' said IAB leaders at a press conference yesterday.

As the AL government has failed to protest the Indian move to construct the Tipaimukh Dam on Borak River, Peer of Charmonai announced the programme to protest the Indian move and also draw the world attention, they added. The leaders and workers of the party across the country, particularly the districts and thana units of Sylhet Division, are working hard to make success the long march.

Held at the party office, convener of the Long March Committee and party's general secretary Maulana Yunus Ahmed said the long march would start at 2.00 pm. Prior to it a rally will be held at 11.00 am where leaders of different political parties will address.

The route of the long march caravan is Dhaka-Brahmanbaria-Sylhet-Zakiganj-Tipaimukh.

The long march caravan will reach Amalshid, Zakigonj on December 26, said Maulana Yunus Ahmed.

If the government creates any obstacle, a strong movement would be launched against it, IAB leaders said.

IAB held a 15-day long campaign programmes in the city from December 10 to 23 to make success the long march.

Wall writings, posters and banners with different slogans on Tipimukh Long march, were hanged at different places of the country. particularly the Sylhet-Zakigonj route.

Leaders of different political parties have already extended their support to the long march programme.

Among those who have extended support include president of Krishak Sramik Janata League Bangabir Abdul Kader Siddique, Jagpa president Shafiul Alam Prodhan, NPP chairman Sheikh Sawkat Hossain Nilu, executive president of Jamiyate Ulema Maulana Muhiuddin Khan, Dhaka University professor Dr Maimul Ahsan Khan, Khelafat Majlish ameer Maulana Habibur Rahman, Muslim League general secretary Atikul Islam and president of Sylhet Division Development Action Council Advocate Abed Raza.

http://newsfrombangladesh.net/view.php?hidRecord=298104
 

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