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India working to make Bangladesh a desert

We have too many rivers but all rivers are connected with India. If you don't supply water we will not survive. Paani doh Yaar.
We should cut water supply of BD if they refuse to take back illegal immigrants
 
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The Bay of Bengal should be renamed the Bay of Arabia. Bangladesh should also try joining the Arab league.
 
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That's strange, its not only one or two people I'm talking about, I have alot of Bengali friends, really nice people...met their families too, they are from Dhaka and one is from Chittagong

In the capital you get those middle class people who believe in 'progression' and 'liberalism' but really they're just closet Islamophobes that cherry pick parts of Islam when it suits them. Your circle of friends maybe different, but I haven't come across a Bangladeshi like that, yet. Similarly you get the same type of people in any Muslim country for example I live in London, there are many rich Lahoris and families from Karachi who are of doctor families but if you saw them, it's like they purposely try to disassociate themselves from Islam (no offence to anyone from Lahore or Karachi and if I did, try to forgive me).
 
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That looks like peak of summer season when water is minimum in all river. :wacko:

This is no different from the last Israeli attack on Hamas when these people started posting pictures of everything from the Earthquake to floods anywhere in the world to show the "plight of Palestinian civilians"!

Guess they call it taqiyya and it works wonders.
 
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Farakka—-India’s diabolical water conspiracy against Bangladesh

The abnormal drying up of major rivers and their tributaries coupled with sharp fall in underground water levels has caused a serious threat to the environment, navigation and irrigation in northern and north-western regions of Bangladesh.
Sources in the Water Development Board (WDB) and experts said water flow in the Brahmaputra, Teesta, Padma, Mohananda and their tributaries has slowed down abnormally causing emergence of hundreds of shoals adversely affecting navigation and irrigation.
They said the serious situation has been created by the unilateral withdrawal of waters from the international rivers by India through its Farakka, Gozaldoba and Mohananda Barrages in the upstream, which also causes unusual fall in the underground water levels.


It also brings about changes in the overall climatic pattern. As a result, the northern region is experiencing extreme cold and hot weather, the sources said.They said if this situation continues, the process of desertification will be accelerated affecting environment, climate, ecology, bio-diversity, agriculture, habitation, navigation and irrigation in northern and north-western Bangladesh.

The navigation has almost come to a halt at all points of the major rivers since the advent of the current dry season. Only five out of 15 spans at the Hardinge Bridge and only one out of 44 sluice gates of the giant Teesta Barrage Project (TBP) at Dalia point in Nilphamari district is releasing a little quantity of water.

The water level in the Brahmaputra has marked an all-time fall at all points in Kurigram, Gaibandha, Jamalpur and Mymensingh districts.
The navigation has stopped at the Teesta Railway Bridge and other points of the river Teesta. It has come to a halt for the first time in the river Brahmaputra at all its entry points.
Farmers are unable to irrigate their Boro fields sowed earlier on char lands for want of water. Hundreds of boat passengers remain stranded on chars and shoals almost everyday when their boats and ferries hit the emerging shoals, the sources said.

History of the Ganges Conflict between Bangladesh and India


Negotiations on sharing of Ganges water at Farakka was started from 1960 at the time of signing of Indus Water Treaty between India and Pakistan. India decided to construct a barrage across the Ganges at Farakka in 1951 in order to divert water to Bhagirathi to maintain its navigability which was being hampered due to siltation. Construction of the Farakka Barrage was started by India in 1960 unilaterally violating the international norms of any construction for diversion of water on any international river. Construction of the barrage having a length of 7363 ft, designed for a maximum design discharge of 27,00,000 cusec and a head regulator for diversion capacity of 40,000 cusec of flow.
Over the next years, Pakistan occasionally responded to reports of Indian plans for diversion projects of the Ganges, with little Indian response. In 1957, and again in 1958, Pakistan proposed that:
1. The advisory and technical services of a United Nations body be secured to assist in planning for the co-operative development of the eastern river systems;
2. The projects in the two countries be examined jointly by experts of the two countries before their implementation; and,

3. The Secretary-General of the UN be requested for the appointment of an engineer or engineers to participate in the meetings at experts level.
India turned down these proposals although it was agreed that water resources experts of the two countries should, “exchange data on projects of mutual interests.”These expert-level meetings commenced 28 June 1960.
At the third secretaries’ level meeting, Pakistan proposed that an agreement should provide for:
1. Guarantee to Pakistan of fixed minimum deliveries of the Ganges waters on a monthly basis at an agreed point;
2. Construction and maintenance of such works, if any, in India as may be necessary in connection with the construction of the Ganges Barrage in Pakistan;
3. Setting up of a permanent Ganges Commission to implement the agreement;
4. Sachinery and procedure for settlement of differences and disputes consistent with international usages.
India again argued that such an agreement could only take place after the two sides had agreed to “basic technical facts.”
The fifth and final secretaries-level meeting was held in New Delhi from 16-21 July 1970, resulting in three recommendations:
1. The point of delivery of supplies to Pakistan of such quantum of water as may be agreed upon will be at Farakka;

2. Constitution of a body consisting of one representative from each of the two countries for ensuring delivery of agreed supplies at Farakka is acceptable in principle;
3. A meeting would be held in three to six months time at a level to be agreed to by the two Governments to consider the quantum of water to be supplied to Pakistan at Farakka and other unresolved issues relating thereto and to eastern rivers which have been subject matter of discussions in these series of talks.
Little of practicality came out of these talks, and India completed construction of the Farakka Barrage in 1974. Water was not diverted at the time, though, because the feeder canal to the Bhagirathi-Hooghly system was not yet completed.
India approached Bangladesh for test operation of the Farakka Barrage and feeder canal. The then Prime Minister Sk. Mujib agreed to India’s proposal for test operation of the barrage and feeder canal. Initially in 1975 India was allowed to divert flows varying from 11000 cusec to 16000 cusec for a period of 41 days from 21 April to 31 May ’75 with the understanding that India will not operate feeder canal until a final agreement was reached between India and Bangladesh on the sharing of Ganges water. Violating this understanding India started diverting the Ganges water in the upstream unilaterally in 1976 & 1977. Unilateral withdrawal of Ganges water during the dry months resulted serious adverse effects on environment, agriculture, industries, fisheries, navigation, river regime, salinity contamination in the surface and ground water, etc. in the southwestern and western areas of Bangladesh. Covering almost 20% of countries area is 30,000 sq. km inhabited by about 30 million people.
Historical natural flow at Farakka dwindled due to human intervention in the upstream of the Ganges within the Indian Territory. Moreover, the Ganges water has also polluted with the toxic chemicals and heavy metals from industrial effluent discharged into the river within the India. Withdrawal of the Ganges water upstream of Farakka varies from 40,000 cusec to 45,000 cusec during the month of March & April apart from diversion at Farakka to the feeder canal which means India has been withdrawing about 60,000 to 80,000 cusec of water from the Ganges leaving a very negligible amount of flow for Bangladesh in recent years.After failing in attempts to resolve this issue peacefully and amicably Bangladesh raised the issue of Ganges water sharing in the UN General Assembly session in 1976. Confronting adverse international opinion India had to sign an ad hoc agreement for 5 yrs on Ganges water sharing in 1977 where she had agree to the just share of Bangladesh on the available flow and to increase the flow at Farakka through augmentation to meet the increasing demand of water of both Bangladesh and India. India also agrees to include Nepal for finding long term solution to the problem.

During the period from 1978 to 82 Bangladesh received more than its share for all the years excepting one when the flow at Farakka fall unexpectedly but the India released the guaranteed minimum flow.
1977 agreement was expired in 1982 and India denied extending it. The then military ruler Gen.Ershad succumbed to the Indian pressure and signed a MOU scrapping the 1977 agreement where the interest of Bangladesh was compromised and the guarantee clause was excluded. MOU signed in 1982 was expired in 1985 and extended to 1988 through two other similar extensions. From 1989 onward India refused to come to any deal with the Bangladesh on Ganges water sharing. No treaty or agreement existed till 1996 during which the average low flow has come down to 10,000 to 12,000 cusec with one extreme event of 9000 cusec. During the period of the last democratically elected Govt. of Bangladesh Begum Khaleda Zia in spite of all assurance of the Indian Prime Minister Narashima Rao to reach a just solution to the Ganges water sharing, India fully avoided reaching any agreement with the Govt. Bangladesh again raised the issue in the UN General Assembly but to no effect.


Ecological impact of Farakka barrage

Bangladesh faces at least 30 upstream water diversion constructions of which Farakka Barrage is the major one. The effects of Farakka Barrage on water resources, socioeconomic, and culture have been disastrous. An attempt has been made here to unfold such ecological disaster before the readership.
Discharges in the Ganges

The gradual decrease of water in the Ganges at the Hardinge Bridge point due to unilateral withdrawal by India has caused the fissured ground to let air into the ground, and reflects, absorbs, and radiates solar radiation, instead of the almost complete absorption when it had been covered with water.
Ganges Distributaries

The Mahananda is the only tributary of the Ganges in Bangladesh. The main distributaries of the Ganges in Bangladesh are the Baral, the Gorai, the Arial Khan, the Bhairab, the Mathabhanga, the Kumar, and the Ichamati. Distributaries have daughter distributaries. The daughter distributaries are the Musa Khan, the Madhumati, the Pashur, and the Kabodack. Water discharging capacity of these daughter distributaries has resulted in due to the weak flushing power in the Ganges. All the aquatics and the amphibians that lived in watercourse during November through June and in during July through November, along with sportive Gangetic dolphins, are gone. The river can no longer feed thousands of ponds, ditches, and more than 900 km2 of floodplains.

FloodplainsFloodplains that used to have water for 12 mo within depths of 1.1 to 2.2 m, 10 to 11 mo within depths of 0.70 to 1.10 m, and 8 mo within depths of 0.25 to 0.60 m, can now have water for 6 mo, 4 mo, and 1 to 3 mo, respectively, making an overall spatial and temporal drop of about 50% and a drop in ground water recharging.
Ponds
The monsoon season water depth in the post-diversion era is about the same level as the dry season water depth in the pre-diversion era. The water contents of the second-largest surface water resource have been reduced by about 50% making also a decrease in ground water recharge.

Ditches

Ditches would provide seasonal jute retting, fish raising, and cleaning water facilities. They would hold water from July through February, depending on their depths and locations. Additionally, bushy sides of ditches had been abodes of migratory birds, which are no longer observed. These dry reservoirs have been absorbed into agricultural land or homesteads.

Depletion of Natural Fish Breeding Grounds


The surface water resources had been the breeding and raising grounds of 109 species of Gangetic fishes. With the decline of surface water resources, breeding and raising grounds of fishes have been shrunk alarmingly. Fish is the cheapest source of animal protein (6.25%), one of the indispensables of life, and calcium (25%). Currently, the cheapest sources for protein and calcium have been depleted. Furthermore, the Ganges water would bring oxygen, nitrogen, lime, and phosphorus for brisk growth of rice plants in the pre-dam era, but the process has slowed now.
Changes in Agricultural Practices

Due to paucity of Ganges water a change in agricultural practices for jute, sugarcane, and rice has been found. The balance between the cultivation of jute and sugarcane is lost. As a result a lot of farmers have become unemployed and moved toward big cities for livelihood.

Aeration and Re-aeration of Water

The lack of running water over the basins has caused a deficiency of dissolved oxygen in recharging water. Fast-moving shallow streams that would keep the basins inundated at least during July through October had more aeration than sluggish deep streams or stagnant ponds or floodplains.
The basins of the Musa Khan and the Baral have lost the stream currents in distributaries, canals, floodplains, ponds, and ditches by almost 100% both in temporal and spatial scales.
Loss of Inland Navigable Routes

With the drying and the dwindling conditions of distributaries, goods are transported via roads and highways causing at least 5% fatalities/wk/km trip on crowded roads and highways. Distributaries provided cheap inland transportation routes, reducing costly and accident-prone land transportation. Generations-old trees were cut down to widen roads and highways to complement transportation. This destroyed habitats and caused a forced deforestation in an under forested country.
Hygienic Effects

Due to low water availability, people living in river bank have no water to bathe in during the summer. The country’s news media reported of finding skin diseases like scabies, leprosy, yaws, trachoma, and conjunctivitis due to bathing in unclean surface water. Also, Schwarz et al. (1993) reported that principal infectious diseases related to water supply are typhoid, paratyphoid, fever, bacillary dysentery, amoebic dysentery, diarrhea, cholera, hepatitis, poliomyelitis, stomach disorder, schistosomiasis, drocontiasis, guinea worm, roundworm, and hookworm.

Loss of Professions


Apart from farming, the people in the basins were employed as fish men, potter men, boat makers, fishing equipment makers, fishing technologists, and providers of transportation by hackney carriages. It was found by survey that the number of these professionals dropped from 6, 4, 0.4, 5.4, 4.3, and 0.9% to 0.5, 0.5, 0.08, 1.3, 1.2, and 0.1% of the rural population, respectively. Only the number of rickshaw pullers increased, from 1.3% to 5.9%. As to the lost typical fishing assets, a population of 150 fishermen would make 350 fishing nets of 20 kinds for catching 15 to 20 varieties of fishes. These cottage industries and the technical hands in the basins have become extinct.
Ground Water

The U.S. Geological Survey reports surface water and ground water as a single resource (Winter et al., 1998). Filling of surface water resources and the recharging of ground water would occur during June through October. During November through May, evaportranspiration would drop the ground water table about 4 m (with 50% soil porosity; the actual water depth is 2 m) below the wet-season level, as would be found, during the dry season, from water levels in ponds and open wells, and by digging of new ponds and open wells. Every year the ground water is sinking by at least 0.5 m (Department of Public Health Engineering, Rajshahi, Bangladesh, personal communication, 1995). Although the drop in water table varies from place to place, a comparison of the depths of recently and pre-dam installed tube wells suggests about a 10-m drop in water table.
Arsenic Contamination of Ground Water

It is thought that depleting ground water has let air get in the ground below the pre-dam water table. Arsenopyrites buried in this layer of sediment formed water-soluble compounds of arsenic, which infiltrated to water. Although iron can purify water of arsenic in the presence of oxygen, this self-purification of ground water has not occurred completely since the water diversion started because of inadequate recharging water carrying scanty oxygen into the ground water.
Climatic Changes and Health Effects

An analysis of the climate data reveals that the summertime pre-dam maximum temperature has risen from 37 to 43°C and the wintertime minimum temperature has dropped from 8 to 4°C in the post-dam era (Adel, 2000). Further, the frequency of the highest relative humidity in post-dam period is 1.6 times higher than that in pre-dam period. The frequency of >100 mm rain events has been halved, causing a proportionately reduced infiltration from the monsoon rainfall, because the likely recharge occurs when (i) the soil has a high conductivity, (ii) the watertable lies at shallow depth, (iii) the soil is relatively wet, and (iv) the water input rate is low and lasts for a relatively long time interval (Freeze, 1969).
Reports are available on the appearances of health effects such as hypertension, asthmatic conditions, and increased patient suffering due to temperature fluctuations. It was found that one in every four families has an asthma patient, and more than 10% of the families have three asthma patients. Also, most of the asthma patients above 50 yr of age suffer from diabetes, hypertension, and stroke, the latter being the number one crippler and killer disease. Further, a general kind of aridity prevails in the city of Rajshahi, favoring uplift of aerosol dusts in the air. From the daily intake of 20 m3 of air, an adult individual inhales about 10 mg of dust. Annually, an adult individual inhales 2 g of dust. The inhalation of dusty air triggers allergic reactions in asthma patients and patients having asthma-like symptoms.
Increased Occurrences of the Worst Floods

Bangladesh has become more flood-prone than it was in the pre-dam era. Floods have hit with extraordinary ferocity in the southwest, northwest, northern, eastern, and central parts of the country in the post-dam era from time to time. Dams are used as flood outlets during the flood season when the upstream country cannot withhold the rising flood water. Floods cause irreparable damage to crops, livestock, and above all, humans. Bangladesh is never given a warning of potential floods by the neighboring country, forcing it to face the flood without preparation. The flood of 2000 inundated areas in Rajshahi, Nawabganj, Kustia, Satkhira, and Jessore. In Rajshahi, dead bodies were seen floating in the Ganges. Many people from the neighboring Indian downstream districts took shelter in the northwestern and southwestern parts of Bangladesh. It is reported that Bangladesh border forces had to guard against the upstream country’s border forces’ action of water release through Bangladesh.

Farakka—-India’s diabolical water conspiracy against Bangladesh | Fact and Truth
 
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In the capital you get those middle class people who believe in 'progression' and 'liberalism' but really they're just closet Islamophobes that cherry pick parts of Islam when it suits them. Your circle of friends maybe different, but I haven't come across a Bangladeshi like that, yet. Similarly you get the same type of people in any Muslim country for example I live in London, there are many rich Lahoris and families from Karachi who are of doctor families but if you saw them, it's like they purposely try to disassociate themselves from Islam (no offence to anyone from Lahore or Karachi and if I did, try to forgive me).
As people get more educated and progressive they tend to leave out more conservative parts of their religion. Rich people do not want religion as much as poor people do
 
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In the capital you get those middle class people who believe in 'progression' and 'liberalism' but really they're just closet Islamophobes that cherry pick parts of Islam when it suits them. Your circle of friends maybe different, but I haven't come across a Bangladeshi like that, yet. Similarly you get the same type of people in any Muslim country for example I live in London, there are many rich Lahoris and families from Karachi who are of doctor families but if you saw them, it's like they purposely try to disassociate themselves from Islam (no offence to anyone from Lahore or Karachi and if I did, try to forgive me).

Oh ok , but my opinion is religion is something absolutely different from culture, the ones I'm talking about are not Islamophobes, they are active members of Muslim Student Association...pray and basically they aren't anti-religion ...you might be right...urban culture might be a bit different from rural one
 
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Really!? I haven't seen anyone wear that in Bangladesh.

Ok, here is a book "Women, Islam and the State"...read Page 120-121, When Pakistani regime tried to make changes in Bengali culture, which included changing Bengali to Arabic script, stop them from wearing "Bindis" (Forehead marks)....the Bengali poppulation especially women resisted.... Women, Islam, and the State - Google Books
 
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Please provide the latest updates on this project.
 
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this is why India is behave like FATHER of bangladesh.. India Supports Bangladesh every time
 
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Why Bangladesh Hates India

1. Cutting down the fair share of water distribution from Nepal>India>BD, India somehow acts the big daddy seems to enjoy controlling all the water source. (E.G. -Farraka Barrage)

2. Indian Satellite TV channels are free to telecast in Bangladesh, Whereas the Indian Government doesn't allow the same for BD TV channels.

3. Indian government try get the most out of everything in every bi-lateral agreements with BD.

4. Indian border army seems to enjoy killing Bangladeshi people for no reason.

5. India's cross border terrorism inside Bangladesh.

6. India's interference inside Bengali Politics and internal affairs.

Bangladesh

More Reasons why Bangladeshis hate Indians:

1. Tipaimukh Dam of India, the dam which will just destroy the environment of the northern regions of Bangladesh and devastating for the agriculture of Bangladesh. For the details about this please visit http://wreforum.org/khaleq/blog/....

2. Killing of innocent Bangladeshis by the BSF, in the recent years the BSF killed almost 100 of Bangladeshis in the border which is one of the vital cause of this hatred. For details please visit BSF kills 21 in eight months | Dhaka Tribune
Some photos of killed Bangladeshis by BSF-


3. Bangladesh is a cricket playing nation and it's a place of emotions for us. In the recent days some Indian commentators insults Bangladesh and Bangladesh Cricket Team in a very bad manner which hits the emotions of common people. One of the example of this is here -Navjot Singh Sidhu is being fired as the ICC threatens ESPN and Star Sports

4. Drug abuse and addiction is now a days one of the most dangerous problems in Bangladesh and almost all of these illegal drugs are supplied from India . Bangladesh is the main target of the Indian illegal drugs dealers. A news of seized drugs during coming from India is here -Tk3 crore yaba seized at Comilla | Dhaka Tribune

There are only some major causes, there are more causes behind this. So I think now you can understand why most of the common Bangladeshi people hates India.

Source: Why all neighboring countries- China, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan, hate INDIA? | Page 4
 
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Why Bangladesh Hates India

1. Cutting down the fair share of water distribution from Nepal>India>BD, India somehow acts the big daddy seems to enjoy controlling all the water source. (E.G. -Farraka Barrage)

2. Indian Satellite TV channels are free to telecast in Bangladesh, Whereas the Indian Government doesn't allow the same for BD TV channels.

3. Indian government try get the most out of everything in every bi-lateral agreements with BD.

4. Indian border army seems to enjoy killing Bangladeshi people for no reason.

5. India's cross border terrorism inside Bangladesh.

6. India's interference inside Bengali Politics and internal affairs.

Bangladesh

More Reasons why Bangladeshis hate Indians:

1. Tipaimukh Dam of India, the dam which will just destroy the environment of the northern regions of Bangladesh and devastating for the agriculture of Bangladesh. For the details about this please visit http://wreforum.org/khaleq/blog/....

2. Killing of innocent Bangladeshis by the BSF, in the recent years the BSF killed almost 100 of Bangladeshis in the border which is one of the vital cause of this hatred. For details please visit BSF kills 21 in eight months | Dhaka Tribune
Some photos of killed Bangladeshis by BSF-



3. Bangladesh is a cricket playing nation and it's a place of emotions for us. In the recent days some Indian commentators insults Bangladesh and Bangladesh Cricket Team in a very bad manner which hits the emotions of common people. One of the example of this is here -Navjot Singh Sidhu is being fired as the ICC threatens ESPN and Star Sports

4. Drug abuse and addiction is now a days one of the most dangerous problems in Bangladesh and almost all of these illegal drugs are supplied from India . Bangladesh is the main target of the Indian illegal drugs dealers. A news of seized drugs during coming from India is here -Tk3 crore yaba seized at Comilla | Dhaka Tribune

There are only some major causes, there are more causes behind this. So I think now you can understand why most of the common Bangladeshi people hates India.

Source: Why all neighboring countries- China, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan, hate INDIA? | Page 4


Bangladesh should seek independence.
 
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