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Jewish writer gives Modi a book on atrocities against Hindus in Bangladesh

This Zionist Benkin guy actually funds the Weekly Blitz online in Dhaka.

They are the greatest.

They support India in some religious/ideological respects while at the same time condemn India for doing business with Iran :woot:




---------- Post added at 11:31 AM ---------- Previous post was at 11:30 AM ----------

i really want to go to Australia where most people don't follow any religion!!!..........south asia su%%s!!:hitwall:

Yes, I do share your pain mate.
 
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The Partition? Oh please...



I agree, much more work is needed to be done for minority rights.

But Bangladesh is still very liberal relative to many other Muslim majority countries. And it is a young country with a volatile and an extremely uncertain political climate. I'd say given the limitations, minorities have done well in Bangladesh.

The main problem is that the people in charge of the country hardly follow the rule of law. And they often fail to maintain that order.

That partly explains the often anarchy-like situation in the country regardless of AL or BNP. They just want money for themselves and their family/relatives.

Jamaat really needs a work over for their marketing strategy. Otherwise, they'd be the losers.



Maybe there are extremists in Bangladesh.

But be careful not to force secular ideals fast like what Hasina was doing. In fact, you'd realize that the AL are just as much extreme as the extremists you perceive. Even more than Jamaat.

Yes I know since I know some of their key members well.

I saw student politics real close in DU from 1989 to 1991. I ran for my life from Madhur Canteen, from my classes, and from the University in Dhaka and ended up in a school in Florida.
 
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Not all of them. Just avoid certain 'areas'.

Most of those racists are all jobless nutjobs living off welfare.

Of course not all of them! I've used the term "racists" in a relative sense. You'd be surprised to find out how many non-jobless non-nutjob racists there are in Australia.

I keep hearing things from people I know. Well best thing to do is just to ignore them, if you can!
 
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aargh there is noting wrong in it.People know about the fate of hindus in Bangladesh.we all are aware about the plight of hindus. hindus are crushed in BD and they form the lowest rung of these societies. they are butchered,raped,looted and all kinds of atrocities are meted on them.no body can raise a voice in their favor,as it may be considered as an act of 'communalism'.A very sad situation indeed.

Its called ethnic or religious cleansing and proof of that is the dwindling minority population in BD.
 
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Real Reason of Clash in Hathazari:Hindu mob was playing music and dancing during prayer time and they been told to keep away from Mosque. But instead Hindu mob went to attack and damage the mosque. Above picture shows damage to Mosque caused by Hindu mob.




This is growing sign that many Hindus armed with Awami League secular imposition and indian interference feel they own over majority population of Bangladesh and try to look down. In last one year there were at least 4-5 incidents where Hindu teachers made visceral attack on Prophet Mohhamed (PBUH). In one case, offending Hindu teacher had given promotion position under education ministry.

Teacher suspended over prophet remarksAug 2, 2011

A Hindu teacher in Muslim-majority Bangladesh has been suspended after allegedly making offensive remarks about the prophet Mohammed that triggered angry protests, an official said on Tuesday.

Madan Mohan Das, a teacher at a government high school, is the second Hindu teacher in two weeks to be removed from his post after alleged remarks about Islam’s prophet triggered street protests in the capital Dhaka.
“

Das has been suspended effective from Sunday pending further investigation,” education ministry spokesman Subodh Chandra Dhali said.

Das is accused of making disparaging comments about the prophet’s many wives that were seen as particularly insulting when coming from a Hindu and so prompted major protests by Islamic groups outside Dhaka’s main mosque.

He was initially transferred to a remote school in the country’s north as punishment but ongoing public protests prompted state education authorities to take further action.

In July, English language teacher Shankar Biswas was sacked for making similar remarks at his school in the southern district of Gopalganj.

About 90 percent of Bangladesh’s 142 million people are Muslims, and religious issues often erupt into unrest.

Recent protests have focused on an Islamic pledge that has been removed from the constitution by the secular ruling party.

There were also violent protests in 2006 after a Danish newspaper printed cartoons of the prophet.

In 2009, a local newspaper cartoonist was jailed briefly for hurting religious feelings after a drawing showed a small boy suggesting that all cats should be named Mohammed. – AFP

Teacher suspended over prophet remarks | BDINN.com
 
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^Never mind what happened back there. It's too complex for them to grasp :lol:
 
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Real Reason of Clash in Hathazari:Hindu mob was playing music and dancing during prayer time and they been told to keep away from Mosque. But instead Hindu mob went to attack and damage the mosque. Above picture shows damage to Mosque caused by Hindu mob.




This is growing sign that many Hindus armed with Awami League secular imposition and indian interference feel they own over majority population of Bangladesh and try to look down. In last one year there were at least 4-5 incidents where Hindu teachers made visceral attack on Prophet Mohhamed (PBUH). In one case, offending Hindu teacher had given promotion position under education ministry.

If that's the case then You people should be ashamed of bringing up Gujarat Riots and alleged Modi's inaction during riots because Riots started after a Muslim Mob incited by a particular Masjid call burned people alive. compare that with damaging a wall .

same story in the case of 1993 Mumbai Bombings and following riots.
 
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Its called ethnic or religious cleansing and proof of that is.....

“Ethnic cleansing” of Karbi in Assam
by Nirmala Carvalho



Fr Mangattuthazhe: pressing poverty and inter-racial conflicts lead to frequent violence, which is sure to explode again unless steps are taken to prevent it. Yesterday, clashes between tea plantation workers and thousands of ethic Assamese led to deaths and injuries.


New Delhi (AsiaNews) – Two groups of ethnic protesters battled each other yesterday with bows and arrows, machetes and stones in Doomdooma, Tinsukia district in Assam, leaving four people dead and more than a dozen injured. A priest said this is a very poor area where violence is sure to break out again if steps are not taken to prevent it.


Hundreds of ethnic Assamese demonstrators blocked a main highway for more than a week to protest the killing of a civilian by the Indian army in an anti-rebel operation. The blockade prevented supplies from reaching tea plantations in the area, which remained without food. Yesterday, a group of plantation workers, armed with bows and arrows, attacked the demonstrators, who responded with stones and machetes. Police fired in the air to disperse those fighting and admitted to finding at least three dead and six injured people. A curfew has now been imposed. Over a span of 30 years, ethnic and tribal clashes have caused thousands of deaths. Police also opened fire on other Assamese demonstrators, seriously wounding at least four.


Fr Tom Mangattuthazhe, a collaborator of the bishop of Assam, told AsiaNews that a tough and uncertain situation prevails in the area, not least because “many people live in miserable conditions”. He said: “The situation in Karbi Anglong district [where he works], diocese of Diphu, is critical and could deteriorate into an outburst of ethnic violence at any time. The disappearance of Soinetsing Diphusa and his wife Kenedy Diphusa who went missing from Kheroni area on 30 April and subsequent rumours that spread in the region are examples of widespread violence. They are farmers and have seven children and no one knows where they are now. This is not the first instance of people disappearing. The Karbs and Dimasass have a history of an ethnic conflict, which two years back exploded into ethnic violence, displacing nearly 75,000 people who fled to relief camps. Around 150,000 people lost practically all they had. The conflict started when three auto drivers were kidnapped and it has not stopped since. There are indications that there will be fresh violence soon, if nothing is done to prevent it.” He continued: “Among the people, there are frequent rumours that homes have been burned down. To quell these rumours, we have organized a village-to-village campaign in sensitive areas, appealing to people to remain calm and not to listen to rumours. We also have peace meetings in different locations to sensitize people.” The priest this was the “poorest and most backwards area of Assam, where people do not even have enough to live.” Although the Karbi are the largest ethnic group in the region, “every year thousands are displaced due to violence and natural calamities and in a few years time, they will become a minority; in other words this is ethnic cleansing.”


Several separatist groups, including the main United Liberation Front of Asom, (ULFA) have been fighting since 1979 for an independent homeland in Assam. Peace talks between ULFA and the Indian government broke down in September last year after a six-week truce. ULFA responded with violence, killing more than 70 Hindi-speaking migrant workers across Assam.

INDIA
 
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India Assam Nellie Massacre, Journalist Eyewitness Account

By hemendraNarayan

25 years on..Nellie still haunts






"The traumatic events of the day keep coming back. The horrific images are stuck. This volume contains along with the eye witness account of the Nellie massacre on February 18, 1983; documents both government and non-official which put the distressing Assam events in perspective. And of course, the recoil of memory recalls bordering on guilt. The dreadful scenes of horror in Assam matched that was witnessed at the time of formation of Bangladesh."

Reviews -

1.

The main piece of the book is more of personal impression of the author, than a hard news story by a professional. Hemendra Narayan, the journalist -- who more by instinct than design - became a witness to the terrible mayhem of February 18, 1983, in central Assam. The traumatic incidents at Nellie still haunt him, and it comes out unmistakably in the chapter - Woman in the Green Sari. The woman, who had seen death all around and escaped, produced a 'surreal scream'; he says -- and adds, "The horrific images are still stuck in my mind."

The magnitude of death and destruction that unfolded before them in an open clear picturesque setting - they were three media persons - would have overwhelmed anyone. It was an eerie setting because of the 'kill-burn-slay' psychology of the hundreds of armed men.

The February 1983 Assembly elections were held to fulfil a Constitutional 'obligation'. The logic was that the polls could not be stopped because the President Rule could not be extended beyond one year, and that deadline was fast approaching. The supporters of movement against 'foreign' nationals were not only boycotting, but opposing the elections aggressively as well.

As the election(s) process got going, "It was a strange scenario across the Brahmaputra valley -- right from Dhubri to Dibrugrah; depending on the population profile -- the killing lust had surcharged the atmosphere," the slim publication says in its preface.

The toll around Nellie villages officially stood at 2,191.

Mr B G Verghese, doyen of Indian journalism -- who has a special interest on the affairs of the North-East, says in his foreword remarks, "India must care and ponder over what happened, and we must all learn our several lessons as distinctive groups, wider communities, the Government..."

The booklet, apart from being of interest to journalists even 25 years on -- should be of relevance to the students of contemporary history. Some of the documents used helps in understanding the overall situation in proper perspective. The documents in the publication, which includes that of the Lalung Darbar, the Election Commission and the report of the non-official Justice Mehta Commission, would be of great significance for some one, studying the Assam and India's history of the period.

(Prerna)

2.

Some events in history just refuse to fade from public memory. The partition of India and Pakistan, for instance. That bloody event in history continues to inspire several novels, academic studies and even films - even now. But there are some dark chapters in independent India's history that many people - protagonists, by-standers and even those who had nothing to do with the event per se - want buried in the sands of time. The infamous Nellie massacre in Assam in 1983 is one such gory episode.

There are conflicting figures about exactly how many people - women, infants and men - were killed on that fateful day of 18 February 1983, but no one disputes the fact that at least 2,000 people lost their lives. For years, the Nellie massacre became a metaphor for everything that has gone wrong with Assam over the past three decades. Those who worry about the unabated influx of foreigners from across the international border say Nellie was a manifestation of the pent up anger among the indigenous people.

Others, apologists for the migrants, portray the victims of the Nellie massacre as just that - victims.

But the reality of the violence of that day and several days preceding it lies somewhere in between. And bringing that to the fore is reporter, Hemendra Narayan, now with The Statesmen but who 25 years ago was with The Indian Express. He was one of three journalists to witness the carnage first hand. For a quarter century, he carried the memories of that particular day with him but finally decided to come out with a small booklet detailing the events of that day. It was as if he was liberating himself after such a long gap. A catharsis in a way for Narayan the human being, if not Narayan the reporter!

The writer, I am sure, in 25 Years on... Nellie still haunts, had no intentions of opening any old wounds or hurting anyone. But it can be said that the Nellie massacre still remains a deep wound on the collective psyche of Assam! Narayan has indeed recounted the events of that period with some objectivity and with the benefit of hindsight

In the 52-page "slim publication", as BG Verghese describes it, he says in the Foreword, "Narayan has recalled various versions on offer, including his own of what happened on 18 Februrary, 1983. The narrative reads like the Japanese play, Rashmonon."

Narayan has indeed included an array of material in an attempt to give all possible sides to the real story of Nellie. He has his own dispatch of that day as the starting point.

It includes a memorandum by the Lalung Darbar, presented to Indira Gandhi, who in many ways should be blamed for creating the circumstances that led to the Nellie massacre. The Lalungs, who are often portrayed as aggressors of that day, have stoutly denied their hand in the violence. Then there are documents, both official and non-official, as also the Election Commission's logic in holding the elections that ultimately resulted in unleashing the violence that culminated in Nellie.

Like a true reporter, Narayan has attempted to raise the real question: What is the real truth of Nellie? Like many events in independent India's history, the correct answer will never be known - not at least in our lifetime, as Tribuhwan Prasad Tewary, who conducted an official enquiry into the massacre (and whose report has never been made public), told Narayan.

But in writing and publishing an account of Nellie, 25 years after it happened, Narayan has done a signal service to historians and students of contemporary history. The mystery of Nellie will never be completely solved but at least, through Narayan's efforts, each of us can make an attempt to find our own little answers.

India Assam Nellie Massacre, Journalist Eyewitness Account
 
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“Ethnic cleansing” of Karbi in Assam
by Nirmala Carvalho



Fr Mangattuthazhe: pressing poverty and inter-racial conflicts lead to frequent violence, which is sure to explode again unless steps are taken to prevent it. Yesterday, clashes between tea plantation workers and thousands of ethic Assamese led to deaths and injuries.


New Delhi (AsiaNews) – Two groups of ethnic protesters battled each other yesterday with bows and arrows, machetes and stones in Doomdooma, Tinsukia district in Assam, leaving four people dead and more than a dozen injured. A priest said this is a very poor area where violence is sure to break out again if steps are not taken to prevent it.


Hundreds of ethnic Assamese demonstrators blocked a main highway for more than a week to protest the killing of a civilian by the Indian army in an anti-rebel operation. The blockade prevented supplies from reaching tea plantations in the area, which remained without food. Yesterday, a group of plantation workers, armed with bows and arrows, attacked the demonstrators, who responded with stones and machetes. Police fired in the air to disperse those fighting and admitted to finding at least three dead and six injured people. A curfew has now been imposed. Over a span of 30 years, ethnic and tribal clashes have caused thousands of deaths. Police also opened fire on other Assamese demonstrators, seriously wounding at least four.


Fr Tom Mangattuthazhe, a collaborator of the bishop of Assam, told AsiaNews that a tough and uncertain situation prevails in the area, not least because “many people live in miserable conditions”. He said: “The situation in Karbi Anglong district [where he works], diocese of Diphu, is critical and could deteriorate into an outburst of ethnic violence at any time. The disappearance of Soinetsing Diphusa and his wife Kenedy Diphusa who went missing from Kheroni area on 30 April and subsequent rumours that spread in the region are examples of widespread violence. They are farmers and have seven children and no one knows where they are now. This is not the first instance of people disappearing. The Karbs and Dimasass have a history of an ethnic conflict, which two years back exploded into ethnic violence, displacing nearly 75,000 people who fled to relief camps. Around 150,000 people lost practically all they had. The conflict started when three auto drivers were kidnapped and it has not stopped since. There are indications that there will be fresh violence soon, if nothing is done to prevent it.” He continued: “Among the people, there are frequent rumours that homes have been burned down. To quell these rumours, we have organized a village-to-village campaign in sensitive areas, appealing to people to remain calm and not to listen to rumours. We also have peace meetings in different locations to sensitize people.” The priest this was the “poorest and most backwards area of Assam, where people do not even have enough to live.” Although the Karbi are the largest ethnic group in the region, “every year thousands are displaced due to violence and natural calamities and in a few years time, they will become a minority; in other words this is ethnic cleansing.”


Several separatist groups, including the main United Liberation Front of Asom, (ULFA) have been fighting since 1979 for an independent homeland in Assam. Peace talks between ULFA and the Indian government broke down in September last year after a six-week truce. ULFA responded with violence, killing more than 70 Hindi-speaking migrant workers across Assam.

INDIA

1. Racial tensions,. come visit UK and US once. The topic is something else.
2. 5 year old article
 
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If that's the case then You people should be ashamed of bringing up Gujarat Riots and alleged Modi's inaction during riots because Riots started after a Muslim Mob incited by a particular Masjid call burned people alive. compare that with damaging a wall .

same story in the case of 1993 Mumbai Bombings and following riots.

At least no one was killed in the incident in Bangladesh. It was a random act of vandalism by some rowdy student political wings.
Whatever happened in the Gujarat riots is India's problem.

I still fail to understand why the bullshit Indian media come up with all kinds bullshit against Bangladesh.

It's like: "Oh look, those evil terrorist Jamaties are going to wipe out all minorities in Bangladesh."

I personally do not agree with everything Jamaat stands for, but they are not terrorists like how some Indians perceive. It's a LEGAL and RECOGNIZED entity.

1. Racial tensions,. come visit UK and US once. The topic is something else.
2. 5 year old article

Does that mean the UK and US will conduct 'ethnic cleansing'?
 
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