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No restrictions on telecast of Indian TV channels in Bangladesh.

The 'mutilated' version in called Bangal language in your small state.

Bangladesh is true flag bearer of Bengali culture and heritage. West Bengal is illegal state of India which actually belongs to Bangladesh.

Sorry weaklings that get walked over constantly, cry constantly about 3 million of their innocents being butchered and are unable to do anything to receive justice for that (given the claim is so shoddy to anyone with common sense)....get to assert squat about who is the flag-bearer of any culture.

Your whole country is founded on a hoax fuelled by butthurt (of your own effeminate weakness that required manly DADA to rescue and save you) and you call others as "illegal"?

You lot continually throwing a tantrum over this just shows how weak and defeated you truly are. A country that is confident in its identity has no requirement in the first place to assert it so flimsily like you lot. I'm glad you have to live with what 1971 was deep down beyond the words you lot throw around. You betrayed your compatriots (that you chose in the first place) and you claim vindication through a number of innocent dead no one else believes or supports. That is the sum total of the nature of your people and will always be. Dont blame how we use and discard you in repeated cycles for what lies within you inherently.

Bangladesh is just a funny joke for most people when it even gets mentioned in the first place (like being among the least liveable places in the world).
 
lol BD and Pak whining is quite interesting.Anyway,you have only one choice to ban all that just MADE me PM of India then i will ban these disgusting Brothelwood movies and daily serials within one minute. :lol::lol:
 
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The 'mutilated' version in called Bangal language in your small state.

Bangladesh is true flag bearer of Bengali culture and heritage. West Bengal is illegal state of India which actually belongs to Bangladesh.

Islamic and Hindu Bengali cultures, all belongs to Bangladesh.




A variety of Bangladeshi foods— smoked ilish with mustard-seeds, biryani and pithas



The annual Bengali New Year parade.
:sleep::closed:
 
Since other thread got closed, need to post the correction here:

Dear Besharam President @Trumpcard of India,

I am very much obliged to post a news printed in your newspaper, "The Hindu". Only 283 in your slum called india, whereas there are more than 500,000 illegal Indians to a poor BD.

"State has 283 illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, says Home Minister
SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT
BELAGAVI NOVEMBER 22, 2016 16:57 IST
UPDATED: NOVEMBER 22, 2016 16:57 IST"

We would be much obliged if your Excellency take appropriate action to bring back your economic refugees in our BD.

Thanking you in anticipation.

Sincerely yours
-----------------

That was just Karnataka dummy (the home minister of Karnataka quoted in the state LA). Of course the further away from the hellhole that is BD, the fewer the number of illegals...(look at a map sometime to check the distance). This was just a minimum figure for that state anyway (that were identified).

http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...ladesh-says-Home-Minister/article16675358.ece

I know you are very sad that the UN has agreed multiple times with India that BD illegals are the single largest stock of illegal immigrants contained within the developing world...but please dont put that butthurt so brazenly on display each time it comes up.
 
Remote doesn't help when half of the channels are Indian.It seems there is no regulation on broadcasting Indian channels here.These channels are earning millions of dollar from BD while Bangladeshi channels are banned in India.This should be a two way street.If no Bangladeshi channels are allowed than Indian channel should also get banned.
You have nothing to offer and hence have no say on the topic of your channels getting banned in India! Moreover there must be some demand for Indian channels in bd hence the supply!

Since other thread got closed, need to post the correction here:



That was just Karnataka dummy (the home minister of Karnataka quoted in the state LA). Of course the further away from the hellhole that is BD, the fewer the number of illegals...(look at a map sometime to check the distance). This was just a minimum figure for that state anyway (that were identified).

http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...ladesh-says-Home-Minister/article16675358.ece

I know you are very sad that the UN has agreed multiple times with India that BD illegals are the single largest stock of illegal immigrants contained within the developing world...but please dont put that butthurt so brazenly on display each time it comes up.
http://m.indiatimes.com/news/india/...egal-bangladeshis-living-in-assam-266404.html
These posters need to smell the coffee and wake up rather than getting personal when they have no reply!
 
You have nothing to offer and hence have no say on the topic of your channels getting banned in India! Moreover there must be some demand for Indian channels in bd hence the supply!


http://m.indiatimes.com/news/india/...egal-bangladeshis-living-in-assam-266404.html
These posters need to smell the coffee and wake up rather than getting personal when they have no reply!

Thanks for the article. The source article is:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...9b3d759cfe7_story.html?utm_term=.b88faa12735e

Trump calls for mass deportations. This Indian state is already weeding out undocumented Muslims.




Rama Lakshmi November 27, 2016

HATIMURIA, India — Eight years ago, a dozen families showed up at this quiet farming village, saying floodwaters had washed away their homes.

They spoke with a different accent, and the villagers wondered if they might be illegal Muslim immigrants who had crossed the porous border from neighboring Bangladesh. Illegal immigration has been a contentious,issue in this northeastern state of Assam for more than three decades.

Yet “we pitied them and gave them refuge,” said Lavanya Bisaya, the 56-year-old mother of the village headman.


But as the newcomers’ numbers swelled to 200 families, tensions began to mount, until finally villagers were protesting and chanting, “Liberate our land, remove outsiders!” echoing a debate raging across Assam.

As President-elect Donald Trump has pledged to throw out up to 3 million undocumented immigrants from the United States, this remote Indian state of 31 million is in the midst of an effort to identify and “weed out” some of the more than 20 million illegal immigrants from Bangladesh living in India.

Officials launched a laborious effort to certify the Bangladeshi population in India two years ago, but the drive has been infused with new vigor and cash since the governing Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party won state elections in April.

“The Hindu rate of population growth is declining. But the Muslim rate is rising. Most of the Muslims here are from Bangladesh. If this continues, the Assamese Hindus will become a minority soon; we will lose our language, our culture, our identity,” said Himanta Biswa Sarma, finance minister in the Assam government.

Fears that terrorist groups with global backing from neighboring Bangladesh would cross over the border to radicalize local youths have also galvanized the effort, officials say.

“Our detect-delete-deport campaign is even more important because now Islamic extremist groups from Bangladesh are also sending their people to India along with the immigrants on this route,” said Samujjal Bhattacharya, a longtime activist.

Muslim-majority Bangladesh fought for independence from Pakistan and became an independent nation in 1971. Assam’s border with Bangladesh stretches for about 160 miles, 40 percent of it through,wetlands, making it relatively easy for poor Bangladeshis looking for work in India to cross over. Anger over their presence in India dates to the 1980s, when the state endured six years of anti-immigration agitation that spawned armed guerrilla groups.

As public rhetoric against the immigrants has soared, activists fear that declaring hundreds of thousands of people here illegally may whip up anti-Muslim sentiment and leave India with a humanitarian crisis because there is no treaty to deport them.


[Heartbreaking photos show what it’s like living in a walled city of a Bangladeshi brothel]

Detecting the illegal immigrants is not easy, officials say, because many of them have mingled with local populations over time, obtained forged documents, bought land and even voted.

In the past two years, officials digitized the handwritten census data of 1951 and the voter list of 1971, and created a legacy database.

People lined up to submit more than 60 million documents related to birth, land ownership and education to prove they were citizens.

But many applicants have lied and declared false connections to citizens picked out from the legacy data, officials say.

For example, 31 people have claimed to be the children of the same father. Other applicants have claimed the same woman as their mother — if it were true, she would have been giving birth to a new child every month.

To combat fraud, officials are poring over family trees of two generations of each applicant to corroborate information about parents and siblings.

[It’s not easy for women to own land in India. One woman died fighting for hers.]

“The family tree corroboration is my real weapon against fraud. There is a lot of public anxiety around this exercise,” said Prateek Hajela, who heads the National Register of Citizens. “This project is like a river of fire and we have to swim in it.”

The exercise is estimated to cost $138 million and several deadlines have been missed.

Meanwhile, people are growing impatient.

In the past year, Hatimuria village became a mini-battleground of locals versus immigrants — with street fights and tense night patrols.

Tensions worsened last month when the villagers erected a bamboo fence to block the passage of newcomers to a squatters’ settlement, and filed a police complaint. When the authorities did not act, the women locked up the police station and staged a two day sit-in.

Bowing to public pressure, the police arrived days later with an elephant and a bulldozer and mowed down the squatters’ shelters.

“There are so many of them spread all over the state; we are anxiously waiting for the government to finish its paperwork and uproot them,” said Phukan Chandra Medhi, the village elder.

But the evicted families have resettled in another vacant plot of land near the river not too far away. They say they have papers to prove they are legal.

“These days, the public mood is very negative. You have an argument with somebody on the street and they call you a Bangladeshi,” said Noor Jamal Ali, a 30-year-old tailor.

“My father was born here. How many times do I need to shout that I am a citizen?” asked Mohibul Islam Badshah, a schoolteacher.

Even though the immigrant population also includes some Hindus who entered India from Bangladesh, the sentiment against immigrants has morphed into rhetoric against Muslims, who make up about 34 percent of the state’s population.

“If indeed there are illegal immigrants, send them back. But don’t stamp the Bangladeshi tag on all Muslims so loosely,” said Aminul Islam, general secretary of the All India United Democratic Front, a political party that represents many Muslim voters.

Crossing into India is not very difficult, security officials say. It takes a few hours by boat, and there are many middlemen along the border who help find safe routes, often with the connivance of corrupt officers.

“As soon as they arrive, their priority is to enter their names into the voter list somehow. They forge all kinds of documents and pay bribes for this,” said Upamanyu Hazarika, a Supreme Court lawyer and convener of Forum Against Infiltration. His group mobilized the women in Hatimuria against the squatters.

Many of those who have been caught up in the citizenship drive who cannot prove their lineage are languishing in detention centers.

“It is no coincidence that most people declared foreigners by the tribunals are extremely poor and illiterate, and cannot access competent lawyers,” said Aman Wadud, who provides free legal aid to “doubtful” voters.

On the day the police came to Hatimuria to evict the squatters, Bisaya and other women climbed the rocks and watched the scene from a distance.

“As a human being I felt sad seeing them run here and there, holding onto their children and things as their tin houses were crushed,” Bisaya recalled. “But we have been tolerant for too long. They stole our goats, lemons and bicycles. Tomorrow they would have stolen our jobs and land, too.”

====================

Do you have any idea how many are in the "detention centers" right now?
 
It is not about the quality , It is about gross incompetence of our TV channels. Out of 30 Minutes 20 mins will be advertisements. People get bored easily and switch to Indian channels. Bangladeshi dramas are still better than any of Indian dramas .

Young generation of Kolkata listens to Bangladeshi songs a lot. Habib, Hridoy, James , Ayub all are very popular there. I dont see Bangladeshi Music channels being telecast there.

Some bangladeshi bands became popular along with our bands when band music was the in thing, not anymore.

And bangladeshi channels are not banned, but nobody watch them, so very few operators air them.
 
Some bangladeshi bands became popular along with our bands when band music was the in thing, not anymore.

And bangladeshi channels are not banned, but nobody watch them, so very few operators air them.


That's incorrect. There is no ban on BD channels, but resorting to unusual means these are not telecast in India. Same happens to our goods trying to enter. They will find some excuse to ensure this does not enter. This is the typical Hindu mentality at work here.
 
That's incorrect. There is no ban on BD channels, but resorting to unusual means these are not telecast in India. Same happens to our goods trying to enter. They will find some excuse to ensure this does not enter. This is the typical Hindu mentality at work here.

Apparently bangladeshis themselves don't watch these channels........... Typical jamati mentality at work here.
 
can somebody tell us some famous bd channels.. may be they do carry some of them in WB.
 
Some bangladeshi bands became popular along with our bands when band music was the in thing, not anymore.

And bangladeshi channels are not banned, but nobody watch them, so very few operators air them.

The channels are not banned but Indian government has raised the tariffs for them so high that makes it commercially unfeasible to telecast in the country. In contrast, Indian channels are enjoying a free market in Bangladesh...

I guess in the early or mid 2000s, NTV and some other Bangladeshi channels used to air in India. Their popularity was so high that your cultural ministry (not sure about state or central) lobbied to restrict the telecast of Bangladeshi channels, supported by the corporate houses, arguing that those channels are eating up the popularity of local channels and that the Bangladeshi products will be occupying the local market beating the local products...
 
The channels are not banned but Indian government has raised the tariffs for them so high that makes it commercially unfeasible to telecast in the country. In contrast, Indian channels are enjoying a free market in Bangladesh...

I guess in the early or mid 2000s, NTV and some other Bangladeshi channels used to air in India. Their popularity was so high that your cultural ministry (not sure about state or central) lobbied to restrict the telecast of Bangladeshi channels, supported by the corporate houses, arguing that those channels are eating up the popularity of local channels and that the Bangladeshi products will be occupying the local market beating the local products...
how much is the tariff? is it levied only on foreign channels or Indian channels too?
 
how much is the tariff? is it levied only on foreign channels or Indian channels too?

I'm not sure but that's what I heard from those related to the industry... It's obviously on the foreign channels only, to save local productions...
 
I'm not sure but that's what I heard from those related to the industry... It's obviously on the foreign channels only, to save local productions...
hmm... will it be possible to ask the person for a source?...
there are awful lot of 'I heard somewhere' in bd section(and even bd news sources which use 'according to reliable sources' followed by writing whatever they want)... so it will be nice if you can support what you say... or heldge such sentences with 'I think' or 'may be' so that it will be taken as your opinion and not as an assertion as statement of fact.
btw not saying you are wrong.. just too lazy to google and onus is not on reader anyway.
 
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hmm... will it be possible to ask the person for a source?...
there are awful lot of 'I heard somewhere' in bd section(and even has seeped into bd news sources which uses 'according to reliable sources' followed by writing whatever they want)... so it will be nice if you can support what you say... or heldge such sentences with 'I think' or 'may be' so that it will be taken as your opinion and not as an assertion as statement of fact.
btw not saying you are wrong.. just too lazy to google and onus is not on reader anyway.

Well, the source is primary which means the person is directly related to the issue...

I guess this thing has come up several times in the news as well, so there's nothing really suspicious. Popular media personalities like Munni Saha has been quite vocal on this issue, despite her pro-India stance on several matters...
 

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