brad brace contemporary culture scrapbook

March 9, 2007

Bangladesh to boot Burmese refugees from camp

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 8:10 am

March 8, 2007 —About 6000 Burmese refugees living in makeshift camps in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazaar district have been ordered by the government to move, the United Nations office of the High Commissioner for Refugees said yesterday.

According to UNHCR, the unofficial refugee camps along the Naff River in Teknaf are set to be demolished as part of an attempt by Bangladesh’s interim government to crackdown on illegal housing.

Pia Prytz Phiri, UNHCR’s representative in Bangladesh yesterday condemned the government for ordering the refugees to move without any advanced warning.

“We understand why the government doesn’t want them living there, but to move them without having prepared any solution in advance is not very humane,” Pia Prytz Phiri said in a statement.

“These people are of concern to us and we want to help them . . . it is hard to imagine human beings living in much more deplorable conditions than those in Teknaf,” she said.

UNHCR said it had called for the Bangladesh government’s cooperation in searches for new homes for the refugees, many of which are Rohingyas from Burma’s Arakan State. The organisation said it had consistently been prevented by the authorities from helping the refugees.

Since the camps were formed in 2004, residents have faced constant pressure from the government to move.

“We are under instructions to evacuate from this place,” Noor Aysha, 25-year-old refugee was quoted by UNHCR as saying.

“They are already doing evacuations [from another section of the camp] and of course we are worried. We don’t know where to go,” she said.

NYC cabbies from Bangladesh

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands,india — admin @ 8:06 am

Taking a look at where New York City’s 43,402 taxicab drivers are from: about 2,300 are American.

The top five countries of origin for NYC cabbies:

1. Bangladesh
2. Pakistan
3. India
4. Haiti
5. United States

Although there are currently only 13,000 yellow cabs in NYC, one driver said that many ex-cabbies keep their taxi licenses active as a back-up plan in case their current jobs don’t work out.

March 8, 2007

Mystical Awareness

Filed under: bangladesh,General,global islands,india — admin @ 9:31 am

Revelations of colored lights occur to the initiate during his spiritual training: there are dots and spots and circles; the soul passes through periods of black color and of black and red spots until the appearance of the green color indicates that divine grace is near–green has always been considered the highest and heavenly color.

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands,india — admin @ 9:19 am

March 7, 2007

Sufi note

Filed under: art,bangladesh,General,global islands,india — admin @ 5:26 pm

Letters written with ink do not really exist qua letters. For the letters are but various forms to which meanings have been assigned through convention. What really and concretely exists is nothing but the ink. The existence of the letters is in truth no other than the existence of the ink which is the sole, unique reality that unfolds itself in many forms of self-modification. One has to cultivate, first of all, the eye to see the selfsame reality of ink in all letters, and then to see the letters as so many intrinsic modifications of the ink.

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 4:44 pm

November 26, 2006

Facing an uncertain future

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands,india — admin @ 5:11 pm

According to a report by Human Rights Watch Asia in June 1995 probably more than a million women and children are employed in Indian brothels. Many are victims of trafficking through international borders, mostly Nepal and Bangladesh. Bombay has an estimated 100,000 brothel workers. Twenty percent of Bombay’s brothel population is thought to be girls under the age of eighteen.

Trafficking victims in India are subjected to conditions tantamount to slavery and to serious physical abuse. Held in debt bondage for years at a time, they are raped and subjected to other forms of torture, to severe beatings, exposure to AIDS, and arbitrary imprisonment. Many are young women from remote hill villages and poor border communities who are lured from their villages by local recruiters, relatives or neighbours promising jobs or marriage, and sold for very small amounts to brokers who deliver them to brothel owners in India for anywhere from Rs.15,000 to Rs.40,000 [$500-$1,333]. This purchase price (Human Rights Watch Asia report, 1995) becomes the “debt” that the women must work to pay off — a process that can stretch on indefinitely.

According to an AFP report at least 20,000 Bangladeshi women and children are trafficked to India and Pakistan and to Middle Eastern countries every year. According to a Times of India report an estimated 50,000 Bangladeshi girls are trafficked to or through India every year. The girls end up in brothels in India or Pakistan or in Middle Eastern or South Asian countries.

India shares a 4,222-kilometers border with 28 Bangladeshi districts. Bangladeshi traffickers have built up bases in the border districts of India. According to an Independent Bangladesh report an estimated 90 percent of trafficked women were forced to engage in prostitution. Reportedly, 400,000 Bangladeshi women are engaged in forced prostitution in India, and 300,000 Bangladeshi boys have been trafficked to India. According to one report, every day 50 Bangladeshi girls are lured across the Indian border and sold. Bangladeshi girls who are trafficked to India by organised networks usually end up in brothels in Kolkata or Mumbai.

November 25, 2006

Bangladesh put in category of ‘flawed democracy’

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 9:45 pm

Unb, Dhaka

Bangladesh ranks 75th among 165 democracies and is grouped in the category of “flawed democracy” in a global survey report released by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) on November 24, as hassles hampered a smooth run of the past parliament and continued over the coming elections.

The EIU also put Bangladesh on the “negative list” with a caution that an unclear or disputed election result, to be overseen by the caretaker government, could trigger a political crisis and rollback of democracy.

Its democracy index is based on five categories: Electoral process and pluralism, civil liberties, the functioning of government, political participation, and political culture.

Bangladesh’s overall score was 6.11, out of maximum of 10 band scores.

“The condition of having free and fair competitive elections, and satisfying related aspects of political freedom, is clearly the basic requirement of all definitions,” the report noted.

According to the report, although half of the world’s countries can be considered to be democracies, the number of “full democracies” is relatively low (only 28). As many as 54 are rated as “flawed democracies”. Of the remaining states, 55 are authoritarian and 30 considered “hybrid regimes”.

According to the EIU ranking, the top ten democracies are Sweden, Iceland, the Netherlands, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Luxembourg, Australia, Canada and Switzerland. In the ranking, the US manages to come in at 17, with the UK following up at 23.

November 23, 2006

Baby auctioned for $351 to pay micro-credit debt

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 6:51 am

POOR parents of a newborn child in southern Bangladesh auctioned off their baby to repay a loan from a local micro-credit bank.

The auction took place in the impoverished hamlet of Farhadabad in Fatikchari sub-district, 290km south of the capital, Dhaka, over the weekend, said the daily, Ittefaq.

The announcement of the sale attracted more than a dozen bidders, many coming from outside the district.

The newspaper, quoting local reporters, said the baby was sold at a price of 20,000 taka ($351).

Chikon Mia and Humaira Khatoon, parents of the baby, said they already had two children who they were barely able to feed.

“We do not have enough money to feed the two children. How can I possibly feed a third one?” Ms Khatoon asked.

The landless family fell into hard times and took out a small loan last year to tide them over an economic crisis. But the farming couple failed to repay the loan in time and plunged into deeper financial problems.

After the couple’s request to the bank to reschedule the unpaid loan was turned down, they put the baby up for auction.

Nearly 40 per cent of Bangladesh’s 130 million people live under the United Nation’s designated poverty line.

November 17, 2006

Islamic extremism threatens Bangladesh

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 6:38 am

MADRAS, India — Bangladesh is the latest South Asian flash point where democracy stands threatened. Bloody street battles between two rival political parties — led by two women who hate each other — and other violence have swept the small country northwest of India in recent weeks. The military is now on the streets of major cities and towns.

Once known as East Pakistan whose Bengali-speaking Muslim majority had an affinity with India’s West Bengal state on the border, Bangladesh was born in December 1971 following political developments that had driven a wedge between West and East Pakistan. The two were already divided by language (West Pakistanis spoke Urdu, Punjabi and Sindhi), culture and a huge distance.

East Pakistani feelings that the concentration of political power in West Pakistan gave it greater privileges led to the rise of Bengali nationalism, which West Pakistan tried to crush. The military murdered intellectuals and resorted to plunder, looting and rape, trying break the East’s morale. Even napalm bombs were used against innocent villagers. It was attempted genocide.

India intervened, defeating West Pakistani forces in the East, and the region declared independence. But a military coup in 1975 saw the murder of the nation’s father and first prime minister, Sheik Mujibur Rahman, and 15 members of his family. The military took over.

Although democracy was restored in 1991, recent political violence and gore have added a frightening dimension to the fragile peace of this nation of 150 million. There are fears that Bangladesh will once again slip into a military dictatorship. Many people are deeply disappointed with political corruption. The failure of mainstream politics has encouraged the extremist fringe in a land peopled by al-Qaida and Taliban sympathizers. Events in recent weeks suggest that the state is on the brink of Islamic radicalism.

The Bangladesh Nationalist Party and its Islamic allies ended their chaotic, five-year term Oct. 27. Their rule had been marked by a nonfunctioning Parliament, street battles and creeping poverty and diseases.

A partisan and ailing president, Iajuddin Ahmed, has become the head of an interim government with defense, foreign affairs and the military under his control. General elections are scheduled for January, but the present scenario indicates that it is unlikely that the 90 million eligible Bangladeshi voters will get a fair chance to elect a government. The judiciary is highly politicized, and the Election Commission is filled with political appointees.

The Awami League, the country’s main Opposition party led by Sheik Hasina had planned demonstrations when Ahmed took over, but when she got wind of a move by outgoing Prime Minister Khaleda Zia — who heads the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) — to declare a state of emergency, she called off the protests. Hasina realized that such demonstrations would only fuel the fire. (Prime Minister Rahman, killed in the 1975 coup, was Hasina’s father.)

Since Hasina’s Awami League has a fair chance of an electoral win, it has a lot to lose by political rashness. At least one important factor is on her side: Since democracy was restored in 1991, incumbents have not fared well in elections. In addition, the BNP has split: A new organization, the Liberal Democratic Party, led by former President Badruddozza Chowdhury, is campaigning on an anticorruption platform. He has managed to rope in some important BNP leaders. But if the Election Commission is not purged of pro-BNP elements, Zia may still manage to rig the polls. Hasina has been demanding the appointment of neutral commissioners.

There is understandable international concern that Bangladesh’s corrupt, power-hungry politicians have weakened the nation’s institutions to the extent that a free and fair electoral process is difficult. So the ground looks ideal for the emergence of violent Islamic extremism. Two possibilities are feared: military intervention leading to a dictatorship, or a takeover by Islamic radicals.

Although the Bangladesh military is not as politicized as its Pakistani counterpart, there are military leaders waiting in the wings, according to media in Bangladesh. Islamic radicalism appears to be the greater threat. Militancy has grown in recent years, targeting leftists, secularists and intellectuals plus religious minorities, such as Christians and Hindus. Bombings and suicide missions are on the rise.

The principal beneficiary of the political unrest has been the increasingly influential Islamist fringe, led by legitimate parties such as the Jamaat-e-Islami and extending to the violently militant Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh and the Jamaat-ul-Mujahedin Bangladesh, reports the International Crisis Group, adding that “Islamic militancy has flourished in a time of dysfunctional politics and popular discontent.”

Perhaps what Bangladesh urgently needs today is a national government that will look beyond narrow, partisan politics. But where is the leader to head such a government? Neither Hasina nor Zia seems to have such a vision.

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