June 9, 2007
June 8, 2007
Evidence mounts of Bangladesh mass torture
A news investigation has uncovered evidence linking Bangladesh’s military-backed Government with mass arrests, illegal detention, torture and at least 100 murders since January. The horrific revelations come as Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer prepares to unveil a one-third increase in foreign aid to Bangladesh.
Since January, soldiers have been calling the shots in Bangladesh, one of the world’s youngest and poorest countries. Troops took to the streets after democracy was suspended and the military imposed draconian emergency rule.
Media restrictions are now tight and openly filming soldiers is banned. The Army said it took control to clean up a culture of corruption in politics and it has rounded up dozens of prominent people, but the news has discovered evidence of something far more sinister behind the scenes.
Human rights groups contend that the military has arrested as many as 200,000 people since the crackdown began. There is no way to fully account for their whereabouts but the belief is that most of them are still in military custody.
Some have emerged with shocking accounts of abuse, torture and murder. Soldiers picked up Protap Jambil on the way home from a wedding. He says he was beaten for more than four hours.
“They tied my two hands and feet and eight or nine of them caned me,” he said.
“I was in tremendous pain – I couldn’t move, I couldn’t walk, I needed four people to carry me.”
Mr Jambil says he was forced to lie while up to eight soldiers took turns beating him with bamboo rods.
“I kept praying to God and his son, Jesus. I thought that I would die,” he said.
He was not alone. His brother-in-law was also arrested and tortured, but he did not survive.
“At first they tied both of his hands and feet, then they tortured the soles of his feet and all over his body,” Mr Jambil said.
“They unzipped his pants and attached pliers to his penis and to all of his fingers and toes.
“They put candle wax on the wounds and then they put hot water mixed with dried chilli and salt and poured it all over his body and through his nose and ears.”
Attempts by human rights groups to document abuse cases have been met with threats and intimidation, but some refuse to be silenced.
Human rights group Odhikar says the security forces have killed at least 100 people since January at a rate of almost one per day.
Spokesman Farhad Mazhar says those who do emerge from military custody tell a disturbingly similar story.
“People have been picked up without any kind of evidence and then they’ve been tortured,” he said. “People complain that their nails have been taken out. They’ve been tortured very badly.”
Interrogation centres
Military-run interrogation centres operate all over the country. Some, such as Fatullah stadium on the outskirts of Dhaka, are brazenly open. A year ago, Australia played a Test match against Bangladesh there. Today, it is military occupied.
One witness, who was too fearful to appear on camera, described how he heard torture victims screaming in agony during a local cricket match.
Later in the same day, a senior Army officer boasted openly that suspects were far more talkative after they had been given electric shocks, beaten and subjected to water torture.
The head of the Bangladesh armed forces and the man behind emergency rule, is General Mooen Ahmed.
General Ahmed says action has already been taken on the allegations of human rights abuses.
“Nobody is above the law in this country, so if anybody makes a mistake, he will be taken to task,” he said.
The general denies soldiers are torturing suspects and rejects claims there have been at least 100 cases of murder by armed forces since he took power.
Govt hand-picked
To provide cover from allegations that he carried out a coup, General Ahmed hand-picked a civilian caretaker Government to run Bangladesh.
“It is absolutely a civilian Government, supported by the middle classes – the soldiers, the police,” he said.
Army-approved Foreign Minister Iftikhar Chowdhury says the military only plays a role given to it by the Government.
“It’s not a dirty work,” he said. “The Army is taking certain actions in terms of the anti-corruption drive, which has full support of the community.”
Mr Chowdhury says the arrests of as many as 200,000 people have taken place under due process.
“The arrests are made under some allegations of breach of law,” he said.
“Due process begins with the effecting of the arrest when those arrested are brought before magistrates, as is always the case here.”
The United Nations sees it differently. It recently accused the Bangladesh armed forces of using murder as a means of law enforcement.
But Mr Chowdhury says Bangladesh has done better than most countries of the world in these respects.
“I can tell you this and we’re proud of our record,” he said. “In human rights, Bangladesh is better than many, many, many, countries.”
‘Aust interference’
Bangladesh was on a knife edge in January. As political rivalries were being played out in violent street clashes, western diplomats were shuttling around the capital trying to mediate.
Just before the Army hit the streets, the British and American ambassadors each held private meetings with the military chief. Some suspect General Moeen was given a green light to take over.
Influential newspaper editor Nurul Kabir says a clique of western diplomats known as the Tuesday Club interfered in his country’s internal affairs.
The club is an informal caucus of the big donor nations that meets every week. Its core members are ambassadors from the US, Britain, Japan, Canada, the European Union and Australia.
“An ambassador isn’t supposed to do all these things,” he said. “I don’t believe that my ambassador in Washington can even think of entering into the headquarters to discuss politics.”
Mr Kabir says the Tuesday Club not only courted military intervention but campaigned for civilian politicians to accept it back in January. However, none of the diplomats will agree to talk about it.
“As a citizen, I feel embarrassed and I’m sure that people of the countries that they have sent here would have been embarrassed too to see how their high commissioners and ambassadors in Dhaka are meddling themselves in politics,” Mr Kabir said.
Aid defended
Australia’s High Commissioner, Douglas Foskett, refused to be interviewed for this story but he remains an open backer of the Government, despite the military’s behaviour.
“We are happy that all is looking positive for the future,” Mr Foskett said in a press release.
“Such is Australia’s apparent faith in the current state of affairs in Bangladesh, the Federal Government is preparing to increase foreign aid from $43 million to around $57 million, a 33 per cent increase.”
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer has defended Australia’s aid program after the human rights allegations were aired TV. Mr Downer says the aid does not go to the Bangladeshi Government.
“No matter what the political behaviour of the political elites might be – and in this case they have a caretaker Government which says it’s reformist, which promises to restore democracy and we await that happening – I think it’s so wrong to take necessary assistance from the poorest people in society,” he said.
“We shouldn’t ever consider doing that. If I’m criticised for helping the poor, I don’t mind that.
“There are 60 million people living in Bangladesh in abject poverty and I think we’re doing the right thing to help those people and I would think most Australians would agree with me.”
The parliamentary secretary for Foreign Affairs, Greg Hunt, says Australia’s aid to Bangladesh was increased in line with its status as one of the poorest countries in the world.
Mr Hunt has pointed out that Australian aid does not go directly to the Bangladeshi regime but to reputable organisations like UNICEF and the World Food Program.
‘Common interests’
Mr Chowdhury is set to visit Canberra to collect the aid cheque. It is unclear what, if any, conditions are attached.
When asked if Australia’s High Commissioner raised any human rights concerns with him, Mr Chowdury had this to say:
“Douglas Foskett has been a tremendous ambassador. He’s a very good High Commissioner. We have always talked about common interests,” he said.
“There is sometimes a fine line between interest and interference. Ambassadors understand this very well.
“This country is – we would like to be as we say we are – in charge of our own destiny, in the driver’s seat of our programs, plans. Australians understand and appreciate that very much.”
General Moeen insists democracy will return to Bangladesh with fresh elections by the end of next year but he recently raised eyebrows by promoting himself to Full General. Many wonder how long civilians will remain in the picture.
Generals in Bangladesh have a notorious history of thirsting for absolute power.
June 7, 2007
Nicaragua authorities launch new anti-drug operation
Nicaragua’s anti-drug forces and navy on Wednesday began an operation seeking the ringleaders of the drug group Millennium Cartel, said the police.
Operation Pacific Storm is a follow-up to the operations on Monday and Tuesday. On Tuesday, six cartel members were arrested on the beach at Salina Grande in Leon Department, some 93 km northeast to the capital.
On Monday, in Operation Tenacious, 11 cartel members, including Guatemalans, Hondurans, Salvadorians and Nicaraguans, were arrested.
All these operations, after months of intelligence work, “have been a success until now,” police spokesman Alonso Sevilla told local media.
He said the police will continue the anti-drug efforts along the Pacific coast as those “traffickers are trying to attack the Pacific coast because we have hit their Atlantic Ocean routes.”
About eight tons of cocaine and 41 kg of heroin had been seized so far this year, said Sevilla, and 50 Mexicans, Salvadorians, Guatemalans, Hondurans and Nicaraguans had been detained in 2007.
The smuggling group takes drugs from Colombia via Mexico to the United States.
June 6, 2007
Massive security preparations for upcoming G8 summit in Germany
In preparation for the G8 summit of world leaders to be held June 6-8 in Germany, the idyllic bathing resort of Heiligendamm is being transformed into a high-security tract resembling the notorious “Green Zone” in Baghdad. The leaders of the seven major industrial nations and Russia will be entrenched behind a wall 12 kilometres long, 2.5 metres high (7.5 miles by 8.2 feet), comprising 4,600 steel panels, mounted with barbed wire, cameras and sensory detectors. An exclusion zone of 11 nautical miles will be established out to sea, complemented by an air exclusion zone extended 50 kilometres into the skies.
The cost of these measures is estimated at €92 million. Additional expenses include the wages and overtime of 16,000 police assembled from across Germany, who will provide around-the-clock protection for the eight world leaders attending the summit.
Even this is not enough, however. To prevent protests against the summit and to intimidate demonstrators, the federal interior minister and police authority are working with their counterparts in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania (MWP)—where Heiligendamm is situated—to draw up a range of repressive measures which would warm the hearts of most authoritarian rulers.
These measures began on May 9 with a series of coordinated police raids carried out across the country involving 900 police officers in six northern German states. Police searched 40 offices and dwellings occupied by opponents of the summit and seized computers, hard discs and written documents. The raids were organised by the general federal attorney, Monika Harms, and justified on the basis of Germany’s anti-terror laws. The raids represented the first-ever use of the controversial paragraph 129a—allegedly directed against the danger of terrorism—for the criminalisation of political opponents.
The raids were subsequently condemned by a number of jurists and politicians who declared them to be completely out of proportion to any real danger to the state. They were clearly aimed at intimidating the opponents of the summit and collecting confidential information about planned protests. After the raid, the Federal Prosecutor’s Office declared it was investigating 21 suspects in connection with “terrorist” arson attacks, but no arrest warrants had been issued because, according to a spokeswoman, there was a lack of any real evidence. It is clear, therefore, that the “suspicions” of terrorism were merely a pretext.
Since then, there has been a veritable flood of new measures against the planned protests proposed by the federal interior minister, Wolfgang Schäuble (Christian Democratic Union, CDU) and local police authorities.
According to one of Germany’s main television channels, the state of MWP is “preparing mass prisons for opponents of globalisation.” Potential prisoners include not only demonstrators, guilty of an offence or refusing to obey the dictates of the police, but also potential delinquents, who can be “pre-emptively” imprisoned—a practice disturbingly similar to the notorious protective custody of the Nazis.
Following the threat of preventive detention for potentially violent demonstrators by Interior Minister Schäuble, the spokeswoman for the MWP interior ministry, Marion Schlender, declared that the state would “fully exhaust” its legal capacities for preventive detention of presumed culprits.
MWP’s Security and Order Law (SOG) allows so-called preventive safekeeping of up to 10 days. The law was passed in the last legislative period with the votes of the Left-Party-PDS, which governed in a coalition with the Social Democratic Party (SPD). Following a recent state election, the state is now governed by a grand coalition of the SPD and CDU. While the Left Party is one of the co-organisers of the current protests against the G8 summit, it prefers to keep quiet about the role played by members of its own party in introducing repressive legislation in MWP.
MWP Interior Minister Lorenz Caffier (CDU) has also taken precautions to speed up the prosecution of offending demonstrators, so they can be sentenced immediately after their alleged offence.
Protesters could end up behind bars for simply getting too close to the security fence. For the period May 30 to June 8, the regional police has banned all public meetings within a distance of 200 metres from the security fence and around the local airport where summit leaders will land for their conference.
This means that the ban on demonstrations extends to a distance of 5-10 kilometres from the conference centre. There is no legal basis for this restriction. The organisers of the planned protests have asserted that they will apply for an injunction against the ruling and if necessary take the issue to the German Constitutional Court.
The interior undersecretary of state and former president of the Federal Information Service (BND), August Hanning, cynically justified this flagrant violation of the freedom of assembly with the assertion that Germany wanted to be “a good host.” This evidently means that demonstrations against the summit are permissible only if the summit participants and accompanying journalists are completely unaware of them.
The Federal Prosecutor’s Office has also resorted to obtaining samples of the odours of globalisation opponents, in order to be able to identify them later with the help of sniffer dogs. Up until now, such operational methods were the exclusive domain of the Stasi Stalinist secret police in the former East Germany. At a museum dedicated to the activities of the Stasi, it is still possible to view the odour samples (in glass bottles) obtained by agents of opponents of the GDR regime.
While a number of politicians have raised reservations of this practice—parliamentary Vice-President Wolfgang Thierse (SPD) complained of “police state methods à la GDR”—Interior Minister Schäuble has unreservedly defended the measures. He told Bavarian radio, “In certain cases it is a means to identify possible suspects.” The issue was to ensure the security of the G8 summit, he said, and this would be done by the police using all “appropriate means.”
The external circumstances of the G8 summit mirror the relationship between the heads of states and governments who often describe themselves as the leaders of the “free world” and the mass of the population, which is held at bay by barbed wire fences, troops of police and bans on demonstration: a deep social and political gulf yawns between the two sides.
Kenya: Floods displace hundreds
Hundreds of Kenya’s Lamu residents have left homeless after their houses were submerged by raging floods.
An estimated 1,000 victims the floods, according to the district disaster management committee, are in Bomani in the expansive Mpeketoni settlement scheme.
Several mud-walled huts had been washed away, Lamu acting district commissioner Moses Ivuto said.
“But there are no casualties as people had moved out of flooded areas to higher grounds,” he said after touring the area together with the disaster management team.
The flooding had affected schooling after a small bridge connecting the village with the institution was washed away, he said.
Mr Ivuto said the Red Cross Society had started assisting the displaced families with food and clothing but more assistance was needed.
“We will be holding an emergency meeting to come up with an urgent plan of action to assist the victims,” he told the Nation by telephone.
A resident who has been forced to abandon his home, the rains have been pounding the area for two weeks, according to Mr Joram Njoroge. Mr Njoroge, whose three acre maize plot has been destroyed, said hunger was imminent in the area.
“But the greatest fear now is the strong possibility of hippos coming up to where the people are because of the huge water mass,” he said.
Mr Emmanuel Wanyoike Kimani, a Red Cross official, said immediate measures should be taken to ensure that lives were not lost due to starvation and outbreak of water-borne diseases.
“The situation is critical and more food and other materials like blankets and mosquito nets are needed urgently to supplement what has already been given out,” he said.
June 5, 2007
Political Party Ban
Thailand’s military-backed interim government has lifted a ban on
political party activities. The ban was imposed last September following a
coup that ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. The ban has been
lifted to allow parties to campaign for a general election, expected in
December. The move comes days after a court ordered the dissolution of Mr
Thaksin’s Thai Rak Thai party and banned its leaders, including Thaksin,
from politics for five years.
June 3, 2007
Prisoners ‘packed like sardines’ in Bangladesh jails
DHAKA: Top political leaders including former ministers and lawmakers are among a record 86,000 detenues “packed like sardines” in Bangladesh’s jails which have a total capacity to house only 27,000.
Several hundred new prisoners are huddled every day by authorities conducting a nationwide drive against crime, corruption and religious extremism, making the
situation worse.
Sweaty summer and monsoon for which the tropical Deltaic region is known add to the woes of the prisoners.
Even the authorities are appalled. “You will be astonished to see the awful condition of the prisoners,” said the inspector-general of prisons, Brigadier General Zakir Hasan.
“They sleep in shifts, and queue up for hours to use the lavatories and bathrooms,” New Age quoted him as saying yesterday.
There were 71,000 prisoners already when the present government took office January 12, thanks to several weeks of mass agitation by a 14-party opposition alliance led by Awami League chief Sheikh Hasina.
The influx has been even higher since Chief Adviser Fakhruddin Ahmed’s caretaker government launched the drive, nabbing scores of high-profile people, with most of them detained and put on trial, in police or judicial custody.
With the drive continuing, it is showing no sign of a decline. The number is in fact growing, though there is no space left for accommodating “even a single person”, senior prison officials told the newspaper.
The situation has worsened in recent weeks in that the prisoners cannot move about in their cells properly, let alone lie down for sleeping and use toilets and bathrooms when necessary.
Three shifts have been formed so that the prisoners can sleep in phases, and it does not matter whether he or she sleeps in the day or at night.
As per the statistics recorded by the prison authorities, the number of inmates in jails was 68,278 in January, and rose to about 86,000 on May 27. The present capacity of the country’s 66 jails is only 27,254.
The general prisoners are feeling the pinch as the jail authorities had to empty many cells in the country’s prisons to accommodate the VIP prisoners, including former ministers, lawmakers and businessmen who were netted in the drive.
“It’s really tough to stay in the crowded cells in the hot weather. You will not understand the dreadful condition of the general prisoners if you have not been there,” said a prisoner at the jail gate, before rushing away with his parents.
June 2, 2007
Bangladesh snake charmers dance to a new tune
PORABARI, Bangladesh – They’ve dodged deadly kisses, orchestrated mesmerizing dances and healing sessions, but Bangladesh’s snake charmers are now a dying breed.
Bangladesh has an estimated 500,000 snake charmers, who rove the country like gypsies or live in riverboats.
Some 5,000 have settled with their families in Porabari village, 32 km (20 miles) from Dhaka, where every household boasts a basket full of snakes, even though few charmers are teaching their children their art.
“This is not because we no longer love snakes or dislike to play them for a living,” said Alamgir Hossain, 45, who holds the title of “sorporaj” or “snake king”, the highest honor in the community.
“I grew up with the snakes, played with cobras, and, maybe you can say, romanced with them,” said the father of six.
“So did most members of the clan. They play snakes to crowds of villagers for money. But those days have changed.”
Now many of Porabari’s charmers have taken other professions with more predictable incomes, like pulling rickshaws or growing rice and vegetables. Most send their children to school.
Urbanization, deforestation and other environmental changes have also decreased Bangladesh’s snake population. Even though the government has banned the killing of snakes, villagers often kill serpents that have bitten or killed others.
Hossain won his title after many years of devotion, practice and training in Bangladesh and India’s Assam state. Today, few have the patience or inclination to do the same.
He said he was one of only six living “sorporaj” in the country — five of his predecessors were killed by snake bites.
In Porabari, children play with snakes without fear, draping them around their necks like garlands.
Female snake charmers often sell talismans and “medical” advice to illiterate villagers. Male charmers are often called upon to cure people who have been bitten by poisonous snakes and are seen as “ujhas” or paramedics.
Hossain said Porabari’s charmers make most of their money from selling snakes to the other charmers who descend on the village for the weekly snake market.
“I try to buy nearly 100 snakes in each consignment, for 400 or 500 taka ($6-7) each, and then sell them for a minimum profit,” Hossain said. “But high quality snakes, like the king cobra, are rarely found and cost nearly 5,000 taka a piece.”
Despite his elevated position in the community, Hossain said he had no intention to allow his children to follow in his “risky” footsteps.
“But we cannot live without snakes,” he said. “We love them like we love our children.”