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Bangladesh - News And Discussion
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The infiltration of terrorists into India and the persecution and genocide of Hindus in Bangladesh. Based upon writings of Arun Shourie


http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=...1742796978<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Very tragic. <!--emo&Sad--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/sad.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='sad.gif' /><!--endemo-->
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->413 Bangladeshis killed by BSF in 5 years
Says Odhikar report
Staff Correspondent

Indian Border Security Force (BSF) and hoodlums killed 479 Bangladeshis inside Bangladesh territory in last five years, said a special report of Odhikar, a rights watchdog, in the city yesterday.
Of them, 413 were killed by BSF men who continued killing, injuring, abduction, rape and mugging along the border during the period.

Besides killing, 381 Bangladeshis were injured, 449 arrested, 531 abducted and seven women were raped by BSF men. Eighty-three people including eight children went missing and 40 fell victim to snatching and looting by BSF and Indian hoodlums.


"Most of the victims were poor local farmers," said the report prepared on the basis of facts collected by Odhikar's own unit and stories published in major national dailies.


The victims were gunned down while working on their lands and in most cases BSF took the bodies to India and in some cases the abducted Bangladeshis were killed there later.

Twenty-eight Bangladeshis were killed, nine injured, seven arrested and five abducted from October 10 to December 31, 2001.


In 2002, Indian miscreants and BSF men killed 105, injured 54, arrested 366 and abducted 118 Bangladeshis. Besides, 30 people including eight children went missing and 12 incidents of snatching took place during the period.


In 2003, 43 Bangladeshis were killed, 82 injured, 21 arrested, 120 abducted, two raped, eight mugged and seven went missing.


The BSF men and hoodlums killed 76, wounded 35, arrested nine and abducted 73 Bangladeshis in 2004.


In 2005, 104 people were killed, 66 injured, 26 arrested, 78 abducted, 14 went missing, three women raped and four incidents of snatching and looting took place.


Indian miscreants and BSF men killed 123 Bangladeshis, injured 135, arrested 20, kidnapped 135 and raped two women from January 1 to October 27 of this year.

Besides, 32 people went missing and eight incidents of snatching and looting also took place during the period.

Demanding proper international investigation and exemplary punishment to the perpetrators, Odhikar urged Indian and Bangladesh governments to take necessary steps to put an end to such human rights violation incidents.

http://www.thedailystar.net/2006/11/12/d61112060185.htm<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
<!--emo&:roll--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/ROTFL.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='ROTFL.gif' /><!--endemo-->

But I do wish this was true though.



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<!--emo&Sad--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/sad.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='sad.gif' /><!--endemo--> Bangla fencing put on hold as farmers protest
Maitreyee HandiquePosted online: Tuesday, November 14, 2006 at 0000 hrs Print Email
NEW DELHI, November 13: The Meghalaya Government has stopped the fencing construction on the Indo-Bangladesh border.


It says the fencing cannot start before the local communities, which have been agitating against it in some pockets of the southern part of the state, get to air their grievances in a joint discussion.

“We have asked the National Building Construction Corporation (NBCC) to keep the work in abeyance for the time being,” a state Home department official said. NBCC is one of the agencies undertaking major works in the state.

Fencing of some 58 km of the 443 km-long border came to halt a few months ago after outcry by local farmers, who refused to give up their cultivable land that lapped over the ‘zero line’ the two countries had agreed to treat as No Man’s Land.

The disputed areas are Dawki, a major coal export post in Jaintia Hills, Nongjri and Nongshken, dominated by Khasi tribals.

Under a pact between the two countries, about 150 yards on either side of the border were meant to be habitation-free, but the official informed that apart from “areas of adverse possession” (disputed areas that both India and Bangladesh claim as occupied), village farmlands stretch into the ‘zero land’ zone on both sides of the border.

The official said the observation to keep 150 yards

free on the international border did not figure in the 1975 Indo-Bangladesh border pact.

“But it’s a gentleman’s agreement” to observe that the sanctity is maintained.

Two local NGOs — Hynniewtrep People’s Social Organisation (HPSO) and Coordination Committee of International Border (CCIB), an association of four local NGOs — have been raising the cudgels on behalf of the farmers. The CCIB reportedly wants no fencing to divide the tilled land.

The HPSO, a human rights organisation on the other hand, has taken a moderate stand, stating that the ‘zero line’ must be reduced from 150 to 30-40 yards in order to save farmlands, predominantly rice and betel nut- growing area.

Kyrshan War, who leads HPSO, agrees border fencing with patrol towers, being built at a cost of about Rs one crore a kilometre, will keep a check on smuggling and infiltration, a major issue in the Northeast. “But vast cultivable land will be lost. This has to be considered before any agreement is reached.”

maitreyee.handique@expressindia.com
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The infiltration of terrorists into India and the persecution and genocide of Hindus in Bangladesh

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=...1742796978<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Very important video, watch it and send the link to your friends.

Bangladesh is a silent killer, many people here seem to think Pakistan is our main enemy but Bangladesh is a snake, a country that acts friendly when it needs us but is silently spreading it's cancer all the way from Kolkata to Mumbai, one day it will be too late to do anything to stop this.

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Bangladesh is poor, fanatic and breeding like rats, so its not only dangerous to India, environment but whole world.

This video is eye opener.
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<b>Living on the edge: Jehadist attitudes in Bangladesh</b>
Vikram Sood
03 January 2007
....
Many of the members are Afghan jehad veterans, and fund ing from Saudi Arabia and Kuwait continues with the aim of introducing a more orthodox system of Islamic education and governance. The argument cannot be that they are fanciful groupings of a few or that they may not be effective; instead the fear is that this shows an evolving mindset in our neighbourhood
...............

<b>India has chosen to stay out of any advisory roles because anything we say or do will be held against us.</b> The West has been more explicit in expressing its worries at what might be and Dhaka-based British, US and Canadian envoys have given gratis advice on democracy and the need to hold free and fair elections. They have also been urging the young to exercise their franchise, several of whom are not on the voter lists or have been removed from the lists, because of selective revision. Usually, such mysterious omissions are names of those who belong to the minorities.
...............
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http://www.rediff.com/news/2007/jan/04spec.htm

The Rediff Special/ Mashuqur Rahman

The demons of 1971

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->On December 16, 1971 the Pakistan army in Bangladesh formally surrendered. At the cost of three million dead the nation of Bangladesh was born. It was the most concentrated act of genocide of the 20th century.

Thirty-five years after the birth of the nation, many have forgotten the sacrifices of those who are no longer with us. But for those of us who survived, for our parents who kept us safe through the months of terror, there is no erasing the horrors of 1971.

Bangladesh today has yet to exorcise the demons of 1971. Many of the Razakars who collaborated with the Pakistan army and murdered countless Bengalis have today returned to Bangladesh. Some of the Razakar leaders from 1971 today lead the Jamaat-e-Islami party. Still others live freely in the United Kingdom and the United States. None of these Razakars have yet to face justice for the crimes they committed in 1971.

Today the secular Bangladesh that was born from the ashes of 1971 is under threat. It is under threat from the same anti-liberation forces that helped perpetrate the genocide of 1971. The future of a secular Bangladesh hangs in the balance today. In 1971, Bangladeshis learned the evils of both racism and religious extremism. It is a lesson we forget at our own peril. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>All of Bangladesh can't come to India, SC tells Government </b>
Pioneer News Service | New Delhi
The Supreme Court on Friday came down heavily on the Centre for failing to deport Bangladeshi nationals staying illegally in the country just because the neighbouring country refuses to accept them back as their citizens.

<b>"Merely because Bangladesh does not accept the deportees cannot be a solution to the problem," </b>the Bench of Justices GP Mathur and LS Panta remarked while hearing a public interest litigation on the issue filed by NGO, Image India Foundation.

The court brushed aside Solicitor General GE Vahanvati's contention that this problem was acute since the other side was not willing to cooperate in resolving the dispute. <b>The court also found little merit in Vahanvati's argument that there was a human problem in pushing these deportees across the border with the Bangladesh Rifles guards shooting them down </b>.

Viewing the repercussions as serious, the Bench commented, "That does not mean that the entire population of Bangladesh can come in India."

Vahanvati assured that in view of these compulsions,<b> the Government is keen on completing fencing of the Indo-Bangladesh border by March 2007 to prevent further infiltration.</b>

The Centre said it was willing to part with details about fencing and the time period by when it is proposed to be completed. Arguing for the petitioner, senior advocate Vijay Hansaria along with advocate CD Singh told the Bench this exercise was to be completed by December 2006. The petitioner further led the court's attention to the number of tribunals required to be set up by the Centre in each state.

<b>Giving two months time, the bench asked the Centre to furnish details about the fencing of border, time schedule for its completion, the number of Foreigners Tribunals constituted in states and the number of Bangladeshis actually detected and deported in the last three years.</b>

The Bench which heard the Centre at length, questioned the Government's complacency in deporting Bangladeshis when it was found wanting in providing sufficient means to its own people. Taking a reality check, it observed,<b> "at the time of independence undivided India had a population of about 40 crore. "Today minus Bangladesh and Pakistan, farmers in the country are providing enough to meet the requirements of a huge population. But for how long will this continue."</b>

<b>The population is bursting at its seams with severe power, water shortage in cosmopolitan cities. Openly expressing its fears about the current trend, the Bench observed, "we must not lose sight of the fact that Russia got disintegrated due to scarcity of food</b>."

According to an affidavit filed by the Centre in July 2005, India shares a border length of 4095 kilometres with Bangladesh out of which 926 kilometres is riverine border. <b>Despite non-cooperation from Bangladesh, the affidavit stated over 1,17,428 Bangladeshi nationals were deported between 2001 and 2003.</b>

On two earlier occasions the Court has even pronounced judgements noting such infiltration as causing an "external aggression" seeking immediate steps to contain the damage.
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

Central was swift hiting hard working Delhi traders who were Indian citizen and now protecting illegal Bangladeshi, majority of them are involved in criminal activities.
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<!--QuoteBegin-Bharatvarsh+Dec 30 2006, 03:11 PM-->QUOTE(Bharatvarsh @ Dec 30 2006, 03:11 PM)<!--QuoteEBegin--><!--QuoteBegin--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The infiltration of terrorists into India and the persecution and genocide of Hindus in Bangladesh

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=...1742796978<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Very important video, watch it and send the link to your friends.

Bangladesh is a silent killer, many people here seem to think Pakistan is our main enemy but Bangladesh is a snake, a country that acts friendly when it needs us but is silently spreading it's cancer all the way from Kolkata to Mumbai, one day it will be too late to do anything to stop this.
[right][snapback]62625[/snapback][/right]
<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->

Just got a chance to watch this. I agree with Bharatvarsh - its a must see.
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As expected. <!--emo&Big Grin--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/biggrin.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='biggrin.gif' /><!--endemo-->
<b>State of emergency declared in Bangladesh</b><!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The declaration of emergency came after the<b> United Nations has suspended all technical support for elections that have been boycotted by the opposition and are looking increasingly chaotic and possibly untenable.</b>

<b>The European Commission said on Thursday it had also decided to suspend its poll observation mission.</b>

<b>The interim caretaker government stood firm on Thursday in its pledge to hold elections on January 22 despite the boycott by a multi-party alliance headed by former prime minister Sheikh Hasina on grounds the ballot would not be free and impartial</b>.

At least 45 people have been killed and hundreds injured in pre-election violence and police say they fear far worse to come.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon noted the situation had deteriorated to the point that the US-based National Democratic Institute for International Affairs and the International Republican Institute were refusing to monitor the elections.

<b>"The political crisis in Bangladesh has severely jeopardised the legitimacy of the electoral process,"</b> Ban said in a statement released on Thursday in Dhaka.

"The announced cancellation of numerous international observation missions is regrettable. The United Nations has had to suspend all technical support to the electoral process, including by closing its International Coordination Office for Election Observers in Dhaka," Ban said
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Democracy in Muslim nation is impossible.
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It is only a matter of time before the Army may step in and save what is left of Bangladesh. Even at this late hour, all the political parties joining together can save the nation. The political hatred between the two main political formations of the country has brought this disaster. Taking advantage of the situation, some undesirable elements may have also ganged up with one or the other political party.
We in India will obviously be concerned with the developments. We have been observing the rise and growing in strength of the fundamentalist forces during the last few years. The increasing influence of these elements within the establishment, the patronage that the BD authorities have been providing to the insurgent groups operating in the North-Eastern States of India were all disturbing developments. If Bangladesh moves towards anarchy, it is bound to have repercussions on the Indian side of the border. There can once again be influx of refugees across the border.

Let us hope that better sense will prevail upon the political leaders of Bangladesh.
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Bangladesh curbs media<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Bangladesh imposed strict media restrictions on Friday as part of emergency laws after the president quit as head of the interim government, postponing elections in a bid to halt political violence.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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[center]<b><span style='font-size:14pt;line-height:100%'>Bangladesh</span></b>[/center]

[center]<b><span style='font-size:21pt;line-height:100%'>State of emergency</span></b> <!--emo&:flush--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/Flush.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='Flush.gif' /><!--endemo-->[/center]

[center]<b><span style='font-size:14pt;line-height:100%'>Hope amid the murk of Bangladeshi politics</span></b>[/center]

IAJUDDIN AHMED, Bangladesh’s president, has stood down as head of a caretaker administration, postponed the election it was due to oversee on January 22nd, and handed over to Fakhruddin Ahmed, a former head of the central government. The president also declared a state of emergency, involving the deployment of thousands of soldiers with broad powers of arrest, press censorship and a one-off night-time curfew in some 60 cities and towns in the country of more than 140m people.

A new interim government will now have 120 days to prepare free and fair polls. The president has yielded to weeks of pressure on the streets organised by an alliance of political parties, and to foreign concern. The political system has broken down. The mechanism devised to ensure its continuity became the cause of its collapse. This was the “neutral” caretaker administration that takes over for three months after every five-year parliamentary term to oversee elections. One of Bangladesh’s two main political parties, the Awami League, and its allies, have always alleged that the one that took over last October was far from neutral.

The League led weeks of general strikes and often violent protests calling for electoral reform or the postponement of the election. Dozens of people have been killed, and hundreds injured. The League argued that, in becoming head of the interim administration, the president had flouted the constitution. It accused the Election Commission of partiality, and claimed the electoral roll was stuffed with millions of ghost voters—a claim backed by foreign observers.

On January 3rd the League announced that it would boycott the election. Without it, the poll would be meaningless. Since the toppling of a military ruler in 1990, power has alternated between the BNP and the League and the two women, the “begums”, leading them—Khaleda Zia, the outgoing BNP prime minister, and the League’s Sheikh Hasina Wajed.

The origins of the crisis lie in the winner-takes-all mentality with which both big parties have fought elections, and in the deep personal antipathy of their two leaders. Most blame must lie with the BNP, which has indeed sabotaged free and fair elections. But the League has been all too willing to air its grievances on the streets.

Just before the president declared the state of emergency, two important international bodies, in effect, threw their weight behind the League’s call for a postponement of the election. The United Nations said the political crisis had “severely jeopardised the legitimacy of the electoral process” and that it was withdrawing all technical support. The European Union said it would withdraw its observer mission, because the conditions for credible and meaningful elections did not exist.

<b>The only groups that stood to benefit from the stand-off were Islamic extremists and soldiers. Bangladesh, a traditionally tolerant and moderate Muslim country, <span style='font-size:14pt;line-height:100%'>has nonetheless seen in recent years the growth of a small but violent fundamentalist tendency. It has grown in the vacuum left by the failure of mainstream politics. The army, exasperated by the messiness of civilian politics, may hanker for the certainties and privileges of military rule. But the UN hinted that one of those perks-Bangladesh’s extensive role in UN peacekeeping operations-might be in jeopardy if the army took political sides.</span></b>

That may make the army think twice about staging a full-blooded coup, though Mr Ahmed could not have acted without its tacit backing. The Awami League has welcomed the president’s decision to meet some of its demands. The BNP-led coalition that formed the previous government, however, boycotted Mr Ahmed’s swearing-in ceremony. Stability depends on persuading the two big parties to agree to submit to an electoral process. The president has made a start in establishing the conditions for this to happen. But no one ever lost money betting on the “two begums” ability to bicker.

Cheers <!--emo&:beer--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/cheers.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='cheers.gif' /><!--endemo-->
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A top functionary of the Bangladesh Bank has taken over as the head of the interim Government. In fact, in the last 72 hours the President has gone back in his earlier assertions that there is no legal provision for postponing the general elections and as such the voters list cannot be re drawn. He has now accepted the demands of the 14 party alliance and all indications are that the voters list will certainly be revised before the actual holding of the elections. Now it appears, the real power has passed on to the Army and no action is taking place without its approval. The presence of the Army in the streets of the major towns gives a reassuring sense of confidence amongst the common people who have become fed up with the last four months of political turmoil.
It is expected that the interim government will take a number of actions to ensure the conduct of free and fair election which will be acceptable to the international community. The wide spread corruption, a committed judiciary and the rise of fundamentalists have not gone unnoticed in the Army circles and it is expected that the present caretaker government with the help of the Army will try to blow up the scandals and discredit some of the undesirable political activists, so that in the future a cleaner political scene will prevail in Bangladesh.
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<b>Bangldesh under Pakistani ISI command sending Military in plain clothes to West Bengal for creating havoc and stealing Indian strategic secrets</b><!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Two Bangladeshis were arrested on Wednesday, allegedly with confidential defence documents in their possession, at Basirhat in North 24 Parganas district, police said.

They were nabbed a day after the arrest of a Bangladesh Army deserter in the same district.

Sensitive military intelligence documents and confidential papers on India's defence set-up were seized from the two men - idenitified as Hasan Ahmed, 24, and Al Amin Mirza, 23 - after their arrest by the CID at Basirhat bus stand, a top official told PTI here. “Prima facie, it is suspected that the two were on an espionage mission in India,” he said. Fake Indian currency with a face value of Rs 2,500 was found in the possession of the men who did not have any valid travel documents, the official said
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Perpetrators set fire on 10 Hindu Minority houses at Baniachang Upazilla of Habiganj District.

Perpetrators set fire on 10 Hindu Minority houses on last Monday (08.01.2007) at Baniachang Upazilla of Habiganj District. Ten houses including one cow burnt to ashes. Women and Children became destitute and shelterless.(The daily Samakal dated 16.01.2007)

HABIGANJ: Staff Reporter:  A group of perpetrators set fire on ten minority houses on last Monday at Baniachang Upazilla of Habiganj District. Before setting fire on the houses, perpetrators looted belongings of the minority family. Bholanath Das (60) was seriously injured due to being set on fire. One hundred fifty person including children and women have become homeless and shelter less.

It is learnt that the perpetrators were trying to evict those ten families of Gunpur village under Baniachang Upazilla since long. The local people said that the perpetrators might have committed this offence.

On last Monday morning early time of the day the perpetrators initially set fire on the house of Bholanath Das. Within twinkling of an eye the fire broke out and engulfed adjacent more 9 minority houses. The local people came and tried to extinguish the fire continuously for several hours and subsequently came under control.  The houses of ten minority families including the houses of Ranga Lal Das, Bholanath Das, Banabashi Das, Fulchand Das including a cow were burnt to ashes.

Before setting fire perpetrators looted fishing nets valued at Taka 50,000/- and paddies valued at Taka 50,000/- belonging to minority destitute victims. Total cost of damages caused due to fire stands Taka more than 15 million as initial estimation. More than 150 children and women belonging to minority community are passing their days under the sky in this severe cold weather prevailing there.

Through:
Rabindra Ghosh
Published Wednesday, January 17, 2007 8:37 PM by Administrator

http://hrcbmdfw.org/blogs/bangladesh/archi.../01/17/594.aspx<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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ULFA, the communist terrorists funded by the islamic ISI of Terroristan:

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/ULFA_ga...how/1678191.cms
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>'ULFA gave $6 mn to Bangladesh parties'</b>
[ 25 Feb, 2007 1243hrs ISTPTI ]

NEW DELHI: The banned United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) is reported to have pumped in over six million dollars to fund major political parties in the forthcoming Bangladesh elections, a leading US think-tank has said.

The funds have gone to at least 15 candidates belonging to both the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and Awami League, Strategic Foresight Inc said, claiming that the ULFA was "hedging its bets in order to protect its militant and business operations in Bangladesh should either party win".

In a report on the general elections, which are expected to be held later this year, and the prevailing political situation in Bangladesh, the think-tank said the ULFA's core leadership is believed to have been living in luxury in that country for 15 years "under the protection of its political allies in Dhaka".

The think-tank, also known as Stratfor, said "as long as ULFA can continue funding the appropriate candidates, it can ensure that the Bangladesh government will resist caving into Indian demands to crack down on the militant group".

Observing that six million dollars was a "handsome contribution" coming from an Indian militant outfit, the report said the ULFA was "no ordinary organisation".

Its chief Paresh Barua was "an enormously wealthy racketeer worth approximately 110 million dollars" with business operations throughout India, Bangladesh and the Persian Gulf, it said.

The business interests, Stratfor said, included hotels, consulting firms, driving schools, tanneries, department stores, textile factories, travel agencies, investment companies, shrimp trawlers and soft drink factories.

"Barua's businesses in Bangladesh allegedly are handled by a senior government official in Dhaka," it claimed.

The think-tank said ULFA funded its militant activities through "a sophisticated extortion network" and that major tea companies in Assam continuously faced "pay or die" threats but preferred to stay quiet, both out of fear as well as business interests.

Stratfor said the ULFA had "increasingly become more concerned with its financial interests".

The ULFA was also aware that New Delhi would not budge in its refusal to give in to the group's demands and therefore was focussing its militant operations to bleed the security forces in order to strengthen its negotiating position, it said, while referring to recent attacks against migrant workers in Assam.

Besides the ULFA, the report said, Bangladeshi Islamist groups and Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence were other players having stakes in Bangladesh.

<b>"As long as India's militant-rich, porous borders remain, Pakistan can continue to hamper Indian ambitions to step beyond its backyard and become a truly global power," Stratfor said.</b><!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->At least someone external has clarified that it is Pakistan that is holding not only Afghanistan back but also India. (The conclusion ain't rocket science, I know, but from the amount of Paki denial, you'd think it was.)
Is that final statement of Stratfor also an indirect admission from his end that ULFA is indeed Pakistan's little friend, or is that statement not really about the rest of this ULFA article at all?
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Bangladesh has officially become Pakistan II (or East Pakistan, again). Its transformation is complete now, down to the usual islamic lies to protect its government-sponsored terrorists. Hence Bangladesh too deserves to be designated <!--emo&:liar liar--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/liar.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='liar.gif' /><!--endemo-->

http://www.dailypioneer.com/indexn12.asp?m...t&counter_img=2
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Bangla denies of existing terror camps on its soil</b>
Agencies | New Delhi

Ruling out India's concrete evidence on insurgent camps on its soil, Bangladesh today said that no camps were present on its soil. But to save its face the country has said that it would not provide refuge to ultras fleeing from the North East and 'assured' to take steps to check infiltration from its side.
 
"We are determined to do the utmost to see to it that miscreants from India do not get a breathing space in Bangladesh," BDR Director General Major Shakil Ahmed said at a joint media interaction with his BSF counterpart AK Mitra after conclusion of talks.
 
It also agreed to allow developmental activities taking place within 150 yards of the border, tea plantations till the zero line barring certain stretches and offered cooperation in tackling cross-border smuggling of drugs and cattle.
 
The significant understandings came through after four days of discussions between the Director Generals of BSF and Bangladeshi Rifles here as part of the Indo-Bangladesh Border Coordination Conference.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->Also see post 217, where even a US think-tank person is willing to admit to Bangladeshi islamoterrorists that are working for Pakistan (I) to hamper and harrass India.
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<b>Sheikh Hasina charged with murder of five people </b><!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Hasina, who is on holiday in the United States, "has been charged with the murder of four people during the political unrest last October," Police Deputy Commissioner Shahidul Haq Bhuiyan told a news agency.

"Detective branch police submitted the charge-sheet of the case to a Dhaka court today after carrying out investigations and taking evidence," said Bhuiyan, adding the case would be heard April 22.

However, he gave no details of the exact role Hasina, who heads the Awami League and a 19-party opposition alliance, is accused of playing in the October 28 killing of the men who were battered to death. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

why ?
<i>They come to America</i>
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The Governemnt of Bangladesh has banned the entry of the Awami League Chief into the country. She was prevented from boarding a BA flight . It is perhaps a good sign, BD will get rid of the BNP Awami League fight.
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