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Thursday, November 22, 2007

[chottala.com] Taslima moved to Rajasthan : Taslima-Nandigram mix brings Army out

11/23/2007 8:33:44 AM 

 
 

 
 
Bangladeshi author Taslima Nasreen being taken out of a hotel in Jaipur in a government car along with her personal escorts and the police   
VIDEO ZONE:
  • AIMF TARGETS TASLIMA
    I
    INSIDE NANDIGRAM
  • THE WAR CONTINUES
  • CAN THE CPM RECOVER?
  •  

     

     
     
     
    Taslima leaves for New Delhi
     
    Nandigram row exposes family divide
     
     
     

    Taslima moved to Rajasthan
    Taslima moved to Rajasthan
    NDTV Correspondent
    Thursday, November 22, 2007 (Kolkata)
    Controversial writer Taslima Nasreen has been taken to Rajasthan from West Bengal.

    On Wednesday, a small protest by a little known Muslim group- the All India Minority Forum had shot out of control in Kolkata and there were scenes of violence all day.

    The group claimed it was protesting against the violence in Nandigram and also demanded the expulsion of Bangladeshi author Taslima Nasreen from the state.

    Following the violence in Kolkata on Wednesday, Left front Chairman Biman Bose had said that the Bangladeshi writer should leave if her presence is causing trouble.

    However, on Thursday Bose was forced to retract his statement and said that he was rectifying Wednesday's statement on Taslima on behalf of his party and any decision on extending or cancelling her visa can only be taken by the Centre.

    ''The right to grant or cancel a visa does not lie with the state government, only the Indian government can do that,'' said Biman Bose.

    The author's visa expires in February next year.

    Taslima has not spoken since Wednesday's clashes but earlier this year, shortly after she was roughed up by protestors in Hyderabad, she had gone to release the Telugu translation of her book Shodh.

    Speaking to NDTV about her reasons for wanting to live in Kolkata, Taslima said, ''I am getting so much support and solidarity from people that I am grateful to them. I want to live here peacefully. I want to write peacefully and I want to feel at home.''

    Kolkata, meanwhile, is slowly getting back to normal a day after violent clashes. Public transport is back on the roads and all schools, colleges and offices have re-opened.

    It was a tense night on Wednesday with several parts of the city under curfew. However, no further clashes were reported during the night.

    Flag marches by the army are continuing and the Army will hold a review meeting at later today.

     
    Previous:

    Taslima-Nandigram mix brings Army out

    Md Safi Shamsi / Ravik Bhattacharya / Subrata Nagchoudhury

    Posted online: Thursday, November 22, 2007 at 0000 hrs

    Fearing communal flare-up, West Bengal calls in Army, clamps curfew in parts of Kolkata after angry mob clubs Bangla author's presence with Nandigram violence.

    KOLKATA, NOVEMBER 21: For the first time since the demolition of the Babri Masjid in December 1992, the Left Front government in West Bengal called out the Army and imposed night curfew in central Kolkata after mob violence following a protest against the presence of Bangladeshi author Taslima Nasreen in the city and attacks on Nandigram villagers by CPM cadres

    The Army's presence brought peace on the main streets but lanes and bylanes seethed with tension until late tonight forcing the government to clamp curfew from 10 pm to 6 am in areas under five police stations, including Park Street, Park Circus and Ripon Street.

    By evening, the clashes had left a trail of injured — 35 policemen, including a Deputy Commissioner of Kolkata Police. The police arrested 57 people. Mobs attacked a couple of CPM offices close to the party headquarters in Alimuddin Street.

    Nasreen, hounded by fundamentalists in Bangladesh, has been in the city since 2004. And several hardline Muslim groups have earlier too protested against her presence.

    What was of concern to the government today was how little-known groups got together to bring both Nasreen and Nandigram together — a majority of the victims in Nandigram of CPM violence are Muslim — to confront the CPM and the government.

    While police are still trying to figure out the key players, The Indian Express spoke to several eyewitnesses, police sources and protesters to find that the rallyists included fundamentalist Islamic leaders, Opposition politicians from Trinamool Congress and Congress and religious Muslim organizations.

    Their "cause" was a potentially explosive mix of Taslima Nasreen and Nandigram, both on full display in the placards they carried and the slogans they shouted.

    bThe dramatis personae:

    Officially, the rally was organised by the All India Minority Forum headed by Idris Ali of the Congress. This organisation in the past has never been able to mobilise more than 40 people for a rally. Police officials don't know how, given its limited logistical capability, it could spark off such widespread violence today.

    FurFuraSharif Foundation, a religious organization with a sizeable following of Bengali Muslims. On several occasions, it has officially interacted with the government — over a year ago, it held a protest rally against a madrasa textbook on Islamic history that it alleged contained "objectionable references."

    Said its leader Maulana Toha Siddiqui: "Our protest was against the atrocities by CPM cadres against Muslims in Nandigram and Taslima Nasreen's visa extension. A magazine patronized by the CPM, Path Sanket, ran an anonymous letter in which a blasphemous comment was made against the Prophet. The same issue had a piece by Biman Bose, CPM politburo member. We made our displeasure known to the government and called for a ban on the magazine."

    Quami Awaz Welfare Society: Roshan Ali of this little-heard organization was one of the three leaders arrested from Park Circus prior to the outbreak of violence. Sources said that Quami Awaz is a new organisation, more religious than political.

    Opposition political activists: The mob had a large following from both the Trinamool and the Congress. One of those arrested was Mumtaz Alam, a former Congress councillor. In Linton Street and Tantibagan Lane, the epicentre of the violence, the mob was being led by Fahim, a local Trinamool leader. In Ripon Street and Goltala, the mob was led by Iqbal and Sultan Ahmed, who have shuttled between the Congress and the Trinamool.

    A section of the followers were from the Milli Ittehad Parishad — a conglomerate of 12 Muslim organizations formed in August this year as a pressure group in close touch with the government on the Taslima issue. It has sent letters to the Governor and the Chief Minister protesting against her presence.

    Jamiat-e-Ulema-Hind's Sidiqullah Chowdhury, who is one of the prime movers behind the Nandigram protests, has been one of the most vocal protestors against Taslima too. Just six days ago, he led a massive procession holding placards demanding her "eviction" from the state and India. Although his banner was absent today, police said the rally had members from the People's Democratic Conference of India — the Jamiat's political wing.

    In the evening, the government sent Syed Md. Noorur Rahman Barkati, Shahi Imam of the Tipu Sultan Mosque, to the troubled areas to appeal for peace. After his visit, Barkati, known for his allegiance to both the Congress and Trinamool, said: "Messages have been conveyed to the people and things will soon be under control."

    Such a gallery of characters made for a controversial mix. "Communal sentiments were involved and the issue is also sensitive. We will now work along with Army men to maintain peace," admitted police chief Gautam Mohan Chakraborti, facing his first trial by fire after taking over from Prasun Mukherjee who had to resign over the Rizwanur-Priyanka case.

    http://www.indianexpress.com/story/242020.html

    Kolkata burns over Nandigram, Taslima Hindustan Times
    It was only about Taslima: Idris Ali The Statesman
    Taslima moved to Rajasthan NDTV.com
    Hindu - Times of India
    all 200 news articles »

    BBC:  http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7108074.stm


     
     

     
     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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