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Friday, May 9, 2008

Re: [chottala.com] Asking to CTG & EC...Why do not talk CTG or EC with the common people or non political persons for making the plan to conduct the fair & neutral election??

It is not the wise duty to the present CTG & EC for doing any talking works or negotiation works until & unless they are rectified themselves & become quality educated persons with those political leaders who are responsible for creating the situation in the country to impose the rules of emergency.

Why do not talk CTG or EC with the common people or non political persons for making the plan to conduct the fair & neutral election??

Their main duty is to conduct fair & neutral election according to the fair lawful system rules of laws so that voters can cast their votes properly & fair politicians can be elected in the election.

It is also the main duty to the Present CTG before conducting fair election to proof that they are under the control of lawful system rules of law not under the control of any pressure group or on pressure persons.

It is the duty to the CTG

(a) For doing works of lawful trial against of all corrupted persons

(b) For doing works of lawful reformation works in all sections

(c) For providing works of nation wide all people job basis quality education to make them quality skilled in their respective working fields &

(d) For taking works of lawful action to establish lawful democracy in the country for establishing system of lawful honest administration.

Only quality educated efficient honest politicians can build quality nation.

 

 

 

 

 
 

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[chottala.com] Concert at Hyde Park to celebrate Mandela's 90th birthday

Concert at Hyde Park to celebrate Mandela's 90th birthday
 

Nelson Mandela will travel to London next month for another musical extravaganza to celebrate his 90th birthday and raise awareness of Aids in Africa.

By Ciar Byrne, Arts and Media Correspondent
Wednesday, 7 May 2008

Twenty years after a historic Wembley Stadium concert called for his release from Robben Island, Nelson Mandela will travel to London next month for another musical extravaganza to celebrate his 90th birthday and raise awareness of Aids in Africa.

Queen, Annie Lennox, Leona Lewis, the Sugababes, Dame Shirley Bassey, Simple Minds, Eddy Grant, Jamelia, Andrea and Sharon Corr and Razorlight are just some of the artists that will appear on stage in London's Hyde Park on 27 June to celebrate the life and work of the Nobel Peace Prize winner and civil rights leader.

They will be joined by African performers including the Soweto Gospel Choir, the Sudanese rapper Emmanuel Jal, South African singers Johnny Clegg, Sipho Mabuse and Loyiso, the Aids orphans choir The Children of Agape and the legendary Congolese musician Papa Wemba.

The organisers have also promised several surprise performances and, although none are confirmed, there have been rumours that Amy Winehouse, Eminem, U2 and The Spice Girls will appear on the night.

Gordon Brown, Bill Clinton, Oprah Winfrey, Will Smith, Lewis Hamilton, Robert de Niro and Forest Whittaker are all due to attend three days of celebrations in honour of Mr Mandela.

Precisely 46,664 tickets are being sold – representing Mr Mandela's Robben Island prison number. He was prisoner number 466, imprisoned in 1964.

After striving for decades and eventually succeeding in ending apartheid in South Africa, Mr Mandela turned his attentions in 2002 to one of the most pressing issues facing the country today, HIV and Aids. The 46664 campaign was launched in November 2003 with a concert in Cape Town directed by Dave Stewart and Annie Lennox and Queen's Brian May and Roger Taylor, supported by Bono, The Edge and Beyonce.

The former ANC president will use the Hyde Park concert to step down from his campaign work with the organisation.

In a message on the 46664 website, Mr Mandela, who turns 90 on 18 July, said: "You all know that I am supposed to be retired but when you retire it means that you can have time for birthdays.

"My friends and the charitable organisations that bear my name want to use my 90th birthday year to raise funds to continue our work and so of course I want to help them. London wants to celebrate my birthday and I said I would go if they would raise funds for our charities.

"So, we have a bargain – I am going to London and they will host a concert in Hyde Park, which will raise awareness of our work and much needed funds."

The Nelson Mandela 70th birthday concert on 11 June 1988 was a focus for the anti-apartheid movement in the UK, which used the event to call for his release from prison. The Eurythmics and Simple Minds, who will perform in Hyde Park, both appeared at the original concert alongside Whitney Houston, Sting and Dire Straits.

Mr Mandela was finally freed from Robben Island on 11 February 1990, after 27 years in prison. When he was released, there were 120,000 people living with HIV in South Africa. Today, more than 5.5million South Africans are living with HIV/Aids.

The Simple Minds lead singer Jim Kerr told Virgin Radio: "Simple Minds will be there and for us it's really, really special because it's almost 20 years to the day when we took part in a concert at Wembley Stadium.

"At the time, it was very different circumstances, Mandela was very much a mysterious man imprisoned in Robben Island.

"Everyone knows the story of Mandela since and I think this is very special because they say this could be his last trip to Britain in any sort of official capacity."

Mr Mandela has been a source of inspiration for the music world. Simple Minds wrote the tribute song "Mandela Day" for the original 1988 concert, while Santana wrote a track, "Mandela", for the same concert.

Interesting? Click here to explore further


Virgin Media Music
Hyde Park concert for Mandela's 90th
Independent, UK - May 8, 2008
Nelson Mandela will travel to London next month for another musical extravaganza to celebrate his 90th birthday and raise awareness of Aids in Africa. ...
Mandela to celebrate 90th birthday in London Xinhua
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Simple Minds joins Nelson Mandela's 90th birthday lineup Melbourne Herald Sun
Billboard - AHN
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MTV.uk
Eminem to Play Mandela's Birthday, Celebrate the End of Apartheid...
Dose.ca, Canada - Apr 11, 2008
Eminem has sent his RSVP to former South African president Nelson Mandela's 90th birthday blow-out. According to British tabloid The Sun, Em will appear at ...
Eminem Approached To Perform For Nelson Mandela The Celebrity Truth
all 65 news articles »

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[chottala.com] Pakistanis see risks in UN inquiry into the death of Benazir Bhutto

Pakistanis see risks in UN inquiry
By Indlieb Farazi
 

 

Scotland Yard sent a team to Rawalpindi in January 2008 to investigate the
killing of Benazir Bhutto, the former prime minister [GETTY]

Senior Pakistani officials and political pundits have expressed concern over the newly elected government's decision to request a UN-led inquiry into the death of Benazir Bhutto, the former prime minister and leader of the Pakistan People's Party (PPP).

Bhutto was killed during a rally in Rawalpindi on December 27 last year, creating a wave of support in the country that helped her party win the most seats in February's parliamentary election.
 
Mushahid Hussain, secretary-general of the Pakistan Muslim League-Q (PML-Q), a party which firmly supports Pervez Musharraf, the current president, told Al Jazeera: "[The investigation] will have adverse ramifications for Pakistan's national security since it will open the door to foreign intervention in our domestic affairs that may extend, eventually, to sensitive domains like the nuclear programme."
 
"It will also send a message that the government of Pakistan has no confidence in its own security institutions, which are under its control. Pakistan's sovereignty and security could both be at stake."
 
Resignations in protest
 
Resistance to the idea of a foreign-led inquiry may be gaining momentum. Last week two senior members of the government resigned. Pakistani media suggested that the resignations were in protest against the idea of a UN investigation.
 
Tariq Fatemi, a former Pakistani ambassador to the US, Jordan and the EU, says a UN commission to investigate Bhutto's killing would be compromising sovereignty and independence and interfering in a "purely domestic" affair.
 
"The commission could be lethal. The UN will feel it is able to come and investigate issues such as differences within the provinces or non-conventional weapons," Fatemi told Al Jazeera.
 
"The UN will say that you involved us for domestic affairs so you will have no issue with us investigating A, B, C. Up until now Pakistan has jealously guarded its public sovereignty."
 
Pakistan's nuclear programme is one contentious issue of security and sovereignty that critics of the UN probe fear could me compromised.
 
Asif Ali Zardari, Bhutto's widower, and the PPP
want a UN probe into her killing [AFP]
Arif Mohammed, a former senior Pakistani member of the UN Secretariat, says if a UN inquiry gets the green light, investigations could spiral out of control, leading to sanctions, a full economic blockade and isolation.
 
"The proposed Benazir Bhutto Commission is far more useful for the US, can provide easy and direct linkages to nuclear proliferation issues, and pave the way for IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) inspections in Pakistan."
 
Critics of the PPP proposal fear that once UN investigators delve into possible motives behind Bhutto's assassination, a direct link could be made with Abdul Qadeer Khan, the architect of Pakistan's nuclear programme.
 
Just before her death Bhutto said she would be willing to allow UN inspectors to question Khan.
 
Khan, who was involved in sharing nuclear secrets with Libya, Iran and North Korea, has remained under house arrest in Islamabad. Neither Khan nor anyone linked to the case has faced charges in Pakistan.
 
"The US has the ability to steer any UN enquiry in any direction, we must not forget the Iraq commission," Mohammed said.
 
"The IAEA could take control of all installations with firm possibility of de-nuclearisation.
 
"If America uses the United Nations as an excuse to further delve into Pakistan's secrets, the country's sovereignty will be at stake, leaving an open door for ongoing investigations."

Pre-emptive strikes
 
Mohammed also fears a UN commission could lead to US involvement - and possible pre-emptive strikes - in Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal regions, with an international force deployed to investigate the military's involvement in the south western province of Baluchistan.
 
"If the UN commission is set up, it could lead to a committee set up to 'protect' the Baluch minority similar to Darfur, and finally Pakistan could be put on the Human Rights Watch list under any premise and unending investigative demands for years to come," he told Al Jazeera.
 
"There needs to be more focus, more debate on the consequences of a UN investigation in the country," he cautioned.
 
Gul, the former intelligence chief, says Pakistan
should handle the Bhutto case itself [AFP]
Hamid Gul, a retired military general and former director of Pakistan's secret services, believes Mohammed's fears are legitimate. 
 
"It is all a real possibility," he said.
 
"America is already insisting on their right to pre-emptive strikes. We have heard comments from [John] Negroponte. The statements are very eminent and threatening. If this happens, then I am afraid that the Pakistani people will rebel against the government and its policies towards America.
 
Gul says the US has to decide whether it will make Pakistan a hostile camp like Iran or press Pakistan into friendly service into the "war against terrorism".
 
"If Bush doesn't shift the paradigm, then Pakistan will probably pull out of the war against terrorism," he says.
 
Gul thinks Pakistan should handle the Bhutto murder case itself.
 
"We have very good investigators in Pakistan and we should use their service if they really are interested in the truth," he said.
 
Distrusting Musharraf
 
But the newly elected government said one of the principal reasons for resorting to an international probe is that it does not trust a previous investigation launched by the Musharraf government.
 
In January, a PPP committee, said: "The main reason we are approaching the United Nations is the distrust and lack of credibility of the government, and we will prove it".
 
The government says it has been suspicious of the Musharraf government's motives in blaming Baitullah Mehsud, a northwest frontier-based Pakistani Taliban leader, for Bhutto's murder.
 
Pakistan last month released Sufi Mohammed, leader of the Tehreek-e-Taliban and a Mehsud ally, who had previously recruited thousands of people to fight against the US-led invasion of Afghanistan.
 
The deal reached with Mohammed was part of the new government's efforts to engage in dialogue with armed groups fighting against the state.
 
Al Jazeera approached senior PPP officials but they were unavailable for comment.
 
Nuclear installations safe
 
Raza Rabbani, a senior PPP politician and leader of the house in the senate, has dismissed the suggestion that UN-led investigation would pose a threat to the national interests.
 
Pakistani media have quoted Rabbani as saying that the country's nuclear installations would not be open to foreign investigators and Abdul Qadeer Khan will not be subjected to questioning.
 
He said only those aspects connected to the Bhutto assassination, would be investigated.
 
Rabbani, who is a practising lawyer, believes that the people campaigning against a UN investigation do not want to expose what he calls the conspiracy behind the murder.
 
The PPP says it distrusts Musharraf's
investigation into Bhutto's killing [GETTY]
Tanvir Ahmed Khan, a former foreign secretary, also believes a UN-administered Bhutto murder investigation, possibly modelled after the current Rafik al-Hariri probe, is the 'will of the people of Pakistan'.
 
He says Pakistan should prepare to remove any obstacles and garner as much support for an international probe as possible.
 
Critics nevertheless believe that a UN investigation along the lines of the Rafiq al-Hariri murder inquiry, is not applicable to Pakistan.
 
Al-Hariri, a former Lebanese prime minister, was assassinated in February 2005. A UN-led probe was demanded by Lebanon after speculation mounted over Syria's involvement in his death.
 
In Bhutto's case, no fingers have been pointed as yet outside of Pakistan.
 
"When no second country is deemed to be involved, then there shouldn't even be a commission," Gul says.
 
Fatemi, the former Pakistan diplomat, told Al Jazeera: "We still have no evidence of foreign interference into her death. Pakistan's foreign office, in consultation with experts at the UN, concluded that while the call of the UN investigation may service the purpose of public concerns, the consequences could be detrimental."
 
The exact mandate and the scope of terms of reference for the proposed commission are yet to be determined but will likely stir further debate in Pakistani politics once they are made public.

 

Source: Al Jazeera
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[chottala.com] The Washington Post: Islamic Divorce Ruled Not Valid in Maryland [Consequently, in the United States ]

Custom Allowing Men to End Marriage With Oral Declaration Lacks 'Due Process'

By Ruben Castaneda
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, May 8, 2008; B02

After his wife of more than two decades filed for divorce in Montgomery County Circuit Court, Irfan Aleem responded in writing in 2003, and not just in court.

Aleem went to the Pakistani Embassy in the District, where he executed a written document that asserted he was divorcing Farah Aleem. He performed "talaq," exercising a provision of Islamic religious and Pakistani secular law that allows husbands to divorce their wives by declaring "I divorce thee" three times. In Muslim countries, men have used talaq to leave their wives for centuries.

But they can't use it in Maryland, the state's highest court decided this week.

The state Court of Appeals issued a unanimous 21-page opinion Tuesday declaring that talaq is contrary to Maryland's constitutional provisions providing equal rights to men and women.

"Talaq lacks any significant 'due process' for the wife, its use, moreover, directly deprives the wife of the 'due process' she is entitled to when she initiates divorce litigation in this state. The lack and deprivation of due process is itself contrary to this state's public policy," the court wrote.

The decision affirms a 2007 ruling by the Court of Special Appeals, the state's intermediate appellate court, which also said that talaq does not apply in the Free State.

Under Islamic traditions, talaq can be invoked only by a husband, unless he grants his wife the same right.

According to the Court of Appeals' opinion, Irfan Aleem, who worked for years as an economist with the World Bank, is worth about $2 million, half of which Farah Aleem is entitled to under Maryland law. When Irfan Aleem tried to divorce his wife under the concept of talaq, a sum of $2,500 was mentioned as a "full and final" settlement, according to the appellate decision.

That amount was written into the marriage contract Farah Aleem signed the day she married him in their native Pakistan in 1980, according to the appellate decision. The contract was in accordance with Pakistani custom. At the time, he was 29 and she was 18. The couple moved to the Washington area in 1985.

"I don't even know how to express how happy I am. I am ecstatic, relieved," Farah Aleem, 46, said yesterday.

Over the years, a lack of financial support from her ex-husband caused hardship for her and her son and daughter, who are in college, she said. "All I ever wanted was my fair share, not a penny more," said Aleem, who lives in the Washington area, works full time for an accounting firm and is pursuing an accounting degree at night.

At the direction of the judge who presided over the Aleems' divorce proceedings, the couple's Potomac home was sold, and half the proceeds -- about $200,000 -- went to Farah Aleem, said Susan Friedman, her attorney.

Friedman said she thinks that Irfan Aleem, who retired in recent years, invoked talaq to avoid paying Farah half of his World Bank pension, which provides him with $90,000 annually, the attorney said.

"It will be very pleasant when [Farah] gets her share of that," Friedman said. "She's delighted about that."

Friedman said she will serve papers on the World Bank showing that the original order from the Circuit Court -- that Farah Aleem is entitled to half her ex-husband's pension -- is now final and that the bank has to give her half.

Irfan Aleem, who is in his late 50s, lives in Pakistan, Friedman said.

His attorney, Priya R. Aryar, said, "We're very disappointed with the decision. We think this could have adverse ramifications for a whole bunch of people who reside in the D.C. area under diplomatic visas and assume that their family law rights and obligations are governed by the laws of their country of citizenship."

A legal scholar and an Islamic leader said the appellate court's decision was not surprising.

"For the most part, Muslims expected this kind of ruling," said Muneer Fareed, secretary general of the Islamic Society of North America in Plainfield, Ind. "The contrary would be a surprise to them. They do not expect the U.S. legal system to give full recognition of talaq."

Julie Macfarlane, a legal scholar who is researching a book about Islamic divorces in North America, said the decision was not surprising. "There's no legal enforceability [for talaq] in U.S. courts," said Macfarlane, a professor at the University of Windsor in Canada.

Source:

Custom Allowing Men to End Marriage With Oral Declaration Lacks ...
Washington Post, United States - May 7, 2008
By Ruben Castaneda After his wife of more than two decades filed for divorce in Montgomery County Circuit Court, Irfan Aleem responded in writing in 2003, ...

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[chottala.com] Israel's "Independence Day" and the Palestinians' Naqba (Catastrophe) Day

 
Namely the State of Israel
08/05/2008 11:30:00 PM GMT
 
Israel's "Independence Day" and the Palestinians' Naqba (Catastrophe) Day are two sides of the same coin. In 60 years Israel hasn't succeeded to untie this knot by creating another reality.
 

By Uri Avnery

Every time I hear the voice of David Ben-Gurion uttering the words "Therefore we are gathered here…" I think of Issar Barsky, a charming youngster, the little brother of a girl-friend of mine.

The last time we met was in front of the dining hall of Kibbutz Hulda, on Friday, May 14, 1948.

In the coming night my company was to attack al-Qubab, an Arab village on the road to Jerusalem, east of Ramle. We were busy with preparations. I was cleaning my Czech-made rifle, when somebody came and told us that Ben-Gurion was just making a speech about the founding of the state.

Frankly, none of us was very interested in speeches by politicians in Tel Aviv. The city seemed so far away. The state, we knew, was here with us. If the Arabs were to win, there would be no state and no us. If we won, there would be a state. We were young and self-confident, and did not doubt for a moment that we would win.

But there was one detail that I was really curious about: what was the new state to be called? Judea? Zion? The Jewish State?

So I hastened to the dining hall. Ben-Gurion's unmistakable voice was blaring from the radio. When he reached the words "…namely the State of Israel" I had had enough and left.

Outside I came across Issar. He was in another company, which was to attack another village that night. I told him about the name of the state and said "take care of yourself!"

Some days later he was killed. So I remember him as he was then: a boy of 19, a smiling, tall Sabra full of joie de vivre and innocence.

The closer we come to the grandiose 60th anniversary festivities, the more I am troubled by the question: if Issar were to open his eyes and see us, still a boy of 19, what would he think of the state that was officially established on that day?

He would see a state that has developed beyond his wildest dreams. From a small community of 635,000 souls (more than 6000 of whom would die with him in that war) we have grown to more than seven million. The two great miracles we have wrought - the revival of the Hebrew language and the institution of Israeli democracy - continue to be a reality. Our economy is strong and in some fields - such a hi-tech - we are in the world super-league. Issar would be excited and proud.

But he would also feel that something had gone wrong in our society. The Kibbutz where we put up our little bivouac tents that day has become an economic enterprise, like any other. The social solidarity, of which we were so proud, has collapsed. Masses of adults and children live below the poverty line, old people, the sick and the unemployed are left to fend for themselves. The gap between rich and poor is one of the widest in the developed world. And our society, that once raised the banner of equality and justice, just clucks its collective tongue and moves on to other matters.

Most of all he would be shocked to discover that the brutal war, which killed him and wounded me, together with thousands of others, is still going on at full blast. It determines the entire life of the nation. It fills the first pages of the newspapers and heads the news bulletins.

That our army, the army that really was "we", has become something quite different, an army whose main occupation is to oppress another people.

That night we indeed attacked al-Qubab. When we entered the village, it was already deserted. I broke into one of the homes. The pot was still warm, food was on the table. On one of the shelves I found some photos: a man who had obviously just combed his hair, a village woman, two small children. I still have them with me.

I assume that the village which was attacked by Issar that night presented a similar picture. The villagers - men, women, children - fled at the last moment, leaving their whole life behind them.

There is no escape from the historic fact: Israel's Independence Day and the Palestinians' Naqba (Catastrophe) Day are two sides of the same coin. In 60 years we have not succeeded - and actually have not even tried - to untie this knot by creating another reality.

And so the war goes on.

With the 60th Independence Day approaching, a committee sat down to choose an emblem for the event. The one they came up with looks like something for Coca Cola or the Eurovision song contest.

The real emblem of the state is quite different, and no committee of bureaucrats has had to invent it. It is fixed to the ground and can be seen from afar: The Wall. The Separation Wall.

Separation between whom, between what?

Apparently between Israeli Kfar Sava and neighboring Palestinian Qalqiliyah, between Modi'in Illit and Bil'in. Between the State of Israel (and some more grabbed land) and the Occupied Palestinian Territories. But in reality, between two worlds.

In the fevered imagination of those who believe in the "clash of civilizations", whether George Bush or Osama Bin-Laden - the Wall is the border between the two titans of history, Western civilization and Islamic civilization.

Our Wall has become the front-line between these two worlds.

The wall is not just a structure of concrete and wire. More than anything else, the wall - like every such wall - is an ideological statement, a declaration of intent, a mental reality. The builders declare that they belong, body and soul, to one camp, the Western one, and that on the other side of the wall there begins the opposing world, the enemy, the masses of Arabs and other Muslims.

When was that decided? Who made the decision? How?

102 years ago, Theodor Herzl wrote in his ground-breaking oeuvre, Der Judenstaat, which gave birth to the Zionist movement, a sentence fraught with significance: "For Europe we shall constitute there [in Palestine] a sector of the wall against Asia, we shall serve as the vanguard of culture against barbarism."

Thus, in 22 German words, the world-view of Zionism, and our place in it, was laid down. And now, after a delay of four generations, the physical wall is following the path of the mental one.

The picture is bright and clear: We are essentially a part of Europe (like North America), a part of culture, which is entirely European. On the other side: Asia, a barbaric continent, empty of culture, including the Muslim and Arab world.

One can understand Herzl's world view. He was a man of the 19th century, and he wrote his treatise when white Imperialism was at its zenith. He admired it with all his soul. He endeavored (in vain) to arrange a meeting with Cecil Rhodes, the man who symbolized British colonialism. He approached Joseph Chamberlain, the British Colonial Secretary, who offered him Uganda, then a British colony. At the same time, he also admired the German Kaiser and his so well-ordered Reich, which carried out a horrible genocide in South-West Africa in the year of Herzl's death.

Herzl's maxim did not remain an abstract thought. The Zionist movement followed it from the first moment on, and the State of Israel continues to do so to this very day.

Could it have been different? Could we have become a part of the region? Could we have become a kind of cultural Switzerland, an independent island between East and West, bridging and mediating between the two?

One month before the outbreak of the 1948 war, seven months before the State of Israel was officially founded, I published a booklet entitled "War or Peace in the Semitic Region". It began with the words:

"When our Zionist fathers decided to set up a "safe haven" in Palestine, they had the choice between two paths:

"They could appear in West Asia as a European conqueror, who sees himself as a bridgehead of the 'white' race and master of the 'natives', like the Spanish conquistadores and the Anglo-Saxon colonialists in America. Like, in their time, the Crusaders in Palestine.

"The other path was to see themselves as an Asian people returning to its homeland - seeing themselves as an heir to the political and cultural tradition of the Semitic region."

The history of this country has seen dozens of invasions. They can be divided into two main categories.

There were the invaders who came from the West, such as the Philistines, the Greeks, the Romans, the Crusaders, Napoleon and the British. Such an invasion establishes a bridgehead, and its mental outlook is that of a bridgehead. The region beyond is hostile territory, its inhabitants enemies who have to be oppressed or destroyed. In the end, all of these invaders were expelled.

And there were the invaders who came from the East, such as the Emorites, the Assyrians, the Babylonians, the Persians and the Arabs. They conquered the land and became part of it, influenced its culture and were influenced by it, and in the end struck roots.

The ancient Israelites were of the second category. Even if there is some doubt about the Exodus from Egypt as described in the Books of Moses, or the Conquest of Canaan as described in the Book of Joshua, it is reasonable to assume that they were tribes that came in from the desert and infiltrated between the fortified Canaanite towns, which they could not conquer, as indeed described in Judges 1.

The Zionists, on the other hand, were of the first category. They brought with them the world-view of a bridgehead, a vanguard of Europe. This world-view gave birth to the Wall as a national symbol. It has to be changed entirely.

One of our national peculiarities is a form of discussion where all the participants, whether from the Left or from the Right, use the clinching argument: "If we don't do this and this, the state will cease to exist!" Can one imagine such an argument in France, Britain or the USA?

This is a symptom of "Crusader" anxiety. Even though the Crusaders stayed in this country for almost 200 years and produced eight generations of "natives", they were never really sure of their continued existence here.

I am not worried about the existence of the State of Israel. It will exist as long as states exist. The question is: What kind of state will it be?

A state of permanent war, the terror of its neighbors, where violence pervades all spheres of life, where the rich flourish and the poor live in misery; a state that will be deserted by the best of its children?

Or a state that lives in peace with its neighbors, to their mutual benefit; a modern society with equal rights for all its citizens and without poverty; a state that invests its resources in science and culture, industry and the environment; where future generations will want to live; a source of pride for all its citizens?

That can be our objective for the next 60 years. I think this is what Issar would have wanted, too.

-- Uri Avnery, an Israeli writer and peace activist, founded the Gush Shalom movement. He had served three terms as an MP at the Knesset. This article was published by Gush Shalom.
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/newsfull.php?newid=115791

 

 

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[chottala.com] Fastest growing cities and urban areas (1 to 100)

Three of our cities are in the top 100 list. Chittagong # 10, Dhaka #19
and Khulna #37.

http://www.citymayors.com/statistics/urban_growth1.html


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[chottala.com] AABEA's family & friends evening on May 17, 2008. All of you are invited (NOT limited to engineers

~ A LARGE FAMILY & FRIENDS GATHERING IS ONLY A WEEK AWAY FOR WHICH YOU HAVE WAITING FOR LONG ~
 
Respected friends & families,
 
AABEA (American Association of Bangladeshi Engineers & Architects) is requesting your presence to enjoy annual family & friends evening on Saturday, May 17, 2008 from 5:00 pm to 11:30 pm at the auditorium in University of Maryland at Shady Grove, 9630 Gudelsky Drive, Rockville, Maryland 20850.  THIS EVENT IS NOT LIMITED TO ENGINEERS & ARCHITECTS ONLY.  Everyone of any profession is requested to attend with family & friends.  The event includes Seminar, Dinner, and a very attractive Entertainment Program (we mean it).  Your contributions will be appreciated @ $12.00 per person (Free for students of KG & 1st grade; $8.00 for students of 2nd to 8th grade).  Your contribution includes complementary delicious dinner and unlimited soft drinks & tea.
 
The very attractive entertainment program includes varieties of songs, group dance, romantic duet dance, comedy skit, fun games for audience, recitation, instrumental music (Behala), very popular Dhroopad's Giti-Naksha, etc.  It also includes --- no, let's not disclose everything right now.  We like to give you marvelous & fascinating surprise.  You will get a different and full satisfactory flavor from our entertainment program.
 
We are extremely sorry to note that the serving of dinner will completely close at 8:30 pm sharp.
 
Arrangement for Maghrib prayer and other prayers will be made.
 
PLEASE MARK YOUR CALENDAR IMMEDIATELY FOR MAY 17, 2008 TO ENJOY THIS FABULOUS & HIGHLY AMUSING FAMILY & FRIENDS GET TOGETHER WITH YOUR FAMILY & FRIENDS.  Please see the details about this program in the following.  You may also open & print the attachment for better view of the announcement and for further & clearer information on May 17 program. 
 
I am also requesting you to mark your calendar for August 9, 2008 to enjoy "Science Fair and Picnic" at Lake Fairfax Park, 1400 Lake Fairfax Drive, Reston, VA 20790 with your family & friends.  Please open the second attachment to get some additional information on Science Fair & Picnic.  Details about this program will be distributed after our May 17 program.

*************************************************************************************************************************

AABEA (American Association of Bangladeshi Engineers & Architects),

Washington DC Chapter

presents

 

~ ANNUAL FAMILY & FRIENDS EVENING ~

 

Meet your friends & families on the Evening of May 17, 2008

 

Donation amount:  $12.00 per person

Students:  Free for grades KG & 1;  $8.00 for grades 2 to 8

(Courtesy dinner and unlimited soft drinks/tea are included in your donation)

 

This event is NOT limited to engineers and architects only.  All of you are requested to attend.  Your presence is highly anticipated.

 

Event Highlights:  5:00 pm:  Annual General Meeting (limited to current AABEA members only)

  6:00 pm:  Seminar (open to everyone): "Multimodal Traffic Improvements in

                     Bangladesh & Dhaka City"  {to be presented by Dr. Anwar Karim, PE}

  7:00 pm:  Dinner (open to everyone)

  8:00 pm:  Very Attractive Entertainment Program (open to everyone)

                     {songs, dances, comedy skits, fun games, recitation, Dhroopad special, etc.}

11:30 pm:   Close, accept our thanks, and go home

 

When and Where:

                               Saturday, May 17, 2008  (from 5:00 PM to 11:30 PM)

University of Maryland at Shady Grove

9630 Gudelsky Drive, Rockville, MD 20850, Tel: 301-738-6349

_______________________________________________________________________________________________

Direction: From I-495 take I-270 North towards Frederick.  Take Exit 8 to Shady Grove Rd.,  At exit ramp keep left and turn left at signal on Shady Grove Road – West towards Hospital.  Pass the Hospital.  Next signal is Rte 28 (Darnestown Road).  Pass Rte 28, then turn immediate first right at Gudelsky Drive.  After entering to Gudelsky Drive, turn left and continue, you will see the Auditorium Building at your right.  Parking is on your left.

____________________________________________________________________________________________

Points of Contact:  Shabbir Parvez: 703-793-0346, 703-606-2022 (cell);  Faisal Quader: 301-990-7363, 301-526-7888 (cell);  Mosabber Zaman: 240-462-4482;  Mahfuzur Rahman: 410-796-0577, 301-646-3475 (cell);  Nasreen Chowdhury: 703-493-9219, 703-944-4604 (cell);  Ajhar Nakib: 703-760-9616, 703-953-4788 (cell);  Shahid Alam: 703-922-0999, 703-927-8958 (cell)

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