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Friday, November 28, 2008

[chottala.com] Wahhabi teaching on the rise in Bangladesh: Saudi Arabia provides the money

Islamic World News
26 Nov 2008, NewAgeIslam.Com

Wahhabi teaching on the rise in Bangladesh: Saudi Arabia provides the money


http://newageislam.com/NewAgeIslamArticleDetail.aspx?ArticleID=1019


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Compiled by Syed Asadullah

 

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Bangladesh faces Islamist fanatics

"Pakistan is the breeding ground and the brain and Saudi Arabia provides the money." Saudi Arabia is a major founder of madrassas and mosques in Bangladesh, for example – and it is no coincide that Wahhabi teaching is on the rise.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

By Benedict Rogers

Bangladesh is a country associated more with floods, cyclones and poverty than terrorism or radical Islamism. Indeed, it is a country founded on secular, democratic values and widely regarded as a moderate Muslim state. In recent years, however, militant Islamism has quietly been taking ground – and Bangladesh's survival as a progressive state is on a knife-edge.

The warning signs have been there for some years, and some commentators have been sounding the alarm. In 2002, Ruth Baldwin wrote a piece in The Nation headlined: "The 'Talibanisation' of Bangladesh." Hiranmay Karlekar wrote Bangladesh: The Next Afghanistan? While Maneeza Hossain's Broken Pendulum: Bangladesh's Swing to Radicalism and Ali Riaz's God Willing: The Politics of Islamism in Bangladesh are all important contributions.

Perhaps the most visible and dramatic sign of the growth of extremism came three years ago. On 17 August 2005, between 11 and 11.30 am, 527 bombs were exploded in a massive attack on all but one of the country's 64 districts. Such a carefully co-ordinated campaign of terror shocked the nation – but in many respects it was just the tip of the terror iceberg. Other terrorist incidents, including an attack on the Bangladeshi-born British High Commissioner, members of the judiciary and sporadic attacks on religious and ethnic minorities are further indicators of the presence of well-organised terrorist networks.

However, it is not simply the acts of violence that should cause concern. The Islamists' ideological influence has spread to almost all parts of Bangladeshi society – not least the political arena.

The umbrella organisation is Jamaat-e-Islami, a radical group founded in India in 1941 by Mawlana Abul Ala Maududi. According to one analyst in Bangladesh, Jamaat's objective is to create "a monolithic Islamic state, based on Shari'ah law, and declare jihad against Hindus, Buddhists, Christians and free-thinking Muslims." Religious minorities – and Muslims regarded by Jamaat as heretical, such as the Ahmadiyya sect – are targeted for eviction, according to one human rights activist, "or at least to be made into a 'non-existent' element whose voice cannot be heard."

Jamaat's tentacles now reach into major sectors, including banking, health care, education, business and non-profit organisations, and they aim to "destroy" the judicial system, according to one critic, including by "physically eliminating judges." In 2001, Jamaat won 17 parliamentary seats in alliance with the governing party, the Bangladesh National Party (BNP), and became a partner in the coalition government until its overthrow by the military in 2007. Elections scheduled for next month could result in Jamaat's return to government, if BNP wins, and even in the current caretaker administration there are believed to be Jamaat-sympathisers.

While Jamaat is the umbrella, according to journalist Shahriar Kabir and the Forum for Secular Bangladesh there are over 100 Islamist political parties and militant organisations in Bangladesh. Only four of these have been banned, and even they continue to operate under alternative names. Extremist literature, audio and video cassettes are widely distributed, and thousands of madrassas teach radical Islamism.

All this is completely at odds with the vision of Bangladesh's founder, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, who led the struggle for independence from Pakistan in which at least three million were killed, ten million displaced and 250,000 women raped. According to Hiranmay Karlekar, at the heart of the birth of Bangladesh was a belief that "the Bengali identity had prevailed over the Islamic identity." The preamble of the first constitution explicitly stated a commitment to secularism and democracy, and political parties were banned from using religion as a basis for their activities.

Bangladesh began sliding slowly towards Islamism following the assassination of Rahman in 1975. In 1977, references to secularism were deleted from the constitution and the phrase "Bismillah-Ar-Rahiman-Ar Rahim" ("In the name of Allah, the Beneficient, and the Merciful) was inserted. Five years later, General Ershad – one of the military dictators who ruled the country in the alternating competition between the army and the democrats – introduced the Eighth Amendment, making Islam the state religion. The constitution now states that "absolute trust and faith in the Almighty Allah shall be the basis of all actions."

There remain some provisos, which give religious minorities protection. For example, while Islamic principles are set out as guiding values, the constitution states that they "shall not be judicially enforceable." The Chief Justice has said clearly that Shari'ah does not constitute the basis of the country's legislation. Religious freedom, including "the right to profess, practice or propagate any religion", is protected, and discrimination on religious grounds prohibited.

Nevertheless, in practice Christians, Hindus and Buddhists are denied promotion in the government and the military and in the view of one Bangladeshi journalist; religious and ethnic minorities have seen "unprecedented persecution" in recent years.

In 1998, for example, three Christian sites in Dhaka were attacked – a Catholic girls' school, an Anglican church and a Baptist church. A mob set fire to the school, destroyed property, burned books, pulled down a cross and smashed statues of the Virgin Mary and St Francis of Assisi. Death threats were issued from the nearby mosque. Since then, sporadic attacks on churches have escalated. In 2007, at least five churches were attacked. Hindus and Ahmadiyyas face similar violence.

Cases of abduction, rape, forced marriage and forced conversion of religious minority women – and particularly young girls – are increasing, in a trend worryingly reminiscent of Pakistan. On 13 February 2007, for example, Shantona Rozario, an 18 year-old Christian student, was kidnapped. She was forced at gunpoint to sign a marriage document with her kidnapper, and an affidavit for conversion to Islam, witnessed by a lawyer, a mullah and a group of young men. After a month she managed to escape, but others are not so fortunate. On April 30 of this year a 14 year-old Christian girl, Bituni de Silva, was raped at gunpoint, and on May 2 a 13 year-old daughter of a pastor was gang-raped.

Apostates in Bangladesh face similar severe consequences for leaving Islam as they do throughout the world. On 1 February this year, a 70 year-old woman convert to Christianity from Islam, Rahima Beoa, died from burns suffered when her home was set ablaze after her conversion.

In 2004, a Jamaat Member of Parliament attempted to introduce a blasphemy law in Bangladesh, modelled on Pakistan's notorious legislation. Attempts have been made to ban Ahmadiyya literature. And even during the State of Emergency, when protests and processions are supposed to be banned, extremists led by groups such as Hizb-ut-Tahrir have held angry rallies. On 17 September 2007, for example, a cartoon was published in a satirical magazine, Alpin, featuring a conversation between a child and an imam, in which the boy was told that he should always use the prefix 'Mohammed' before a name. The boy then decided to call his cat "Mohammed Cat." The cartoon sparked outrage, and effiges of the newspaper editor were burned in street protests. The cartoonist and the editor were arrested, charged with sedition, and the publication was closed down. In April this year, large protests were held after Friday prayers in major cities, opposing the government's plans to legitimate women's rights in the constitution. Maulana Fazlul Haq, chairman of the Islami Oikya Jote, described such a policy as "anti-Qu'ran" and "anti-Islamic."

An estimated 2.5 million people in Bangladesh belong to indigenous ethnic tribal groups, sometime sknown as "Adibashis." There are at least 40 different ethnic groups, mainly inhabiting the Chittagong Hill Tracts and the plains area around Mymensingh. Most of these tribal groups are non-Muslim – predominantly Buddhist, Christian and Animist. Since the late 1970s, the Bangladeshi government has actively sponsored the resettlement of Bengali Muslims into the tribal areas – resulting in the construction of mosques, land-grabbing, evictions and discrimination against non-Muslims. One indigenous rights campaigner said: "Our way of life is an open society. Men and women can work anywhere. We are more flexible on gender issues. But the settlers have come in and built mosques, and they use their loudspeakers which affects us culturally and psychologically."

In one village near Mymensingh, for example, a Bengali Muslim married a Christian from a tribal group. All the other villagers are Christians. After a few years, he decided he needed a mosque – even though he was the only Muslim in the area. So now he is building a mosque – and the likelihood is he will bring in an imam, who will bring his family, who will bring their relatives: and the slow, subtle, insidious repopulation of a non-Muslim, non-Bengali area will unfold. When I visited the remote jungle village, the atmosphere was tense – and the imam, sitting at the mosque construction site, was unwelcoming.

The prediction of Bangladesh's "Talibanisation" may sound extreme, and in the immediate term the likelihood of Bangladesh becoming like Afghanistan is far-fetched. Bangladesh has not gone as far down the road of radicalisation as Pakistan, for example. Nevertheless, the warnings need to be taken seriously. If it continues as it is, Bangladesh will go the way of Pakistan – and then the risk of Talibanisation becomes realistic.

Indeed, it is Pakistan and Saudi Arabia that are fuelling the Islamisation of Bangladesh. As one person put it, "Pakistan is the breeding ground and the brain, and Saudi Arabia provides the money." Saudi Arabia is a major founder of madrassas and mosques in Bangladesh, for example – and it is no coincidence that Wahhabi teaching is on the rise.

A prominent church leader predicts that full Shari'ah law will be implemented if the situation does not change. "Some day, it will happen. Maybe not immediately, but it will happen … The support of voices in the international community is very much needed. More people need to come and find out what is happening here." As Ali Riaz says, "there is no doubt that if the present trend continues, the nation will inevitably slide further down the slope toward a regime with a clear Islamist agenda … What is necessary is a decisive change in the direction of the nation." Such a decisive change is vital, to restore the founding principles of Bangladesh – secularism, democracy, equal rights. There is still a thriving civil society, with bold intellectuals, journalists and human rights activists willing to challenge radical Islamism – and that is a cause for hope. Bangladesh has not been lost to radical Islamism completely – but it will be if the alarm bells are not heard.

Benedict Rogers is a human rights activist with Christian Solidarity Worldwide, and serves as Deputy Chairman of the UK Conservative Party's Human Rights Commission. He is the author of A Land without Evil: Stopping the Genocide of Burma's Karen People (Monarch, 2004). He writes for The Cutting Edge News.

Source:


http://newageislam.com/NewAgeIslamArticleDetail.aspx?ArticleID=1019


Allama Sir Muhammad Iqbal
The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam
Biography, Audio

Videos
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The Message 1976
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Noam Chomsky on
The "Clash of Civilizations"

Fake Christians fabricate
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Wedding day massacre

Stop the Clash
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Re: Stop the Clash
of Civilizations

Case stories on Bangladesh
Case story: July, 2007: 17 year old girl gang raped and threatened with death
The GHRD-Dhaka representative investigated the brutal gang rape of an Adibashi (indigenous) adolescent, which occurred on the 19th July 2007.

Case story: July, 2007: 19 year old girl gang raped and killed, and her body disfigured with acid
The melted dead body of a missing college girl from the Rampal upazila was recovered on 11 July, 11 days after she went missing.

Case story: April, 2007: 17 year old minority girl gang raped by two men
GHRD investigated the alleged gang rape of a minority teenager (17) from the South Taktabunia P.S.- Amtali, District – Barguna, on the 13th April 2007.

Case story: April, 2007: 20 year old minority woman raped by her neighbour
GHRD investigated a report that on 15th April a 20 year old Hindu housewife was raped in the Barguna District by her neighbour.

Case story: April, 2007: 10 year old girl raped by 42 year old male
On 24th April, a 10 year old impoverished minority girl was raped in the district of Brahmanbaria by a 42 year old male.

Case story: Kabita Rani Sarkar, 15, gang raped by seven men
Kabita Rani Sarkar, 15, was gang raped by seven men when she was walking home from school.

Case story: Shymoli Das, 20, Gang Raped
Shymoli Das, 20, was gang raped in Satbaria under Kaliganj Upazila of Jhenaidaha District on June the 20th, 2006.

Case story: Rani (18) committed suicide after rape
Beauty Rani Das (18) was sent to work as a maid-servant by her father, due to family poverty.

Case story: Jhuma Rani Roy, 14, gangraped
A destitute Minor Girl – Jhuma Rani Roy (14) daughter of Amar Chandra Roy at Kakbali, Jagannathpur P.S., District Sunamganj in Bangladesh brutally gang-raped.

Case story: Ms. Mukta Rani Roy ( 3 and half years old ) a Minority Child raped
A minor child aged about 3 and half years belonging to minority community – Ms. Mukta Rani Roy daughter of Bimal Chandra Roy of Khutamara Union under Jaldhaka police station at Nilphamari has been the victim of rape on 5th of April, 2006 at about 2 p.m.

Case story: Minority Hindu girl brutally gang raped
Ms. Shilpi Rani Shil (19) daughter of Mono Mohan Shil of village Agla, Rupganj PS, Dist. Narayanganj is a poor law-abiding youngest girl of Shil family and is the permanent citizen of Bangladesh.

Case story: Babita, 18, gang raped by police officers
Babita Rani Boby, 18 belonging to Indigenous Harijan community was given intoxicated medicine pills and thereafter she was gang-raped.


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[chottala.com] Bangladesh and Zionism

The Daily Star
Monday, April 10, 2006
Thegovernment has appointed three American lobbyists including an individual and two firms to arrange high-level interactions with the US government and build a "positive and correct image" of Bangladesh among the US policymakers.
The lobbyists have also been assigned to ensure "balanced reporting on Bangladesh" through mainstream media. They will coordinate with the relevant agencies of the US government to facilitate interactions in Bangladesh between the government and the representatives of the US government.
The firms, The Washington Group and Ketchum Washington (TWG/K), will get a monthly retainer fee of at least $45,000 in addition to "certain out of pocket expenditure" that TWG/K will incur in connection with the services. It is not clear from documents how much the individual lobbyist, Richard L Benkin, will get.
The contract signed on October 31 last year for an initial period of six months between the Bangladesh embassy in Washington and the lobbyists however said "efforts will be made" to keep the pocket expenditure within $750 a month. The contract will be evaluated after the expiry of the first 90 days.
-----(unquote)
 
There were people who warned: (quote)
 

Bangladesh and Zionism: The appointment of Richard L Benkin
* Author: sr
* Filed under: PoliticsTuesday
Apr 11,2006

Salam Dhaka has alerted the bangladeshi blogosphere to the appointment of a zionist, amongst others, as a PR man for Bangladesh. Richard Benkin has a certain way with words. And his talents have no doubt impressed the government sufficiently for him to have acquired this 5k usd per month contract. Richard penned a letter in Jewsweek sometime back entitled "Dear Bangladesh." Full of sophistry, the article tried to woo Bangladesh into recognising the state of Israel. (unquote)
------------ -
The government probably thought, playing friendliness to Israel would probably bail them out. But the conspiracy of 'third force' or the so-called one-eleven 2007 was hatched much before then. And the government played in the hands of the conspirators.
 
However, anyone who reads the following posting of Dr Benkin, will clearly see how urgently we need to launch campaign and build peaceful, unless compelled otherwise, political resistance throughout the country against imperialism and hegemonism. In order to obtain the broadest participation of the people, we need also to develop simultaneously the struggle for the economic emancipation of the people.
 
------------ --------- --------- --------- ---- (quote) 
 

Portal to the Hindu World
 
20 Nov 2008
An India-Israel- United States Alliance: The Last Great Hope for Humanity
   Posted by: Dr. Richard Benkin   in Bangladesh, Hinduism, Politics, Research & Analysis
Add Comment


Dr. Richard Benkin
  On November 1, 2008, I delivered the Arvind Ghosh Memorial Lecture to the Human Empowerment Convention in suburban Chicago. The address was interrupted more than a half dozen times with applause and received a standing ovation at its conclusion. The following are excerpts from that address.
"Some years back, my mother, wife, and daughter were sitting in a Jerusalem restaurant enjoying a meal. Not many weeks later, a Palestinian terrorist entered the restaurant and blew himself up, [and] I realized that had my mother, my wife, and my daughter been there that day, the murderers would have considered their deaths something glorious…. Anyone who could glory in the deaths of my mother, my wife, and my daughter is an enemy so vile that…there can be no quarter, no negotiation, no compromise; and in the fight against it there can be no rest….
"Why is there any question about the need to fight them unrelentingly and to destroy them utterly….Our enemy's expressed goals are to destroy our faiths, our values, our ways of life….Fuzzy thinking about this can destroy us, and…no matter [who] tries to convince us otherwise, [we] must remain focused on what we have to do to defeat them….This enemy has a name, and we need to use it: radical Islam. Not terrorism, which is only a tactic; or unspecified radicals, militants, or whatever politically correct word is in fashion but Islamist radicals….If we are engaged in a war on 'terror,' we are [merely] reacting to a tactic [and] not engaged in a comprehensive effort to defeat the terrorists and those who send them. If our enemies are merely "the extremists," we have [abandoned] the search for any ideology…that unites those extremists and motivates them. [That] dilutes our struggle, weakens us, and strengthens our enemies…radical
Islamists.
"An alliance of Israel, India, and the United States…can [easily] dispose of the terrorists and the national leaders that support them…Look at what each nation has done by itself. Ever since its 1948 birth, Israel has been bedeviled by nation-states and terrorist groups determined to destroy it. It is the only nation on earth that has never known a day of peace….Invaded by multiple Arab militaries in 1948, 1956, 1967, and 1973…Israel beat them all back so thoroughly, that they had to change tactics and send terror proxies to do their work…. But the terrorists have failed, too. Suicide bombings [and rocket strikes from Gaza] have been virtually eliminated….In a 2007 conversation with an Israeli insider, I noted how the number of terror attacks dropped significantly, even though the terrorists keep trying….'Let me tell you a secret,' he whispered, smiling. 'We stop most of them in their beds.' Israel has survived; more than that, it
has thrived to become one of the world's technological giants….
"India was born with an enemy dedicated to its destruction on its northwest border. For the last ten years, Pakistan has been a nuclear power.It has supported anti-Indian terror for decades, and since 1996, the entire Muslim ummah in the form of the Organization of Islamic Conferences and its members stand with Pakistan in claiming Kashmir. India faces a steady stream of terror attacks [and] a steady flow of Muslim infiltrators trying with some success to change the demographic realities in East and West Bengal. As I rode through villages near the Bangladesh and Nepal borders…I was told how each one has gone from having a mixed Hindu-Muslim population to an exclusively or almost exclusively Muslim one.…Yet India, too, survives and is becoming one of the new century's economic giants….
"The United States remains the world's only superpower and its largest economy…[Its] efforts in Iraq are succeeding. Terrorist actions are down, calm is returning, and Iraqis are taking on ever more of their national responsibilities. [It] has defeated an Islamist onslaught…conducted with no regard for the safety of innocents or for any international conventions. It has done so despite a worldwide ideological crusade by leftists and elites to demonize the United States and its anti-Islamist efforts. They have called it a war for oil, a war for Israel, and a war against Islam….
"Radical Islam threatens every country and people on earth but targets these three nations specifically for extinction….Yet, all three nations are told to negotiate with the enemy; to make concessions; to understand their grievances and our sins….Never mind that Israelis were being blown up on public busses; Palestinians said they were 'humiliated' by Israel's security checkpoints. So the world leaned on Israel, not the Arabs, to engage in what they called confidence building measures [that is] unilateral concessions [that only built] our enemy's confidence in our weakness….
"India is the key. Israel and the United States have had a strategic relationship at least since the 1960s. [India] did not even recognize Israel until 1992 and was a staunch ally of the Soviet Union during the Cold War.…But the collapse of the Soviet Union and growth of the Islamist enemy changed international realities and caused most nations to take a new look at their strategic interests….
"This has caused something of a generation gap among members of the India's media and government. Many remain tied to the ideologies and policies of the past, while much of the younger generation does not….The [leftist] Congress Party recently broke with its communist allies over the…nuclear cooperation deal with the United States [and] West Bengal [Communists] suffered some reverses in local elections for the first time in its thirty-year, iron-fisted rule of that state….Earlier this year, I addressed a group of journalism students at the University of Lucknow [about] Islamist ethnic cleansing of Bangladeshi Hindus. [They] voiced their opinions about how the Indian media has failed to identify the true nature of this genocide-in- the-making [but also] avidly drank in any detail I could provide about life in the Jewish state…and about the wayJews and Hindus share so many values and sensibilities. More than anything else, however, these
journalists of tomorrow wanted to know how tiny Israel was able to 'defeat the terrorists and jihadis…so India can adopt these methods and defeat our terrorists like the Israelis did….'
"Members of [the] mainstream media…were quite candid about the media's leftist bias, corruption in the Congress government…and about the severity of the Islamist threat….But because, they told me…they "would surely be sacked" if their editors or colleagues heard those candid opinions, we met in out of the way hotels, coffee shops, and other inconspicuous places….
"In the United States…the political correctness police see a potential offense in virtually every comment that calls our enemy what it is. In Israel, it is the misnomered peace camp; misnomered because the only peace their policies would bring is the peace of the grave. In India, it is pseudo-secularism, a policy that legislates Hinduism to a second-class status….The recent budget included millions to fund Muslim religious pilgrimages but not a penny for Bangladeshi Hindus living stateless and abused in refugee camps. Even in its final days in office, Israel's Kadima Party is looking to strike a deal that would give up ancestral Jewish lands on West Bank, but also part of Israel's capital, Jerusalem [and] Hebron, where Judaism's patriarchs and matriarchs are buried….There had been a continuous Jewish presence in Hebron from biblical times until 1929 [when] Muslims with help from local authorities rioted and attacked the ancient Jewish
community. Those who were not murdered were expelled [and] today, the descendants of the murderers have the gall to say the descendants of the victims have no title to the land, and the world disdainfully calls them 'settlers.' So, tell me, at what point does the statute of limitation run on genocide….
"We are also fighting what I have termed the Red-Green Alliance… of Communists and Islamists…In 2004, Al Qaeda terrorists were on the run from U.S. forces that dislodged them from their strongholds in Afghanistan….Friendly [Pakistani] border guards got them safely… to terrorist-controlle d sections of Kashmir and into Nepal where they set up terror bases….Nepal is overwhelmingly Hindu and hardly a likely candidate to become the next Taliban state, but the Nepalese King had seized dictatorial powers in response to a decades-long communist revolt. That made for social chaos and uncontrolled borders that allowed Islamists in the Pakistan Embassy to engineered an agreement with the communists to provide Al Qaeda with safe haven.
"The Islamists were…interested in the world's third-largest Muslim country just down the road: Bangladesh [where] Islamists had infiltrated virtually all of the country's social institutions and had been part of the government since 2001. They were all set to make further gains in the upcoming January 2007 elections [until] a military coup stopped them—for the moment. [But] the Islamists remain in the area ready to seize power when conditions allow it….The Maoists'…reward was a role in Nepal's coalition government, which gave them enough legitimacy to masquerade as a political party and run in the next election [and seize] power. [We see Red-Green] collusion between West Bengal communist government and Bengali Islamists [in] ongoing attacks by local and Bangladeshi Islamists that the government tolerates. I recall one village where the local commissar got there before I did to intimidate the refugees into silence. It appeared to be
working until one elderly woman stood up in the public square and said, 'I'm not afraid of anyone,' and with the red official looking on, proceeded to tell me about the continuing attacks. [Its] less violent side is even more influential in blocking a US-India-Israel alliance….Leftists sympathize with Islamist goals, demonize Israel, and oppose anything the United States does….
"Wherever I went in India, I heard, 'There are no democracies between Jerusalem and New Delhi.' India and Israel…have been able to maintain their democracy without military coups or contrived states of emergency, without the suspension of rights or elections, despite pressure so continuous that few nations would be able to withstand it. In our tripartite alliance, we have the world's oldest democracy, the United States, the world's largest democracy, India, and the only democracy in the Middle East, Israel…. Each offers something the others do not….India's greatest enemy is Pakistan; at least for now, the United States maintains extensive relations with it. Iran is Israel's nemesis (America's, too); and India has a good relationship with that country. America's greatest rival, China (also a threat to India), has some serious ties with Israel.
"In the area of energy, competition for resources between India and the United States helped drive up the price of oil. [They accounted] for one third of the world's oil consumption ….We appeared dependent on OPEC while they seemed independent of us [until] recent US actions to increase drilling, dip into its oil reserves, and conserve energy…drove down the price of oil [and] sent OPEC into a panic. If these two giant oil importers could unite in deliberate action to collapse the price—then take advantage of some extremely exciting Israeli advances in alternate energy technologies—the three could turn defeat and dependence into victory….
"Both the United States and India now have troops training in Israel, studying anti-terrorism tactics, urban guerilla warfare, and other tactics. In January, an Israeli spy satellite was fired into orbit on the back of an Indian rocket; and…India is now the largest importer of weaponry from Israel….Intelligence sharing has also grown with time, and Israeli intelligence is particularly active in providing India with good information to keep Pakistan in check….
"To make an India-Israel- US alliance a reality….First, we have to commit ourselves to doing what it takes to achieve this…As I have found in my own human rights efforts, there is nothing that can stop a committed individual who continues to impress upon leaders the moral nature of his or her claims. Second…we have to organize…identifying people who are willing to put together structures, raise funds, and do the leg work needed to convince people in Washington, New Delhi, and Jerusalem to further these ties. Third…we need to make this an issue that [politicians] cannot ignore. Bring it to their attention; tie donations to it; take out ads; get media time [and secure] cooperation of lawmakers from [all] parties…When I toured the Hindu refugee camps earlier this year, it was a member of the Congress Party who stood with me [even though] many in his party opposed his decision but….It is no different in the United States. The last protest
letter I asked be sent to the Bangladeshi government was signed by four Members of Congress: Trent Franks of Arizona, a conservative Republican; Mark Kirk of Illinois, a moderate Republican; Steve Rothman, a moderate Democrat from New Jersey; and Allyson Schwartz, a liberal Democrat from Philadelphia….And work to defeat those who reject the seriousness of the existential threat that all three nations face. Do it as if your life depended on it because it does.
"Fourth, there are many ways to build a corps of supporters in the United States Congress and Senate. Networks of like-minded individuals exist in all three countries and all over the world….Fifth, find the 'good guys' in the media. Although we rightly complain about a media tendency to avoid naming the threat and to downplay its seriousness, there are many writers and outlets that are not like that. We need to identify them and cultivate those relationships….
"Over the past couple years, I have become more and more involved in trying to protect the Bangladeshi Hindus from the genocidal efforts of Bengali Islamists, the corruption of Bengali leaders, and the shameful inaction by India, the United Nations, Amnesty International and the other so-called human rights groups…Some 20 million Bangladeshi Hindus who should be here are not….As a Jew, I am extremely sensitive about the Nazi holocaust against my people. I have family who survived it and family who did not. There is nothing in history that comes close to it [but this situation is eerily familiar]….Contact me….Work with me….Do not let this opportunity pass." You can help me return to India in March to fight for the Bangladeshi Hindus by donating at Interfaith Strength. (unquote)

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* ওঁTags: Bangladesh, hinduism, india, israel, Politics

This entry was posted on Thursday, November 20th, 2008 at 9:15 pm and is filed under Bangladesh, Hinduism, Politics, Research & Analysis. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0feed. You can leave a response, or trackbackfrom your own site.


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