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Tuesday, September 1, 2009

[chottala.com] Dos and Don'ts to prevent Swine Flu [1 Attachment]

[Attachment(s) from Dr. Md. Mizanur Rahman included below]

Please see the attachment.

 

Attachment(s) from Dr. Md. Mizanur Rahman

1 of 1 File(s)


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[chottala.com] Help for victims of Bangladesh river erosion - BBC News



Help for victims of Bangladesh river erosion

By Mark Dummett
BBC News, Kaijuri, Bangladesh

River erosion in Kaijuri, Bangladesh
The river banks are made of nothing more than clay and sand

The United Nations says it has developed a plan to help the thousands of Bangladeshis who lose their homes every year because of river bank erosion.

Using satellite images, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) says it can predict which areas will be destroyed by rivers shifting course, so that the affected people receive assistance.

Every year it is estimated that about 100,000 people are made homeless by the unstoppable force of the country's two largest rivers - the Brahmaputra and the Ganges (which are known in Bangladesh as the Jamuna and the Padma).

Their river banks are made of nothing more than clay and sand, so thousands of hectares of land are washed away each monsoon, when the rivers run fastest.

Usually the rivers' victims receive little help, and many are forced to migrate to the slums of the overcrowded capital, Dhaka

'Bigger disaster'

"This is a silent disaster," the UNDP's assistant country director Aminul Islam says.

"Every year thousands of people are losing their lands and they are silently suffering because nobody keeps any records.

"If there were statistics and you put them all together you'd see that this was a much bigger disaster than one single event like a cyclone which draws much more attention and global resources."

The UNDP is currently managing a pilot project in three areas, which are expected to be washed away this year.

It is working with the Dhaka-based Centre for Environmental and Geographic Information Services (CEGIS) to warn people that their homes and fields are in danger.

Ahmad Ali
Ahmad Ali is a victim of river bank erosion

They use red and yellow-coloured flags to indicate risk levels.

They work these out by studying 25 years of satellite images and soil samples.

Their predictions have already proved accurate at Kaijuri, near the city of Sirajganj, north-west of Dhaka.

A 10km stretch of bank there has been destroyed by the Jamuna since the start of the monsoon in June, and 2,000 people have already lost their homes.

"It just happens so quickly," one of the victims, Ahmad Ali said. "There is a splash of water and suddenly the ground you're sitting on disappears."

The head of the local council, Safiuddin Chowdhury, also saw his home crumble into the river, which at this time of year can be 15km wide.

Grateful

"The only way to explain to people who know nothing about our problem of river bank erosion is this - those who had a very happy and healthy life, with beautiful houses, and fields full of crops and cattle, are now like beggars. They sleep in the markets and in the open," he said.

But the people here are grateful for the warnings they received this year.

"At least this time we were able to save our furniture and possessions," Rahimullah, another victim, said.

"In previous years people just moved when the erosion came up to their doorsteps, when the house was about to collapse into the river."

For the first time, these victims of river bank erosion have been registered, so the hope now is that the government will provide them with support, and help in resettling.

The rivers deposit much of the land they take away further downstream, so if they are lucky, people can still reclaim what they have lost.

 
 


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[chottala.com] A banyan tree in Dhaka called Kennedy



 

Remembering Ted Kennedy

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 The banyan tree senator Ted Kennedy planted in Dhaka University  in Feb. 1972 to replace the original "Bawt Tawla" blown up by the Pakistan Army in March 1971. Today, the tree Kennedy planted in 1972 has grown as large as the original Bawt Tawla

Tuesday, September 1, 2009


A banyan tree in Dhaka called Kennedy

 Tarek Fatah

National Post


In the late hours of March 25, 1971, as the citizens of Dhaka slept, the Pakistan Army launched a war on its own people. By the time the sun rose, thousands of students in two university residential halls were dead and countless more lay wounded.


Dhaka University had been a hotbed of political activism for decades. To the generals of the Pakistan Army led by president Yahya Khan and his feared commander in then "East Pakistan," General Tikka Khan, it had to be vanquished. The army also had a score to settle with an old tree on the campus grounds that was rumoured to have cast magical spells of rebellion on the young men and women who mingled underneath it.


After the first massacres, soldiers were sent to kill the giant banyan tree, lovingly known as "Bawt Tawla." Under its branches, many generations of Bengali students had gathered, conspired and then gone out to change the world.


It was under this tree that the language movement of 1953 was launched. Here in 1968, students had risen up against the military rule of General Ayub Khan, leading to his humiliation.


By the time the sun set on March 25, the Pakistan Army had blown up Bawt Tawla, ripping the very heart out of Dhaka University.


"It was a sad day as if someone had destroyed the very essence of our lives," says Fuad Chowdhury, a Canadian filmmaker who witnessed the carnage.


"I saw the random killing and shooting of civilians. Canon fire destroyed part of my house, but the next morning when we saw the tree gone, we were devastated," he adds. "Bawt Tawla was gone forever, we thought. But we were wrong."


A million lives and two years later, after the Bangladeshis had defeated the Pakistan Army and achieved independence, a white American politician would come to the spot where the old tree stood and plant a new sapling.


Today, almost forty years later, that sapling has grown into a new Bawt Tawla, and under it students mourn the passing of the man who planted that sapling: senator Edward Kennedy.


Ted Kennedy had a huge following all over the world. Some admired him for his charisma, others because he was the brother of JFK and RFK. But in Bangladesh, he was revered because he spoke up when no one else in the U.S. dared to say a word.


In 1971, when the Pakistan Army began its genocide, Islamabad was a close ally of the U.S. President Yahya Khan had facilitated the Nixon-Mao meeting and the White House was not interested in damaging relations with a military junta that provided an effective counter balance to the growing India-U.S.S.R. relationship.


As Pakistani atrocities mounted, the U.S. consul general in Dhaka, Archer Blood, sent an urgent message to the State Department. It read:


"Our government has failed to denounce the suppression of democracy. Our government has failed to denounce atrocities… But we have chosen not to intervene, even morally, on the grounds that the ...conflict, in which unfortunately the overworked term 'genocide' is applicable, is purely an internal matter of a sovereign state."


Blood said that Dhaka University students were "either shot down in rooms or mowed down when they came out of building…estimated 1,000 persons, mostly students, but including faculty members resident in dorms, killed… At least two mass graves on campus, one near Iqbal Hall, other near Rokeya Hall. Rain [on the night of] March 29 exposed some bodies. Stench terrible."


Instead of paying attention to the news about the bloodletting, the "Blood Telegram," as it came to be known, was reclassified as secret, and Archer Blood got transferred out of Dhaka.


As the world seemed to have abandoned Bengalis, one man had the courage to defy his own government, thumb his nose at the Nixon administration and go to the teeming refugee camps where ten million people were living in appalling conditions. This man was then 39-year-old senator Ted Kennedy.


Kennedy toured the camps and heard eyewitness stories of the massacres all over East Pakistan. Back home, senator Kennedy wrote to the Senate Judiciary Committee on Refugees about "one of the most appalling tides of human misery in modern times." He wrote,


"Nothing is more clear, or more easily documented, than the systematic campaign of terror — and its genocidal consequences — launched by the Pakistani army on the night of March 25th …All of this has been officially sanctioned, ordered and implemented under martial law from Islamabad. America's heavy support of Islamabad is nothing short of complicity in the human and political tragedy of East Bengal."


Despite obstruction from the Nixon White House, Kennedy worked both sides of the house, pleading for the end of U.S. support for Pakistan. This finally led to the U.S. Congress passing a bill that banned all arms sales to Pakistan.


On December 16, 1971, the war ended and Bangladesh seceded from Pakistan to become an independent country.


Fuad Chowdhury recalls when two months later, senator Kennedy came back to Bangladesh and planted a tree at the site of the original Bawt Tawla.


"There were thousands of students chanting "Joi Kennedy" (long live Kennedy) as he spoke to us, comparing the Bangladesh revolution to the American Revolution.


"For us, he was a hero then and will always be remembered as the man who stood by us in our darkest days. The banyan tree should now be re-named as the banyan tree called Kennedy."


Today, the tree Kennedy planted in 1972 has grown as large as the original Bawt Tawla.

 

Source:

http://www.averroespress.com/AverroesPress/Main/Entries/2009/9/1_A_banyan_tree_in_Dhaka_called_Kennedy.html

 Note: The language movement was lunched from Amtola which is currently inside Dhaka Medical College campus.

 



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[chottala.com] FW: Secularism in India



Dear all chottala readers,
Please look at the so called secularism in India. Burning of Muslims' Holy Quran, sometimes Christians' Bible and sometimes Buddhists' Holy book which is the common and regular phenomenon in India, should not be regarded as secularism. Killing of Buddhists in millions in the past by Raja Sankar Acherjee to convert them forcefully into hinduism is a well known history of the past. Population wise and religion wise Muslims are the third largest population in the world after 1st Christians' and 2nd Buddhism. Hinduism is limited in India and Nepal only, with worshipper of multiple god and goddess mostly animals starting from
monkey upto donkey. The most peculiar thing in their religion is to purify their house with cow dung and spreading cows' urine in their houses. Even some of them used to drink cow's urine to feel some peace and mental happiness in their soul. Whatever might be, it is their own faith and believe. But why to attack others religious sentiments by destruction of Mosques (like Historic Babri Mosque), Christian Church, Buddhist Temple, killing and burnung alive of thiusands of innocent Muslims by the instigation of their chief minister fanatics Norendra Singh Modi in Guzrat, burning of others Holy Book like our Holy Quran and so on. Our Muslims never did this following the teachings of our Prophet Muhammed Sallalahu Alaihe Wasallam (PBUH), and according to the teachings of our Holy Quran.

Dowllah.

 

 

From: shahid@merimo.net
To: mjewel.mannan@gmail.com
CC: gstexazad@gmail.com; ga@merimo.net; ga1@merimo.net; profiles@yahoo-inc.com; kamrul@ctgtel.net; mechanic@merimo.net; mdsjahan@gmail.com; miaze@gsnc.net; mizan@merimo.net; mjewel.mannan@gmail.com; gmchy@youngone.co.kr; rana@merimo.net; sarwar@fahamigroup.com; naser@merimo.net; nasrin@merimo.net; nazir.kari@gmail.com; nizam@ghhaewae.com; sabbirhs@yahoo.com; salahdeen@mail2world.com; shahadat@merimo.net; shameem@merimo.net; siraj_58@hotmail.com; somiul_nasim@yahoo.com; syed.a.jabbar@gmail.com; taufiq.hemple@gmail.com; ttw@bbts.net
Subject: Activities of Dandi Potash in India
Date: Sat, 29 Aug 2009 08:30:02 +0600

 
 
 
 
 
       Nauzubillahe Minzalek
 
                
           HINDUS BURNING THE HOLY QURAN 
Please forward this to as many people as you can in different countries so that it may reaches the media which will for sure- cover it as well as it
deserves, and the Muslims all over the world may know & do something about this.
This is an exclusive picture and it's the only proof of the unforgivable sin done by the fanatics Hindus with a  Pagriwala Mouchewala Sikh Sardarji standing and looking from behind most probably as admirer and supporter.

 

 

Image Hosted by Reattached- The Best Hosting

           What a nice Secularism in India.

.

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