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Thursday, October 27, 2011

[chottala.com] Further approach for Humanitarian help for kidney transplant



                                                                              "Please forward this message to your network"

Dear

Community Leaders, Humanitarians and Community Members,

BCCDI endorsed community welfare service "Manush Manusher Jonno" is one of the many other programs to provide support to the people need help. In this connection I would like to convey this message to the community about one of my best childhood friend Professor Khaled Kamal Chowdhury's younger brother Tarek Kamal Chowdhury (Shaheen) require to transplant at least one of his kidney immediately to survive in life. At this very moment; this 32 years young boy is living with both of his damaged kidney in Chittagong Bangladesh but he is originated from village: Payalgacha, Barura, Comilla. He is now surviving basis on day to day dialysis. Since this whole process is very expensive, so it is very difficult for this family to bear this large expense.

So, at this moment this family is seeking humanitarian help from the community in USA and any kind hearted person from elsewhere around the world. Your kind donation will be very highly appreciated and will help a young boy to get his life back. If you are willing to contribute your generous donation, please contact with BCCDI's main contact number or Professor Khaled Kamal Chowdhury on his cell 88-01712612299 for more information. Thank you again for your great support and cooperation.

Your donation could be directly contributed to the account bellow

Tarek Kamal Chowdhury

HSBC Bank LTD

Savings Account # 004-188207-001

Or

Contact with BCCDI  

With regards

Mizanur Bhuiyan-202-213-1990 Cell

General Secretary

BCCDI (Bangladesh Center for Community Development Inc.)

703-828-1953 (Main Number)



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Re: [chottala.com] Gaddafi made a great mistake




     Politicians never learn lesson from the history. Even Democratically elected leaders become tyrent autocratic ruler. Current Bangladesh government is one of them. Those rulers never listens the heartbit of the nation rather use brutal Police/RAB force to silent opposing views. Hasina should have learned lesson from the fate of her father. Same thing moght happen again and if Hasina government falls, people won't protest rather will support it.Our Police vforce force is the tool of repression since Pakistani rule. Even in 52 Language movement, 66's  6 point movement, 69's mass movement Bangali Police /BDR fired and killed Bangalis. They are always obidient to the rulers they never refuse unjust order from political government. They basically help tyrant rulers survive.
 
 
---------- Original Message ----------
From: "Turkman" <turkman@sbcglobal.net>
To: chottala@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [chottala.com] Gaddafi made a great mistake
Date: Wed, 26 Oct 2011 15:42:03 -0000

 

He should have appointed one of his sons and retired or should have used brutal force against the JehaaDis, who had started rebellion instead of letting it grow. If he was failing, he should have fled to Cuba or Venezuela. Stupid just did not believe the people he has provided so much money all the time without them working, would revolt against him ever.

--- In chottala@yahoogroups.com, siraj uddowllah <siraj_58@...> wrote:
>
>
> Dear chottala readers,
>
> Muammar Gaddafi made a great mistake by giving all sorts of extra
> facilities to his subjects. Like Mahathir Mohammad of Malayasia he also played
> a tremendous role in building up his country Libya. Whatever might be after all
> of these, like Mohathir Mohammad he should leave the power and quit. He would
> be a respected man for ever to the Libyan people. But instead he tried to
> remain in power by grabbing the throne for long. The ultimate result he was
> brutality killed cruelly and mercilessly by those whom he has given so much facilities
> to raise them to a super international standard. Now those who are shedding
> crocodile tears asking for investigation for his killing, was the the real
> initiator of his killing.
>
> Dr. Siraj Uddowllah.
>



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[* Moderator's Note - CHOTTALA is a non-profit, non-religious, non-political and non-discriminatory organization.

* Disclaimer: Any posting to the CHOTTALA are the opinion of the author. Authors of the messages to the CHOTTALA are responsible for the accuracy of their information and the conformance of their material with applicable copyright and other laws. Many people will read your post, and it will be archived for a very long time. The act of posting to the CHOTTALA indicates the subscriber's agreement to accept the adjudications of the moderator]




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[chottala.com] Iran's Largest Banks Swindled Out Of $2.6 Billion [Behind islamic cover !!!]



Behind islamic cover :

Iran's Largest Banks Swindled Out Of $2.6 Billion

October 27, 2011

Listen to the Story

A man walks past a branch of Iran's Bank Saderat in Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates. An estimated $2.6 billion has been stolen from Bank Saderat and other leading Iranian banks, causing a growing scandal.

 
Enlarge Karim Sahib/AFP/Getty Images

 

A man walks past a branch of Iran's Bank Saderat in Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates. An estimated $2.6 billion has been stolen from Bank Saderat and other leading Iranian banks, causing a growing scandal.

October 27, 2011

A bank fraud scandal of unprecedented proportions is shaking domestic politics in Iran.

Several of Iran's largest banks have been swindled out of an estimated $2.6 billion. The scandal has sparked a widening investigation with more than 30 arrests so far. It has also led to charges that some of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's closest advisers were involved.

On its face, it appears it was easy for some of Iran's most important bankers to steal so much money.

All they did was secure falsified letters of credit from several key banks, and money started flowing into the accounts of an investment firm and out of Iran, Muhammad Sahimi says. Sahimi is a writer for the website Tehran Bureau.

The hardliners around Ayatollah Khamenei have been trying to link this to (President) Ahmadinejad's group.

"Bank Melli and Bank Saderat which are two important banks in Iran were used to open huge lines of credit without presenting any assets to, you know, back up those line of credits," Sahimi says. "And these line of credits were played against each other to get in some sort of ponzi scheme."

Theft Just Discovered

Apparently the scheme had been operating for several years, but it was discovered just last month, prompting the managing director of the Bank Melli to flee to Canada where he owns an opulent home.

In Iran the widening scandal has taken on political dimensions, says Sahimi. It is now coloring the struggle for political preeminence between President Ahmadinejad and Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

"The hardliners around Ayatollah Khamenei have been trying to link this to Ahmadinejad's group," Sahimi says.

The link, according to the Khamenei camp, is the president's chief adviser Rahim Mashaei, who has often been the lightning rod for criticism from conservative hardliners, according to Abbas Milani of Stanford University.

"The argument is that he is somehow responsible and that the president's office is responsible, although no one has yet accused Ahmadinejad," Milani says.

This is not the first time that Ahmadinejad and his inner circle have been accused of corruption. Earlier in his term as president, several billion dollars of oil revenues disappeared.

 
 

The banking scandal has political implications in Iran, and the president's top adviser, Rahim Mashaei, has come under criticism. He's shown here in a 2007 photo.

Political Implications

Though little evidence exists to back up any allegations against Ahmadinejad, Sahimi argues there is some basis for these suspicions, including next March's parliamentary election.

"What is most important, and they don't talk about, is the fact that these are Ahmadinejad supporters that have amassed a lot of resources," Sahimi says. He adds that critics feel that money could be used to "buy their votes and their loyalty for the election. That's the real issue here."

It's not just the hard line conservative camp that believes Ahmadinejad has his eye on extending his political power beyond 2013, when his second and final term ends. Some argue that Ahmadinejad would like see his supporters take control of the parliament, then engineer victory for his hand-picked successor in 2013.

Ahmadinejad underscored his own role as president when he was asked about his accomplishments at a recent press conference in New York.

"The president is among the servants of the people, on the side of the people, among the people. This is something that has been established in Iranian history. And of course the president must love his people, his nation," Ahmadinejad said through an interpreter.

At the same time, Ahmadinejad has hinted he would like to see relations improve with the United States, which he certainly would benefit from, says Nader Hashemi, an Iran analyst at the University of Denver.

"He made a number of statements that suggested that he wanted to resolve tensions with the United States," Hashemi says. "Doing so in the context of Iranian politics would be an extremely popular move. And would sort of increase his support going toward a parliamentary election next year."

So the claim that Ahmadinejad and his supporters may be accumulating a multi-billion dollar slush fund — stemming in part from the recent fraud — is not beyond the realm of the possible. That prospect has clearly got Ayatollah Khamenei and his camp worried, says Abbas Milani.

"He is not sure about how much of an arsenal Ahmadinejad might have," Milani says. "There is increasing talk about impeachment. There is talk of doing away with the whole office of the presidency, replacing it with the prime minister, who would be elected by the parliament and dismissed by the parliament, essentially making Khamenei the unrivaled head of state."

Just a few days ago, Khamenei himself suggested in public that Iran might not retain the presidential system forever.

It's not clear just how serious the impeachment effort is yet, but it's safe to say, the divisions in Iran's government just keep getting deeper and deeper.

 


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[* Moderator�s Note - CHOTTALA is a non-profit, non-religious, non-political and non-discriminatory organization.

* Disclaimer: Any posting to the CHOTTALA are the opinion of the author. Authors of the messages to the CHOTTALA are responsible for the accuracy of their information and the conformance of their material with applicable copyright and other laws. Many people will read your post, and it will be archived for a very long time. The act of posting to the CHOTTALA indicates the subscriber's agreement to accept the adjudications of the moderator]




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