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Tuesday, August 28, 2012

[chottala.com] Re: Low and disorder: 30 Murdered in 6 days





http://jugantor.us/enews/issue/2012/08/29/news0400.htm


http://www.amardeshonline.com/pages/details/2012/08/29/160971




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[chottala.com] Re: Ershad's India connection [1 Attachment]

[Attachment(s) from Isha Khan included below]

Indian Govt's Favour to Ershad

On Sat, Aug 25, 2012 at 12:19 PM, Isha Khan <bdmailer@gmail.com> wrote:



http://www.amardeshonline.com/pages/details/2012/08/25/160249

http://www.prothom-alo.com/detail/date/2012-08-25/news/283575

On Thu, Aug 23, 2012 at 12:22 PM, Isha Khan <bdmailer@gmail.com> wrote:
Pro-India politricks of Ershad

http://www.banglanews24.com/detailsnews.php?nssl=5c0b22ae24d0082d80a0d52feb219798&nttl=22082012134014


On Sat, Aug 18, 2012 at 8:29 AM, Isha Khan <bdmailer@gmail.com> wrote:
Prof Mahbubullah on Ershad's India visit


http://www.amardeshonline.com/pages/details/2012/08/18/159808


On Thu, Aug 16, 2012 at 7:20 AM, Isha Khan <bdmailer@gmail.com> wrote:





Attachment(s) from Isha Khan

1 of 1 File(s)


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Re: [chottala.com] SIRAJ SIKDAR issue






It is interesting that Siraj Sikdar was hurling arsenal at India because he had information Hindus during the war killed many, thus he was going after India, and as he was Menon Group I also think he was influenced by  Chinese backed politics, Now that is may be not why he and his allies did not go after China as i am sure during the war of Independence, Chinese backed also killed people during the war of Independence and subsequently..

Well the thing is India is Hindu..Guess what Siraj Sikdar will remind you of a bread and snack route delivery driver in Oklahoma, name Sikh Jaswant Singh Mudhar..then if he was an Engineer in his profession that would be just what dr ordered guess what hint is my employers non discriminating Jewish Director he had his stuff in his residence and moved them out after he left the company..may not believe this I


From: Debasish Barua <gorba196138@yahoo.com>
To: "chottala@yahoogroups.com" <chottala@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Wednesday, August 22, 2012 2:09 PM
Subject: [chottala.com] SIRAJ SIKDAR issue

 
It seems SIRAJ SIKDAR had access to very sophisticated ARSENAL, hint is sourced thur ISRAEL, in fact though he was not a military individual the location where he was arrested in his hied out in SUNDER BAN area..was very carefully designed Should I say hint was as if it was prepared by ARTILLERY CORE in MILITARY..may had backing from then Bangladesh Military..it seemed his capture was expedited as he fired ROCKET fire from his location to INDIAN territory was the jungle is shared by both country..he was captured by two female and one male police...again ordered by some kind of court. It is hint his escape from custody was aided by people that helped him built that hide out..and as he died in cross fire again those helped him eliminated him because they did not want him to disclose anything some segment of his family was secretly co operating with Govt..

By the way the people that fired on JSD procession same people killed Sheikh Mujib and his family...




From: Debasish Barua <gorba196138@yahoo.com>
To: "chottala@yahoogroups.com" <chottala@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, August 21, 2012 8:57 AM
Subject: Re: [chottala.com]Mujibur Secret Visit to Agartala My assessment Few other notes

 

Kennedy was assassinated around year 1993, Shere- Bangla died just few months before Kennedy died. Now their seems to another conjecture hint as it states Mujib stayed in Prison their and not only that their is few more things hint is their is this Child abuses case over my custody, that would be about the year it might got started, Jinnha wanted my custody as I was born in 1961. A Catholic Judge ruled in favor of my parents over Jinnhas request . Not only that, I also belief that Mujib and my grand father who despite himself being involved in the mess over me, was my lawyer. They were both Jinnhas member of parliament..I wonder who else of foreign origin was their...

It seems this issue of over which my custody was fought some segment of family members fought for change of custody and some where for custody to be with my parents...it seems..as I have mention to few that even after the war Mujib had personnel interest in the investigation and assigned a relative police Daroga to designate another junior relative policeman to investigate the issue it has been on going..it is that police man that died during Zia rule in prison mysterious circumstance...that Darogas name was also SACHIN   DAROGA some one that also was stationed in Sylhet..I get hint that their could be tie to this event with as India's movie actress who is now India member of Parliament REKHA with INDIA's Cricket Team Captain SACHIN TENDULEKAR

Why custody battle was fought had many reason that include family inheritance issue to etc...now I also have relative in India her name is I think REKHA..she is the daughter of..my father fathers sister JOGOMAYA..many in Chittagong may have seen her she used to stay in our living room and was very religious, her husband was also an army men and died in India..hint is their may have been tie in this with Rekha and then Indias Cricket team captain...as it is not surprising Indias recent captain Sachin Tendulekar played test match with Pakistan..as Bangladesh has too..their is possibilities as I think Sachin and as Bangladesh Cricket control board dictated by Tareq younger Khoka tied to Thailand has been seeking the Pakistani Copy of the court filling in recent ..Mujib and Toffazal as press is also very keen on investigative journalism and hint is Toffazalas are tied to as high as TIME WARNERS..why was the custody ruling came in favor of my parents it was considered open and shut case...it was and still is a very high stake custody issue, it seems Judge relied on..my step grand mothers sister families report in the issue provided by law enforcement well that is the side I think as it involves Coke inheritance issue...they were actually backed by PEPSI COLA, thus Chinese...the Bishuddhanada side, seems this is the other side that got piece of the truth hint is actually the BRAHMAN that did my horoscope KUSTHI may have been involved in getting the truth....I think their is one more possibility...when was the KAPTAI DAM built...their was also resistance to this..

As I see..

From: Debasish Barua <gorba196138@yahoo.com>
To: chottala@yahoogroups.com; "farida_majid@hotmail.com" <farida_majid@hotmail.com>; "abid.bahar@gmail.com" <abid.bahar@gmail.com>
Cc: "aanis06@yahoo.com" <aanis06@yahoo.com>; "shahadathussaini@hotmail.com" <shahadathussaini@hotmail.com>; "shahdeeldar@gmail.com" <shahdeeldar@gmail.com>; "syed.aslam3@gmail.com" <syed.aslam3@gmail.com>; "liaquat707@me.com" <liaquat707@me.com>; "sonarbangladesh@yahoogroups.com" <sonarbangladesh@yahoogroups.com>; "Diagnose@yahoogroups.com" <Diagnose@yahoogroups.com>; "manik195709@yahoo.com" <manik195709@yahoo.com>; "kamalctgu@gmail.com" <kamalctgu@gmail.com>; "ovimot@yahoogroups.com" <ovimot@yahoogroups.com>; "faithcomilla@gmail.com" <faithcomilla@gmail.com>; "pressministerwash@yahoo.com" <pressministerwash@yahoo.com>; "muhanazm@yahoo.com" <muhanazm@yahoo.com>; "obaidul.quader@gmail.com" <obaidul.quader@gmail.com>; "farid2002hossain@hotmail.com" <farid2002hossain@hotmail.com>; "srbanunz@gmail.com" <srbanunz@gmail.com>; "captchowdhury@yahoo.ca" <captchowdhury@yahoo.ca>; "sahannan@sonarbangladesh.com" <sahannan@sonarbangladesh.com>
Sent: Monday, August 20, 2012 3:29 PM
Subject: Re: [chottala.com]Mujibur Secret Visit to Agartala My assesment

 

It is indeed a very detailed report of Mujib being spotted in India, or Tripura. I also read many of the names associated in the article. Remind you that may not be first trip of Mujib to India and as he studied in INDIA...If  not ALIGHAR, Calcutta University for sure. I am sure he had few if not many Hindu friends..and I do not think that would be very surprising..

I also see a discrepancy in the article how many accompanied Mujib to Tripura one place it states he was accompanied by two other and in other place it states three other....but it does identify Toffazal Hossain as it is claimed of famed ITTEFAQ. It is interesting authors hint something improper in the trip as Mujib and hints Mujib off course was not in AGARTALA conspiracy...

I do not know why Mujib had to go their could be many reason..one i think around that time their was INDIA/ CHINA war..and if their was anything improper in the trip..in the nature of AGARTAL CONSPIRACY..could one of the accompanied was SGT JAHURUL HAQUE, he is the other co accused in the Agaratala Conspiracy ..mysteriously Toffazal Hossain Manik Mia was not accused in AGARTALA Conspiracy..

I do believe ITTEFAQ played a significant role in its  news reporting during the war and the time period that lead up to the war, that created an environment pro independence of Bangladesh..but then again MUJIB with other banned ITTEFAQ, paper of Tofazzal Hossain ..could it be Toffazal Hossain related some how to  other popular leader..HOSSAIN SHAHID..may be just speculation on my part..

Another interesting conjecture is the name of KAR..I came across, this name more then once..in Chittagong we do have KAR COMPANY.  I guess he was in Tripura as invited guest to attend and may be he was doing MISTY MOOKH..as KAR COMPANY by court building is like other BOSE BROTHERS..famous for SWEETS and SNACKS..

Not only that among the people Rabindranath Tagore corespondent with also comes a name KAR..I guess many possibilities...back to RABINDRANATH, EINESTINE Clique issue...

What ever the purpose of the visit I think INDIA , CHINA war stopped in a stalemate soon after.. their could have been many possibilities, we could have been OCCUPIED BY CHINA has INDIA lost that war out right, I think CHINA would have like to steam role it..10 million man army, I guess we could have been..10th province of China..I guess mear Mujibs presence could have some  had some effect in the war ..

Their was this other report..KISSINGERS most despised man was MUJIB..and rumor is..his favorite was BHUTTO..hint is it is BENAZIR some how communicated to Hassina like Kennedy assassination that..Her father that would be ZULFIQAR told her of MUJIB being killed in actual..time was MUJIB was still alive then..

I guess watch JFK and the discussion between Jim Garrison and his Military contact it was stated their..AUSTRALIAN press reported the assassination of Kennedy before it actually happened..

Nixons man in China was Kissinger as news report has it..for many reason TRIPURA and BANGALADESH HILLTRACTS faces insurgencies , some of these are very long time in planning that is just now coming a bit Clear..I guess many in Bangladesh like those MAO Badis , in Tripura..

The thing is MUJIB was not COMMUNIST as Many likes them...that is why GUS HALL buddies around the world did not like him..

Debasish Barua



From: Mohiuddin Anwar <mohiuddin@netzero.net>
To: farida_majid@hotmail.com; abid.bahar@gmail.com
Cc: aanis06@yahoo.com; shahadathussaini@hotmail.com; shahdeeldar@gmail.com; syed.aslam3@gmail.com; aanis06@yahoo.com; liaquat707@me.com; sonarbangladesh@yahoogroups.com; Diagnose@yahoogroups.com; manik195709@yahoo.com; kamalctgu@gmail.com; farida_majid@hotmail.com; shahdeeldar@gmail.com; ovimot@yahoogroups.com; chottala@yahoogroups.com; faithcomilla@gmail.com; pressministerwash@yahoo.com; muhanazm@yahoo.com; obaidul.quader@gmail.com; abid.bahar@gmail.com; farid2002hossain@hotmail.com; srbanunz@gmail.com; captchowdhury@yahoo.ca; sahannan@sonarbangladesh.com
Sent: Thursday, August 16, 2012 4:04 PM
Subject: [chottala.com] Sheikh Mujibur Rahaman&#65533;s Secret Visit to Agartala

 


 
 

January 11, 2012

Sheikh Mujibur Rahaman�s Secret Visit to Agartala

Sheikh Hasina�s visit to Agartala on Wednesday will occasion a trip down memory lane for three elderly men who can still remember how fifty years ago her father Sheikh Mujibur Rahaman made a secret foray into this city after crossing over to Khowai in West Tripura district-for the first and the last time to meet the then Chief Minister Sachindra Lal Singha. Only a few top-notch in the administration knew about the secret visit and fewer still knew that he spent a full November night in Agartala Central Jail. And that visit was five years before famous Agartala Conspiracy Case of 1968 which ultimately set the stage for the Bangladesh Liberation War. Of course, Sheikh Mujibur Rahaman was not involved in the Agartala Conspiracy Case-though he was implicated and made Accused No-1 � but at that time he did not come to Tripura.

He came only once and that was in 1963.�Though the specifics of his meetings with Sachindra Lal Singha will never be known because both Singha and Mujib are long dead and gone, there is no doubt that the �Bangabandhu� was testing the waters to secure Indian help for his cause.��Yes, of course I have seen Sheikh Mujib when he came to Khowai. But that was long ago, perhaps 50 years ago. I was then employed in the SDO office and I saw Sheikh Saheb entering into the SDO Sir�s residence, part of which was his office then�, said the 86 years old man as he sat straight on his bed.�Satya Deb, a former Class IV staff of Smarajit Chakrabarty, the then Sub Divisional Officer of Khowai, West Tripura is among the three living men who had seen Sheikh Mujibur Rahaman during that secret trip to Tripura.�It was if I correctly remember in November 1963-according to some it was cool November 3 afternoon-when Sheikh Mujib crossed over the border�, said Arun Bhattacharjee, then a clerk at the SDO Khowai office.
�The way all involved maintained hush-hush and the alacrity in which the entire visit was handled it became clear to us that it was a top secret visit by Sheikh Mujib. Then SDO was Smarajit Chakrabarty and evidently he was alerted by the higher ups. Sheikh Mujib crossed the border through tea estate in the afternoon along with three persons. Then we did have only two jeeps, one belonged to SDO and one to BDO.��It was indeed a top secret visit of Sheikh Mujib to India believed to have been for seeking New Delhi�s help for some sort of movement that Bangabandhu was planning even as early as in 1963. He had met the then Chief Minister Sachindra Lal Singha, who was his friend, and had asked him to help in this regard.��I remember SDO Sir asked the then Khowai police station OC Sudarshan Kar to remain alert and then went off to receive him in the border without saying anything to anyone. Within half an hour the SDO came back with his jeep TRA 54. And he was accompanied by three others, one among them was Sheikh Mujib�, said Bhattacharjee, who can still clearly remember the visit.The jeep went straight to Chakrabarty�s office and they just slipped hurriedly into first the SDO office and then at the back of the office in his Chakrabarty�s drawing room. �It was then I saw Sheikh Saheb. He was wearing Punjabi Pyjama and a shawl was wrapped around his upper part. He was a tall man. I saw three others but did not recognize them�, said Satya Deb. Some sources said, Mujib was then accompanied by editor of Ittefaq newspaper of the then East Pakistan Tofazzul Hussain and two other reporters.�Abhijit Chakrabarty, youngest son of the SDO said, �my mother Rama Chakrabarty told me she had prepared coffee for them�.Soon Sachindra Lal Singh�s younger brother Umesh Chandra Singh arrived Khowai as speacial emmisery of the Chief MInister and immediately all of them in two jeeps � one of them of the SDO and one of the BDO sped towards Agartala.
�Interestingly driver of SDO�s jeep Haripada Das came to our headclerk Birendra Kumar Bhattacharjee and requested him for some money as he would need to buy petrol as he would have to take �some Bangladeshi VIPs� to Agartala. �God knows how many times I have to run. so I need some money for petrol, Haripada told the head clerk who in turn told the cashier to give him the money, said Bhattacharjee.��I still remember soon after Sheikh Mujib crossed over there were hectic military movements in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) border. We could see Pakistani military and para-military jeeps wildly moving and deployment being done. Obviously they came to know Mujib would be crossing over to Tripura on some secret mission but they were late.�Mujib and his three associates arrived Agartala and went straight to Chief Minister�s residence at 12�30 am at night. Within a day seven more close associates also arrived in Agartala. In Agartala while Mujib was made a guest of Singh�s sister Hemangini Devi in Arundhuti Nagar. Others were housed in two other places- one being the Colonel Bari at the city heart. According to veteran journalist JItendra Paul, who was a close associate of Singh said the Chief Minister had got a call from Prime Minister Jawhar lal Nehru not to keep Mujib and others in his official residence and they might all have been �armed� and that they �sneaked; into Indian territory illegally.
It was after a series of discussions with Mujib, Tripura Chief Minister Sachindra Lal Singh accompanied by Chief Secretary B Raman flew to New Delhi to meet Prime Minister Jawhar Lal Nehru.�I met the Prime Minister personally as Chief Secretary stayed at the Foreign Secretary�s office chamber. We discussed Indian helps for Mujib�s movement. But Nehru was not ready at that moment since only one year ago we had Indo-China war�, according to a written statement given to a Bangladeshi reporter by Singh some months before his death. As the talks failed Mujib was visibly sad. But the problem arose as to how they should return home. Decision was taken that they would be pushed back. �I was then SDO Sadar (Agartala). At the instruction of the Chief Minister and Chief Secretary I received Mujib at a city area and took him Agartala Central Jail�, said KP Chakrabarty over telephone last year to this writer last year. As Mujib went to jail and a case for �intrusion� was registered against him, the then District Magistrate and SP met Mujib in jail.
�My father Nani Gopal Kar Bhowmik was the Superintendent of Jail and according to Jail code he was also present during the meeting. But he did not divulge me what transpired in the meeting�, said Manish Kar Bhowmik, and eminent senior layer of Gauhati High Court. �Chief Minister also came to meet Mujib in jail. But that at that time my father was not there. Mujib stayed a full night in Agartala Central jail and a sentry by the name of Abu Taher was posted to attend him�, Kar Bhowmik added. Next day Mujib and three of his companions were �officially� pushed them back to East Pakistan through Kamalasagar border crossing the Salda river. �This was the only time Sheikh Mujibur Rahaman came to Tripura. And it still remains a top secret and not many were at all aware.

 
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Re: [chottala.com] Investigation of ARAFATS death



Seems their is renewed interest in the death of Palestianian Leader Yassir Arafat as he died in France..Here is a name many may have know his name is Professor Edward Said..he is Christian and has been a Memember of PLO parliament in exhile...he was also a vocal  critic of ARAFATS role..hint is he is behind the death of ARAFAT who himself being moslem was married to Christian female as he about just got married and had a son..

I have seen Professor Said, criticize ARAFAT as sell out..hint is he was behind the death of ARAFAT, I think here are some of the important clues  some how ARAFAT like many seems French are more sympathetic to PLO cause ..I think the greater truth is..in Professor Said biography.., Professor Said is dead too

Beneath look where he studied...seems OBAMA all over...does'nt it  Harvard, Princeton, Colombia..guess what who else studied in Colombia, another name in Indian History Dr Ambedkar..., My gut says OBAMA had role in Arafats death, I guess he has been getting rid of terroist..son of Jewish mother and moslem father from KENYA..another Safari country..

I think it will all lead to Charles Brown lawfirm in Houston Texas & Bain & Bain &&&&&& etc and Babu GONESWAR ROY

Fluent in EnglishFrench, and Arabic,[28] Said earned a Bachelor of Arts (1957) from Princeton University, and a Master of Arts (1960) and a Ph.D. (1964) in English Literature from Harvard University.[29]

[edit]Career

In 1963, Saïd joined the faculty of Columbia University, in the departments of English and Comparative Literature, where he served until his death in 2003. In 1974 he was Visiting Professor of Comparative Literature at Harvard, in 1975–6 Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral Science at Stanford, and in 1977, Saïd became the Parr Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia and subsequently became the Old Dominion Foundation Professor in the Humanities. In 1979, Saïd was Visiting Professor of Humanities at Johns Hopkins University.[30] Saïd was also a visiting professor at Yale University and lectured at more than 100 universities.[31] In 1992, he attained the rank of University Professor, Columbia's highest academic position.[32] He lived near campus in The Colosseum onRiverside Drive.



From: Isha Khan <bdmailer@gmail.com>
To:
Sent: Saturday, August 25, 2012 12:32 AM
Subject: [chottala.com] RMG: Export Powerhouse Feels Pangs of Labor Strife

 
Export Powerhouse Feels Pangs of Labor Strife
By JIM YARDLEY  Published: August 23, 2012
ISHWARDI, Bangladesh — The air thickened with tear gas as police and paramilitary officers jogged into the Ishwardi Export Processing Zone firing rubber bullets and swinging cane poles. Panicked factory workers tried to flee. A seamstress crumpled to the ground, knocked unconscious by a shot in the head.
Dozens of people were bloodied and hospitalized. The officers were cracking down on protests at two garment factories inside this industrial area in western Bangladesh. But they were also protecting two ingredients of a manufacturing formula that has quietly made Bangladesh a leading apparel exporter to the United States and Europe: cheap labor and foreign investment.
Both were at stake on that March morning. Workers earning as little as $50 a month, less than the cost of one of the knit sweaters they stitched for European stores, were furious over a cut in wages. Their anger was directed at the Hong Kong and Chinese bosses of the two factories, turning a labor dispute into something potentially much larger.
"If any foreigner got injured or killed, it would damage the country's image around the globe," said a police supervisor, Akbar Hossein, who participated in the crackdown. "We all know the importance of these factories and this industry for Bangladesh."
Bangladesh, once poor and irrelevant to the global economy, is now an export powerhouse, second only to China in global apparel exports, as factories churn out clothing for brands like Tommy Hilfiger, Gap, Calvin Klein and H&M. Global retailers like Target and Walmart now operate sourcing offices in Dhaka, the capital. Garments are critical to Bangladesh's economy, accounting for 80 percent of manufacturing exports and more than three million jobs.
But with "Made in Bangladesh" labels now commonplace in American stores, Bangladesh's manufacturing formula depends on its having the lowest labor costs in the world, with the minimum wage for garment workers set at roughly $37 a month. During the past two years, as workers have seen their meager earnings eroded by double-digit inflation, protests and violent clashes with the police have become increasingly common.
In response, Bangladeshi leaders have deployed the security tools of the state to keep factories humming. A high-level government committee monitors the garment sector and includes ranking officers from the military, the police and intelligence agencies. A new special police force patrols many industrial areas. Domestic intelligence agencies keep an eye on some labor organizers. One organizer who had been closely watched, Aminul Islam, was found tortured and killed in April in a case that is unsolved.
"The garment industry is No. 1 for exports and dollars for the country," said Alonzo Suson, who runs the Solidarity Center in Dhaka, an A.F.L.-C.I.O.-affiliated labor rights group. "Any slowdown of that development is a national security issue."
For the Obama administration, which has cultivated Bangladesh as a regional ally in southern Asia, labor unrest has become a matter of growing concern. In a May visit to Dhaka, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton raised labor issues and the Islam murder case. In June, Ambassador Dan W. Mozena warned Bangladeshi garment factory owners that any perception of a rollback on labor rights could scare off multinational brands and damage the garment industry. "These developments could coalesce into a perfect storm that could threaten the Bangladesh brand in America," he said.
For global brands, which are forever chasing the cheapest labor costs from country to country, Bangladesh has been a hot spot, especially as wages have risen in China. McKinsey, the consulting giant, has called Bangladesh the "next China" and predicted that Bangladeshi garment exports, now about $18 billion a year, could triple by 2020.
But in late July, representatives from 12 major brands and retailers, alarmed by the rising labor unrest, prodded the Bangladeshi government to address wage demands, a suggestion rejected by the labor minister. "No reason to be worried," Khandker Mosharraf Hossain, the minister, told reporters, noting that brands were not canceling orders.
Bangladesh was born in bloodshed during a 1971 war of independence from Pakistan and has since gyrated between military rule and fragile democracy. It has about 150 million people and is one of the most densely populated countries in the world. Derided by Henry A. Kissinger as the world's "basket case," Bangladesh has since made considerable progress on fronts like women's literacy, juvenile and maternal mortality, per capita income, and life expectancy.
This upward arc is often credited to Bangladesh's vibrant civil society, but the garment sector, in which about 80 percent of the workers are women, has also played a critical role, providing socially acceptable jobs to women in a conservative Muslim country. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, in lobbying the United States for favorable trade preferences, has argued that such policies would improve the lives of millions of poor women.
Bangladesh's Home Ministry, in a written response to questions, said the government does not favor factory owners over workers but acts as a "referee/umpire" while maintaining an "investment friendly" environment for foreign and domestic investors.
Yet Ms. Hasina's government has resisted expanding labor rights in a country where the owners of about 5,000 garment factories wield enormous influence. Factory owners are major political donors and have moved into news media, buying newspapers and television stations. In Parliament, roughly two-thirds of the members belong to the country's three biggest business associations. At least 30 factory owners or their family members hold seats in Parliament, about 10 percent of the total.
"Politics and business is so enmeshed that one is kin to the other," said Iftekharuzzaman, director of Transparency International Bangladesh."There is a coalition between the sector and people in positions of power. The negotiating position of the workers is very, very limited."
A Country Within a Country
Mohammad Helal Uddin joined Rosita Knitwear in May 2010 and was thrilled to have the job. Rosita was inside the new Ishwardi Export Processing Zone, not far from his home village, meaning he could live with his wife and two young daughters and not have to toil in the fields. "I feel I have a kind of dignity in this job," he said.
Mr. Uddin, 28, worked in the knitting department and after six months was promoted, with a base salary of $55 a month. He soon began to notice irregularities. Workers were not getting promised annual raises, monthly attendance bonuses or the 17 paid holidays a year, beyond their usual one day off a week. Employees also said they worked four hours of overtime a day but were paid for only two.
Three decades ago, Bangladesh created a network of export zones to attract foreign investment with tax incentives and other benefits. Today, a large majority of Bangladesh's garment factories lie outside these zones, but the zones are favored by foreign investors. Rosita and its sister factory, Megatex, both owned by the Hong Kong conglomerate South Ocean, were the first plants in the Ishwardi zone. Zones like Ishwardi operate like countries within a country. They are governed by a separate agency, the Bangladesh Export Processing Zones Authority, and by separate laws. By tradition, the authority has been run by a military officer, active duty or retired, and many factories have hired retired soldiers to oversee security.
For workers, wages were higher in the zones and conditions were better. But unions were initially banned, and workers had no right to organize until 2004 when Parliament, facing international pressure, approved worker associations at individual factories.
At the Rosita factory, workers elected a 15-member association last December, with Mr. Uddin as president. In January, a female employee complained that a Bangladeshi middle manager was pressuring her to have sex with one of the Chinese bosses. Enraged, workers demanded that the management address her complaint as well as the discrepancies over annual raises and earned leave. Six weeks of confrontation and chaos followed. In February, equipment in the Rosita factory was damaged during a rampage. Nearly 300 workers were accused of vandalism and fired, with their names posted on a blacklist at the gate of the Ishwardi zone. Mr. Uddin, who denied any wrongdoing, was fired and temporarily jailed.
When he tried to return to work on Feb. 20, Mr. Uddin said two black-clad officers hustled him into the tiny guardhouse. The officers were members of the Rapid Action Battalion, a government paramilitary force infamous for vigilante attacks known as "cross fire" killings. He said one of the officers ordered him to sign a resignation letter.
"I didn't do anything wrong," Mr. Uddin said he told them.
He said one of the officers pushed a gun against his shoulder. "If you don't sign," the officer told him, according to Mr. Uddin, "we will take you in the car and you will have to face the cross-fire."
Mr. Uddin signed. Inside the factories, according to several workers, police and paramilitary officers walked through the workrooms, holding termination letters. The message was clear: work or leave.
By March, an American labor rights group, the Institute for Global Labor and Human Rights, was advocating for the workers. A South Ocean executive arrived at Ishwardi and promised to address worker complaints over wages and unpaid leave. Then on March 20, workers discovered that managers had cut the piece rate, a type of production bonus, meaning a loss of wages. Another standoff ensued as managers closed the factories. But when workers returned March 25, the wage cut had not been fully restored.
Hundreds of workers gathered outside the front door of the factory in an impromptu sit-down strike. Eight workers, interviewed in June, said all the managers had left the factories. A small contingent of police officers soon arrived and ordered everyone back to work. A seamstress said a police officer knocked her to the ground, beating her unconscious with a stick and shredding her clothes. "I kept asking them to stop," said the seamstress, who asked not to be identified, fearing reprisals. "But even after I fell to the ground, they kept beating me and pulled my hair."
Workers began throwing stones and chanting slogans against the police, who fled. Hours later, after officials in Dhaka were notified, officers from the Rapid Action Battalion as well as surrounding police stations arrived. Officer Hossein, the police supervisor, denied that the police were aggressors, saying officers were told that foreign managers were trapped inside the factories and that angry workers were vandalizing equipment. "They attacked the police," Officer Hossein said. "They started the violence."
Cellphone videos show police officers firing rubber bullets and pummeling workers with cane poles. "They treated workers as if they were not human beings," one worker said.
The Power Equation
Bangladesh's two major political parties, the governing Awami League and the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party, often seem engaged in a blood feud. Yet, many analysts say, the two parties agree on one thing: safeguarding the garment industry.
Three months after the clash at Ishwardi, tens of thousands of angry workers protested near Dhaka, demanding higher wages and crippling one of the country's most important industrial zones for more than a week. Riot police officers dispersed the protesters with tear gas and rubber bullets, as scores of people were injured.
Following huge protests in 2010, Ms. Hasina raised the minimum wage for garment workers to $37 a month from about $20. But her government has resisted the renewed worker demands, even as executives at some leading brands have voiced support for adjusting wages and expressed concerns about labor unrest.
In June, top executives at the Swedish retailer H&M fretted that recurring labor protests were disrupting production and called on Bangladeshi factories to rectify the situation.
Major brands have been stung by bad publicity. This year, War on Want, a nonprofit group, found that workers in five factories making products for Nike, Puma and Adidas were paid less than the minimum wage and complained of workplace abuse and sexual harassment. In March, the parent company of the Tommy Hilfiger brand, PVH Corp., hurriedly donated $1 million toward a factory safety initiative as ABC News was preparing to broadcast a report on a fire that killed 29 workers in a Bangladeshi factory making clothes for Tommy Hilfiger.
"They want to see better standards and conditions in factories in Bangladesh," said Julia K. Hughes, president of the United States Association of Importers of Textiles and Apparel, a trade group in Washington. "No company is arguing that wages should not rise in Bangladesh. They are not saying what the wage should be, but absolutely wages should go up."
But many factory owners are skeptical that buyers are truly willing to pay higher prices. One owner, Shawkat Ali Bhuiyan, said he had stopped working with companies like Walmart and Target because his profit margin was almost nonexistent, while some Bangladeshi labor leaders blame the foreign brands for exploiting workers.
"We need to clean up the whole supply chain," said Roy Ramesh Chandra, a powerful public sector union leader. "The brands need to fulfill their responsibility. The manufacturers need to fulfill their responsibility. And the government should comply with international obligations and respect international labor standards."
Bangladesh has responded to international pressure in the past, sharply curtailing child labor and improving safety conditions in the 1990s. Now, though, the pressure points are the rights of workers to organize and collectively bargain for wages, issues that require action by a political system dominated by business interests, including the garment sector.
A. K. Azad, president of the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry, played down the garment sector's political clout. "We are not powerful," he said, adding: "Power lies with the politicians. Power lies with the media."
But many apparel tycoons have also gone into politics or begun media careers, purchasing newspapers or starting independent news channels. Mr. Azad, who owns one of the country's biggest garment factories, also owns a Bengali-language newspaper and a television station. Several Western diplomats privately noted that news coverage often emphasizes the disruptions caused by protests above the concerns of workers.
At the Rosita and Megatex factories, South Ocean management hired a labor oversight firm, Verité, which detailed a host of problems, including humiliation of workers, summary firings and deliberate interference with the ability of workers to organize. New management teams are now running the factories, and Verité is helping put in place changes to increase wages and protect worker rights. "South Ocean have taken labor issues at the two factories extremely seriously and have taken swift actions to address those issues," the company's law firm, Winston & Strawn of Hong Kong, said in a statement.
Many of the workers involved in the March 25 clash are back on the job, despite their anger over how they have been treated. The seamstress who was knocked unconscious, her clothes shredded, said she had little choice, since she was the family's sole breadwinner. "I am helpless," she said. "We have to get food."
South Ocean dropped charges against Mr. Uddin but the police are still pursuing separate charges. Meanwhile, officials at the export zone authority have blacklisted him from being hired at factories inside the zones. "We spoke up," he said. "And we became criminals in the eyes of all authorities."




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[chottala.com] Breaking News :- Justice A.K.M Jahir Ahmed Resigned from Tribubunal -1



 
As per news Justice A.K.M Jahir Ahmed has submitted resign letter today from ICT -1.
 
Some big questions arise here. why he resigned at this moment? Does he not satisfy with governrnent policy? has he get any pressure from gov't to dictect as their wish? Earlier he was not present when some contradictory rulles issued by Chairman of tribunal-1.
 
in Bangladesh media and blog this question arise that gov't gave him pressure to resign from ICT-1.
 
 
 
 
 


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