Monday, February 17, 2014

Community News


From Bangladesh to Brick Lane

Collected by Sabuj Mia

The path to the village of Gonipur is thick with mud, forcing walkers to go barefoot for fear of losing a sandal. It is half an hour from the main road to this village, and the main road is a two-hour bus ride from the bustling town of Sylhet in Bangladesh's north-eastern corner.

Alongside the path, paddy fields lie flooded with monsoon rain and children pull nets through the murky water, hoping to find small fish or snails to supplement their diet: they and their families are among the poorest people in the world.

Kazi Abdur Razzak used to farm these paddy fields but at the age of 80 he has now retired. He still owns some fields although flooding means he cannot rely on an income from rice.

But Mr Razzak is lucky: he has a son in London. A son who, together with his wife (who is also the daughter of Mr Razzak's cousin and next-door neighbour) sends around £300 a month, which is more than enough money for the extended family of 20 to live on. Every couple of months, the postman makes his way up this path with a much-needed money order from London.

As the rain clatters off his corrugated iron roof, Mr Razzak says: "My son sends me a little money and it helps. I have someone who works in my paddy fields now that I have retired but we need the money from London to live. My son helps with food, clothes and the family expenditure."

Sitting in a cafe just off Brick Lane in east London, his son Kazi Iqbal Hussein, explains: "This is my responsibility as a son and as a Muslim and I want to share what I have with my family. I am lucky that I can do that, that I am able to look after my father and brothers and sisters."

Mr Hussein and his wife Ruksana feel well-off earning around £2,500 a month between them and are happy to help those in Gonipur.

It is a tenet of Islam that followers give to those less fortunate than themselves. A little money from the UK goes a long way in Bangladesh, and Sylhet is now one of the richest towns in the country with the area's economy largely built on British curry.

More than eight out of 10 Indian restaurants in the UK are owned by Bangladeshis, the vast majority of whom - 95% - come from Sylhet. In 1946, there were 20 restaurants or small cafes owned by Bengalis; in 1960 there were 300; and by 1980, more than 3,000. Now, according to the Curry Club of Great Britain, there are 8,500 Indian restaurants, of which roughly 7,200 are Bengali. An awful lot of chicken tikka masala, apparently now Britain's national dish, has its origins here. Even the little village of Gonipur has despatched more than 200 people - called Londonis - to Britain.

The money sent by Mr Hussein and his wife has also helped to build a kindergarten in the village. In addition, the primary and secondary schools as well as the local mosque have been reconstructed with the help of foreign remittances.

There are madrasas and other schools, health centres, hotels, shopping centres, a children's playground - all built with foreign investment. There's even a drug rehabilitation centre built to deal with British Bengali heroin addicts, a big problem in Tower Hamlets. (One Sylheti doctor says that between five and 10 new heroin addicts arrive in Sylhet from London each week, sent for treatment by their parents. But, he adds, heroin and hashish are cheaper and more freely available here.)

Although poverty is endemic in Sylhet, shopping centres adorned with marble and chrome and houses with pillars and columns have been built with Londoni money.

Much of the money comes from the East End, where the majority of Bangladeshis settled when they arrived in the UK. They came from one of the world's poorest ar eas to London's poorest borough: Tower Hamlets, where around 37% - 123,000 - of the borough's population is Bengali. In April this year, Tower Hamlets council officially renamed an electoral ward Spitalfields/Banglatown and a few years ago erected lamp posts made in a South Asian style and painted in green and red, the colours of the Bangladeshi flag. Each year, thousands throng the streets around the area for a massive festival celebrating Baishaki Mela, the Bangladeshi new year.

In Brick Lane, Bengali staples such as jack fruit, betel nut and paan leaves and frozen fish caught in Sylhet's Surma river are for sale. Dozens of travel agents offer flights to Sylhet with Biman Bangladeshi Airlines for around £500; the weekly Sylheter Dak - with a UK circulation of around 7,000 a week - has an office here. There's a shop called Sylhet Stores, a lawyers' office called Sylhet & Co and a Bangladeshi Welfare Association. There are Bangladeshi banks and remittance shops, and a booming black market in money transfers. Almost everything, it seems, harks back to Sylhet.

And in Sylhet, many things hark back to London. There's a shopping centre called London Mansions and shops named London's Fashions and London's Shoes. There's even a Tescco, with the same typeface as the British supermarket but intentionally misspelt to prevent any legal action. Some are even opening British-style curry restaurants with names like Taste of Bengal and the Last Days of the Raj.

The close ties between the two places is perhaps best illustrated by the Sylhet Partnership, a European Commission-funded venture. Ayub Karim Ali, a worker with Tower Hamlets, has been seconded to Sylhet for two years to establish a project to clean up the town's previously filthy streets. Most of the waste, much of it household rubbish, is traditionally simply dumped in the gutter - but, now, in a small part of town, the pilot project sends rickshaws to collect it.

Mr Karim Ali, who moved to London with his family in 1973, at the age of 11, says: "The first generation in London still dream about Sylhet, still want to come back here if they can, although they have been living [in the UK] for 20 to 30 years. Apart from taking part in the local mosque and local community organisations, they rarely get involved in anything else in the community that they are living in. Within a few minutes the conversation will move on to Sylhet."

He is criticial of much of the building work that is being financed by Londonis in Sylhet, wishing that more sensible investment would take place. Big Londoni houses in the area of Uposhoar lie empty and the upper floors of many shopping centres remain unoccupied. He says: "I get really irritated because we don't need so many shopping centres in Sylhet. We also have big houses and nobody lives there. The guys who are building big houses and big shopping centres, it's their way of saying 'I've made it'. It's for emotional and psychological reasons.

"They are buggering up the city with all this bloody building work and it is supported and sustained by London money. Some sensible investments are also taking place - they have invested in a children's amusement park and healthcare facilities, but they need to do more."

Others are critical of Londonis who come over for extended holidays, wearing western clothes and displaying their wealth. But the Londonis feel they can't win.

Millionaire


Abdul Mannan is building the Sylhet Millennium Shopping Centre, an ostentatious construction of granite and stainless steel, with his brother Razzak and other partners. Mr Mannan moved to London in 1973 when he was 12 years old and his first job was working as a tailor. He later moved into the restaurant business, then property development and the stockmarket and is now a millionaire.

He says he has built the shopping centre to help create jobs. He wishes more British Bengalis would invest back in Bangladesh, but understands how political turmoil and corruption has prevented this in the past. "I am urging people in the UK who have businesses to do something to create jobs. I am asking them to start non-profitable organisations. There are people in the UK who are Bangladeshi who have millions of pounds and they are doing nothing for this country."

But there are others who help as best they can. Numan Ahmed, 22, was left behind when his family moved to London. His mother, whose parents lived in the UK, moved there five years ago and three years later his father and younger brothers were allowed to follow. He is studying history and political science at a college in Sylhet and lives entirely on remittances - £200 every few months - sent by his father, who works in a restaurant. He too wants to go to London. "London is very good, very nice and very clean. The life there must be good because everyone wants to go there."

But moving to Tower Hamlets is not always a ticket to riches. For all the BMWs and Mercedes sitting outside the restaurants in Brick Lane, there are men inside working 14-hour shifts washing dishes and living in decrepit, overcrowded council flats.

Syed Zain al-Mahmood, a Sylhetti journalist who has studied the Bangladeshi-Londoni phenomenon, says: "People [in Sylhet] think that people in the UK have it easy because they have more money and when they come here they throw it around. People think it's a utopia. They don't know that people are having to work in restaurants for long hours, that they live in horrible council estates."

And then there is the problem of identity and belonging. Ruksana Hussein, Mr Razzak's daughter-in-law, was born and grew up in Tower Hamlets and says that she can neither shirk off her Britishness nor return permanently to Bangladesh. "I often find I am in conflict within my own thoughts. I have got western culture and gone through school and lived here so when I go back to Bangladesh I am looked upon as a Londoni. When I am here, I am not seen as British, even though I have a cockney accent. We have got a mongrel of something and it can be difficult to know what it is."

The marrying of the two cultures, and the numbers of Bangladeshis permanently settling in the UK means that the number of remittances going back has become less and less. In a paper presented to London Guildhall University, French academic David Garbin said that the financial relationship between Londoni families and those in Bangladesh was "rapidly changing". He said: "In 1995, a report indicated that 20% of the Bangladeshi families in east London were sending money to Bangladesh whereas in the 60s and 70s, a proportion of 85% were remitting their savings."

Many British Bangladeshis say they no longer need to send money home because "my family is all here now" or "my family is well-educated and does not need money". Elders within the community predict that it is a tradition that will eventually die out along with others. Abdul Murkth, who runs Sunrise Wedding services off Brick Lane, providing outfits and paper decorations for Bengali weddings says his business has a lifespan of 10 years and thinks the same about remittances.

"My dad used to send us money every month but that's going back a good 20 years and then we joined him here and it stopped," he says. "It's becoming rare because people are moving out of that country and bringing their children up here."

Yet in Bangladesh, impoverished families are relying on the remittance lifeline. In the village of Sabharang, in Sylhet's Jagarnath district, a mother sits in her simple, one-room house and tries to explain why she needs money. She says she sent her son to London 22 years ago but recently he stopped sending money.

"We are very poor. We as a family decided that he should go to London because we wanted money. There's lots of money there," she says. "But he is not sending money for a long time. We sent him there to help us but he is not sending money."

In Gonipur, Mr Razzak knows he is lucky: "My son is a good son. He is a good Muslim."

Source: Guardian

World

Plane carrying 18 people missing in Nepal

   By Sabuj Mia, London
Rescuers in Nepal yesterday scrambled to find a Nepal Airlines plane carrying 18 people that went missing
"The Nepal Airlines plane with 14 (adult) passengers took off from Pokhara airport at 1.30 pm and disappeared 15 minutes later," Nepal police spokesman Ganesh KC told AFP.
A total of 18 people were on board, the 14 adult passengers, plus one infant and three crew, an airline spokesman said.
"One of the passengers is from Denmark," spokesman Ram Hari Sharma told AFP. The rest of those on board are from Nepal.
Heavy rain was hampering efforts to search for the plane, with two helicopters forced to turn back because of bad weather, Bimlesh Lal Karna, chief air traffic controller at the country's largest airport in Kathmandu, said.
"The weather was not bad at the time the plane went missing... It worsened later on," Karna told AFP.
The incident again raises concerns about the Himalayan nation's aviation sector, which has come under fire from international authorities after a series of fatal accidents.
The European Union in December blacklisted all the country's airlines and banned them from flying to the EU.
Nepal, which counts tourism as a major contributor to its economy, has suffered a number of air crashes in recent years, which have usually been attributed to inexperienced pilots, poor management and maintenance.
in the country's mountainous west, officials said.The plane with 15 passengers and three crew on board lost contact with air traffic controllers shortly after taking off from the popular tourist town of Pokhara, airline officials and police said.

Bangladesh

10 BUET students sent to jail

By Sabuj Mia, A Student, London


A Dhaka court yesterday sent 10 students of Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (Buet) to jail after rejecting their bails in connection with “plotting subversive activities”

. The court passed the order after the students had been produced before it on the expiry of their one-day remand.
The defence lawyers submitted separate petitions seeking bails for the arrested saying that they were implicated in it over conspiracy.
On Thursday night, based on information about a suspicious gathering, police had detained 72 people at a restaurant on BCC Road in the capital’s Wari area.
Of them, 60 Buet students, 11 students of different private universities and a Buet teacher, police sources said.
However, 62 people except the Buet students were released on Friday

Source: The Daily Star

Entertainment

Ornob & Friends and Tahsan enthral audience at IGCC

by Sabuj Mia, A Student at BPP
Ornob sings at the programme.
Ornob sings at the programme.

Indira Gandhi Cultural Centre (IGCC) organised a musical evening by noted Bangladeshi band, Ornob & Friends at the IGCC auditorium on February 15.
Ornob set off the evening with a Tagore song “Ami Marer Sagor”. His solo repertoire included another Tagore song “Majhey Majhey” and his popular album tracks “Tomar Jonyo”, “Hok Kolorob” “Se Je Bosey Achhey”.
Ornob with Pantha Kanai and Buno rendered a popular folk number “Mon Torey” while Pantha Kanai performed a Lalon song “Jaat Gelo”, RD Burman records “Mon Dilona” and “Dokhin Haoa”, and a film track “O Rey Neel Doriya”.
Nazrul Islam sang two songs, “Bhab Toronge” and “Moner Manush”. Ornob wrapped up the musical event with a Poet Jasimuddin number “Nao Chharia Dey”.
The day before, IGCC organised a musical evening by 'Tahsan Khan and the Sufis' on Friday. The band performed 12 songs, including Tahsan's hits “Irsha”, “Megher Pore” “Prematal”, “Protyaborton”, “Alo” and covers of “Leaving On A Jet Plane”, “Annie's Song” and “Wonderful Tonight”.
Source: Daily Star, BD

Business

Google Challenges Apple With ‘Hero’ Phone
By Sabuj Mia, An Accounting Student, London


Google is preparing an attack on Apple's iPhone with a device that is more aware of its surroundings and smart enough to anticipate how it will be used next, according to the head of the internet company's Motorola subsidiary.


The gadget, called the MotoX, will also be made in the US and will be part of a campaign to drive down the cost of smartphones and end the high profit margins companies like Apple have enjoyed, said Dennis Woodside, the Google executive installed to run Motorola after it was acquired in late 2011.

Mr Woodside's comments, made at the D11 conference in southern California, marked the first official confirmation by Google that it would launch a "hero" phone, or flagship handset capable of competing with devices such as the iPhone and Samsung's S4.

The MotoX "is more contextually aware of what's going on around it. It allows you to interact with it more than other devices today. It anticipates my need," Mr Woodside said.

Sensors inside the device, like a gyroscope and accelerometer, will be constantly powered up so that the phone will know whether it's in a car travelling at 60mph or being taken out of a user's pocket, he said. Based on that, it will try to anticipate what a user is likely to want it for, for instance enabling it to open a camera app in advance to take a picture.

Mr Woodside hinted that the new handset would go on sale later this year and be priced well below the iPhone 5, adding that the sort of steep price declines seen in consumer electronics from personal computers to televisions were overdue in the smartphone market.

Without naming the iPhone directly, he said: "Those products earn 50 per cent margins. We don't necessarily have those constraints. Those [margins] will not persist."
Source:FT
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Sunday, February 16, 2014

Health and Education,






What Is Cough ?


By Dr Murad A Alam, A Medical Science Student at SSMC, Dhaka

Coughing is a reflex action started by stimulation of sensory nerves in the lining of the respiratory passages – the tubes we use to breathe.

When a person coughs, there is a short intake of breath and the larynx (the voice box) closes momentarily. The abdominal and chest muscles used for breathing contract, which in turn increases the pressure needed to drive air out the lungs when the larynx re-opens.

The resulting blast of air comes out at high speed, scrubbing and clearing the airway of dust, dirt or excessive secretions. Coughing is a common symptom when the airways are 'tight', as in asthma.

The cough reflex is a vital part of the body's defence mechanisms. Normally, the lungs and the lower respiratory passages are sterile. If dust or dirt get into the lungs, they could become a breeding ground for bacteria and cause pneumonia or infection in the breathing tubes.

What causes coughing?


Coughing usually means there is something in the respiratory passages that should not be there. This can be caused by breathing in dust particles in the air or when a piece of food goes down the wrong way.

It could also be a sign that an infection in the lungs is making the respiratory passages produce phlegm.

Coughing can be provoked by:
the common cold, which is a frequent cause of acute cough that usually settles in less than three weeks.
sucking material into the breathing tubes from your mouth.
more severe illnesses, such as pneumonia, acute heart failure or pulmonary embolism (a clot in the blood vessels of the lung).
smoking, which often causes chronic cough (smoker's lung).
asthma – particularly in children who may only cough and show no wheezing.
stomach acid coming back up the gullet and spilling over into the windpipe (gastro-oesophageal reflux).
medicines used in heart disease called ACE inhibitors.
bacterial or viral infections in the lungs, eg acute bronchitis, pneumonia,whooping cough, croup in children
rarely coughing can be provoked by psychological illness
damage to the nerves that supply the vocal chords (known as vocal chordpalsy) and chronic cough can occur.

Coughing is more efficient when preceded by a full intake of air.

For this reason, patients with weak muscles, poor coordination of airway closure and re-opening, or who have airflow obstruction (as in COPD) will have a poor cough and be susceptible to complications including infection in the lower respiratory tract and pneumonia.


How can coughing be treated?


Coughing is a symptom, not a disease. It is the underlying cause of the cough that needs to be treated.

You should consult your doctor if any of the following symptoms accompany a cough, so that possible underlying causes can be investigated and treated where necessary:
coughing up phlegm that is green, rusty brown, yellow, blood-stained or foul smelling
chest pain
shortness of breath or wheezing
pain and swelling in the calf
recurrent night-time cough
whooping cough or croup
worsening smoker’s cough
sudden weight loss
fever and sweating
hoarseness of the voice with a chronic cough that doesn’t clear up spontaneously.

If you can't cough but need to, problems soon arise. Equally, when coughing is painful (for example, because of a broken rib), patients try not to cough and this can be dangerous.

Ineffective clearance of the airway can lead to a chest infection and possible pneumonia. In these circumstances, pain-relieving medicine can be useful to permit an efficient cough.

Airways infection

Infections in the breathing tubes can be caused by both bacteria and viruses, although the most common cause in children is a virus. Bacterial infections can be treated with antibiotics, but viral infections cannot.

Vaccination has greatly diminished the incidence of whooping cough (pertussis), but if this is the diagnosis, antibiotic treatment with a macrolide antibiotic such as erythromycin decreases the severity of this illness within the first week of treatment.

Asthma

Asthma may cause coughing without wheeziness. This tends to be worst through the night, disturbing sleep. It may be the first sign of asthma in children, or a warning sign that asthma is worsening or not controlled properly. Conventional asthma treatment with inhaled anti-inflammatory preventative medicines and relievers will usually relieve a cough that is due to asthma.

However, a metered-dose inhaler may itself induce cough, and you may need to use a large volume spacer device or a dry powder inhaler instead.

Gastro-oesophageal reflux

Gastro-oesophageal reflux requires treatment with antacids to neutralise the stomach acid, or H2 antagonists or proton-pump inhibitors to reduce the production of stomach acid.

Smoking

Giving up cigarettes will lessen or abolish smokers' cough in 94 per cent of people within four weeks.

ACE inhibitors

If an ACE inhibitor is the cause of coughing, switching to alternate treatment such as anangiotensin II receptor antagonist will help.
How effective are cough medicines?

In cases where a cough is particularly annoying, but not life-threatening, a simple cough mixture may be useful. There are a range of over-the-counter medicines that can be helpful in such circumstances.

Taking these can be justified when there is no special reason to suspect any serious underlying disease, such as the symptoms listed above. You should ask your pharmacist for advice on which of the many available over-the-counter cough remedies are suitable for you.

A productive, chesty cough, in which phlegm is coughed up, should be treated with an expectorant cough mixture to help loosen the phlegm and make it easier to cough up from the airways. Expectorants contain ingredients such as guaifenesin, ipecachuana or ammonium citrate.

A non-productive, dry, tickly or irritating cough, in which no phlegm is coughed up can, be treated with a cough suppressant to reduce the cough reflex.

Cough suppressants include pholcodine, dextromethorphan and codeine. Other cough suppressants include simple linctus, glycerin and lemon and honey, which coat and soothe the back of the throat.

Antihistamines, such as diphenhydramine and promethazine, reduce the cough reflex and also dry up nasal secretions, which can be useful for coughs that are caused by a postnasal drip (mucus running down the back of the throat), or are associated with a cold.

Ipratropium bromide nasal spray also reduces watery nasal secretions that can cause postnasal drip and contribute to a cough.

Some cough remedies also contain sympathomimetics such as ephedrine, for their airway relaxing and decongestant effects, and can be useful if you have a blocked nose as well as a cough.

Patients should not treat themselves with cough mixture for any longer than two weeks. If the cough persists, a visit to the doctor is definitely required – informed medical assessment will help identify the underlying cause and allow treatment.

What if a young child has a cough?





Older children and adults usually have some idea whether their cough is caused by a foreign body, dust or smoke particles, or an infection in the breathing tubes. Clinical inspection will reveal features that may suggest a specific cause.

If a young child coughs, parents need to be able to tell whether the cough is a sign of disease or whether their child has a foreign body in their respiratory passages.
If your child also has a fever or a cold, the cough is a sign of an infection. If nothing else seems to be wrong, wait for the cough to go away. If the coughing goes on for more than a couple of days, consult a doctor.
In the meantime, if you want to give your child a medicine to help soothe the cough, it is best to use a simple cough syrup containing glycerol, honey or lemon. Other over-the-counter cough and cold remedies are no longer recommended for children under six years of age, because there is no evidence that they work and they can potentially cause side effects, such as allergic reactions, effects on sleep or hallucinations. For children over six years of age other cough and cold medicines are still available from pharmacies - ask your pharmacist for advice. Any medicine you give should be administered carefully using the spoon or measuring device supplied to ensure the maximum dose is not exceeded.
You should avoid using more than one cough and cold medicine at the same time when treating your child's symptoms. Different medicines may contain the same active ingredient(s) and using more than one may lead to you exceeding the maximum recommended dose(s). Ask your pharmacist for more advice.
If the coughing comes on suddenly, and is very forceful, it's likely your child has swallowed something that's causing the cough. This could be life-threatening for your child, who could choke. Lift your child by the legs so their head points downwards, then slap their back with a cupped hand. If this doesn't help, call an ambulance immediately.
If at any point your child seems very ill, you should consult an emergency doctor immediately.
Diagnostic testing for chronic cough

If you suffer from a chronic cough, tests will need to be carried out to determine the cause.
After initial assessment, a chest X-ray is taken to ensure that serious diseases such as lung cancer or tuberculosis (TB) are unlikely.
Blood and skin tests are of little help, although they may reveal an allergic tendency.
Sputum (phlegm) examination for bacteria, TB and cancer cells can be ordered, together with non-invasive heart tests such as an ECG or even echocardiography.
In difficult cases, further tests can be considered, including fibre optic bronchoscopy, CT examination of the chest and sinuses and even methacholine inhalation challenge or oesophageal pH monitoring. These are only available in special centres.

Whether a particular factor is responsible for chronic coughing can be determined when treatment for a specific cause achieves some benefit for the patient.

But often there is more than one cause for the cough, in which case treating only one factor will not succeed in completely relieving the symptoms. This is frustrating for both you and your medical adviser.

In such a case, a progressive and incremental approach is appropriate. Treatment directed at a specific cause is started and the result assessed.

If there is a partial but incomplete response, other treatments are then tried in turn. Eventually, the vast majority of coughing can be successfully managed in this manner.

If treatment is fruitless with no realistic chance of working – for example in the case of advanced lung cancer, the use of powerful cough suppressants may be justified.


Email us : TheWeeklyDiscovery@gmail.com







Bangladesh


"Al-Qaeda chief's 'intifada' call in Bangladesh"


By Helal Khan

An audio tape purportedly from the Al-Qaeda has called on the Muslims

in Bangladesh to wage a battle to protect Islam before claiming that

the idea of the Bengali nation has not worked out.

Its chief Ayman al-Zawahiri in the clip interprets the Bengali

struggle for freedom from Pakistan in a way that is chillingly similar

to the one offered by the Jamaat-e-Islami.




Again, the global terror network is on the same wavelength with the

Islamist party, which is facing calls for a ban for 1971 atrocities,

that the

ongoing war crimes trial only aims to harass Islamic scholars.




The militant leader in the clip can be heard charging the government

with killing 'thousands of people' during last year's crackdown on the

violent rally by Hifazat-e Islam - in an echo of claims made by the

Chittagong-based outfit along with the BNP and the Jamaat.




The recording with the call to arms has hurried the Hifazat, perceived

to be bankrolled by the Jamaat, into denying any ties with the

al-Qaeda.




Speaking in Arabic on the tape released on a website used for militant

audios and videos, the

Egyptian-born surgeon derides the Bangladesh government for being

anti-Islam and secular.




The terror outfit's outrage at the trial of the Jamaat-e-Islami

leaders is also palpable.




The entire clip lasting 28 minutes and 58 seconds titled "Bangladesh:

Massacre Behind a Wall of Silence" features message by al-Zawahiri,

who appears only in a still image, along with other images, including

the Hifazat rally.




A copy of the supposed al-Zawahiri recording is available with us.

There, he claims that "a massacre of Muslims is being carried out

these days" and "the western media is colluding with the killers to

belittle its significance and hide the facts".




"This is the bloodbath taking place in Bangladesh, without the Muslims

paying least attention to it," the Egyptian-born eye surgeon, thought

to be in hiding in Pakistan or Afghanistan, observes.




The first two minutes of the clip screen footage of last year's May 5

police action at a Hifazat-e Islam rally in Dhaka. Then speaks

Zawahiri, hitting out at the Western media's alleged silence on 'how

Muslims are massacred in Bangladesh'.

Letting rip at the creation of Bangladesh, he says it has not worked

as a nation born more than 40 years ago 'to protect the

independence, glory, honour and freedom of its people'.




The al-Qaeda chief's tirade appears to have been provoked by the war

crimes trials. Jamaat leader Abdul Quader Molla has already been

hanged, drawing condolences in Pakistan's Parliament which said he was

hanged to death because "he was loyal to Pakistan and supported

Pakistan army during the 1971 war".




Several other Jamaat leaders face death and life sentences. In

addition, many Jamaat leaders and activists are in jail on charges of

involvement with violence last year.




Zawahiri in the clip says: "Bangladesh is the victim of a conspiracy

in which the agents of India, the corrupt leadership of Pakistan Army,

and treacherous power- hungry politicians of Bangladesh and Pakistan...




"However the real victim was the Muslim Ummah in the subcontinent

generally, and in Bangladesh and Pakistan specifically.




"The crimes that are being committed in Bangladesh today against the

core beliefs of Islam, the prophet of Islam (peace be upon him), and

the Muslim Ummah are only the fruits of the rotten seeds sown by these

criminals.




"Their purpose was not independence from Pakistan, stopping the

aggression against the people of Bangladesh or getting rid of military

rule in Pakistan.




Continues the 62-year old: "None of these was the real objective...

The real purpose was weathering the Muslim Ummah in the subcontinent.




"It was to rip the Ummah apart into pieces, bleed it to death by

getting it entangled in mutual strife, regional conflicts and wars.

Politics

Delhi election gamechanger Arvind Kejriwal resigns as CM

By M A Amin, A Student at Glyndwr University, UK




Arvind Kejriwal, the Indian anti-corruption campaigner and self-styled revolutionary, who challenged established political parties and unexpectedly won control of New Delhi in an election last December, has resigned as chief minister after less than two months in office.


Mr Kejriwal’s resignation brings an end to the first taste of power for the upstart Aam Aadmi (Common Man) party, which he founded a year ago. But the AAP remains popular in the capital and in some other Indian cities, and may win seats in the general election to be held within three months.






Mr Kejriwal blamed the Congress party and the Bharatiya Janata party, India’s two main national political groups, for the deadlock and suggested they were avenging his formal corruption complaints against Mukesh Ambani, the billionaire head of Reliance Industries, and Congress’s Sheila Dikshit, his predecessor as chief minister.


“They tell us we don’t know how to govern,” he said shortly before resigning. “Listen, acting against the corrupt is true governance.”


He added: “We did a lot for Delhi by cutting electricity and water tariffs. My ministers tried to do a lot by spending many sleepless nights . . . Maybe we made mistakes. We are human, but we tried our best.”


His opponents, as well as some disillusioned early supporters of the AAP, accused him of behaving like a protester rather than an office-holder. They said the party was ill-prepared for government and had failed to explain how it was going to finance the generous price cuts for power and water that it offered to consumers.


“He has miserably failed to deliver in 49 days,” Harsh Vardhan of the BJP told CNN-IBN television news. “Arvind Kejriwal had no alternative except this.”






The AAP won 28 of the 70 seats in the Delhi assembly, less than the BJP’s 31, but formed the new government under Mr Kejriwal with temporary support from Congress. Both BJP and Congress were happy to have the new party expose itself to the realities of government and lose some of its lustre.


The Delhi assembly is expected to be dissolved and new elections called, which may coincide with the general election due by May.

Email: TheWeeklyDiscover@gmail.com

Politics


Merkel, Hollande to discuss possible European communication network that avoids the US.


By M A Amin, a Student at Glyndwr University, UK


German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Saturday she would talk to French President Francois Hollande about building up a European communication network to avoid emails and other data passing through the United States.


Merkel, speaking on Saturday ahead of a visit to France, has been pushing for greater data protection in Europe following reports last year about mass surveillance in Germany and elsewhere by the U.S. National Security Agency. Even Merkel's cell phone was reportedly monitored by American spies.


Merkel said in her weekly podcast she disapproved of companies like Google and Facebook basing their operations in countries with low safeguards on data protection while being active in countries like germany with high data protection.


"We'll talk with France about how we can maintain a high level of data protection," Merkel said before her visit to Paris on Wednesday.


"Above all, we'll talk about European providers that offer security for our citizens, so that one shouldn't have to send emails and other information across the Atlantic. Rather one could build up a communication network inside Europe."


Government snooping is a particularly sensitive subject in Germany due to the heavy surveillance of citizens practiced in the Communist East Germany and under Hitler. The country was shocked by reports of NSA surveillance in Germany, based on information from former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.


"We've got to do more for data protection in Europe, there's no doubt about it," Merkel said on Saturday.


Germany has been pushing, so far in vain, for a 'no-spy' agreement with Washington.


Merkel said that other topics she plans to discuss at the Franco-German summit on Wednesday include closer cooperation on climate protection ahead of the 2015 climate conference in France and security policies, in particular in Africa.










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