Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Delhi cops rope in pay phone operators - MSN India

Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Delhi cops rope in pay phone operatorsPhone booth operators have been asked to keep an eye on people calling Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Jammu and Srinagar as Independence Day approachesNew Delhi: Telephone booth operators, taxi drivers and guesthouse owners in the capital have been asked to keep an eye on people calling Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Jammu and Srinagar as Independence Day approaches. Cyber cafes and guesthouses have been told to install closed circuit television (CCTV) cameras.Telephone booth operators have been asked to maintain a separate register for people making local, intra-state and international calls in the run up to Aug 15."Try to overhear the conversation and if any suspicious activity is noticed, inform police immediately and keep a watch over the person. Keep an eye on persons making calls on ISD codes 008801 (Bangladesh), 0092 (Pakistan), 09977 (Nepal) and local codes 0191 (Jammu) and 0194 (Srinagar)," the instructions read.Raju, a phone booth owner in southwest Delhi, told IANS: "The cops come daily to my shop and check the register to see whether we are maintaining a record. A constable then signs and put the date at the end of the particular day's record."Apart from keeping a call record, guesthouses have been told not to allow guests to use the hotel address for delivery of new mobile phone SIM cards. They have also been asked to install CCTVs at the entrance and maintain the footage of visitors.A "watch (is) to be kept on persons using guesthouses and they have to obtain photo identification cards of users and local contacts in case of a person belonging to another state or country," the instructions say.Also, don't be surprised if a taxi driver asks for a passenger's identity proof or reports to the police if a passenger has been clicking pictures of any important monument in the city."Terror threat increases manifold during the time of Independence Day and Republic Day. So we are asking each and every person to remain vigilant and report any suspicious matter to police," a top Delhi Police official told IANS."If we don't keep their phone call records, it is very likely that the terrorists may escape easily after executing blasts in the city. We appeal to people to cooperate with the police," the official added.Mobile SIM card dealers have been strictly instructed to ask customers for photo identification proof. Besides installing web cameras with recording facility, cyber cafe owners have been directed to keep a watch on people surfing the Internet."We are very particular about cyber cafes after the series of blasts in Jaipur, Bangalore and Ahmedabad. The terrorists have used cyber cafes before executing the blasts," said a senior official.Apart from briefing phone booth operators, taxi drivers, guesthouses, parking attendants, vegetable sellers and market associations, the Delhi Police have for the first time sent requests to large hospitals, colleges, schools and resident welfare Associations to take precautionary measures.Letters have been sent to medical superintendents of Safdarjung Hospital and the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) and principals of schools and colleges."In Ahmedabad, terrorists did not spare hospitals and they exploded bombs there when media people and relatives of affected persons in the bomb blasts gathered in the hospital," said Assistant Commissioner of Police Kumar Gyanesh."In view of the terrorist attacks on hospitals, we have written letters to AIIMS and Safdarjung hospitals for strengthening security in and around their premises," Gyanesh said.In a letter to colleges and schools, the police have asked them to be vigilant as they could prove vulnerable targets for terrorists.Source: Indo-Asian News Service
Delhi cops rope in pay phone operators - National News – News – MSN India - News

Monday, August 04, 2008

SAARC Security Pact

S Asian leaders sign security pact

Saarc leaders signed deals to develop energy, food security and to fight terrorism [AFP]

South Asian leaders have called for joint action against terrorism and more regional trade, according to a draft declaration adopted at a regional conference in Colombo.
The two-day summit of the South Asian Association for Regional Co-operation, or Saarc, ended in the Sri Lankan capital on Sunday. The eight Saarc member countries adopted a regional anti-terrorism co-operation agreement on Sunday, despite accusations that members of Pakistan's main spy agency, Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI, helped carry out a deadly bombing of the Indian embassy in Kabul.
Saarc, which groups Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, also noted the urgent need to develop energy and food security.
The leaders approved the immediate establishment of a food bank to cope with regional shortages triggered by rising prices, as well as plans for improving energy security in the region, home to nearly one-fifth of the world's population. The foreign ministers of the Saarc members signed the anti-terrorism agreement, and endorsed the creation of a regional development fund and rules for standardisation of products traded among member countries. The leaders agreed to focus on developing hydropower and renewable energy programmes involving solar equipment and wind turbines.Saarc was established in 1985 to promote economic co-operation, but progress in most areas has been slow.

'Terrorism combat'

The security pact calls for freezing funds that might be used for terrorist activities, regular meetings between security chiefs, the exchange of intelligence, and training of personnel dealing with terrorism and drug offences. The deal may be difficult to implement in view of accusations by India and Afghanistan that elements of the ISI helped an armed group bomb India's embassy in Afghanistan on July 7, killing 41 people. During a meeting with Manmohan Singh, the Indian prime minister, on Saturday, Yousuf Raza Gilani, Pakistan prime minister, offered to launch an independent investigation into the allegation, Shivshankar Menon, India's most senior diplomat, said.Pakistan had earlier denied the accusation.

Afghan-Pakistan pledge

Separately, the leaders of Afghanistan and Pakistan agreed to "re-engage" in the fight against extremism, a joint statement said. Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president, and Gilani met on the sidelines of the summit on Sunday, according to a joint statement. "The two sides agreed to co-ordinate their efforts to stop cross-border terrorism," the statement said. "At the suggestion of Pakistan, the Afghan side agreed to re-engage on all bilateral and multilateral forums.

Dhaka mulls Free Trade

Dhaka mulls free trade pacts with India, Pak, Sri Lanka

4 Aug, 2008, 1146 hrs IST, IANS

DHAKA: Bangladesh has decided to sign bilateral free trade agreements (FTA) with three major South Asian trading partners - India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka - in view of the failure of multilateral trading arrangements to serve the country's interests. The decision was taken at a meeting Sunday with stakeholders and experts at the commerce ministry. Commerce and Education Adviser Hossain Zillur Rahman chaired the meet, a national newspaper said on Monday. While negotiating with India on the FTA, the issue of transportation and regional connectivity will come up for discussion automatically, former foreign secretary Farooq Sobhan was quoted to have said. He said Dhaka should have its position clear on this. Although the meeting considered trade data based on research done at home and by the World Bank, it decided to go for further studies, indicating that the process would be slow. A core group comprising public and private sector representatives will be formed with the chief executive officer of the Bangladesh Foreign Trade Institute, M Ali Taslim, as its chief, to assess probable risks and gains of striking the free trade deals with the neighbouring countries. "The whole exercise will be accomplished under a public-private partnership so that the interest of the country can be served," said the commerce adviser, who performs ministerial functions in the cartetaker government headed by Chief Advisor Fakhruddin Ahmed. The Bangladesh high commissioners to these three countries will be asked to give their opinions in this regard and contact the host governments to resume negotiations that remain stalled since their beginning in late 2003. The latest collapse of the World Trade Organisation talks at the level of mini-ministerial conference in Geneva as well as a slow progress in expanding the regional trade under the SAARC Free Trade Area prompted Bangladesh to go for bilateral trading arrangements. Demands including duty and quota-free access of products of the least developed countries like Bangladesh to markets of developed countries remain unrealised despite their commitments during the Hong Kong trade ministerial meeting in 2005. "It will also mean boosting of the regional trade through bilateral arrangements," said an official present at the meeting, in reply to the question why Dhaka would now prefer the bilateral FTA. The meeting also decided to ink similar deals with Nepal and Bhutan in order to justify the objectives of signing FTA with the three major trading nations in the region. Bangladesh has been suffering balance of payments deficits with India over the years at a range of more than $2 billion. Dhaka also has trade imbalance with Islamabad and Colombo although the overall trade volume in this regard is much lower than that with India. Issues of service sector, non-tariff barriers and sensitive list, especially how they would be dealt with in the FTA deals, came up for discussion at the meeting which was attended by representatives of the trade bodies and research organisations and officials of relevant government agencies, the newspaper said.

Sunday, August 03, 2008

Faith

Condoms `Promote Sin' in Papua New Guinea as AIDS, Faith Cross

By Simeon Bennett

Aug. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Godfrey Wippon, the pastor of Papua New Guinea's 70,000-member Revival Fellowship Church, has a simple HIV-prevention message for his flock.``Flee from sin, flee from committing adultery and fornication,'' Wippon, 56, said in a telephone interview from Goroka, in the country's Eastern Highlands. ``If you are a church and you're issuing condoms, you are promoting sin and you're anti-Christ.'' Those infected should turn to God, who has healed 40 church members of HIV, Wippon said.Religion has helped and hindered global health officials battling HIV. While faith-based groups care for AIDS patients, efforts to slow infection have been stymied by religious beliefs and practices. These include Islamic prohibitions against gay sex, which shames gays in Malaysia from responding to prevention efforts, and opposition to circumcision by Hindus and Sikhs in India, global health officials said.``On one hand, some faith-based organizations may be the greatest providers of care and support,'' said Sally Smith, an adviser on faith-based partnerships for UNAIDS, the United Nations' HIV agency. On the other hand, she said, reactions by some religious leaders ``haven't always been positive.''The role religion plays in the fight against HIV is under discussion at the world's biggest AIDS conference, taking place this week in Mexico City. The six-day meeting of 25,000 researchers, health workers and activists features about 100 poster presentations on faith and HIV. It was preceded by a separate summit for Christian groups working with patients.Changing Views``Ten to 15 years ago it was something you didn't talk about,'' Smith said in a July 18 telephone interview from Geneva. ``Now everybody you talk to is saying, `Oh yes, we are just about to start work with faith communities.'''In India, even discussing circumcision to help prevent HIV has run up against historic tensions between Hindus and Muslims. Circumcision reduces men's risk of contracting HIV by at least half and could prevent 5.7 million new infections and 3 million deaths over two decades in Africa, according to the UN's World Health Organization.``For various reasons, religious and otherwise, it has been identified as a very non-Hindu procedure,'' said Nomita Chandhiok, deputy director-general of reproductive health and nutrition at the Indian Council of Medical Research.India has 2.5 million HIV sufferers, according to a November estimate by UNAIDS. The agency reduced the number from 5.7 million, which would have been the largest total for any country, citing improved surveillance. Almost 90 percent of transmission is through unsafe sex, according to India's National AIDS Control Organization.Twice as LikelyA study published last year in the journal AIDS found that uncircumcised homeless Hindu men in Kolkata were more than twice as likely to have HIV as circumcised homeless Muslim men, even though the Muslims had more sexual partners and more frequent contact with prostitutes.The medical procedure is seen as a mark of religious identity, says Shivananda Khan, an AIDS activist and chief executive officer of Naz Foundation International. The a London- based group works to prevent HIV among gay and bisexual men in India, Nepal, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan.``Because my family name is Khan, people think I'm a Muslim,'' he said in a July 11 interview. ``I've been questioned by various intelligence agencies in different parts of this region as to what I do, who I am, and am I a Muslim. In one situation the only way I could prove I was not a Muslim was to take my pants down and say, `See, I'm not circumcised.'''Truck Driver's OpinionGurdev Singh, a 44-year-old truck driver, says he doesn't care what the benefits are. As a Sikh, he says the procedure is unthinkable.``Only Muslims circumcise,'' Singh said at a road stop in Hosur, on the outskirts of Bangalore. ``I will not circumcise as it is against my beliefs.''In Malaysia, where about half the population is Muslim, officials don't need to promote circumcision. The challenge lies in prevention among gay men and bisexuals, AIDS activists say. The Koran and Malaysian law prohibit sex between men.``For Islam it's non-negotiable,'' said Adeeba Kamarulzaman, chairwoman of the Malaysian AIDS Council. ``Homosexuality is `haram,' full-stop,'' she said, using the Arabic word for forbidden, in a July 16 telephone interview.New HIV infections among gay and bisexual men in Malaysia rose to 184 last year from 51 in 2002, according to the council's data. The real number is probably higher, said Raymond Tai, acting executive director of the Kuala Lumpur-based PT Foundation, which promotes safe sexual practices to gay men.More InfectionsIn Papua New Guinea, where 97 percent of people say they are Christian, health officials expect 5 percent of the population to be infected with HIV by 2012, compared with 2 percent this year. AIDS is the main cause of hospital admissions and deaths.From the beginning of the epidemic, established denominations such as the Catholic and Anglican churches have provided care, counseling and testing services ``when the government was in denial,'' said Richard Eves, an anthropologist at the Australian National University who edited a book on HIV and Christianity in Papua New Guinea.More recently, evangelical, charismatic and Pentecostal churches such as Wippon's Revival Fellowship have flourished, promoting a form of Christianity that characterizes HIV as ``the wages of sin,'' Eves said in a July 17 telephone interview.To contact the reporters on this story: Simeon Bennett in Singapore at sbennett9@bloomberg.net;Last Updated: August 3, 2008 00:01 EDT
Bloomberg.com: Worldwide

American Chronicle | Nepal: Wither SAARC? Or withering away?

Nepal: Wither SAARC? Or withering away?

Atul Chatterjee:

 Atul is a post graduate in Economics from the Delhi School of Economics. He has been a school teacher, NGO worker story writer and contributor to various publications. He has written on political, education and economic issues.author's emailauthor's web siteview author's other articlesJoin this author's mailing listYour Name:E-mail Address:Atul Chatterjee


August 03, 2008This is the 15th South Asia Association for Regional Cooperation meet at Colombo. When SAARC was founded a major objective was economic cooperation. At present intra SAARC trade is just five per cent, what does Nepal have to gain by lowering of tariff and non-tariff barriers?Firstly, Nepal does not have a slew of manufactures which it can export. So removal of non tariff barriers is not going to help it all that much on the export front. Further Pakistan has stalled any major agreement by linking the resolution of the Kashmir issue and has refused to grant most favoured nation status to India.India has been erecting all sorts of economic barriers against Bangladesh, and on the other hand in this multilateral institution of SAARC it claims to be lowering barriers to trade. So SAFTA (South Asia Free Trade Association) is still a non starter.It has been announced that Nepal´s Prime Minister G P Koirala is looking for a meeting with Indian PM Manmohan Singh on the sidelines during the meet. What is he going to ask for? What is the continuity from the past?Another agreement that India is looking for is in the area of terror. It will have to get Pakistan to agree to sign the document which mainly concerns exchange of information about terror activities and suspects.What does Maldives and Bhutan also members of SAARC really have to do with terror? India could well have pursued the case bilaterally with Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka and possibly Afghanistan. Each country would have a different level of comfort dealing with India which is the main mover for this agreement.Alternately India should look towards a general agreement under UN auspices to cover this area of terror and try for a 'Global Accord on Terror'.Pakistan has been asking for the inclusion of China in SAARC, India does not want that. China will be able to bring in substantial funds and expertise into SAARC. Nepal would be well advised to support Pakistan in this venture. With China in it would act as a counterweight to India.India on the other hand is supporting the inclusion of Myanmar, this is a good move for that country as it will start coming out of seclusion. But again it is a country with a very weak economy.SAARC needs an injection of fresh blood, best in the form of China. Or else it will become an association of the weak which is rapidly turning into a battle ground and wither away in due course.Nepal should weigh its options, at present the secretariat of SAARC is located in Kathmandu, the employment generated due to that is the main advantage it is gaining!!
American Chronicle | Nepal: Wither SAARC? Or withering away?

Bangladesh, Bhutan call for freer trade for South Asia's SAARC nations - LANKA BUSINESS ONLINE

Bangladesh, Bhutan call for freer trade for South Asia's SAARC nations

August 3, 2008 (LBO) - Bhutan and Bangladesh, tried to fan the flame of free trade in South Asia as dismantling trade barriers went off the agenda, when leaders of seven nations that make up a South Asian regional grouping met in Colombo.The agenda of the South Asian Association of Regional Co-operation (SAARC) was dominated by calls for action against terrorism and ways to counter an oil and food commodity price bubble, the worst the world has seen since 1973.Intra-regional trade in the grouping made up of Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka is low largely due to high tariff barriers that block the movement of goods across the states.Bangladesh first mooted the idea of a free trade bloc for South Asia as early as the 1970s, and after SAARC was created in 1985 the foundation for a preferential trade deal was laid in 1993.Negative ListsIn 2006 it was extended with a deal on the South Asia Free Trade Area (SAFTA) which is expected to bring down tariffs by a modest 20 percent, but it is loaded with a 'sensitive' or 'negative' list.The 'negative' lists are in place to appease domestic producers who have long profited from selling goods to a captive domestic customer base, without competitive pressures forcing them to be more efficient.The helpless domestic consumer base includes half the world's poor, who are forced to buy unnecessarily expensive goods as a result of trade barriers which worsen their living standards.To help South Asians access the cheapest producers of the region, trade barriers need to be dismantled.In addition to improving living standards of consumers, bringing down the barriers would also reward the most efficient producers while punishing those that don't become efficient."Our goal in SAARC is to create new opportunities and to promote linkages for attaining better living standards for our people," chief advisor to the caretaker administration of Bangladesh, Fakruddin Ahmed said at the inauguration of the summit meeting Saturday."Despite SAFTA, non-tariff and para-tariff barriers, complicated and cumbersome customs procedures stand in the way of greater intra-regional trade."Similarly, long sensitive lists closed to preferential tariff and rigidities in other structural and policy frameworks stand in the way of our desire to have a fully integrated South Asia."Clearly there is a need to remove these hurdles to enhance intra-regional trade."EchoedThe appeal was also echoed by Bhutan, which is a landlocked country and is also highly dependent on overland transport links."The imperatives of economic co-operation and free trade in a highly globalised and interdependent world cannot be over-emphasized," Prime Minister Jigmy Y. Thinley said."Recognizing that the furtherance of intra-regional trade is the key to promoting and encouraging an environment of innovation, healthy competition and enterprise that will stimulate economic growth, create gainful employment and generate high income for our peoples, we have created SAFTA."But for this instrument to be meaningful, the number of items on the negative list must be reduced, non-tariff barriers removed and the trade facilitation measures implemented."At the same time liberalization of trade in services and investments must also be perused in earnest."The negative lists however allow barriers to come down at least on goods which are not in contention allowing entirely new trade to start in goods that were not even considered for export and import within the region earlier.Impatient with the delay in SAFTA, India has been striking bi-lateral deals with her neighbours with highly successful deals with Sri Lanka and several other nations.An enhanced economic deal with opening of services, was due to be signed between Sri Lanka and India on the sidelines of the summit.But it was aborted at the last minute after Sri Lanka got cold feet following protests from protectionist lobbies and Marxist political elements.Real LiberalizationMeanwhile, Sri Lanka's president Mahinda Rajapaksa laid the foundations for cheaper communication among the people of South Asia by calling for a reduction in international tariffs within the region.Telephone tariffs within the region are absurdly high, and in many countries it is cheaper to call Europe or North America than their neighboring nations due to artificially high call charges driven by an archaic tit-for-tat penal fee system."Although the numbers of mobile phone users in South Asia are rapidly increasing yet, our people remain distanced through the barrier of tariffs," President Rajapaksa said."I, therefore, propose that we actively promote a reduced tariff for IDD (international direct dialing) calls within the South Asian region to bring our people much closer, much sooner."Bangladesh also called for liberalizing investment within the region saying that intra-regional investment flows are very small in South Asia."Given the right kind of environment and confidence, the potential for increased intra-regional investment is huge," chief advisor Fakruddin Ahmed said."I feel that a restrictive investment regime is one of the inhibiting factors in attracting foreign direct investment."In this context it is important that the draft agreement on promotion and protection of investments in finalised at the earliest."While an incomplete liberalization agenda remains, new areas for action have been added, including terrorism, which is an acknowledged serious problem within the region - sometimes egged on with the help of sanctuaries in each others' countries - climate change and rising food and energy prices.The call of Bangladesh and Bhutan comes as critics compared SAARC unfavourably with the European Union and the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) pointing the two groupings' achievements on economic integration.
Bangladesh, Bhutan call for freer trade for South Asia's SAARC nations - LANKA BUSINESS ONLINE

Zee News - india traffickers hub

India becoming transit point for human traffickers: Minister

Chennai, Aug 02: India is fast becoming a transit point as well as a destination for human traffickers from Nepal, Bangladesh and other Commonwealth nations, Union Minister of State for Law and Justice K Venkatapathy said on Saturday."A large number of children and women are reported missing every year in India. About 1,34,000 women are reported missing in India between 1996 and 2001. Trafficking has acquired grave dimensions with penetration of organised crime syndicates," the minister said.He was speaking at a seminar on 'Consultation on methods to combat trafficking of children and women for commercial sexual exploitation in Tamil Nadu' here.Venkatapathy said factors like underdevelopment, privatisation, liberalisation and commercialisation of agriculture had paved way for increase in trafficking of children and women in India.Madras High Court Chief Justice A K Ganguly said while 30 per cent children enter prostitution after being raped, two per cent enter due to natural disasters which increase vulnerability of women and girls."Human trafficking has become major money making business next to arms and drug trafficking. Illiteracy coupled with poverty is the main reason, making women and children fall prey to trafficking," he said.Tamil Nadu DGP K P Jain said the state, which had recently figured in high supply zone for traffickers, had constituted a special cell to check trafficking."We have appointed nodal officers in all the districts to monitor the trafficking. Only through sensitising the society we can bring an end to this menace," he added.Bureau Report
Zee News - india traffickers hub

The Island-Features

On Indian Expansionism

        by

Gamini Seneviratne

This is a subject that merits close scrutiny in the context of the efforts of the Indian bureaucracy to force a ‘Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement’ (CEPA) down our throats. Indian is evidently afraid that others, notably China, who are competing for resources in this part of the world would get a foothold here. That, they already have; the pressure now is to pre-empt further expansion of the presence of China, Japan & Co. in, shall we say, Lankan waters.As projected, CEPA would simply choke economic enterprise by our people and appropriate our resources in the interests of a Pax Indiana. ‘Histories’, written, naturally, by the perpetrators of such violence, refer to a Pax Romana, a Pax Brittanica and, nowadays, in the present continuous, a Pax Americana. This Indian initiative must also be seen in the light of India’s nuclear deal with the USA: it foreshadows the nature of the ‘Pax’ contemplated by Delhi.Though the small and medium print or even much of the large have yet to be made public, the CEPA (which is now said to be on hold), would no doubt underwrite the same kind of ‘peace’ that every invader of sovereign territories has sought to achieve.In his study of ‘Ceylon Under the British Occupation’, Dr. Colvin R de Silva gives a vivid account of the ‘Madrasi administration’ that was imposed during the early years of the British occupation on the maritime provinces. He characterises them as predators who had no sympathy for the people and their culture (the Brits sent them back). Perhaps Dayan Jayatilleka, whose personal / political positions as they have meandered over time to his benefit should read that.We seem to have it all over again now, and in spades: tea & rubber estates, the Uva Vellassa on the back of magnetite, oil farms in Trinco, the LIOC etc all bent on proving themselves to be the most rapacious.In the not too distant past the parsimony of Indian officials was reflected in the terms they demanded for such products as arecanut (from here), and beedi wrapper leaf (from there). The range of products governed by more recent and equally one-sided deals on trade is much wider. Illustrative of the Indian bureaucracy’s absence of good faith is their prohibition on the export of onion seed for our use. The results of a study of Indo-Lankan trade by a researcher at the ARTI should throw much light on the subject (for use by policy makers who wish to be enlightened).In my formal encounters with the bureaucrats who used to control all human activity in India, but no longer do on terms that tend to be those mentioned below, some of them were so vain (‘arrogant’ might be their preferred term of self-description), and constipated that we felt they had been bawled off by their wives that morning.In a somewhat rambling piece on ‘Will India Become A Superpower?’Ramachandra Guha, author of ‘India After Gandhi: The History of the World’s Largest Democracy’, says,"The terms that came to mind in characterizing an earlier generation of Congress leaders were: patriotic, efficient, social democratic, incorruptible. The terms that come to mind now are: selfish, nepotistic, sycophantic, on the make. . . the unelected officials at times exceed the elected politicians in the scale and ambition of their corruption."Guha also comes up with a quote from (Mahatma) Gandhi which is pertinent to any review of where India is being shepherded by her mercantilists such as Manmohan Singh. The proposed CEPA is but one example:"God forbid that India should ever take to industrialization after the manner of the West. The economic imperialism of a single tiny island kingdom (England) is today keeping the world in chains. If an entire nation of 300 million took to similar economic exploitation, it would strip the world bare like locusts." "These words," writes Guha, "come from an article published in the journal Young India in December 1928. Two years earlier, Gandhi had declared that to "make India like England and America is to find some other races and places of the earth for exploitation".Dr. Manmohan Singh, ironically, was Secretary to the South Commission chaired by Dr. Gamani Corea. Many years ago, Dr. Corea told me how astonished he had been by the sentiments expressed by his colleague at an open conference. Dr. Singh had been conscious of it, but at a tête-à-tête over lunch, Dr. Singh had been evasive.The collection of States ruled by the Rajahs & Ranis, coupled with those over which the British had firm control, became the ‘India’ of today (less the newly created ‘Pakistan’). Commencing with that demarcation (and the concurrent appropriation of Jammu & Kashmir), India has been muscling all around her own territory. She has, for example, choked land-locked Nepal, forced Bhutan to generate hydro-power its people did not need in order to feed Indian industry, violated our air-space and is hell-bent on building a canal through our territorial waters.Among such ‘interventions’, I recall the anguish that enveloped Mohammed Haroon, Minister of Agriculture of Pakistan, as we listened to his Indian counterpart, Fakruddin Ahmed, (later the President of India), outline India’s programme for developing her agriculture. Haroon muttered, ‘The Farrakar barrage’. It was India’s ‘enterprise’ in managing cross border waters: the barrage / dam was built just above her border with East Pakistan, its waters diverted to India in the dry season and, during the monsoon, released to drown what is now Bangladesh. I soothed him with words. More could be said about that and about that occasion. Such a ‘procedure’, was read as an act of hostility.1971 has come and gone. In Bangladesh, chaos has erupted from time to time. The partition of ‘Bengal’ that the Brits failed to carry through a hundred years ago has been made real by Delhi – checkpoints at the ‘borders’ that had not existed for people from ‘East Bengal’ to travel to ‘West Bengal’ for work. Every day. The policymakers in Delhi seem unconscious of the myopia that governs them and their country (which is yet engaged in the long haul towards ‘nationhood’).Their latest move has been to demand that the administration of Bangladesh, no less ‘interim’ than ours, should permit India to run her trucks and trains through Bangladesh in order to establish contact with her north- eastern states of Meghalaya, Tripura and Mizoram. A further demand is that Bangladesh should build the infrastructure required to carry heavy Indian trucks (and truckers carrying AIDS). Bangladesh has turned down the Indian proposal.Jayantha Dhanapala & Daryll Kimball have termed Manmohan Singh’s Nuclear Deal ‘A Non-proliferation Disaster’ (The Island, 31st July) As I suggested in a recent article on our Foreign Service, Jayantha was conscious that India did not challenge the iniquitous provisions in the NPT (over which he presided) in the expectation of a horse-deal with the USA at a later date. That date has now arrived.The gist of this agreement is that India would be exempted from "long-standing NGO guidelines that require full-scope IAEA safeguards… … intended to prevent the use of civilian nuclear technology and material or weapons purposes." They note that, "Unlike the 178 other countries, India has not signed the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). It continues to produce fissile material and expand its arsenal," and "give India the rights and privileges of civil nuclear trade that have been reserved only for members of the NPT."They observe, further, that "Incredibly, Indian officials also want exemptions from NSG guidelines that would allow supplier states to provide India with a strategic fuel reserve that could be used to outlast any fuel supply cut off or sanctions that may be imposed if it resumes nuclear testing," and that "This flatly contradicts provisions in the 2006 U.S. implementing legislation that were authored by Sen. Barack Obama."And what would that Senator, now the leading candidate for President, say to this? - "India is also demanding "full" nuclear cooperation, including access to advanced plutonium reprocessing, uranium enrichment, and heavy water production technology." And what would he say to Iran?Suvrat Raju, in an analysis of ‘The Nuclear Deal and Democracy’, notes "India's vote against Iran, its support for the war in Afghanistan and its endorsement of American positions on climate change, missile defense and chemical weapons -- where the Indian government acted against domestic opposition and long held policies to support the US." India would not be able to "protest loudly against the oppression of Palestinians, organize developing countries in defence of Iran or repudiate iniquitous conditions laid down by the WTO; it must support the US in diplomatic forums and provide logistical support for US military operations in Asia."Raju reports: "According to figures provided by Anil Kakodkar –- the chairperson of the Department of Atomic Energy –- the deal will increase India's installed energy capacity by 2.5% by 2020," – a tiny change in that respect.It was clear from the start that the deal was about a larger strategic relationship with the US (which would also help India obtain a seat in the Security Council)."India is ruled by a government", says Raju, "that is willing to make (in the words of Nicholas Burns, the American negotiator for the nuclear deal), "courageous decisions" -- and bulldoze domestic dissent -- if this is demanded by Washington or Brussels!"No wonder, Manmohan Singh has been contemplating the merits of a "single party state".Raju concludes that "The idea that a government may imperil its own existence to fulfil commitments made to a foreign government is antithetical to the idea of democracy." Yeah.
The Island-Features

Friday, August 01, 2008

Can SAARC take a blance path to Regional Integration

Can SAARC take a balanced path to regional integration?
By Ameen Izzadeen

Regional integration is largely a myth. Absolute regional integration totally wipes out the identity of the state and gives birth to a new political unit in the form of a confederation, union, grouping or even a new mega state. In the unification of Germany, the formation of the United States of America, the creation of the Soviet Union and the birth of independent India, there is evidence to show how states formed into mega states through a process of integration, changing the world map. Colonisation, invasion, occupation and the use of force by a powerful state against a weaker nation are also tools of integration.The fear that weaker neighbours feel regarding a powerful regional bully also leads to regional integration. The long-defunct United Arab Republic —a union between Egypt and Syria from 1958 to 1961 — is a classic example that shows how factors such as fear, economic benefits and political ideology contributed to both integration and disintegration. The fear of a Communist takeover of South East Asian countries was one of the reasons that held together ASEAN (Association of South East Asian Nations).But under normal circumstances, governments and nations have vested interests and nation-states will not dismantle voluntarily for the sake of integration.If the collective interest of two or more states far outweighs the national interest of the individual nation-state, then there is inducement for integration.But in terms of the prevailing political order, integration does not mean the formation of new mega states or confederations. Integration has assumed a new meaning in the form of greater cooperation in the fields of trade, communications, social welfare, transportation and other such areas where nations see there is greater advantage to be accruing to them through regional unity. In this form of regional integration, there is little or no threat to a state's sovereignty. Therefore, there is a tendency among states to form or join regional groupings.It is in this context that the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) came into being and has survived the test of time. But the undercurrents that flowed beneath the surface of regional cooperation in the years prior to the formation or SAARC, have also survived. SAARC is essentially an economic bloc, a grouping that was formed with the stated intention of uplifting the living standards of South Asia's poor. But the undercurrents that prevailed in the late 1970s and the early 1980s, when the idea of South Asian regional integration was being mooted, told a different story.It is no secret that India's South Asia policy is guided by a doctrine similar to the United States' Monroe doctrine — which simply states that no outside power can interfere in the affairs of states in the backyard of a superpower. This vital policy doctrine of India was named the Indira Doctrine after the former Indian Iron Lady and Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, for it was she who added flesh to India's South Asia policy. Since independence, India has been formulating its South Asia policy on the assumption that it was the natural heir of Britain to rule the waves of the Indian Ocean.Obviously, India's neighbours — particularly Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka — resented New Delhi's claim for hegemony in the region and had been looking for a mechanism to check India.Sri Lanka's then President, J. R. Jayewardene, a political realist to the core, thought that by joining ASEAN, Sri Lanka, the first South Asian state to liberalise its economy, could not only gain immense economic benefits but also check India's hegemonic designs on Sri Lanka. But India outmanoeuvred him and warned ASEAN against any move to enrol Sri Lanka.But the old fox, as President Jayewardene was referred to by both his friends and foes, outfoxed India and embraced the idea of South Asian regional cooperation no sooner it was first mooted by Bangladesh's then military President Zia-ur-Rahman, another South Asian leader who resented India's hegemonic South Asian policy.It is naïve to assume that India was unaware of the moves by its neighbours to trap it in a regional grouping, which would seriously undermine its geostrategic objectives. This explains why India was circumspect and did not jump at the idea of South Asian regional cooperation. It joined SAARC only after it had studied the pros and cons from its own national interest perspective, especially in the light of its Indira Doctrine, which continue to this day.It is amidst these undercurrents that SAARC set sail from Bangladesh in 1985. President Jayewardene addressing the inaugural summit in Dhaka said, "We are setting this ship afloat today. There may be mutiny on board, I hope not. The sea may be stormy but the ship must sail on and enter the ports of poverty, hunger, unemployment, malnutrition, disease and seek to bring comfort to those who need it."Twenty-three years after these words were spoken, those steering the ship can still see the port from which they began their voyage while in the ports of poverty, hunger, unemployment, malnutrition and disease the arrival of the ship is eagerly awaited.But don't dismiss SAARC as a total flop. It has some achievements to its credit. For instance, the SAARC Secretariat website proudly claims that there is complete integration in agriculture and rural Development; telecommunications, science, technology and meteorology; health and population activities; transport and human resource development.Though the areas look many, they belong to four main categories. Sadly, the South Asian Free Trade Area (SAFTA), which many hoped would inject new life into SAARC, is not on the list, although SAFTA is supposed to have come into being in January 2006.SAFTA's lack of progress was a classic example of how member-states give precedence to their national interest over the collective interest of the region. The arduous process that led to SAFTA speaks volumes for the mutual suspicion and undercurrents in the grouping, especially between India and Pakistan. Pakistan and India are looking at SAFTA not only from an economic point of view but also from a strategic point of view. Neither country is willing to offer sweeping concessions to the other. India says that it is Pakistan's unwillingness to grant India the most favoured nation status that is blocking the full implementation of SAFTA.There is a viewpoint in India's neighbourhood that the biggest beneficiary of SAFTA will be India as it could swamp the whole of South Asia with cheap Indian goods while other South Asian countries will find it difficult to compete in the Indian markets.Sri Lanka, frustrated by the lack of progress the talks on SAFTA were making, promoted a different mechanism — bilateral Free Trade Agreements between South Asian nations. The credit for initiating this practical approach should go to Sri Lanka's much respected foreign minister, the late Lakshman Kadirgamar. His initiative has borne fruit with Sri Lanka signing FTAs with India and Pakistan, and other South Asian countries also taking steps towards FTAs.In fact, the present trend in regional integration appears to be FTAs and RTAs (Regional Trade Agreements). According to World Trade Organisation (WTO) statistics, RTAs and FTAs have grown by one hundred percent between January 1995 and April 2002.But again, FTAs between South Asian states are not without their problems. There are still areas of disagreement. For instance, many in Sri Lanka believe that India is adopting subtle protectionism under pressure from its industrial and agriculture lobbies. They cite opposition from India's garment and tea industries to exports from Sri Lanka, notwithstanding the FTA. Perhaps, India would have acted differently if it had followed the Gujral doctrine, which called for concessions to India's weak neighbours in trade agreements.India's protectionist attitude was blamed for the failure of last week's Doha rounds of WTO talks in Geneva. India's external trade policy is a fine example of how countries would not agree to any deal inimical to their economic or national interests.The challenge before SAARC is to find a working formula to balance the collective interest of South Asia against the national interest of individual nations. One proposal is to bring in China as a full member. China could qualify to be a South Asian nation as it borders India and Pakistan. China's presence will make SAARC the world's most powerful trade bloc — not only because the grouping will represent nearly 40 percent of the world's population but also because it would allay fears of Indian hegemony.
Sri Lanka Breaking News-Daily Mirror Online

FACTBOX-Politics hobbles trade at Colombo SAARC meet

FACTBOX-Politics hobbles trade at Colombo SAARC meetWed Jul 30, 2008 12:17pm IST Email | Print |Share| Single Page[-] Text [+]July 30 (Reuters) - Trade and terrorism are on the agenda for the 15th South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) summit in Colombo on Aug. 2 and 3.Here is an overview of the group and its agenda:For a full story, please click on [ID:nSP322153]HISTORY, AIMS:- SAARC was established in 1985 by Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, the Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Afghanistan became the eighth member in 2007.- Formed to help boost economic growth and trade in one of the world's poorest regions -- home to about 1.5 billion people, tens of millions of whom live in abject poverty -- it has been flayed by critics who say it has remained a talking shop where lofty speeches are rarely translated into action.TRADE RHETORIC AND REALITY:- Trade between members did not accelerate in the five years after structured economic cooperation began with the SAARC Preferential Trading Arrangement (SAPTA) in December 1995.- Intra-SAARC commerce remains at just over five percent, compared to other regional forums such as Asean's internal trade at 26 percent and EU's 55 percent.SLOW PROGRESS, INDIA-PAKISTAN PROBLEMS:- Signed in January 2004, the South Asian Free Trade Area (SAFTA) agreement, supposed to supersede SAPTA, finally came into force in July 2006.- Aimed at achieving zero tariffs on almost all products by 2012, SAFTA has witnessed squabbles over tariff concessions with Pakistan accusing India of violating the agreement with various Non-Tariff Barriers.- SAARC's perceived failure to take off despite many summits has been traced to mistrust and animosity between its two biggest members, India and Pakistan, whose rivalry dates back to their independence in 1947. Their uneasy ties, particularly over disputed Kashmir, still undermine greater regional cooperation.ISSUES ON THE TABLE IN COLOMBO:- Officials say no major agreements are expected -- accords could include one to launch a SAARC Development Fund (SDF), a pact on regional legal cooperation to fight crimes and a fund to manage food and energy crisis.- India would push for counter-terrorism drive after facing a wave of bombings last week, and another attack on its embassy in Kabul that India blames on Pakistan's spy agency. (Compiled by Krittivas Mukherjee; Editing by David Fox)
FACTBOX-Politics hobbles trade at Colombo SAARC meet | Quotes | Company News | Reuters

Bangladesh Civic Group Blames Foreign Envoys for Prying in Domestic Affairs

Bangladesh Civic Group Blames Foreign Envoys for Prying in Domestic AffairsBy: iStockAnalyst Thursday, July 31, 2008 9:56 AMSend Email Email View Comments Comments (0) Post Comments Post Comment Bookmark It Text of report headlined "Foreign diplomats blamed for meddling in internal affairs" published by Bangladeshi newspaper New Age website on 31 JulyA civic group has alleged that diplomats of some influential countries have been meddling in Bangladesh's internal affairs blatantly flouting the globally accepted diplomatic etiquette.It also criticised the leaders of political parties for creating scopes for foreign diplomats to poke their nose into the country's internal affairs.The National Interest Group, launched in April 2008 to keep a watch on activities and statements of Dhaka-based foreign diplomats, published its first-ever quarterly report Wednesday, found envoys of the United States, Britain, European Union and India most active and consistently flouting Vienna Convention on Diplomatic and Consular relations."They have publicly spoken about our governance, political process, anti-corruption drive, election procedure, foreign policy, economy and even security matters," Mahmudur Rahman, coordinator of the group and former energy adviser to the [BNP] Bangladesh Nationalist Party -led alliance government, told a press conference.Referring to statements by different foreign diplomats over the last four months, the report said that the present "unelected and weak" government showed extreme tolerance towards the external interferences without any protest in most cases.Politicians rushed to diplomats' residences and hold closed-door meetings with them in the name of tea parties, it revealed.It also castigated a section of the media for giving excessive coverage on foreigners' statements."They in fact instigate diplomats and visiting foreign dignitaries to make derogatory remarks about Bangladesh," the report said.The group, which placed seven-point recommendations to the government seeking an end to foreigners' meddling in Bangladesh's domestic affairs, also called upon the media not to be used as a tool of propagating foreign policy objectives of the imperial powers.It stressed the need for raising mass awareness to stop violation of the Vienna Convention and protect Bangladesh from unwanted external interventions.The diplomats should be warned against violation of the international norms and politicians should be condemned for parleying with local embassy people on internal political matters, it said.The group also asked the foreign embassies to maintain lists of local guests who pay frequent visits to their residences and make those public to ensure transparency.Prior permission from the government should be made mandatory for the embassies to hold any meeting with political parties, it suggested.The report pointed out that the neo-liberal economic policy of the West had been continuously undermining the economic sovereignty of the smaller and weaker South Asian countries like Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan and Maldives.While these countries need supports to advance their economies to strengthen their positions and capacities in the given global order, multilateral and bilateral development partners did the opposite, the report added.Originally published by New Age website, Dhaka, in English 31 Jul 08.(c) 2008 BBC Monitoring South Asia. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.trackingStory Source: BBC Monitoring South Asia
Bangladesh Civic Group Blames Foreign Envoys for Prying in Domestic Affairs

Monday, May 14, 2007

EX MP Jailed




Joynal Hazari jailed over wealth report


Ex-BNP MP Farid arrested, Abu Zafar sent to jail







A Feni court yesterday sentenced former Awami League lawmaker Joynal
Hazari to three years' imprisonment as he failed to submit his wealth
statements to the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC), reports BSS.

Judge of the special court Mohammad Nazrul Islam convicted Hazari who is on the government's list of 50 corrupt suspects.

ACC's
Assistant Director Shafiqur Rahman filed the case under section 26(1)
of Anti-Corruption Law 2004 on April 8. Five witnesses gave their
depositions.

The AL leader has been absconding since
August 16, 2001, and was convicted in four cases out of 20 filed by the
various government organisations.

EX-MP FARID ARRESTED

Rapid
Action Battalion (Rab) arrested former BNP lawmaker from Cox's Bazar-2
Alamgir Mohammad Mahfuzullah Farid from his NAM Flat on Manik Mian
Avenue yesterday.

A team of Rab-3 picked Alamgir up around 2:00pm. He was under Rab custody until 8:00pm.

Rab said Alamgir is an accused in a Tk 50 lakh extortion case filed with Moheshkhali Police Station on April 15.

Former Chairman of Hoyanok union in Moheshkhali Abdul Mabud Chowdhury filed the case against Alamgir and 18 others.

EX-MP ZAFAR SENT TO JAIL

Former
BNP lawmaker from Faridpur-1 constituency Shah Mohammad Abu Zafar was
sent to jail yesterday when he appeared at a local court in a case
filed in connection with misappropriation of relief materials.

District
and Sessions Judge M Abdul Majid rejected his bail petition and ordered
sending him to prison. Later, he was sent to Kashimpur jail, reports
our Faridpur correspondent.

The case was filed against him
following the recovery of 304 CI sheets of government relief fund from
his village home by the joint forces on February 12.




 
 













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BNP Reform Question




Leaders jettison Khaleda on reforms question








BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia is becoming isolated within the party as
more leaders, now articulating their views against her 'unilateral'
decisions in running the party, are asking for reforms to bring
democracy in the party.

Former
whip in parliament and BNP Joint Secretary General Ashraf Hossain
yesterday called for curbing the power of the party chief and end
'dynasty'.

Earlier several senior leaders of the party demanded decentralisation of power within the party.

Another
faction of BNP, however, raised questions about the recent 'revolt'
against the party chief by some leaders and said those leaders had
earlier accepted every decision of Khaleda Zia without any question.

"The party constitution should be changed as the power given by the constitution was misused," Ashraf Hossain said.

Terming
Khaleda's 'family centric' leadership as undemocratic, he said, "The
party chairperson has given priority to her relatives and non-political
persons during the last few years. Even she appointed her relatives to
the party positions without any consultation."

"As a political
party, BNP was not run the way it was supposed to. Fourteen years have
passed without any national council and nothing has been done according
to the party constitution. But I could not get the chance to tell this
in the party platform," he said.

Meanwhile, BNP Joint
Secretary General Goyeshwar Chandra Roy yesterday hinted that party
Chairperson Khaleda Zia might release her brother Sayeed Iskandar from
the post of vice-chairman of the party.

"I discussed the
matter with her [Khaleda] over phone and she told me that she would ask
her brother to resign," Ghoyeshshar told a TV channel last night.

Sources
said Sayeed Iskandar did not meet Khaleda Zia in last few days as she
decided to ask her brother to resign from the post of party
vice-president.

"Dynasty is harmful for the democracy while
decentralisation of power is urgent for the party," former whip Ashraf
Hossain told the reporters yesterday.

Ashraf, one of the close
aides of BNP Secretary General Abdul Mannan Bhuiyan, said it is good to
see that some people are now speaking against dynasty.

Earlier former BNP minister M Saifur Rahman said, "There should be an immediate end to family-centric politics."

Freeing
politics from family influence is needed for a vibrant multi-party
democracy in the country, Saifur, who is also a member of BNP Standing
Committee, said.

He said a large number of leaders and
activists of the party are worried about the concentration of power in
the hand of a single person.

Dhaka city Mayor Sadeque Hossain
Khoka also spoke in favour of changing the party leadership and
decentralisation of power to make the party pro-people.

"BNP
must carry out reforms within the party, punish the corrupt and remove
failed politicians," former minister M Osman Farruk said in his recent
interview with the media.

The people of Bangladesh had enough
of dynastic rule and now they want to live and work in a democratic
environment, the BNP leader said, adding that all over the world people
are rejecting dynastic rule and Bangladeshis are no exception.

Meanwhile,
BNP chairperson's adviser Hannan Shah yesterday said that Khaleda Zia
is facing pressure to go to any ASEAN country on the plea of treatment.



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Politics



Jalil for law to throw corrupt, criminals out of politics





Awami League (AL) General Secretary Abdul Jalil yesterday said the corrupt politicians, black money holders and godfathers of criminals can be rooted out through legislation and consensus among the political parties.

He thanked the military-backed interim administration for initiatives to rid politics and parliament of the evil elements.

"It would never do the nation any good if the evildoers are elected to parliament. They only cater to self-interest and poison politics," Jalil told reporters at his Mercantile Bank office.

Queried if his party would decide not to nominate the corrupt suspects, black money holders and patronisers of criminals for the next election, the AL leader said "If we expel them, the others will shelter them, and in that case, my party will wind up being on the losing side. So, all political parties need to arrive at a consensus on the issue."

An effective legislation can free the political parties of perverting forces, he noted adding that the politics should be controlled by no one but the politicians.

Jalil said they have always been in favour of reforms and that is why they had placed a 31-point reform proposal. "We had long been calling for an independent and strong Election Commission (EC)," he added.

The AL leader called on the interim government to lift the ban on political activities especially indoor politics so they could begin the work on reforms and help the EC carry out electoral reforms.

He also urged it to hand over power to an elected government after a free and fair election as soon as possible.

Asked about reform of the political parties, he said the AL has grown to be the largest political party through reforms since its founding. "If further reforms are necessary to keep pace with the changing times, we will of course discuss the issue at the party forum once the ban on indoor politics is gone," he observed.

"But there would be no reforms without Sheikh Hasina," Jalil said adding, "The party leaders and workers are emotionally attached to her as they see in her the reflection of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. No one in the party could think of a leadership minus her."

"Hasina never wanted to be the Awami League president. It was rather the leaders of the organisation who elected her as its chief in 1981. Before that, the party was split in four factions. So she is the symbol of unity. Those who believe in the ideals of Bangabandhu just cannot think of Awami League without Hasina."

Jalil welcomed the EC's decision to task the armed forces with preparing the voter roll. Describing the military personnel as the sons of this soil, he said, "There's nothing wrong with them doing the work."

On intra-party democracy, the AL general secretary said, "No other party but Awami League practises democracy within it."

He said when a whole lot of discussions are on about party reforms and democracy, Khaleda Zia's brother Sayeed Iskander's being a vice-chairman of the BNP has dealt a severe blow to the spirit of reforms. It only exposed that "the party is very much in dynastic politics".

Referring to former finance minister M Saifur Rahman's remark that it was a mistake to accept President Iajuddin Ahmed as the chief adviser, Jalil said the realisation has come very late. "Like him, many others [of BNP] will now understand their mistakes and see the logic behind our demand," he said.

 



 



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Friday, May 11, 2007

CTG Port Turns Dynamic








Ctg Port suddenly turns dynamic


Performance goes up by 30pc, business cost reduces by 40pc







Following the promulgation of the state of emergency in January this
year, the efficiency of the premier port Chittagong increased 30
percent and the cost of running business there reduced by 40 percent, a
recent study revealed.

The
turn-around time of ships at the port reduced to 4.48 days in the month
of April whereas it was 11.65 days in January this year. The number of
vessels handled per month at the port also increased to 86 in April
from 70 in January last. The number of ships handled in January 2006
was 60.

The amount of cargo handled also increased to 83,245 TEUs (twenty equivalent units) in April from 76,213 in January last.

The
customs' processing of export-import documents also ran at a quick pace
to keep up with the goods handling at the port. The Chittagong Port
customs officials claimed that over 98 percent documents have been
assessed so far within the time frame and only two percent remains
pending due to various reasons.

The business community
expressed satisfaction over the progress made by the joint forces in
stopping corruption, illegal toll and bringing discipline back in cargo
handling.

Immediately after deployment of army personnel
in order to aid the civil administration in January this year, a
taskforce under the joint forces took initiative and got involved in
the port activities, according to sources.

The taskforce held a
series of meetings with all stake holders and rounded up corrupt labour
leaders, port officials and other criminals who were obstacles to
smooth operations of the port.

A number of private operators
were also appointed to manage the terminal and handle cargo quickly as
part of the reform programme and gradually the port's activities
improved.

The business community and port users started getting
the benefit of the actions taken by the joint forces and demanded
continuation of the reforms and the system to be made permanent so that
the premier port never went back to the previous dismal condition after
changes in the national politics.

Earlier the premier port was
a headache for the nation for long as it was termed one of the most
insecure, inefficient and costliest ports of the world.

It is
going to be a model for other sectors to follow as the long congestion
of the ships and containers were untangled with three-months' effort,
the sources said.

At the moment, there is no ship congestion at
the port. Sometimes 5-8 berths remain empty due to lack of ships. Most
ships enter the Karnaphuli channel without wasting any time waiting at
the outer anchorage. In the month of January this year, the average
waiting time of ships at the outer anchorage was over 14 days.

A
medium-sized ship's per day cost of waiting is around $10,000-15,000.
Sometimes ships wait at the outer anchorage due to technical reasons
like low tide.

"We are happy and every sensible person should
be happy not only because the corruption has been stopped but also for
the port as it is moving towards maintaining a proper system," said MA
Latif, senior vice president of Chittagong Chamber of Commerce and
Industry (CCCI).

Due to the bad image of the port abroad,
the local business community has to pay at least 20-22 percent higher
freight charges than other ports of similar distant, he pointed out.

Latif
said the port got a bad name as political parties used the port as a
tool to make their demands heard. "We want relief from the anarchy
created in the name of a democratic movement," he said.

Referring
to the politicians, Latif further added that they have their democratic
rights for a political movement but they do not have any right to
create panic in order to realise their demands.

There should be
a law made so that people who lost properties and suffered due to these
political movements could be compensated, he stated.

"The port
has gone through a revolutionary change in the last three months and we
are moving in the right direction," said Mahbub Ali, chairman of
Bangladesh Shippers Council--a platform for exporters.

He said
it would take more time to make everything all right but whatever
changes took place in last three months were never thought possible.

"We
want the present condition to continue," he said, adding, "This is high
time to give the message to the politicians that the port should remain
above politics for the sake of this nation."

According to
sources, the port situation started improving after the appointment of
Saif Powertec to undertake an integrated operation at the exclusive
container jetty, Chittagong Container Terminal (CCT).

Earlier,
the company operated four sophisticated gantry cranes at the CCT.
Operations at the CCT were done by various groups and each group had
different jobs. As a result, the pace of container handling suffered.

The
number of ships handled a month doubled at the CCT after all the
groups' operations were integrated. A total of 31 container ships were
handled at the CCT in April this year whereas 15 ships were handled in
December last year.

Nine imported items are now taken directly
off docks from ships helping a long way in reducing container
congestion. The items are rice, wheat, beans, mastered, chickpeas,
scraps, wet paper, cotton and poultry feed.

More than 1,000
trucks and over 2,000 labourers used to get inside the port to handle
these goods creating traffic congestions inside the port.

The
container keeping capacity at the port jetty was increased to 22,000
TUEs from 12,000 TEUs a few months ago by expanding the yard area. The
space increased as the yard of newly constructed New Mooring Container
Terminal (NCT) was added to the available space.

The port
authority hoped the capacity would be increased to 30,000 TEUs by July
this year when the park yard and under construction yard inside the
port become available.

Earlier, lunch, dinner and prayer time
used to be long in Chittagong port. The authorities enforced a duty
roster at each station where the name of an employee and the duration
of his or her duty time were mentioned. The duty officer goes on
inspections to ensure that the right man is at right place at the right
time.

The authorities also opened two complaint cells at the
terminal building and at the girls' school to respond to complaints.
This worked well as problems could be addressed faster, a source said.

The
joint forces also took an initiative to stop power cuts inside the
port. The Power Development Board (PDB) connected the port jetty with
the national power grid and no disruption of power occurred at the
terminal in the last three months.




 












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Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Profile ofthe Terrorist Insurgency in NE

Profile of the Terrorist Insurgency in North East India---Isha Khan - 12/19/2006

Formation: Asom Sanjukta Mukti Morcha or the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) was formed on April 7, 1979 by Bhimakanta Buragohain, Rajiv Rajkonwar alias Arabinda Rajkhowa, Golap Baruah alias Anup Chetia, Samiran Gogoi alias Pradip Gogoi, Bhadreshwar Gohain and Paresh Baruah at the Rang Ghar in Sibsagar to establish a "sovereign socialist Assam" through an armed struggle. War Cry: Joi Ai AsomLeadership:Arabinda Rajkhowa is the 'Chairman' of ULFA. 'Vice Chairman' Pradip Gogoi was arrested on April 8, 1998 , and is currently in judicial custody at Guwahati. 'General Secretary' Anup Chetia is under detention in the Bangladeshi Dhaka after being arrested on December 21, 1997. The outfit's founding member and ideologue Bhimakanta Buragohain, 'Publicity Secretary' Mithinga Daimary and 'Assistant Secretary' Bolin Das were arrested during the military operations in Bhutan in December 2003. Earlier, 'Cultural Secretary' Pranati Deka was arrested at Phulbari in the West Garo Hills district of Meghalaya. Other leaders are: Bhimkanta Buragohin, Pradip Gogoi alias Samiran Gogoi, Mithinga Daimari, Pranati Deka and Ramu Mech ,Mithinga Daimary (real name Dipak Das),The cultural secretary of the Ulfa, Pranati Deka hails from Nalbari district. She is the wife of the group's finance secretary Chitrabon Hazarika. She was first arrested from a Mumbai hospital in 1996. Later, she was released on bail in 1998 only to be arrested again at Phulbari, Meghalaya in 2003 while trying to escape. The ULFA has a clearly partitioned political and military wing. Paresh Barua heads the military wing as the outfit's 'commander-in-chief'. Following the military operations in Bhutan in December 2003, most of its top leadership reportedly operates from unspecified locations. According to reports, ULFA is in the process of relocating its camps in Myanmar, Mon district of Nagaland, Garo hills of Meghalaya and Tirap and Changlang districts of Arunachal Pradesh.Areas of Activity and InfluenceThe ULFA's organisational structure is divided into four zones:East Districts(Purb Mandal) West Districts(Paschim Mandal) Central Districts(Madhya Mandal) South Districts(Dakshin Mandal)Sanjukta Mukti Fouj (SMF):A military wing of the ULFA, the Sanjukta Mukti Fouj (SMF) was formed on March 16, 1996 . SMF has three full-fledged battalions (Bn): the 7th, 28th and 709th. The remaining battalions exist only on paper - at best they have strengths of a company or so. Their allocated spheres of operation are: 7th Bn (HQ- Sukhni) Responsible for defence of GHQ8th Bn Nagaon, Morigaon, Karbi Anglong9th Bn Golaghat, Jorhat, Sibsagar11th Bn Kamrup, Nalbari27th Bn Barpeta, Bongaigaon, Kokrajhar28th Bn Tinsukia, Dibrugarh709th Bn KalikholaLinks and camps:The ULFA sought shelter in the forests on the Indo-Bhutan border from the early 1990s and established several camps in the forest areas of southern Bhutan. Over the years, it reportedly developed linkages with several officers and personnel of the Royal Bhutan Army (RBA) and Police - which ensured, among other things, a steady flow of rations, logistical support as well as aid and contacts for money laundering. The ULFA's Bhutan set-up had a reported strength of around 2000 cadres spread across the outfit's 'General Head Quarters', it's 'Council Head Quarters', a 'Security Training Camp' and a well-concealed 'Enigma Base'. Numbering around 13 in all, the major camps of the ULFA in Bhutan included:1. Mithundra 2. Gobarkunda3. Panbang4. Diyajima5. Pemagatsel Complexi. Kharii. Shumariii. Nakar6. Chaibari7. Marthong8. Gerowa9. Sukhni (Merungphu): 'General HQ'10. Melange11. Phukaptong: 'Council HQ'12. Dalim-Koipani (Orang)13. Neoli DebarliMost camps and other establishment of the ULFA were in Sandrup Jongkhar, a district in southern Bhutan that borders Assam's Nalbari district. The RBA is reported to have destroyed all the outfit's camps and observation posts during the military operations launched in December 2003. In 1986, ULFA first established contacts with the then unified National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN) and the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) of Myanmar for training and arms. ULFA linked up with the Kachins through the 'good offices' of the Naga rebels. It learnt the rudiments of insurgent tactics from the Kachins (who reportedly charged Rupees 100,000 per trainee). Subsequently, links were established with Pakistan 's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) and the Afghan Mujahideen. Reports indicate that at least 200 ULFA activists received training in Pakistan and Afghanistan.Bangladesh authorities arrested its leader Anup Chetia on December 21, 1997 . He is currently under detention at the high-security Dhaka Central Jail. The main charges against Chetia include illegal entry into Bangladesh, possession of two forged Bangladeshi passports, possession of an unauthorised satellite telephone and illegal possession of foreign currency of countries as diverse as the US, UK, Switzerland, Thailand, Philippines, Spain, Nepal, Bhutan, Belgium, Singapore and others. Two other accomplices, identified as Babul Sharma and Laxmi Prasad, were also arrested along with Chetia. ULFA gradually expanded its network to include operational control of activities and the receipt and shipment of arms in transit before they finally entered India. Owing to greater vigil along the known routes of ULFA arms flow, the group has, in recent times, been making attempts to set up bases in Meghalaya, especially in the West Garo Hills to coordinate the transit of arms. ULFA has for long maintained close linkages with the Pakistan's ISI which procured several passports for Paresh Baruah and other ULFA cadres. Several ULFA cadres have also received arms training from the ISI at various training centres in Pakistan, close to the Afghanistan border. ULFA had also announced its support for Pakistan during the Kargil war. They described the Pakistani intruders - primarily Pakistani Army regulars and Afghan mercenaries - as 'freedom fighters'. Reports indicate that the ULFA's mouthpiece, ULFA's a website newsletter Swadhinata also known as 'Freedom', receives editorial support from ISI inside Pakistan. It was in 'Freedom' that the ULFA first supported the Pakistanis during the Kargil war. The ISI has provided ULFA cadres with arms training, safe havens, funds, arms and ammunition. Training has been given at camps in Pakistan and Bhutan. At least 300 ULFA cadres were also trained at Rawalpindi and other locations in Pakistan. The training included courses in the use of rocket launchers, explosives and assault weapons. Paresh Baruah has been regularly visiting Karachi since 1992-93. He is also reported to have met Osama bin Laden in 1996 during a visit to Karachi. The ULFA leader was reportedly taken to a camp on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, where he not only received assurance of military help in the form of arms and ammunition, but also assurances of co-operation and logistical support of all international organisations owing allegiance to bin Laden, including the International Jehad Council, the Tehrik-ul-Jehad, Harkat-ul-Jehadi-e-Islami (HuJI), apart from the Al Qaeda. The ISI has also trained ULFA terrorists in counter intelligence, disinformation and use of sophisticated weapons and explosives. Pakistan has facilitated the visits of Paresh Baruah and other ULFA leaders to Singapore , Thailand and other countries, and a channel for the transfer of funds and arms has been created. The ISI largesse enabled ULFA to buy arms in Cambodia, paying for these in hard currency routed through Nepal. The ISI also 'introduced' ULFA to LTTE transporters who, for a fee, undertook to transport arms from Southeast Asia into Myanmar. In April 1996, Bangladesh seized more than 500 AK-47 rifles, 80 machineguns, 50 rocket launchers and 2,000 grenades from two ships off Cox's Bazaar. Four Tamils were among those arrested Co-operation between various terrorist organisations in India's north-east and foreign groups was formalised with the formation of the Indo-Burmese Revolutionary Front (IBRF) in 1989. The IBRF was made up initially of the NSCN-K, ULFA, United Liberation Front of Bodoland, Kuki National Front (KNF) (all from India) and Chin National Front ( Myanmar). Paresh Baruah is reported to have paid a substantial sum of money to the Kachins for the first large consignment of weapons from Thailand. Manerplaw in lower Myanmar on the border with Thailand is the stronghold of the rebel Karen National Union which, in 1993, is reported to have delivered, from the Cambodian arms market, AK-56 rifles, machine guns, rocket-propelled guns and anti-tank rifles to the ULFA. The organisation's cadres have identified an arms dealer as an ethnic Kachin and wife of an assassinated Manipuri rebel Themba Song. The Communist Party of Burma is known to have gifted some weapons, mainly Chinese-made M10 rifles, to ULFA and Naga terrorist organisations. Arrested ULFA cadres have claimed that Baruah used to smuggle heroin, procured in Myanmar into Assam as part of "a personal operation". According to surrendered ULFA cadres, the ULFA terrorists had also crossed over into China via Bhutan and established contact with the Chinese Army. The group, on the basis of these contacts, had a rendezvous with a Chinese ship on the high seas in March 1995 during which a weapons' consignment was transferred to them. A further consignment ultimately landed up in Bhutan in 1999, though it was actually acquired in 1997. ULFA also runs profitable narcotics business in Myanmar and Thailand. A close nexus between ULFA and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) had also been reported. The LTTE is reported to have trained various ULFA cadres in explosives handling. ULFA as a Revolutionary Organization: United Liberation Front of Assam, ULFA, a revolutionary political organisation was born on the lawns of the historic Rang Ghar of Sibsagar on 7th April 1979. ULFA'S aims & objects : To liberate Assam , (a land of 78,529 square K.M.), through Armed national liberation struggle from the clutches of the illegal occupation of India and to establish a sovereign Independent Assam. ULFA represents:ULFA represents, as its name implies, not only the Assamese nation but also the entire independent minded struggling peoples, irrespective of different race-tribe-caste-religion and nationality of Assam. The struggle for national liberation of Assam never is a separatist or secessionist movement. Assam was never a part of India at any point of time in history. The fact is independent Assam has been occupied by India , and deploying occupation forces they are oppressing our peoples and persecuting them. ULFA itself and all freedom fighters of Assam are neither planning nor conspiring to break up India! We are not conducting any armed operation inside India . Freedom fighters of Assam are only trying to overthrow Indian colonial occupation from Assam. The armed struggle for self-defence: The people of Assam are confronting with various problems. Among those, the National identity problem is basic. The communal riot that was followed by the partition of India and Pakistan was responsible for the influx of foreigners from the Indian sub-continent in large scale and thereby caused a real threat to the demographic composition of Assam. India has all along encouraged this influx because of a population base having ethnic affinity with main land India is always favourable to their long term security perspective. This is one of India 's major aspects of colonial occupation of Assam. In economic sphere, India has been engaged in large-scale exploitation. Despite its rich resources, Assam remains one of the most backward states. Therefore, the question of real threat to the national identity of the people of Assam under the colonial occupation and exploitation of India has become the basic problem. As a whole, the problem has become a question of life and death to the people of Assam. The people of Assam confronted with the aforesaid problems such as influx of foreigners and massive exploitation of its natural resources and determined as national identity problem after summing up them. Against the gross injustice for sheer survival as a nation, as a people and as individuals, the people of Assam many times launched democratic and unarmed peaceful movement. However, India ruthlessly suppressed and crushed them ignoring the value of democratic movement. Though the people of Assam and leadership of the struggle have a strong stand for peaceful and amicable solution of the conflict, India has always been trying to force a military solution. Indian military operation in Assam:The main intention of this operation is to suppress the legitimate aspiration of the people of Assam , and their basic and fundamental human rights i.e., national self-determination. There are endless lists of gross human rights violations during this period by Indian occupation forces. They have killed hundreds of innocent people, hundred more have disappeared in their custody and many of our womenfolk have been raped while many more hundreds have been severely tortured to become handicapped. It is the reflection of direct consequence of colonial repressive policy of India. Today, Assam is an occupied country under Indian's martial law and an undeclared war inside Assam is running on. Any thing may happen at any time inside this war theatre. Colonial India 's this repressive policy compel to the freedom fighters of Assam to take up arms for self-defence. So, armed national liberation struggle of Assam is a democratic struggle for the survival of a Nation.ULFA commander Paresh Barua:One of the 'most wanted' north-east terrorist leader, the 45-yr-old ULFA 'commander-in-chief' Paresh Barua is a versatile radical who has been successful in evading Indian forces for long despite non-stop efforts by the latter. Wanted for a series of robberies, killings and extortions, he is believed to be currently based in Bangladesh or Bhutan. Trained in guerrilla war by ISI, Kachin Independent Army (KIA) of Myanmar and NSCN, he can handle all kinds of weapons, travels on forged passports and identity cards and lives on money obtained from extortion or robbery. Also known as Paban Barua and Pradip Barua. He, he is 173 cms in height, has black hair and black eyes, a scar on the palm of his right hand. On May 10, 1985 he and some others raided a bank in Guwahati and shot the manager and stole a sum of Rs 27, 549.62 in cash. Often dubbed as 'braveheart' by many ULFA sympathisers, he has had brush with death several times, including in Dec 2000 when he was seriously wounded in a factional gun-battle in the Chittagong Hill Tracts in Bangladesh. But there is other side of Barua story too. Born on May 1, 1957 , he is a very good football player, can speak a number of languages including English, Bengali, Hindi, Naga and Singpho and of course Assamese, his mother tongue. Insurgent Outfits in North East India Arunachal: National Liberation Front of Arunachal: Koj Tara Dragon Force (ADF) Assam:United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) :Paresh Baruah, Arbinda Rajkhoa, Anup Chetia, Daimari, Pradip Gogoi National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB)United People's Democratic Solidarity (UPDS) Bodo Liberation Tiger Force (BLTF) Dima Halim Daogah (DHD) Karbi National Volunteers (KNV) Rabha National Security Force (RNSF) Koch-Rajbongshi Liberation Organisation (KRLO) Hmar People's Convention- Democracy (HPC-D) Karbi People's Front (KPF) Barak Valley Youth Liberation Front (BVYLF) United Liberation Front of Barak Valley Manipur: United National Liberation Front (UNLF) People's Liberation Army (PLA) People's Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK) Manipur People's Liberation Front (MPLF) Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP) Kanglei Yawol Kanna Lup (KYKL) Manipur Liberation Tiger Army (MLTA) Iripak Kanba Lup (IKL) People's Republican Army (PRA) Kangleipak Kanba Kanglup (KKK) North East Minority Front (NEMF) Kuki National Front (KNF) Kuki National Army (KNA) Kuki Revolutionary Army (KRA) Kuki National Organisation (KNO) Mizoram:Hmar People's Convention (HPC) Hmar People's Convention- Democracy (HPC-D) Hmar Revolutionary Front (HRF) Zomi Revolutionary Army (ZRA) Zomi Revolutionary Volunteers (ZRV) Indigenous People's Revolutionary Alliance(IRPA) Kom Rem People's Convention (KRPC) Chin Kuki Revolutionary Front (CKRF) Bru National Liberation Front Meghalaya:Hynniewtrep National Liberation Council (HNLC) Achik National Volunteer Council (ANVC) People's Liberation Front of Meghalaya (PLF-M) Hajong United Liberation Army (HULA) Nagaland:National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Isak-Muivah) - NSCN(IM) National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Khaplang) - NSCN (K) Naga National Council-NNC (Adino)Tripura:National Liberation Front of Tripura (NLFT): Biswamohan Debbarma, Nayanbashi Jamatia All Tripura Tiger Force (ATTF) : Ranjit DebbarmaTripura Tribal Volunteer Force (TTVF) Tripura Liberation Force (TLF) All Tripura Volunteer Force (ATVF) Tripura National Army (TNA) Borok National Council of Tripura (BNCT) West Bengal:Kamtapuri Liberation Organisation (KLO)