"In what will go on the pages of the history books as one of the most important days of Nepal, Maoist revolutionary (and leader of an outfit that was branded terrorist until two years ago) Pushpa Kamal Dahal (aka Prachanda) has been elected the Prime Minister of Nepal by a majority of votes in the Constituent Assembly..."
Saturday, August 16, 2008
A Maoist Prime Minister in Nepal
"In what will go on the pages of the history books as one of the most important days of Nepal, Maoist revolutionary (and leader of an outfit that was branded terrorist until two years ago) Pushpa Kamal Dahal (aka Prachanda) has been elected the Prime Minister of Nepal by a majority of votes in the Constituent Assembly..."
Monday, August 11, 2008
Picture of the day : from Olympic
In 1992, I had first seen Olympics in TV, before that i had only read them in the "General Knowledge" kind of books, and wondered how USSR and USA were fighting each other in the Olympics. That time, I liked the US Flag and i was not happy that CIS was topping the list of medals. It was always politics in Olympics. Also going on now in 2008. AFP on Bush's current odyssey in Beijing"Bush trip to Asia a mix of sports and politics".
Thanks to the two athletes of Georgia and Russia, that they did act in a way that a stupid human being is also supposed to do. link
World in War again
Chomsky says:
"What's happening seems to me obscure. In Russia, the Putin-Khodorkovsky affair
looks like a battle between two mafias, one state-centered, the other
oligarchy-centered. But information is too low credibility to be confident, at
least what I've seen. I don't see much of an issue of democracy. And when we
are told how Bush looks into Putin's soul and finds a comrade -- need anything
more be said? Undoubtedly the NSC is worried about "the investment and
business climate." And the "rule of law" insofar as it maintains that
properly. How about the "rule of law" in Chechnya? That's someone else's
department.
Have nothing useful to say about what's happening in Georgia."- link
One question that i can't answer: "Why USA are fearing Russia? the nationalism??" - it seems obscure to me. just joking.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Problems in Nepal
"CPN-Maoist activists of Rautahat district today burnt down the effigy of party Chairman Prachanda and demanded for his resignation in protests of the inclusion of no nominees from the district by the party leadership in the closed list for proportional representation system. This is the first incident of open protests against Maoist Chairman Prachanda by activist from his own party. The activists have also alleged that non-Madhesis have been nominated in the Madhesi quotas in the party’s closed list. They claimed that the PR list submitted by the party has emphasized on the hilly region and demanded the party’s central committee to amend the list. The activists have also burnt down the effigy of lawmaker Prabhu Sah. The Maoist became the largest political party in the recent CA elections"
"the power! It changes people, makes people and breaks people. Most people that is, and Maoists are included. It appears that there is a serious power struggle going on within the Maoist party. Baburam Bhattarai versus supporters of Prachanda, the chairman. Today’s op-ed article in Kantipur daily by Bishwodeep Pandey, personal secretary of Baburam Bhattarai, brings the feud to the public. The article, in Nepali, titled “Baburam a New Pushpalal?” refers to the latest verbal attacks against Baburam by some “opportunist elements inside and outside the party.”Click here to read the article in Nepali. Click here to read as it appeared in the newspaper’s page."
Link to United we blog, nepal
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
A Comedian’s Perspective on Pakistan
"...In any country, satire is a very powerful tool used to convey social and political messeges and Pakistan is no different. Recently, with the advent of so many new channels and the freedom given to the media, people have seen a new wave of political satire shows that always prove to be the most popular on television. And even when the media was not free, satire shows like ‘ 50/50′ would always find a way to convey their messages whilst working under strict censorship laws..."
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
The Politics of Cluster Bombs
" .... Nang Wan lies in a hospital bed in this remote area's provincial hospital, her body covered in small black wounds. The 35-year-old woman was digging a shallow drainage ditch around her house on April 16 when her world exploded.
Her youngest, five-year-old, son was killed instantly in the blast. Her other two young children are in the room across the hall, with shrapnel wounds to their bodies and faces. Their injuries are tragically common in this northern province of Laos, a legacy of the country's war with the United States.
During the US's so-called "Secret War" in Laos, which spanned from 1964-1973, the US military dropped more than 2.4 million tons of bombs on the country, including around 270 million cluster bomb sub-munitions..."
Friday, May 2, 2008
Photography: Saiful Haque Omi
Back to his earlier works, I found some today from Zahid sir's table. "Heroes never die:; Political Violence in Bangladesh 1989-2005".
Link to the Daily Star Forum link that I found later > link
Friday, April 25, 2008
The Nigerian judiciary and electoral fraud
In Nigeria last year, again there was fraud on a grand scale, in fact on a scale never seen in the past. The leaders of the western powers may fool themselves that there is real democracy in Nigeria or, to put it better they fool the general public that that is so. The masses in Nigeria know full well that the elections were not fair. They know that there was blatant fraud, stealing of ballot boxes, falsification of results, physical threats and even murder.
Full article at: marxist.comSunday, April 20, 2008
Politics is the price of rice
Recently, the chief adviser, in the light of accusations of poor food distribution, said shortages occur even in countries which have elected governments. Of course they do. That is not the point. The new system of corruption is individualistic, sector-oriented, and technocrat-elitist. It is not tied to constituencies and vote banks which have a nationwide spread, albeit with party lines of exclusion and inclusion. The new system is an introverted one. When it comes to food and other resources, the distribution is random. It is queue-oriented, linear. It does not encompass. Its reach is limited. Most are left out, writes Rahnuma Ahmed*
BHAT dey haramjada (Give rice, you bastard) – screamed the graffiti on a wall. It had stunned pedestrians in Dhaka. This was 1974.
In early March, six months before the famine had reached its peak, news of starvation deaths could be heard. Two to three months later, they had become common enough. Occasionally, dead bodies could be seen lying on the street. What had caused the famine of 1974? Amartya Sen, a Nobel Laureate, says that it was a reduction in the ability of people to command food through legal means available in society – in their entitlements to food – that led to the famine. Food crisis, says Sen, is caused not by food shortage but by the shortage of income and purchasing power. On a person’s ability to command commodities, particularly food, under entitlement relations. Starvation and famine are not only economic, says Sen. These are multi-dimensional subjects, they include social, political and legal issues. If groups of people lack purchasing power they can starve, even though markets are well-stocked. Even though food prices are low.
What had caused the famine of 1974? For Devinder Sharma, it was the US government’s decision to withhold 2.2 million tonnes of food aid that was at fault. The US government had wanted to ensure that the Mujib regime ‘abandoned plans to try Pakistani war criminals’. When the Bangladesh finance minister had called upon the US secretary of state, in August 1973, to appeal for food aid, the latter had advised the speedy settlement of disputes with Pakistan. Referring to Bangladesh government’s proposal of ‘war crimes’ trials of the Pakistan army, he had said it was ‘not good to have such trials’. ‘Humanity’ had never learned from war crimes trials, he said. Of course, the Americans had good reasons for saying so. The US ex-secretary of state Henry Kissinger’s name had repeatedly come up. War objectors had demanded that he be tried for US massacres in Vietnam, for America’s role in Bangladesh’s liberation war. That humanity never learns is best exemplified by the US and its allies. Pakistan. Israel. Humanity never learns unless, of course, the criminals are Nazis or Serbians.
But that is not the end of ‘famine is a political weapon’ for the US story. Pressure on the Mujib government returned. In 1974, the US ambassador said no food aid would be given to Bangladesh if it exported jute to Cuba. The Mujib government gave in to US pressure. Jute exports to Cuba were stopped, but by the time food shipments reached, it was too late. Most famine victims had succumbed.
Were there other causes? Some researchers say successive natural disasters, floods and droughts had prefaced the food crisis. Others mention the Awami League government’s lack of foresight in importing foods. In directing subsidised food to the politically vocal urban population, at horrific costs to far poorer rural people. Others stress political and administrative corruption which had encouraged massive hoarding, and the smuggling of food-grains. Many others say it was the gross mismanagement of the economy.
Why do I rehearse these instances from history? Because there are lessons to be learnt. Because it is not enough for either the chief adviser, his advisers, or the army chief to repeatedly say there is no shortage of rice, the markets are well-stocked, more rice is being imported, it will reach soon. Simplistic reasoning, simplistic assertions are not enough. There have been too many famines, too many deaths. Each death was one too many. We must learn from history. That lessons are not being learnt is obvious from what is being said. From the little that is being done. The rice queues keep getting longer.
In 1974 too, world food prices had risen. But the situation is far more grave now. Hard-hit consumers across the globe are protesting. Mexicans rioted in December 2007. Tortilla prices had jumped up; in some parts of Mexico, it was four times higher. In Indonesia, people have protested against the rise in soybean prices. In Burkina Faso, protestors attacked government offices and shops. Demonstrations have also taken place in Guinea, Mauritania, Morocco, Senegal, Uzbekistan, Yemen. Severe weather, rising population, rapid increases in demand for food grain (China, India), speculation in commodity markets are listed as reasons. Also, a growing trend to turn food into fuel. Four hundred and fifty pounds of maize can be converted into enough ethanol to fill the 25-gallon tank of an SUV with pure ethanol at one time. Or it can be used to provide enough calories to feed one person for a year. The competition between food and fuel is encouraged by governmental subsidies given to biofuel in western countries. In non-western nations, that those hardest hit should be provided with income support to help them purchase food is something all concerned agree upon. Simultaneously, it is agreed that governments should increase their investments in agriculture in order to improve agricultural productivity.
The situation in Bangladesh is made peculiar because of its rule by a caretaker government. Because of the fifteen-month-long state of emergency. Recently, the chief adviser, in the light of accusations of poor food distribution, said shortages occur even in countries which have elected governments. Of course they do. That is not the point. The new system of corruption is individualistic, sector-oriented, and technocrat-elitist. It is not tied to constituencies and vote banks which have a nationwide spread, albeit with party lines of exclusion and inclusion. The new system is an introverted one. When it comes to food and other resources, the distribution is random. It is queue-oriented, linear. It does not encompass. Its reach is limited. Most are left out.
The army chief’s versatile kitchen
The army chief, General Moeen U Ahmed, had said, on a visit to Chelopara in Bogra, Bangladeshis should increase the intake of potato in their daily diet. ‘We should not depend only on rice. Of course, we will eat rice but we must increase the intake of potato.’ That will reduce the food crisis, specially the pressure on rice. Potato yields this year have been very high.
A few days later, General Moeen invited the country’s leading editors to the army headquarters. The meeting was followed by a lunch where nine potato dishes were served with plain rice, fresh salad, fried ruhi fish. The potato-based dishes were: potato country curry, potato malai curry, potato noborotno curry, potato pudina curry, potato roller gravy, potato kofta curry, potato pulse curry, potato shak (spinach) curry. (Jaijaidin, April 9, 2008).
The list only proves that the army chief has versatile cooks, a versatile kitchen. But that was never in doubt. Just as his promotion, or his extension was never in doubt.
Street humour
The language of the streets is different from the language of those who rule the land. Emergency restrictions, and the intolerable food crisis has generated jokes that comprise a secret language of sorts between common people. Food jokes, queue jokes have been common elsewhere too.
Such as this one.
A man is queuing for food in Moscow. Finally he’s had enough. He turns round to his friend and says, ‘That’s it. I’m going to kill that Gorbachev,’ and marches off.
Two hours later he comes back. ‘Well,’ says the friend, ‘did you do it?’ ‘No,’ replies the other, ‘there was an even longer queue over there.’
A recent joke, overheard by a friend in Muktagaccha, between two rickshawallas:
So, shorkar says, we have to eat more potatoes. What do you say?
Well, get those high-talking advisers over, have rice, chaff, flour, and potatoes in charis (cattle troughs), let’s see what they eat. I’ll eat what they eat.
Nine types of any food would fill a rickshawalla’s stomach.
*Rahnuma Ahmed is an Anthropologist based in Dhaka, Bangladesh. She can be reached at: rahnuma@drik.net
Friday, April 11, 2008
Olympics and Politics
"If China invites him, he can attend the Beijing Olympics, but under one condition, that is there must be a relaxation of suppression in Tibet,” Prime Minister Samdong Rinpoche said in Dharamsala, the exiled government’s base in north India.
According to Reuters:
"It is really deserving for the Chinese people to host the Olympic Games," he told reporters in Japan. "(Despite) the recent unfortunate event in Tibet, my position won't change."
Monday, April 7, 2008
Daily Notes
Party president Rajnath Singh, in an interview to a news agency, said the BJP would withdraw all minority-appeasement policies of the UPA government...He said his party believed in providing equal opportunity to all sections of society, especially to the economically backward among all communities..."If NDA comes to power, we will cancel all schemes announced by UPA government on the basis of religion," Singh said.
This is revealing the fundamentalist nature of the party.
Srilanka watch reports another minority leader has been assassinated in Srilanka today by LTTE.
Dr. Julia Ljubimova found that air pollution may cause serious brain damage. Last night I was reading a comprehension on the diseased that is created by the enormous stress that the astronauts undergo during their space travels.
The daily times reports that more than 50 rivers of Philipines are endangered due to the pollution.
...Fifty rivers in the Philippines have been destroyed because people are using them to dump their rubbish, leaving some ecologically dead, an official said Wednesday.
Some days ago when I was reading some parts of the book "Power and Terror" I found Turkey to be a great ally of USA and how USA tolerates the crimes or state terrors of Turkey. Have a look:
....It has become a matter of dogma for the foreign policy establishment and much of the American media that Turkey is a "secular democracy". On the basis of strategic considerations and mythical views about the alleged moderation of Turkey, the Western world has stood by and tolerated acts of terror and violence against peaceful Christian communities that would have been denounced and opposed had they occurred elsewhere...
