Bengal vs Bangldesh–The struggle continues: BNP vs AL

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Bengal vs Bangldesh–The struggle continues: BNP vs ALRupee News

The Many visions of Sonar Bangla: Bengal vs Bangladesh vs Bangastan vs Brohit Bengal vs Ahand Bharat vs Pakistan–The struggle continues: Bangladesh’s Indian backed regime against BNP leaders

Continent of Dinia and dependencies Large Ch. Rehmat Ali Big map

There are many visions of Sonar Bangla. None of them include slavery to the Hinduvta.

Greater Bangladesh

Greater Bangladesh

The current crisis in Bangladesh is not just between two political parties, it is a struggle for the life and death of Muslim Bengal and its struggle for independence from enslavement and servitude. The struggle is between the two visions, one Akhand Bharat and the Muslim Ummah. Dhaka Diary: Bangladesh fights India’s hegemony designs. The introspective convulsions for Bengali nationalism are today as raw as they were a century ago- the schism between secularism and Indian betrayal has created a new wave of Muslim brotherhood that defying gravity in Dhaka has taken a life of its own.

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  • Bengal vs Bangldesh–The struggle continues: BNP vs AL
  • It is pedantic to look into the events of yesteryear. Plassey to Bangistan dream to Bangladesh to Brohit Bengal

    Map of the partition of Bengal October 24th 1906

    Map of the partition of Bengal October 24th 1906

    The parition of Bengal was a seminal event in the history of the Subcontinent. Partition of Bengal’s implications for Bangladesh & Pakistan then and now

    Religious riots in 1947: Who were the architects? After the debacle of December 16th 2001, the Muslim Bengalis were disappointed that Hindu Bengalis failed to rise to the call of Bengali nationalism. They were stupefied that even though Hindu Benglais supported the cause of Bengali nationalism as long as it was directed against Pakistan, the same Hindu Benglais would not support them for a secular Sonar Bangla away from India.

     Bengal 1700 -1792 map Bengladesh and West Bengal map

    Bengal 1700 -1792 map Bengladesh and West Bengal map

    This rejection of Bengali nationalism came as a rude awakening to the Bengalis who felt jilted, and a bit confused. Benglai nationalism that rose at the expense of the Muslim ummah was now at opposite ends with the Muslim identity of Bengalis. The Bengalis of Bangladesh are divided between the Bangladeshis who want a non-subservient Bangal versus the Benglais who are loyal to the Indian elites of Kolkota who have been pumping them for a secular status.

    Shaikh Mujib's body lay in the streets of daysBangladesh 14th August 1975: Shaikh Mujib’s body lay in the streets of days

    Shaikh Mujib Ur Rehman after banning all the opposition parties, declaring himself dictaor and “president of life signed a treaty of Bangladesh with India which pretty much would have absorbed Bangladesh into India. The Bengali patriots struggled to get away from Indian clutches on August 14th, 1975 when they assassinated Shaikh Mujib Ur Rehaman and the patriots left his body to rot on the street for a week. The Bangladesh Jamat e Islam (JEI) and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) struggled against Indian imperialism and attempts by the Awami League to absorb Muslim Bengal back into India. 

    The JEI and the BNP were taking Bangladesh into an independent mode. The current regime backed by India has not only halted the process but is reversing it. Many Bangladeshi intellectuals are calling these events worse than the defeat of Nawab Siruj Ud Daulah at Plassy (June 23rd 1757: The Bttle of Plassy where Lord Clive defeats the standing Muslim patriot Nawab Sirij Ud Dualah–day the decline of the Muslims started and was transformed into enslavement) or the cancellation of the partition of Bengal in 1911. 

    India will only accept compliiant leaders in Dhaka who are ready to accept orders from New Delhi.

    Bangladesh boats

    Within a hundred years of the Battle of Plassy the entire Subcontinent was in the hands of foreign powers and in 1857 the last Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar was exiled to Rangoon, Burma. The reason for the defeat of the Muslims was because when one was attacked the other kept silent. Today both Bangladesh and Pakistan face threats from India.

    Greater Bangladesh map with Muglea corridor

    The Bengalis of Muslim Bengal thought that they had achieved “liberation” after 1971. They never imagined that the percieved and actual discrimination from West Pakistanis would be a picnic compared to the servitude that awaited them for the next few centuries.

    Today the Bengalis have not only questioned the basis of Bangladesh but also shown a desire for military and economic cooperation with Pakistan–the only country that could possibly keep Muslim Bengal into slipping into the condition that existed in Bengal after the cancellation of the partition of Bengal in 1911.

    Bangladesh Pakistan renunion
    BD ready to free Khaleda Zia’   Wednesday, July 09, 2008
    DHAKA: Bangladesh’s military-backed government is ready to free former prime minister Khaleda Zia so she can get medical treatment abroad, the country’s interim leader said in comments published on Tuesday.

    Fakhruddin Ahmed said the government would extend the “same gesture” that it extended to Zia’s bitter rival Sheikh Hasina Wajed, who was released last month as part of a deal to avert a boycott of general elections by her party.

    “Sheikh Hasina was released through a legal process for her treatment abroad and the government has issued notification in this regard,” Ahmed was quoted as saying by the private UNB news agency.

    “If she (Khaleda) desires, the same gesture will be extended to her – there is no hesitation about it,” Ahmed said in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur, where he is attending a summit of the D-8 group of developing nations.

    Zia, who has been detained since September last year as part of a government crackdown on graft, has repeatedly said she would rather stay at home and treat her troubled knees and acute arthritis in local hospitals.

    The two-time former premier has demanded that the government should instead send her two sons – also detained on graft charges and declared sick by courts – abroad for better treatment. The secretary-general of her Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), Khandaker Delwar Hossain, has accused the government of trying to force Zia out of the country in the name of her getting treatment abroad.

    Last month the government freed Sheikh Hasina and allowed her to travel to the United States for ear treatment.

    Hours after her release, Sheikh Hasina led her Awami League to a meeting with the government and announced that the party would take part in general elections scheduled to be held in December this year.

    The current government came to power in January 2007 after a state of emergency was imposed and polls cancelled.

    The administration is keen to ensure the participation of the Awami League and BNP – the main parties in Bangladesh – so the polls due later this year will be credible. Both parties had refused to hold talks to plan for an election in December, which is aimed at restoring the country to democratic rule, because their leaders have been in detention.

    Last year the interim government tried to force both Sheikh Hasina and Zia into exile as part of an effort to clean up Bangladesh’s notoriously corrupt political system, but they refused to leave and were put on trial instead.

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