Friday, September 17, 2010

British Special Forces are undergoing the biggest cuts since the Second World War

 http://rt.com/Top_News/2010-09-16/sas-downsize-budget-slash.html

SAS cuts raise concerns over UK’s military strength

Published 16 September, 2010, 15:16
Edited 17 September, 2010, 02:46

British Special Forces are undergoing the biggest cuts since the Second World War. The Ministry of Defence will be downsizing their elite SAS unit after having its budget slashed.

While the decision may save the government a few pennies, many say the cost of axing members of a global asset spells disaster for the country's future.

World-renowned and notoriously camera-shy, the cream of Britain’s Special Forces is currently at work in Afghanistan. They are seen as one of the greatest assets the UK’s army has to offer, but even they are not immune to government cuts.

The Ministry of Defence is being forced to save between 10% and 20% of its budget. For the SAS, that will mean getting rid of those too old for combat duty, and axing one of its part time battalions.

Bob Paxman used to be in the SAS, and now helps servicemen to overcome post traumatic stress disorder. He wonders what will happen to the men who have spent their lives in extreme situations.

“My concern would be the vast amount of guys that are now going to be out of work, that have been in a military environment, particularly combat environment, hostile environments for a number of years, they all of sudden are going to find themselves with a skills set that they can’t use in a civil community, pretty hacked off for the fact that they are now out of a job, so it is going to be interesting to see what the impact on the social environment in the UK is going to be,” Bob Paxman wonders.
Some say the decision to axe old soldiers is a false economy. They are the ones with the know-how and invaluable experience. Yet as the UK’s economy shrinks, difficult decisions have to be made.

Economists are urging for a proper look at what the UK’s defense needs actually are, rather than just lopping off a bit here and there.

Director General of the Institute of Economic Analysis Mark Littlewood told RT “I think there’s a real problem with approach here, and it does seem that, across the board, the government’s trying to find 10% savings here, 20% there, and I don’t think that sort of salami slicing approach is really going to work.”

“I think what you really need to ask is what are Britain’s military needs going to be over the next 10, 20, 30 years, as far as we can predict them, and then design your armed forces to actually accommodate those strategic concerns, rather than just trying to save on paperclips and stationery,” he concluded.

UK Special Forces have been active in all the major conflicts in recent years: Iraq, Kosovo, East Timor, and now Afghanistan, where 9,500 British troops are currently deployed. The question is whether the British army will be able to play peacekeeping or military roles in foreign conflicts in the future.

At the same time, rising economic powers are also increasing their military forces.

Malcolm Chalmers, who is a Professorial Fellow in British Security Policy at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies (RUSI) points out that “The military capability of countries like China and India is going to continue to rise, because their economy is rising, so that is going to create some nervousness from a period in which NATO countries, and the US most of all, but also most European countries certain enjoyed technological superiority against other states where we are going to move in a more multi-polar world, perhaps Europeans will feel rather uncomfortable about that.”
Not just discomfort, defense cuts ultimately mean European countries will be increasingly dependent on multilateral alliances to ensure their national security.

A defense review is currently underway, with results due to be published in late autumn. What insiders hope for is a wide-reaching decision on the UK’s defense priorities. What some are afraid they are going to get is paper-shuffling and useless cutbacks in Britain’s already over-stretched armed forces.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

World is headed for a global revolution – authors

http://rt.com/Top_News/2010-03-24/bianki-sychev-world-crisis.html
World is headed for a global revolution – authors

The world may have been brought crashing to its knees by the economic crisis, but some say we have not seen anything yet.

The authors of a radical new book, entitled “After the World Crisis”, claim that while America continues to accumulate debt, China is growing ever more powerful, which could trigger a global collapse.

Read more

RT: Sergey Sychev, Valentin Bianki, authors of the book “After the World Crisis”, thank you very much for meeting us today. Valentin, in your book “After the World Crisis” you give advice on how Russia should be acting in times of the global economic crisis. What inspired you for such a global project?

Valentin Bianki: We believe that our viewpoint on what is happening and why it is happening has something to add to the purely economic interpretations, that’s why we had the courage to make statements about this global phenomenon.

RT: Former US Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson in his memoirs says that Russia and China have conspired together to bring down the US dollar. Russia, naturally, refuses to accept such charges, but what’s interesting is that your book actually repeats the idea. Is this a coincidence?

Sergey Sychev: We finished the book at the beginning of 2009. After it was published, we presented it in May, and I personally delivered a copy with an invitation to the US Consulate in St. Petersburg. As far as I know, the CIA works very efficiently. And I have no doubt that the report on our writing traveled up many levels of authority. It might have reached Paulson. Since the book was written as a piece of advice to the Russian government, it might have been interpreted as a non-fictional piece of writing.

RT: Your book also talks about the dollar playing two roles – first, that of the US national currency, and second, that of the world’s global reserve currency. And it goes on to discuss the necessity to have a different reserve currency. How realistic is this and what real prospects does the US dollar face?

VB: To put the book’s idea in a nutshell, it argues that the dollar’s value is bound to drop dramatically and it’s inevitable. The parties to win will depend on how technically this happens and who starts to get rid of the dollars first. The USA might implement the scenario we call the basic one, which consists of staging a series of US-controlled crises across regional markets. When you possess a large mass of money it is easy to saturate a local market with it, thus warming it up. After that, the local market players – for example in Russia – will also start playing on the rising market.

When the initial mass of money cracks down, the market will collapse.

You can do just the same thing to a commodities market. If the USA makes the dollar’s value drop after it arranges the collapse of all the world’s regional and commodities markets, and then buys their newly printed dollars cheaply, it’ll make a huge profit and retain the dollar as the major global currency. On top of that, it will strengthen its position on the global economic scene.

If the downfall of the dollar is caused by other players, China and the USA as the major holders of the US dollar reserve shall get rid of it immediately – unlike Russia which is getting of rid of its dollars now gradually cheaply, and thus will result in the dollar’s collapse. This means that the US economy is not facing a good a time. It will be constrained to one continent and the dollar will no longer be a global currency.

RT: You are also developing the idea that the collapse of the US dollar does not necessarily imply the collapse of the United States. Is this possible?

VB: By staging local and regional crises all over the world the United States is promoting the global perception that the US economy is the only stable economy in the world. No one cares that the EU requirements to the budget deficit are well below 10 per cent, while in case of the United States this figure is a lot higher. Despite this, everyone keeps thinking that the US economy is the most stable and reliable one in the world. They convert their assets into dollars as the only reliable remedy against losing value.

Thus, if I exaggerate just a little, the United States gets to virtually possess all the global capital assets including productive assets and commodities, while the rest of the world gets the stock of dollars. After that, the collapse of the dollar will reduce the US debt and the world’s dollar stock to nothing while the United States will still keep all the global production facilities and commodities.

That’s the scenario, and it’s logically correct. It is hard to believe, but it is free of any logical error, that’s why we think it’s quite possible to happen.

RT: Sergey, it’s quite typical for Russia to blame the United States for all the troubles. We get hit by a crisis and immediately say that it’s America’s fault. What, in your view, are the real causes of the economic crisis? Is it also America’s fault?

SS: In some sense, the crisis was inevitable. When, in 1970, the United States dropped the gold standard and started to trade dollar, the dollar got to be no longer backed by gold or assets. Thus they have the currency but it has no backing reserve. The US debt is growing while the reserve from which to pay it off from is not. This is the first reason for a crisis, whereas the second reason consists of the production having been moved from the United States, the former global production center after World War II, to China and the third world countries. So what are we getting? We are getting the production located in China, Indonesia and India while the centers of consumption are in America and Europe.

So, speaking conventionally, we are in for a global revolution. In the first place, China will realize that it is the major productive power in the world, while the United States is the consumer, and why on Earth should they support them? And the gap only grows. China produces, the United States consumes. The United States is accumulating debt, while China accumulates the real finance and production power.

At some point the US capacity to control this situation became just obvious. In other words it’s not America’ fault, rather it’s something unavoidable. It’s destined, pre-determined by the dominating economic model of consumption.

RT: If we compare the anti-crisis measures in Russia, Europe and Obama’s Stimulus Plan, what would be the difference and what’s more effective, in your opinion?

SS: One should bear in mind that America and Europe have long-standing stable financial institutions. In Russia, they are much younger and less stable. Therefore, the measures are different. I see a great difference in the measures, for instance, Obama in his plan has chosen to finance innovative technology, and thus we talk about a huge investment into in the technology of the future. It may turn out right or wrong. Usually, when you invest in a number of types of technology, only one is going to pay off. Or it can work out as with what the Americans say about their flight to the Moon project – in the end they developed a microchip, and it turned out to be the project’s major achievement. As for us, our plan includes supportive measures. We also plan some investments into future technology, the way Europe and America do, but in a much smaller amount.

RT: Valentin, the world economic crisis has sparked a controversy as to whether a new world financial system is necessary. What should it be like, in your opinion?

VB: The most probable scenario so far is the emergence of dollar-dependent but yet macro-regional currencies. These projects have existed for many years, but it’s only in the last two years that they’ve started to be seriously implemented. The Middle East dinar is a good example. There is a desire and attempts are being made to make the ruble a regional currency, at least through trade with neighboring countries. But the ideal project is the creation of a unified ruble zone with Kazakhstan, Belarus and, possibly, some other country. But despite the fact that attempts are being made, it’s so far difficult to make any forecasts.

RT: What role can Russia play in defining and developing new global economic projects?

SS: Russia has an enormous untapped resource which hasn’t yet been used. It’s Siberia. The key goal at this stage is linked to territorial development. If the crisis keeps developing, and it surely will, an army of unemployed and impoverished people will appear in Europe. Why not repeat a move which America did in the 19th Century, when vast territories in the Wild West were simply handed out to immigrants for development.

We can grant people from Europe declarative citizenship and allocate land allotments in the Siberia and the Far East where there are plenty of agricultural lands and forests.

We will replenish our dwindling population and will be able to develop a region which is now deserted.

So far we don’t have enough internal resources to develop these territories. We should attract population who will care for this land.

RT: As a rule, economic processes impact the formation of socio-political systems or tend to alter them. How can modern economic cataclysms affect the general political world order?

VB: It’s highly probable that a geopolitical balance will be restructured. The location of points of growth, of macro regions that will change their fundamental role in the world, will be important. But processes linked to a new hypothetical model of social set-up under the impact of economic issues are even more interesting. The introduction of the notorious Tobin tax on financial transactions, or a measure like the establishment of trade limits in order to prevent a situation when some countries sell and others buy goods from a couple of countries with an effective mechanism of sanctions – all this can also change the general motivation of the planet’s population. This blocks a trend to super-consumption which is infecting all countries after Europe and the United States. Another direction, which can bring about fundamental changes, though formally it is little linked to the economic crisis, is the development of new advanced technology and biotechnology. With a certain degree of probability, super breakthroughs can be expected in either of these two areas. A country that will be able to carry out such projects will be able to change the world economic set-up and the balance of power.

RT: Sergey, what ways of Russia’s foreign economic development seem optimal to you? What are our nearest priorities?

SS: Russia should be interested in itself, and the task of the government is to work for the sake of the country. In this sense, America is pursuing an ideal policy. It’s so egoistic and so oriented at defending the interests of the American people that we do have to learn how to do it from the United States. We have problems of under-developed territories, infrastructure and under-developed sectors of the economy which are easy to develop.

The second thing is ideology. This is something what the state and the government should deal with. It’s important to create new motivation among people. Today we have the motivation to consume: conspicuous consumption determines a person’s status. We should start forming the motivation to produce.

It’s necessary to advocate profit, innovation and technical inventions. If we are going to be as purposeful as Western countries in doing that, then our efforts will be rewarded and will certainly produce good results.

RT: Has the crisis stopped or is it just the beginning of global changes?

SS: I think that it hasn’t even started. So far the government has been curing its symptoms as it tried to suppress its most vivid manifestations in 2008-2009. The underlying reason of America’s debt and imbalance of production remains. But America is only building up its debt and is entering a stage of a much deeper crisis which is inevitable.

http://rt.com/Top_News/2010-03-24/bianki-sychev-world-crisis.html

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

WikiLeaks invites many questions about Afghan war

http://rt.com/Top_News/2010-07-27/wikileaks-questions-afghanistan-war.html
WikiLeaks invites many questions about Afghan war


Published 27 July, 2010, 03:03

One of the biggest leaks in US military history has exposed several cover-ups in the war in Afghanistan, including the deaths of hundreds of civilians.

The whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks.org published more than 90,000 pages of classified materials covering the war in Afghanistan. The memos reveal the secret efforts of coalition forces to hunt down and “kill or capture” senior Taliban and al-Qaeda figures.

The leak also showed growing evidence that Iran and Pakistan might be supporting Taliban fighters. They also indicate that the Taliban are stronger than ever, in part thanks to alleged support from Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) – despite billions of dollars in recent US aid to Pakistan. The White House said that although the leaked Pentagon files and field reports were no surprise, they threaten national security.

White House Press secretary Robert Gibbs said WikiLeaks’ decision to publish the documents “has a potential to be very harmful” to the US military and to US allies. The leak “poses a very real and potential threat to those that are working hard every day to keep us safe,” said Gibbs.

Already rumblings on Capitol Hill indicate that the leaks may indeed affect US war policy. Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.), the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, indicated that the leak could have political consequences for the president.

"However illegally these documents came to light, they raise serious questions about the reality of America's policy toward Pakistan and Afghanistan," Kerry said in a statement. "Those policies are at a critical stage and these documents may very well underscore the stakes and make the calibrations needed to get the policy right more urgent."

It will probably take weeks for experts and news organizations to fully process the massive trove of leaked classified ‘war diaries’ about the Afghanistan war. But for now, the leak leaves all too many questions about the war effort unanswered.

WikiLeaks opted to distribute its leaked material to a handful of international media outlets, specifically Der Spiegel, The Guardian and the New York Times. RT Contributor Danny Schechter argued that this change in approach was to maximize the impact.

“They didn’t want this to be buried, marginalized, sidelines and treated as just some internet phenomenon. By going to major newspapers in the world that gave legitimacy to their story; it also made it a global story unlike the Pentagon Papers which was covered by The New York Times and Washington Post,” said Schechter.

The story has been covered by media worldwide, which has both embellished the role of WikiLeaks and promoted the story, argued Schechter.

The US government has come out in opposition to the leak, saying it is a threat to US national security.

“We know that truth is always the first casualty in war,” said Schechter. “The United States government has a big apparatus in a sense to manage and muzzle news and information to try and kind of engineer perception of the public and so of course, they tend to emphasize the positive, they downplay the negative. Many journalists have been frustrated by the lack of access to the facts and to the pentagon. They’re kept on a leach, they’re embedded selectively,” said Schechter.

He argued that there is a lack of trust in the Pentagon and the Pentagon’s motives. WikiLeaks and journalists do what they do in support of the truth and democracy.


Brian Becker, the national coordinator for the ANSWER Coalition argued that the Pentagon and White House will likely do their best to target and indicate those who have “dared to tell the truth.”

“The government of the United States, currently the Obama administration, before that the Bush administration, and all of those politicians who wear uniforms who are the Pentagon high command, that they have in fact been lying to the people about the conduct of the war, the purpose of the war and the outcome of the war, and most importantly these documents in their broadest context reveal that these politicians, Obama and before him Bush, knew that the war could not be won and yet they’re expanding the war because they don’t know what else to do,” said Becker.

He argued that the leaders simply do not want to take the responsibility for their failure and have continued to sacrifice American lives.

“So, of course they’d like to indict or criminalize those who have told the truth, but I hope the American people stand up, and I think they will,” said Becker.

He argued that those who stand up at great risk to bring the truth to the people are “the greatest public servants”

“This is in fact the beginning of the end of any public support, as nominal as it is already, for the Afghanistan war,” said Becker.

Courtesy: RT Russian international English TV

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

“Greek bailout is mass robbery”

http://rt.com/Top_News/2010-05-11/greece-bailout-pensions-cut.html

“Greek bailout is mass robbery”


Published 11 May, 2010, 08:43

Greece has kick–started talks on implementing its new economic austerity measures despite warnings of new union rallies. The plans will see pensions slashed and the retirement age increased.

The measures were a prerequisite for an international loan to pluck the country from the brink of bankruptcy. Earlier the EU and the IMF agreed to a rescue package worth a whopping €750 billion.

It is hoped it will prevent the Greek crisis from having a knock-on effect on other European nations. Member states will be able to draw on the funds to defend their economies.

US radio host Alex Jones says the plan will merely hit tax payers even harder in the pocket, and has compared Greece to the situation in America two years ago.

Read more

“Just like we had the financial terrorism of 2008, where Henry Paulson and other people from Goldman Sachs who were controlling the federal government went in and threatened Congress with total financial collapse and ‘martial law’. The same thing has now been done in Europe and they are not really sure where this money is going to,” Jones said.

“These nations are going to have to pay off the private banks – banks with derivatives made up of tens of trillions of toxic assets that weren’t real. They sold them at full price. Now the governments own these and are in big financial trouble, so they are telling people: ‘We are going to have to take all or part of your pension funds to pay for this bailout.’ But it is not really a bailout; it is a mass robbery. This is just the greatest crime of history. The whole world is held hostage by these private central banks – they are just financially conquering nation after nation,” he added.


Greece : Deals to Secure an EU-IMF Bailout?!!!

http://rt.com/Top_News/2010-04-30/greeks-angry-defense-deal.html

Debt-ridden Greeks angry at defense deal

Published 30 April, 2010, 13:37

The European Union is due to agree on the final details of an emergency rescue for Greece’s debt-ridden economy.

....Many Greeks are furious that the government wants to slash salaries and pensions, but not defense bills...

..Greece began to cut its public spending starting with salaries, schools, and other social programs....

..Despina Koutsoumba is a member of the Greek Civil Servants Trade Union, and a mother and activist. She is fighting to make rent, and wants answers from her government. “From the salary cuts in the entire public sector including the pensions, they will gain 1 billion euros,” Koutsoumba said. “And they will spend 2.5 billion to buy six warships from France. Why?”

Implications are flying that these deals helped secure an EU-IMF Bailout.

“It’s a very extraordinary situation: the same governments, the same leaders, who are pushing Greece to cut expenses to cut our deficit are pushing us to buy more military equipment from their governments or military enterprises,” stated Dimitrius Papadimoulis, an MP from the Radical coalition.

Protesters claim Greece isn’t fighting for its own national interest but for third parties.

“We have NATO here, Frontex and other global organizations that cost us a lot of money and make us spend a lot of money,” said Koutsoumba. “It’s not only the defense budget for buying weapons for Greece, it’s money we spend to send soldiers elsewhere… why do we need Greek soldiers in Afghanistan?”

Despina wants answers because she wants a future.

“Now, we know that next year will be worse and worse and worse,” she said. “We don’t have control of our lives… you know I have a child and I wanted – I’m 36 years old – to have a second child and now I’m thinking, can I afford to have second child… can I afford to keep my house?"


Courtesy: RT TV Autonomous non-profit organization (ANO) “TV-Novosti”, Channel

Sunday, April 25, 2010

A QUIET CASE OF ETHNIC CLEANSING

http://www.interfaithstrength.com/Collusion.htm


A QUIET CASE OF ETHNIC CLEANSING

PART TWO: ISLAMIST ATTACKS AND GOVERNMENT COLLUSION

Dr. Richard L. Benkin

http://www.InterfaithStrength.com

drrbenkin@comcast.net



This is the second installment of a four-part series about the ongoing persecution and ethnic cleansing of the millions-strong Bangladeshi Hindus. Most of the direct attacks come from Islamist radicals who are assuming an every prominent role in Bangladeshi society, government, and police. But their ability to continue their systematic destruction of the Hindu community is possible only through the government’s inaction (at best) or tacit approval. Part One explored the historical roots of this genocide-in-waiting. This second part reviews current actions by radicals and governments.


The ethnic cleansing of Bangladeshi Hindus has intensified in recent years. Although no human rights NGO or the UN Human Rights Commission has taken up this matter; several individual South Asians, some authors and journalists, and a few ersatz organizations have attempted to do something to bring this matter to light. Some Muslims, Shoaib Choudhury in particular and fundamentalist leader Kazi Azizul Huq, are raising the issue as well. In February 2007, I received a fax from a Hindu living outside of Kolkata, India. His parents had been forced out of Bangladesh, and his family had fled to the Indian state of West Bengal. His story is not very different from what I have heard from many Bangladeshi Hindus, except that Bikash Halder decided that he could not let his own two children or those of his co-religionists grow up in a world no different from the one he knew. He had heard of me from my human rights work in Bangladesh and located a Hindu attorney in Dhaka, whom Shoaib Choudhury and I work with and whom I had met when I was in Dhaka the previous month. His message was that Bangladeshi Hindus were suffering, and they needed my help. I had received a number of reports to the effect but had not been involved beyond some protests to the Bangladeshis about their treatment of minorities and some speeches I had made while in the country.



It is difficult to get exact figures on the number of Bangladeshi Hindus and their descendants living in India since so much of the movement takes place under the legal radar. Complicating matters further is the fact that there has been extensive movement of economic refugees across the border, as well as deliberate “infiltration” (to use the term current in India) of Bangladeshi Muslims into West Bengal. Even so, after more contact with Halder and others, the full and frightening extent of their condition became clear. So, at the request of several individuals and groups working for the refugees, I traveled to West Bengal and elsewhere in India where I spent the better part of February 2008. I visited over a dozen refugee camps (some semi-legal, most illegal); spoke with dozens of refugees; held private and clandestine meetings with informants; and addressed public forums on the plight of the refugees and what we could do working together.

Numerous refugees testified about “atrocities” committed by Islamist radicals inside Bangladesh. These included beatings, murders, mutilations, ritualized gang rapes, and forced eviction from their lands. In camp after camp, informants told of one or another relative or neighbor being murdered by the radicals as a warning (often repeated explicitly) to abandon their property and leave the area. Most of the camps I visited were in the northern part of West Bengal, and so the vast majority of refugees had fled from areas in Bangladesh’s northwestern or western districts. Another common incident the refugees related involved the random abduction of young Hindu women and girls. These unfortunate females were raped and held by one of their captors then forcibly married to him. Now, to be sure, the women were left with little choice, even without the physical restraint and intimidation that was applied to them. In these traditional villages, rape victims are considered to have shamed their families and so are not welcomed back or defended. Regardless of how heinous we find such attitudes, they play right into the radicals’ calculations. For the process insures that all offspring will then be raised as Muslims in an all-Muslim environment, and a potential source of Hindu offspring will be prevented from fulfilling that role. The logic is not out of keeping with how radicals target Christians in certain areas of the Middle East and in other traditional societies. It also parallels the practice of Palestinian terrorists. During periods of frequent suicide bombings, they would deliberately target Israeli venues that are populated heavily by women of childbearing age, teenagers, and other young people. There is extensive statistical evidence to support this, and to believe this documented pattern is a coincidence and not a deliberate and genocidal plan would be naïve.


One informant told me of an incident—and he said this sort of thing was very common in Bangladesh—whereby a chicken of his roamed into the yard of a Muslim neighbor. The neighbor seized the chicken and ate it. When the owner of the bird confronted him about this, the neighbor replied that he did it because he was Muslim and could. In fact, despite Bangladeshi assurances to the contrary, Hindus and other religious minorities do not enjoy equal rights in that country. When government representatives point to formalistic laws that guarantee equal rights, I tend to respond by likening them to one of the most beautifully-written documents I ever read; to wit, the Stalinist constitution of the Soviet Union. While it went on about freedom and equality, the circumstances on the ground were anything but free and equal. Thus, the refugees also reported an almost universal pattern whereby they would go to the local Bangladeshi authorities for help and protection after an attack or threat. Yet, not one person reported receiving any help; in fact, the common response they reported from the officials was for them to abandon their property and quit Bangladesh. Others who have faced religious or political persecution in Bangladesh report identical experiences with the authorities. My own experiences with them are identical. Further, there is a good deal of anecdotal evidence from victims of numerous incidents in which not only Islamists but also members of the local government actually participated in the attacks.


Kazi Azizul Huq of the Khalefat Andolin Bangladesh said that I needed to take care in accepting stories of Islamist attacks. No doubt, he said, they do occur, but he asserted that many of the Hindus have left voluntarily even abandoning or selling their lands. Huq is a fundamentalist Muslim and a good man who supports action to protect Bangladeshi minorities and other similar action. And no doubt, some of the refugees really did leave Bangladesh of their own volition for economic reasons. But it is also clear that most “voluntary” transactions by Hindus are often less than voluntarily; some not voluntary at all. If one lacks basic rights and protections that all citizens of society can expect, then they are not in control of their destinies. If they have seen others attacked and the authorities refuse to protect them; or heard those same authorities tell them to leave the country; the decision to emigrate is undertaken independent of any truly free will. Let us remember that countless German Jews voluntarily transferred their properties in the 1930s.



These anti-minority actions have been taking place for decades with impunity. The rest of the world has turned a deaf ear to their cries, a blind eye to their suffering. Refugees told me about attacks going back to a time when Bangladesh was still East Pakistan. More frightening, except for the few years after Bangladeshi independence, the attacks have proceeded rather almost non-stop. My own informants are by no means the only source of evidence for the persecution of religious minorities in Bangladesh. Two organizations with chapters in North America, Europe, and of course South Asia—the Human Rights Congress for Bangladesh Minorities and the Bangladesh Hindu Buddhist Christian Unity Council—have been documenting atrocities against Bangladeshi minorities for years. They also have been trying valiantly to inform people of the dire situation of their Bangladeshi co-religionists; but there has been no effective response to their pleas. As a Jewish man, I cannot help but be struck by these cries for help and draw parallels to similar cries of my own people in Europe during the 1930s. They, too, tried to warn the world about a rising dictator and dangerous with genocidal designs on them. Their co-religionists elsewhere tried to sound that alarm bell, too; but then, too, there was no effective response. The consequences proved disastrous not only for Jewry but for the rest of the world, as well.

========================================================

Dr. Richard L. Benkin is an independent human rights activist who first gained notoriety for his successful fight to free Bangladeshi journalist Salah Uddin Shoaib Choudhury from imprisonment and torture in 2005. Since then, he has continued to advocate for Mr. Choudhury’s rights—are constantly under attack by the government of

Bangladesh—and for other human rights issues. Most recently, he took a fact finding trip to West Bengal and other areas in India to confirm the ethnic cleansing of Bangladeshi Hindus and the severity of their current situation even in India.


Dr. Benkin is available for talks and seminars:


Part I: The Roots of Ethnic Cleansing
Part III: Rightless and Vulnerable
Part IV: What Must be Done


http://www.InterfaithStrength.com