Wednesday, November 22, 2017

HISTORY OF BANGLADESH

BANGLADESH

National Flag BD

1 Etymology
2 History
     (a) Early and medieval periods
     (b) Islamization
     (c) British Empire
     (d) Partition of Bengal
    
      
Etymology....

The etymology of Bangladesh (Country of Bengal) can be traced to the early 20th century, when Bengali patriotic songs, such as Namo Namo Namo Bangladesh Momo by Kazi Nazrul Islam and Aaji Bangladesher Hridoy by Rabindranath Tagore, used the term. The term Bangladesh was often written as two words, Bangladesh, in the past. Starting in the 1950s, Bengali nationalists used the term in political rallies in East Pakistan. The term Bangla is a major name for both the Bengal region and the Bengali language. The earliest known usage of the term is the Nesari plate in 805 AD. The term Vangaladesa is found in (11th century) South Indian records.

The term gained official status during the Sultanate of Bengal in the 14th century. Shamsuddin Ilyas Shah proclaimed himself as the first "Shah of Bangala" in 1342. The word Bangla became the most common name for the region during the Islamic period. The Portuguese referred to the region as Bengala in the 16th century.

The origins of the term Bangla are unclear, with theories pointing to a Bronze Age proto-Dravidian tribe,the Austric word "Bonga" (Sun god), and the Iron Age Vanga Kingdom. The Indo-Aryan suffix Desh is derived from the Sanskrit word deśha, which means "land" or "country". Hence, the name Bangladesh means "Land of Bengal" or "Country of Bengal".



[History]

Early and medieval periods...

Gold coin (about 670 CE) from the reign of King Rajabhata of the Khadga dynasty
Stone Age tools found in Bangladesh indicate human habitation for
over 20,000 years, and remnants of Copper Age settlements date back 4,000 years. Ancient Bengal was settled by Austroasiatics, Tibeto-Burmans, Dravidians and Indo-Aryans in consecutive waves of migration. Archaeological evidence confirms that by the second millennium BCE, rice-cultivating communities inhabited the region. By the 11th century people lived in systemically-aligned housing, buried their dead, and manufactured copper ornaments and black and red pottery.The Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna rivers were natural arteries for communication and transportation,and estuaries on the Bay of Bengal permitted maritime trade. The early Iron Age saw the development of metal weaponry, coinage, agriculture and irrigation. Major urban settlements formed during the late Iron Age, in the mid-first millennium BCE, when the Northern Black Polished Ware culture developed. In 1879, Alexander Cunningham identified Mahasthangarh as the capital of the Pundra Kingdom mentioned in the Rigveda.

Greek and Roman records of the ancient Gangaridai Kingdom, which (According to legend) deterred the invasion of Alexander the Great, are linked to the fort city in Wari-Bateshwar.The site is also identified with the prosperous trading center of Souanagoura listed on Ptolemy's world map. Roman geographers noted a large seaport in southeastern Bengal, corresponding to the present-day Chittagong region.

Ancient Buddhist and Hindu states which ruled Bangladesh included the Vanga, Samatata and Pundra kingdoms, the Maurya and Gupta Empires, the Varman dynasty, Shashanka's kingdom, the Khadga and Candra dynasties, the Pala Empire, the Sena dynasty, the Harikela kingdom and the Deva dynasty. These states had well-developed currencies, banking, shipping, architecture and art, and the ancient universities of Bikrampur and Mainamati hosted scholars and students from other parts of Asia. Xuanzang of China was a noted scholar who resided at the Somapura Mahavihara (the largest monastery in ancient India), and Atisa traveled from Bengal to Tibet to preach Buddhism. The earliest form of the Bengali language began to the emerge during the eighth century.


Islamization...

The 15th-century Sixty Dome Mosque built during the Bengal Sultanate is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site
Early Muslim explorers and missionaries arrived in Bengal late in the first millennium CE. The Islamic conquest of Bengal began with the 1204 invasion by Bakhtiar Khilji; after annexing Bengal to the Delhi Sultanate, Khilji waged a military campaign in Tibet. Bengal was ruled by the Delhi Sultanate for a century by governors from the Khilji, Mamluk, Balban and Tughluq dynasties. During the 14th century, an independent Bengal Sultanate was established by rebel governors. The sultanate's ruling houses included the Ilyas Shahi, Jalaluddin Muhammad Shah, Hussain Shahi, Suri and Karrani dynasties, and the era saw the introduction of a distinct mosque architecture and the tangka currency. The Arakan region was brought under Bengali hegemony. The Bengal Sultanate was visited by explorers Ibn Battuta, Admiral Zheng He and Niccolo De Conti. During the late 16th century, the Baro-Bhuyan (a confederation of Muslim and Hindu aristocrats) ruled eastern Bengal; its leader was the Mansad-e-Ala, a title held by Isa Khan and his son Musa Khan. The Khan dynasty are considered local heroes for resisting North Indian invasions with their river navies.

The wall carvings on the 17th-century Atia Mosque built during the Mughal Empire
The Mughal Empire controlled Bengal by the 17th century. During the reign of Emperor Akbar, the Bengali agrarian calendar was reformed to facilitate tax collection. The Mughals established Dhaka as a fort city and commercial metropolis, and it was the capital of Mughal Bengal for 75 years.In 1666, the Mughals expelled the Arakanese from Chittagong. Mughal Bengal attracted foreign traders for its muslin and silk goods, and the Armenians were a notable merchant community. A Portuguese settlement in Chittagong flourished in the southeast, and a Dutch settlement in Rajshahi existed in the north. During the 18th century, the Nawabs of Bengal became the region's de facto rulers. The Nawabs forged alliances with European colonial companies, which made the region relatively prosperous early in the century.

The Bengali Muslim population was a product of conversion and religious evolution,and their pre-Islamic beliefs included elements of Buddhism and Hinduism. The construction of mosques, Islamic academies (madrasas) and Sufi monasteries (khanqahs) facilitated conversion, and Islamic cosmology played a significant role in developing Bengali Muslim society. Scholars have theorized that Bengalis were attracted to Islam by its egalitarian social order, which contrasted with the Hindu caste system. By the 15th century, Muslim poets were writing in the Bengali language. Notable medieval Bengali Muslim poets included Daulat Qazi
Abdul Hakim and Alaol. Syncretic cults, such as the Baul movement, emerged on the fringes of Bengali Muslim society. The Persianate culture was significant in Bengal, where cities like Sonargaon became the easternmost centers of Persian influence.




British Empire...

Prime Ministers of Bengal A. K. Fazlul HuqKhawaja Nazimuddin and H. S. Suhrawardy

Main articles: Presidencies and provinces of British India, British Raj, Eastern Bengal and Assam, and Legislatures of British India

After the 1757 Battle of Plassey, Bengal was the first region of the Indian subcontinent conquered by the British East India Company. The company formed the Presidency of Fort William, which administered the region until 1858. A notable aspect of company rule was the Permanent Settlement, which established the feudal zamindari system. A number of famines, including the great Bengal famine of 1770, occurred under company rule. Several rebellions broke out during the early 
(including one led by Titumir), but British rule displaced the Muslim ruling class. A conservative Islamic cleric, Haji Shariatullah, sought to overthrow the British by propagating Islamic revivalism. Several towns in Bangladesh participated in the Indian Mutiny and pledged allegiance to the last Mughal emperor, Bahadur Shah Zafar, who was later exiled to neighboring Burma.

The challenge posed to company rule by the failed Indian Mutiny led to the creation of the British Indian Empire as a crown colony, and the first railway was built in 1862. Syed Ahmed Khan and Ram Mohan Roy promoted modern and liberal education on the subcontinent, inspiring the Aligarh movement and the Bengal Renaissance. During the late 19th century, novelists, social reformers and feminists emerged from Muslim Bengali society. Electricity and municipal water systems were introduced in the 1890s; cinemas opened in many towns during the early 20th century. East Bengal's plantation economy was important to the British Empire, particularly its jute and tea. The British established tax-free river ports, such as the Port of Narayanganj, and large seaports like the Port of Chittagong.
Social tensions also increased under British rule, particularly between wealthy Hindus and the Muslim-majority population. The Permanent Settlement made millions of Muslim peasants tenants of Hindu estates, and resentment of the Hindu landed gentry grew. Supported by the Muslim aristocracy, the British government created the province of Eastern Bengal and Assam in 1905; the new province received increased investment in education, transport and industry. However, the first partition of Bengal created an uproar in Calcutta and the Indian National Congress. In response to growing Hindu nationalism, the All India Muslim League was formed in Dhaka during the 1906 All India Muhammadan Educational Conference. The British government reorganized the provinces in 1912, reuniting East and West Bengal and making Assam a second province.

The Raj was slow to allow self-rule in the colonial subcontinent. It established the Bengal Legislative Council in 1862, and the
A. K. Fazlul Huq, the first prime minister of Bengal, with Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore
council's native Bengali representation increased during the early 20th century. The Bengal Provincial Muslim League was formed in 1913 to advocate civil rights for Bengali Muslims within a constitutional framework. During the 1920s, the league was divided into factions supporting the Khilafat movement and favoring cooperation with the British to achieve self-rule. Segments of the Bengali elite supported Mustafa Kemal Ataturk secularist forces. In 1929, the All Bengal Tenants Association was formed in the Bengal Legislative Council to counter the influence of the Hindu landed gentry, and the Indian Independence and Pakistan Movements strengthened during the early 20th century. After the Morley-Minto Reforms and the diarchy era in the legislatures of British India, the British government promised limited provincial autonomy in 1935. The Bengal Legislative Assembly, British India's largest legislature, was established in 1937.
Although it won a majority of seats in 1937, the Bengal Congress boycotted the legislature. A. K. Fazlul Huq of the Krishak Praja Party was elected as the first Prime Minister of Bengal. In 1940 Huq supported the Lahore Resolution, which envisaged independent states in the northwestern and eastern Muslim-majority regions of the subcontinent. The first Huq ministry, a coalition with the Bengal Provincial Muslim League, lasted until 1941; it was followed by a Huq coalition with the Hindu Mahasabha which lasted until 1943. Huq was succeeded by Khawaja Nazimuddin, who grappled with the effects of the Burma Campaign, the Bengal famine of 1943 and the Quit India movement. In 1946, the Bengal Provincial Muslim League won the provincial election, taking 113 of the 250-seat assembly (The largest Muslim League mandate in British India). H. S. Suhrawardy, who made a final futile effort for a United Bengal in 1946, was the last premier of Bengal.

The All India Muslim League's Lahore Resolution Working Committee, in which Bengal was represented by A. K. Fazlul Huq and Khawaja Nazimuddin

Partition of Bengal...

Main article: Partition of Bengal (1947)
On 3 June 1947 Mountbatten Plan outlined the partition of British India. On 20 June, the Bengal Legislative Assembly met to decide on the partition of Bengal. At the preliminary joint meeting, it was decided (120 votes to 90) that if the province remained united it should join the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan. At a separate meeting of legislators from West Bengal, it was decided (58 votes to 21) that the province should be partitioned and West Bengal should join the Constituent Assembly of India. At another meeting of legislators from East Bengal, it was decided (106 votes to 35) that the province should not be partitioned and (107 votes to 34) that East Bengal should join the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan if Bengal was partitioned.On 6 July, the Sylhet region of Assam voted in a referendum to join East Bengal.

Cyril Radcliffe was tasked with drawing the borders of Pakistan and India, and the Radcliffe Line established the borders of present-day Bangladesh. The Dominion of Pakistan was created on 14 August 1947.

Monday, November 20, 2017

BANGLADESH

BANGLADESH
NATIONAL FLAG
EMBLEM

Government Seal of Bangladesh

Capital: Dhaka
Dialing code: +880
Capital and largest city: Dhaka; 23°42′N 90°21′E / 23.700°N 90.350°E
Population: 163 million (2016) World Bank
President: Abdul Hamid
Prime minister: Sheikh Hasina


Capital Dhaka
and largest city  
23°42′N 90°21′E

           Religion       
 86.6%             Islam
 12.1%             Hinduism
 0.6%               Buddhism
 0.4%               Christianity
 0.3%               Others

Demonym Bangladeshi

Government Unitary parliamentary republic

 President
  Abdul Hamid




 Prime Minister
  Sheikh Hasina
         

 House Speaker
  Shirin Sharmin Chaudhury

 Chief Justice  
Md. Abdul Wahhab Miah (Acting 207)


                             

 Area
 Total
147,570[5] km2 (56,980 sq mi) (92nd)
 Water (6.4%)

 Legislature Jatiya Sangsad
 Formation and independence
 Partition of Bengal and end of the British Raj
 14–15 August 1947


 Independence declared from Pakistan
26 March 1971
Recognized
16 December 1971
 Constitution
4 November 1972
 Last territorial admission
31 July 2015


Population
• 2016 estimate
162,951,560 (8th)
• 2011 census
149,772,364 (8th)
• Density
1,106/km2 (2,864.5/sq mi) (10th)

GDP (PPP) 2017 estimate
• Total
$686.598 billion (33rd)
• Per capita
$4,207 (139th)

GDP (nominal) 2017 estimate
• Total
$248.853 billion(45th)
• Per capita
$1,524(148th)

Gini (2010) 32.1
medium
HDI (2016) Increase 0.579
medium · 139th


Currency   Taka (৳) (BDT)
Time zone BST (UTC+6)
        Date format        
      dd-mm-yyyy

BS দদ-মম-বববব (CE−594)
Drives on the left
Calling code      +880
ISO 3166 code    BD
Internet TLD       .bd বাংলা
Website In Bangladesh Government Bangladesh 
                                                                               

                                                           


Monday, November 13, 2017

Israel threatens Gaza 'militants'

kmanik-1995.blogspot.com
KM ANIK
24 UPDATE 
13/11/2017
Special News  "GAZA ATTACK"

Reported in BANGLADESH

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday warned Palestinian militants against carrying out attacks in revenge for the blowing up of a tunnel stretching from the Gaza Strip into the Jewish state last month.The Islamic Jihad militant group meanwhile threatened to hit back at Israel over the destruction of the tunnel it says it dug.Israel's operation on October 30 resulted in the deaths of 12 Palestinian militants from Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
"There are still those who toy with trying new attacks on Israel," Netanyahu said at the opening of his weekly cabinet meeting.
"We will react forcefully to whoever tries to attack us or attacks us from any arena. I mean anyone -- rebel factions, organisations, anyone," he said in an apparent reference to Islamic Jihad.
"In any case, we hold Hamas responsible for any attack against us originating from Gaza or organised there," he said of the Islamist group that runs the Gaza Strip.Netanyahu's remarks came on the heels of a Saturday night Arabic-language video issued by Major General Yoav Mordechai, head of a defence ministry unit responsible for activities in the Palestinian territories.Referring to the Israeli operation on October 30, he said that Israel "destroyed a terror tunnel in Israeli sovereign territory".
"We are aware of the plot that the Palestinian Islamic Jihad terror group is planning against Israel," said Mordechai, whose defence ministry unit is known as COGAT.
"They are playing with fire at the expense of Gazan residents, the Palestinian reconciliation efforts and the stability of the entire region.
"Let it be clear: Any attack by Islamic Jihad will be met with a harsh and determined Israeli response.
"This will not only apply to Islamic Jihad but also to Hamas."Mordechai also addressed the Damascus-based Islamic Jihad leadership, mentioning Ramadan Shalah and Ziad Nakhaleh by name.He called on them to "take control over the situation," as they are the ones "who will be held accountable" for any attack.
Islamic Jihad rejected Mordechai's message, saying "the enemy's threat to target the leaders of the movement" was "a declaration of war".
"We will respond to it," the militant movement said in a statement, stressing it had "the right to respond" to the blowing up of the tunnel.Israel has said it is holding the bodies of five militants retrieved from the tunnel and implied it would try to use them as bargaining chips to retrieve the remains of two Israeli soldiers believed to be held by Hamas.Two Israeli civilians, said to be mentally unstable, are also believed to have entered Gaza and to be held by Hamas.Hamas and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas's Fatah signed a landmark reconciliation deal on October 12 aiming to end their decade-long split.The deal is supposed to see the Palestinian Authority retake control of the Gaza Strip by December 1.


EU Brexit chief preparing for 'possible' failure

kmanik-1995.blogspot.com
KM ANIK
24 UPDATE 

13/11/2017
Special News  "EU"

Reported in BANGLADESH

MMANUEL DUNAND EU Brexit chief Michel Barnier said it was "vital" for Britain to increase its offer on its exit bill
EU Brexit chief Michel Barnier yesterday said he is making contingency plans for the "possible" failure of divorce talks with Britain, which he has given two weeks to reach preliminary agreement on key issues.
"It's not my (preferred) option," he told French weekly Le Journal du Dimanche (JDD). "But it's a possibility. Everyone needs to plan for it, member states and businesses alike. We too are preparing for it technically."He recalled that without a deal on post-Brexit trade terms the EU and Britain would revert to World Trade Organization (WTO) tariffs, with trade ties "like those we have with China".On Friday Barnier gave Britain a two-week ultimatum to make concessions on a divorce agreement if it wants to unlock the next phase of talks in December.


US offers to mediate in South China Sea row

kmanik-1995.blogspot.com
KM ANIK
24 UPDATE 
13/11/2017
Special News  "USA"

Reported in BANGLADESH

US President Donald Trump offered yesterday to mediate in a territorial dispute over the resource-rich South China Sea, after years of Chinese island-building in the contested waters.Trump's surprise proposal to insert himself into the decades-long row risked a backlash from China, which has repeatedly said the United States has no role to play in what it insists is a series of bilateral issues.

"If I can help mediate or arbitrate, please let me know... I am a very good mediator,"
Trump told Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang in Hanoi during an official state visit.
Trump told Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang in Hanoi during an official state visit.Trump's comments came shortly before Chinese President Xi Jinping began his own state visit to Vietnam, in the capital Hanoi.China claims nearly all of the strategically vital sea, through which $5 trillion in shipping trade passes annually. It is also believed to sit atop vast oil and gas deposits.
Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan also have claims in the sea, and the dispute has long been seen as a potential trigger for conflict in Asia.Vietnam has courted support from Washington in the row, as it and other claimants have been powerless to stop China's efforts in recent years to cement its claims by building artificial islands in disputed areas.Those islands are capable of serving as military bases, and some of the rival claimants are concerned that China will soon establish de facto control of the waters.Tensions over the sea spiked this year when Vietnam suspended an oil exploration project in an area of the sea also claimed by Beijing, reportedly over pressure from its powerhouse communist neighbour.
In 2014, China moved an oil rig into waters off Vietnam's coast, sparking violent protests in several Vietnamese cities.
Trump's offer came just before he flew to the Philippine capital of Manila for another regional summit.
- THANKS, BUT... -
However, his proposal was not immediately accepted by the Philippines, which under President Rodrigo Duterte has sought to defuse tensions with China over the row in favour of closer economic ties.
"We thank him for it. It's a very kind, generous offer because he is a good mediator. He is the master of the art of the deal," Philippine Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano said when asked about Trump's offer.
"But of course the claimant countries have to answer as a group or individually and not one country can just give an instant reply because mediation involves all of the claimants and non-claimants."Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said he had discussed the dispute with Xi when they met on the sidelines of APEC in the Vietnamese city of Danang on Saturday."He assured us again: 'Do not worry, you have all the rights of safe passage. That will also be applicable to all countries'," Duterte told reporters after arriving back in Manila.


Spain urges return of 'free' Catalonia

kmanik-1995.blogspot.com
KM ANIK
24 UPDATE 
13/11/2017
Special News  "SPAIN"

Reported in BANGLADESH

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy yesterday said he wanted to return to a "democratic and free" Catalonia as he aimed to rally support for a unified Spain on his first visit to the turbulent region since it declared independence.A day after hundreds of thousands of people marched in Barcelona to demand the release of separatist officials detained over their independence drive, Rajoy also urged businesses not to flee the wealthy northern region.
"We have to recover the sensible, practical, enterprising and dynamic Catalonia... that has contributed so much to the progress of Spain and Europe," Rajoy told members of his Popular Party in Barcelona.
"We want to regain a Catalonia for everyone, democratic and free," he added.The Catalonia crisis has caused concern in the European Union as the bloc deals with Brexit and uncertainty over the fate of the region's 7.5 million people. More than 2,400 businesses have moved their legal headquarters elsewhere.
Rajoy yesterday urged those businesses "not to go".Separatist lawmakers, who were dismissed by Madrid after declaring their region independence from Spain last month, insist that they were given a mandate for secession by a banned October 1 referendum.However, pro-unity camps say that the vote was deeply flawed and largely boycotted by opponents of independence, though more than 90 percent of those who turned out backed a breakaway. Several officials have been detained over their role in pushing for independence, which is outlawed under Spain's post civil-war constitution.The region -- which accounts for a fifth of Spanish GDP -- remains deeply divided on independence and Barcelona´s mayor on Saturday slammed separatist lawmakers for dragging Catalonia into chaos.A poll commissioned Sunday by the Madrid-based El Pais daily showed that less than a third of Catalans now believed independence was possible in the near future.The 28 percent of respondents who said they thought swift secession was viable was down sharply from a similar poll in October.Rajoy has used his powers as head of Spain's central government to dismiss Catalan lawmakers, suspend the region's autonomy and call for fresh regional elections on December 21.The prime minister, who attended a presentation by a party candidate at hotel in Barcelona, did not appear in public.