There are nearly 70.8 million forcibly displaced people in the world, according to United Nations refugee agency UNHCR.People are displaced by natural disasters and conflicts, and they are referred to by many names — refugees, stateless, internally displaced persons, asylum seekers, etc.Maybe we should call them aliens, because they are alienated from what we all love — home and homeland.
"I speak of legend, I speak of my ancestor, I speak of the restless present, and of the final struggle in future." --- Abu Zafar Obaidullah
Showing posts with label South Asia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Asia. Show all posts
Jun 14, 2020
Home, homeland and aliens
Home is a place always close to our hearts, not only because we were born, grew up and belong there but also because home is where there is love and care.Our homeland is an extended version of home, which in addition invokes our patriotism.Due to the Covid-19 pandemic and long lockdowns, we have been staying home not only because we love and care but mostly to save lives. But this long confinement at home has not been loving and caring for everyone as people are under pressure from loss of work and income, mental anguish and fear of death.The troubles are even more dire for tens of thousands of internal and overseas migrant workers who returned home penniless and hopeless.Despite this turmoil, people should remain calm and consider themselves luckier than the millions of poor souls around the world who are deprived of home and homeland.
Labels:
1947,
1971,
Alien,
Bangladesh,
Bhutan,
Bihari,
Caritas,
Church,
FABC,
Homeland,
India,
Migration,
Nepal,
Pakistan,
Partition of India,
Refugee,
Rohingya,
South Asia,
Sri Lanka,
Urdu
Mar 12, 2020
South Asia’s rape scourge and moral degradation
Jan 2, 2020
The illusion of human rights in South Asia
Only hours after police in the southern
Indian city of Hyderabad killed in "an encounter" all four men
accused of the rape and murder of a veterinarian, many people in the country
exploded in wild cheers.
Men and women chanted cheerful slogans
and came rushing to congratulate police, flooded them with flower petals and
distributed sweets. Some even set off firecrackers in great delight.
"This is what these filthy animals
deserved and the police have done a great job," some chanted as people
from all walks of life, including politicians and film stars, hailed the police
as heroes.
The police had assuaged public anger over
a case that provoked street protests after the brutal rape and murder on Nov.
27.
Only a few people including rights
activists questioned how the extrajudicial killing of the accused on Dec. 6 was
permitted in a country famed as "the world's largest democracy."
Ranjana Kumari, director of the Center
for Social Research, a social advocacy group, termed the police action an
"utter violation" of human rights and "a total failure" of
the criminal justice system, warning that India was moving toward a vigilante
justice system.
There is little doubt that the accused
men committed the most serious crime, but in the 21st century we cannot rely on
stray bullets to deliver quick justice. This is nothing but committing one
crime to obliterate another one.
The Hyderabad
case represents a common feature of human rights violations in many countries
in today's world, including those in South Asia.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
দক্ষিণ এশিয়ায় ভোটের রাজনীতি এবং খ্রিস্টান সম্প্রদায়
Bangladeshi Christians who account for less than half percent of some 165 million inhabitants in the country pray during an Easter Mass in D...
-
সদ্য প্রয়াত আর্চবিশপ মজেস মন্টু কস্তা, সিএসসি মহোদয়ের সাথে আমার প্রথম পরিচয় ১৯৯৬ খ্রিস্টাব্দে, জাতীয় ক্যাথলিক পত্রিকা সাপ্...
-
Photo: AFP ১৯৭১ সালের ১৬ই ডিসেম্বর বাংলার ইতিহাসের এক অবিস্মরণীয় দিন। নয় মাসের রক্তক্ষয়ী মুক্তিযুদ্ধ শেষে লাখো শহীদের রক্ত, লাখো মা-বোনের সম...
-
Holy Rosary Church at Tejgaon, Dhaka (Photo: Chandan Robert Rebeiro ) For nearly everyone in Bangladesh, Sunday is not a weeken...