FORGIVENESS :
BANGLADESH - STUDENTS - BRAINSTORM
ON THE WORLD STUDENTS SOCIETY - the founder framers of !WOW! from Proud Pakistan, rise to seek forgiveness from the students, and this great nation of Bangladesh, a soulful forgiveness for the past.
ON !WOW! : '' WHATEVER I WANT TO SAY, I will do it justice both before Almighty God and Man. Proud Pakistan and Great Bangladesh are joined spiritually, historically and eternally. Some of Pakistan's mighty sons and daughters rest in that soil, ever mourned.''
!WOW! will rescue history : My heroic elder brother Major Mohammed Arshad FF, the hero of heroes Saif -ul- Azam, and the greatest of my admirers and patriots, genius Syed Zia ud din Ahmed, Saifi Mustafa, Margoob Hussain. And the very thousands and thousands of others are mourned.
FORGIVENESS IS DIVINE : To Bangladesh students " YOU'LL ALWAYS be in love with the dreams and accomplishments of your great forefather who played a founding and a sterling role in the creation of Pakistan.
That truly would be something to live for and look for. May God Almighty guide you all to reassemble the honour of one Pakistan. ''
! Enemies be warned. This is no science fiction. This is very, very doable. ! So The World Students Society honours this supreme undertaking and thoughts.
JUST OVER A YEAR AGO - AFTER Sheikh Hasina - the autocratic leader of Bangladesh, unleashed a brutal crackdown on '' protesting students '' Abu Sayed stood defiantly in front of armed police officers in the city of Rangpur, his arms outstretched.
MOMENTS later, he was hit by bullets and later died from his injuries, his family said. He was one of almost 1,400 to die in a mass uprising that eventually toppled Ms. Hasina after 15 years in power.
Ms. Hasina later fled to India. She left behind a country on the brink of anarchy, but also suffused with hope.
THE STUDENTS wanted to rebuild Bangladesh as a more equitable and less corrupt democracy. They helped install Muhammed Yunus, a Nobel Peace Prize-winning economist, atop an interim government to lead the nation out of chaos into stability.
But some Bangladeshis are frustrated with the slow pace of change, wondering whether protesters like Student Sayed sacrificed their lives in vain.
Under Mr. Yunus, Bangladesh has struggled to address systemic problems like corruption, inflation, a paucity of jobs and an entrenched bureaucracy, which partly fueled people's anger against Ms. Hasina.
Students have clamored for democratic reforms to kick in faster. They also want swifter punishment for Ms. Hasina and the perpetrators of last year's attacks on protesters - including members of political party and police officials.
'' It pains me,'' said Romjan Ali, the slain student, Mr. Sayed's older brother. '' We thought the country would become morally better, inequality would end, there would be fair elections, the killers would be punished, and that punishment would make criminals afraid.
But nothing like that has happened.'' Mr. Ali added that without Mr. Yunus, though, it would probably be worse.
A NEW BEGINNING : The burden of reforming one of the world's poorest and most corrupt countries has fallen largely on Mr. Yunus's shoulders, in a nation still divided and with dozens of political parties.
Mr. Yunus's first task was to restore law and order. Looting, rioting and attacks on minorities destabilized the country after the revolution.
Although Bangladesh is more stable now, the government has been accused by human rights groups of not doing enough to control bouts of violence against Hindu minorities and supporters of Ms. Hasina.
His next goal was to get an extensive reform agenda going. Mr. Yunus appointed 11 commissions to propose reforms, including changes to the electoral system, the judiciary and the police.
The overarching goal was to make the country's democratic institutions, which Ms. Hasina had bent to her will, more resilient against authoritarian rule. But few of those changes have happened, and hope has turned to defeatism.
'' EVERYTHING seems messy now,'' said Abdullah Shaleheen Oyon, a student at the University of Dhaka. He was shot in the leg during the protests, which were set off by anger over a quota system for government jobs.
'' Our dreams remain unfulfilled,'' he added, saying that the urgency with which student leaders had begun their plans was petering out.
The Honour and Serving of the Latest Global Operational Research on History, Times, Sorrow and someday, Joys, continues. The World Students Society thanks most sincerely Anupreeta Das and Saif Hasnat.
With most respectful and loving dedication from the Proud People of Pakistan to the Great Nation of Bangladesh, Parents, Students, Professors and Teachers and then the world.
See You all prepare for Great Global Elections on The World Students Society - the exclusive and eternal ownership of every student of Bangladesh - and for every subject : wssciw.blogspot.com and Twitter X !E-WOW! - The Ecosystem 2011 :
Good Night and God Bless
SAM Daily Times - The Voice Of The Voiceless
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