@Nilgiri Apperantly US has become very concern about labor rights. That was two weeks ago.
US threatens sanctions, visa restrictions for labour rights violations
Published:18th Nov, 2023 at 2:54 AM
View attachment 63510
The US has announced steps like sanctions and visa restrictions in a move to cut violations of labour rights worldwide.
President Joe Biden signed a memorandum on Advancing Worker Empowerment, Rights, and High Labour Standards Globally on Thursday.
Speaking at the rollout of the memorandum during an event of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation in San Francisco, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said: “Advocating for the rights of workers and raising labour standards – that is a central part of our diplomacy; it’s a central part of our efforts at the Department of State.”
He said the US will work to hold accountable those who threaten, who intimidate, who attack union leaders, labour rights defenders, labour organisations – including using things like sanctions, trade penalties, visa restrictions – all the tools in their kit.
Blinken mentioned the case of Bangladeshi worker Kalpona Akter in his speech.
“We want to be there for people like Kalpona Atker, a Bangladeshi garment worker and activist, who says that she is alive today because the US embassy advocated on her behalf,” he said.
“When we use our voice, when we use our advocacy around the world, we can make a concrete difference in making sure that those who are trying to advance labour rights are protected and defended.”
US threatens sanctions, visa restrictions for labour rights violations
Secretary of State Blinken mentions the case of Bangladeshi worker Kalpona Akter in his speechbdnews24.com
And that was two days ago
Bangladesh could be target of US labour policy, warns Washington mission
In a letter, dated 20 November, sent to commerce ministry’s Senior Secretary Tapan Kanti Ghosh by Md Salim Reza, minister (commerce) at the Embassy of Bangladesh, the embassy said there are reasons to believe that Bangladesh may be one of the targets of the US’ recently released memorandum on labour rights.
Bangladesh could be target of US labour policy, warns Washington mission
In a letter, dated 20 November, sent to commerce ministry’s Senior Secretary Tapan Kanti Ghosh by Md Salim Reza, minister (commerce) at the Embassy of Bangladesh, the embassy said there are reasons to believe that Bangladesh may be one of the targets of the US’ recently released memorandum on...www.tbsnews.net
Remember that US is the biggest export destination of BD's industry. It is gonna have serious effect on the economy if USA introduce trade sanctions as mentioned above.
And to make matter worse, nobody will wants to do business with US sanctioned entities.
@Ryder
Next elections are crucial for Bangladesh. US for some reason really don't like the current government under hassina i think.@Nilgiri Apperantly US has become very concern about labor rights. That was two weeks ago.
US threatens sanctions, visa restrictions for labour rights violations
Published:18th Nov, 2023 at 2:54 AM
View attachment 63510
The US has announced steps like sanctions and visa restrictions in a move to cut violations of labour rights worldwide.
President Joe Biden signed a memorandum on Advancing Worker Empowerment, Rights, and High Labour Standards Globally on Thursday.
Speaking at the rollout of the memorandum during an event of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation in San Francisco, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said: “Advocating for the rights of workers and raising labour standards – that is a central part of our diplomacy; it’s a central part of our efforts at the Department of State.”
He said the US will work to hold accountable those who threaten, who intimidate, who attack union leaders, labour rights defenders, labour organisations – including using things like sanctions, trade penalties, visa restrictions – all the tools in their kit.
Blinken mentioned the case of Bangladeshi worker Kalpona Akter in his speech.
“We want to be there for people like Kalpona Atker, a Bangladeshi garment worker and activist, who says that she is alive today because the US embassy advocated on her behalf,” he said.
“When we use our voice, when we use our advocacy around the world, we can make a concrete difference in making sure that those who are trying to advance labour rights are protected and defended.”
US threatens sanctions, visa restrictions for labour rights violations
Secretary of State Blinken mentions the case of Bangladeshi worker Kalpona Akter in his speechbdnews24.com
And that was two days ago
Bangladesh could be target of US labour policy, warns Washington mission
In a letter, dated 20 November, sent to commerce ministry’s Senior Secretary Tapan Kanti Ghosh by Md Salim Reza, minister (commerce) at the Embassy of Bangladesh, the embassy said there are reasons to believe that Bangladesh may be one of the targets of the US’ recently released memorandum on labour rights.
Bangladesh could be target of US labour policy, warns Washington mission
In a letter, dated 20 November, sent to commerce ministry’s Senior Secretary Tapan Kanti Ghosh by Md Salim Reza, minister (commerce) at the Embassy of Bangladesh, the embassy said there are reasons to believe that Bangladesh may be one of the targets of the US’ recently released memorandum on...www.tbsnews.net
Remember that US is the biggest export destination of BD's industry. It is gonna have serious effect on the economy if USA introduce trade sanctions as mentioned above.
And to make matter worse, nobody will wants to do business with US sanctioned entities.
@Ryder
Very informative documentary on Stalin
Liberation War: Who planned the massacre of intellectuals on December 14, 1971 and why?
View attachment 63885
It is believed that Rao Farman Ali, an important officer of the Pakistan Army, masterminded the capture and killing of intellectuals during the liberation war of Bangladesh for nine months.
However, he later denied this allegation. But after the end of the war, a diary of Rao Farman Ali was found, which contained the names of many intellectuals of Bangladesh.
According to a famous historian of Bangladesh, the military commander of East Pakistan, Lt. Gen. Niazi, gave formal instructions to capture and kill the intellectuals.
However, historians and researchers also say that no research has been done on the killing of intellectuals during the liberation war in Bangladesh, so these facts cannot be doubted.
Although the intellectuals were captured and killed during the whole nine months of the war, the last blow of the Pakistani army and its allies was the killing of Bengali intellectuals on December 16, 1971, a few days before the Victory Day.
Among those who were killed were university teachers, doctors, artists and established people of various professions. Albadar Bahini assisted the Pakistani army in the killings.
On the night of December 14, many intellectuals were taken from their homes and killed at once.
According to Banglapedia's calculations, 1,111 intellectuals were killed by Pakistani forces during the liberation war. Most of which were in Dhaka. 149 people.
Historians say that many other intellectuals died in districts outside Dhaka, but are not actually remembered as such, if population and death rates are calculated rather than numbers.
View attachment 63886
Shaheed Intellectuals Memorial Complex in Roy Bazar
Rao Farman's Diary
Although Pakistani military forces, Al-Badr forces are involved in the killing of intellectuals, it is still not clear to the researchers who did the plan, when and how.
Author and researcher Mohiuddin Ahmed tells BBC Bangla, "It cannot be said for sure what exactly the plan did. From the night of March 25th to December 14th, teachers, journalists, artists - they were killed in towns and villages across the country.
"But it's sad, but it's true, there has been no deep research on it," says Mr. Ahmed.
Historian Muntasir Mamun says that intellectuals were killed in different places before the formation of Al-Badr army. Jamaat-e-Islami's student union was completely transformed into Al-Badr. They are specifically tasked with killing intellectuals. In Dhaka city, Al-Badar took everyone in a microbus and killed them.
Liberation war researchers say that Rao Farman Ali is believed to have masterminded the killing of intellectuals in Bangladesh.
After the fall of Dhaka, a diary of Rao Farman Ali, a ranking officer of the Pakistani army, was found in Governor's House, now known as Banga Bhavan. Names of many dead and missing intellectuals are written there.
But Mr. Mamun says that Rao Farman Ali denied the allegation in an interview given to him later.
The interview that Muntasir Mamun was quoting was the interview of Rao Farman Ali that he and Mohiuddin Ahmed jointly conducted in 1989, while visiting Pakistan. Details of this interview were later published in a book titled 'Sey Sab Pakistani'.
In the book, he writes, he asks Rao Farman Ali, 'After the fall of Dhaka, you found a diary in the Governor's House that contained a list of the intellectuals killed.'
In response, Rao Farman Ali says, 'If I want to kill someone, should I save the list like this? Many people came to me and complained in the name of many. As he was doing it, he was helping her. I would have kept their names, it has nothing to do with that murder.'
'That means, you don't know about the killing of intellectuals, you don't know about the genocide in Bangladesh...' Muntasir Mamun asked again.
Farman did not let him finish. He said, 'Genocide, there was no genocide.'
'All the newspapers of the world wrote that there was a massacre,' repeated Muntasir Mamun.
Rao Farman Ali replied, 'No, not right.'
"But that he was somehow connected with it, it was later proved in some documents. But I think the entire military junta was involved," Muntasir Mamun told the BBC.
Niazi's 'Blueprint'
Muntasir Mamun also says that some documents were found in the house of Pakistani businessman Abdul Latif Bawani after the war of liberation, so that the instructions of Lieutenant General Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi, the then military commander of East Pakistan, can be found.
Mr. is describing it as 'Niazi's blueprint'. Mamun.
There was a plan not to put any Bengali officer in any position in that directive. All the top officers of the Pakistani army were involved in this plan, said Mr. Mamun.
The International Criminal Court in Dhaka sentenced Chowdhury Muinuddin and Ashrafuzzaman Khan to death for the murders of university teachers, journalists and doctors in 2013.
At that time, the coordinator of the International Criminal Court and Additional Attorney General M. K Rahman quoted the court as saying that the killing of intellectuals took place in 1971 under the direction and involvement of Chowdhury Muinuddin and Ashrafuzzaman Khan.
According to the complaint filed against them in the tribunal, at the end of the 1971 Bangladesh war, Al Badr Bahini, an affiliate of the Pakistani army, systematically killed intellectuals. Mr. Muinuddin intellectual murder incident operation in-charge and Mr. Ashraf was the chief executor.
Mohiuddin Ahmed says, "In Dhaka or in some big cities, non-Bengalis have done this kind of work as collaborators of the Pakistani army. But in rural areas, Bengali Razakars, Muslim Leaguers have brought the army and introduced people, suggested killing".
Why this murder?
On November 25, 1971, the then university teacher Mir Abdul Qayyum was taken away from his home in Rajshahi by the Pakistan Army. Teacher Mr. It was around nine o'clock in the night when Qayyum was picked up.
At nine o'clock at night, a person Mr. Goes to Qayyum's house and tells that an army officer is calling him outside.
Mr. Qayyum left the house to meet the army officer and never returned.
Two days after Bangladesh became independent, the body of teacher Mir Abdul Qayyum was found in a mass grave at Padma Char near the city of Rajshahi.
The liberation war researchers say that after March 25th, arrests and killings of intellectual activities started all over Bangladesh. But since November, those operations have been stepped up by Pakistani forces and their allies.
Historian Muntasir Mamun tells BBC Bangla, "The killing of intellectuals was completely planned and it started from the 25th of March. Because we see, the first attack was in Dhaka University. There was a reason for this. Students and teachers were the first to stand against the military rulers. So from the time of Ayub Khan, the military rulers had a grudge against the university. Later it spread further.''
"Military junta planned, if the country is deprived of intellectuals, Bangladesh will not be able to raise its head even if it becomes independent one day. From this thought, they started to selectively kill intellectuals,'' says Mr. Mamun.
"Since 47 years, the politicians have united the people, but the intellectuals have done it to inspire and motivate the people. If students are taken into consideration, intellectuals have played a big role in everything from language movement, student movement,'' he says.
Author and researcher Mohiuddin Ahmed says, their main target was students and educational institutions.
Historians say, knowing that defeat was certain, the Pakistani army formed the Al-Badr Army through its Bangladeshi allies and killed the intellectuals.
মুক্তিযুদ্ধ: ১৯৭১ সালের ১৪ই ডিসেম্বরের বুদ্ধিজীবী হত্যাকাণ্ডের পরিকল্পনা কারা ও কেন করেছিলেন? - BBC News বাংলা
ঢাকার পতনের পর গভর্ণর হাউজ, যেটি এখন বঙ্গভবন নামে পরিচিত, সেখান থেকে পাকিস্তানি সেনাবাহিনীর পদস্থ কর্মকর্তা রাও ফরমান আলীর একটি ডায়রি পাওয়া যায়। সেখানে অনেক নিহত ও নিখোঁজ বুদ্ধিজীবীর নাম লেখা।www.bbc.com
@Nilgiri interesting stuff.
Pax Americana (or more like Bellum Americanum) as a period of history is just a continuation of Pax Britannica and is the appellation for the collective might of the Western block and their minions (as opposed to an order reliant on only one country like China). It doesn't exclusively rely on military or economical might, but to lesser extent in terms of raw power on a financial, linguistic, entertainment, media and social media might as well. This Pax (or Bellum) is here to stay for centuries, even though it might have to share it economically and in terms of international institutions with other players like China.
The globalization of neoliberalism has meant that added value is more and more extracted from the third world and concentrated in the hands of billionaires in the west. This is a trend that has sped up immensely in the past three decades. Very few would contest this fact (it's a simple matter of looking up the numbers) but these same people who would not contest it, think the west is falling. How can it be that concentration of wealth is increasing but the west is falling? The centers of gravity of that concentration is all in the west, and the places that wealth is extracted are mostly in Asia.
The narratives about west's fall are about the fall of productive capacity, manufacturing and demographics. But the growing concentration of wealth shows the methods of extraction are working fine (despite the fall in thos categories) and most of the value added in production and manufacturing from the periphery ends up in western hands. All the dreams about the fall of the west by the dwellers of the periphery are asinine wishful thinking in so far as they don't recognize and have no solutions to reverse the impact of this method of concentration of wealth through unequal exchange and IP from the periphery to the center.
P.S. some might challenge this to point out how that production and manufacturing capacity which fuels that extraction and unequal exchange can be taken away when status quo is broken. This trivializes the cheapness of labor all around the world.
However, the increasing numbers of billionaires in the West and growing concentrations of wealth in their hands through added value extracted from the cheap asian labour is a poor argument for the continuation of Wesgern hegemony.
Despite this unequal and unfair exchange, the overall economic gap between West and the 'Rest' has rapidly decreased. See the world of 1970 and today's world in terms of GDP percentage shared by countries.
If we focus narrowly, it may seem Western billionaires and the Wall Street got the most out of it in the last few decades. In reality, the biggest losers of the Capitalist Globalisation are the middle class and the average Joe of America. While the biggest winner from the Wall Street's fine exercise of Capitalism is PRC.
For West, the only way to reverse this is to bring back the industry and manufacturing to home. But that would be at the expense of Wall Street and those same billionaires as there won't be any cheap labour in domstic manufacturing.
Also, it would impact the quality of life for middle class as they won't be able to afford many things that they previously did due to the staggering cost of domstic manufacturing.
But chances are it won't happen because the West, US of A in particular is not really a nation state anymore. It is a 'market state' with an extreme individualistic and materialistic culture where people's, specially billionaires top priority is their own capital and consumptions. Not necessarily the collective national interest.
In a nutshell, West isn't falling not will it fall anytime in the future. The real argument is about the 'Rest' increasingly catching up. Which is very much true and detrimental to Western hegemony.
I agree with many points here as I was not arguing that Pax Americana is going to stay here for centuries. That sentence was about west's power. Pax Americana as a political order is already in its death throes, and will be dead in a decade or two. What I was arguing was that in the ensuing cold war, the west will be the stronger block for a long time.I humbly disagree.
Pax Americana won't stay here for centuries. Not in the dominant form as we see it today. It is true, 20th century was probably the most radical in human history. End of the first cold war and collapse of Soviet union marked the finest triumph of Pax Americana, not only in the physical and meterial terms, but in every other way possible. World adopted Catipalist economy. English is the world language. New generation in every corner of the world increasingly adopted Western way of life. We watch American movies, listen to American music, more and more we wear Western clothing. A highly individualistic & materialistic world view learnt (in the name of modernity) from the West dominates our lives. In short, no other civilization in the history of mankind has impacted and influenced humanity the way Western civilization did. Not even close. And that is thanks to the scientific advances and technological innovations brought by the West itself that connected all of Humanity in an unprecedented manner.
So yes, chances are some fundemntal aspects of Pax Americana will stay with us for centuries. That is indisputable. As with every previous civilization. It is just that, the scale and magnitude of this one is so big that it eclipses all the others.
However, the increasing numbers of billionaires in the West and growing concentrations of wealth in their hands through added value extracted from the cheap asian labour is a poor argument for the continuation of Wesgern hegemony. The reason we observe this trend (as i mentioned earlier) is because world adopted the Capitalist economy and it operates within Western financial system. And guess who had the most capital in their hand? It is the western elite. So of course they will get richer than ever. Of course there is an unequal exchange. Because of the obvious power imbalance and the fact that the world financial system is designed and maintained by the West.
However, something much more significant occured in the same time period. Despite this unequal and unfair exchange, the overall economic gap between West and the 'Rest' has rapidly decreased. See the world of 1970 and today's world in terms of GDP percentage shared by countries.
If we focus narrowly, it may seem Western billionaires and the Wall Street got the most out of it in the last few decades. In reality, the biggest losers of the Capitalist Globalisation are the middle class and the average Joe of America. While the biggest winner from the Wall Street's fine exercise of Capitalism is PRC.
For West, the only way to reverse this is to bring back the industry and manufacturing to home. But that would be at the expense of Wall Street and those same billionaires as there won't be any cheap labour in domstic manufacturing. Also, it would impact the quality of life for middle class as they won't be able to afford many things that they previously did due to the staggering cost of domstic manufacturing.
But chances are it won't happen because the West, US of A in particular is not really a nation state anymore. It is a 'market state' with an extreme individualistic and materialistic culture where people's, specially billionaires top priority is their own capital and consumptions. Not necessarily the collective national interest. And this very extreme Capitalist framework & culture is America's very own Frankenstein's monster.
In a nutshell, West isn't falling nor will it fall anytime in the future. The real argument is about the 'Rest' increasingly catching up. Which is very much true and detrimental to Western hegemony.
The Arms of the Future: A Book Talk with Jack Watling
Please join the CSIS International Security Program for a conversation with Dr. Jack Watling on his recent book, The Arms of the Future: Technology and Close...www.youtube.com
@Kartal1 @Sanchez @Nilgiri I could not recommend this enough. Please do watch it from the beginning to the end. I listen to interviews and podcasts like this frequently, but this guy's wisdom really 'blew' me away. I mean, many of the stuff we would know already, but the way he construct the bigger picture, is unique and convincing.
If we look at history, democratic societies account for a tiny fraction of the total. Most of the times all countries were autocratic, and even when some democracies existed, they were mostly the minority.
Despite the fact that democracies have a tiny share of global history, they account for some of the greatest advances in science and technology, and are the enablers of the highest growth in the human standard of living.
If we look at the achievements of democracies compared to autocracies, and ponder them with the tiny share of time and population that democracies enjoyed at a historical level, the correlation becomes obvious.
The amount of progress that hapoened in democracies is spectacular considering how few people lived in democracies during the known history, compard to the huge numbers of people living in autocratic regimes.
Well, I am a student of sociology and I have a great enthusiasm in these topics.
Again, one of the important thing is to be able to distinguish between correlation and causation.
Well, I am a student of sociology and I have a great enthusiasm in these topics.
Again, one of the important thing is to be able to distinguish between correlation and causation.
I will try to respond to it later. (Today is holiday) If @Nilgiri and @Rooxbar are interested and can make some times, I would love to listen to their valuable perspectives on this.