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Czech Republic mourns university shooting victims
Events have been held across the Czech Republic to honor victims of the worst mass shooting in the country's history. The killings have sent shock waves through what is considered the 12th-safest country in the world. The Czech Republic observed a minute of silence at noon on Saturday as the country holds a national day of mourning after a mass shooting at a Prague university killed 15 people including the shooter. The shooting was carried out by a 24-year-old student who is now thought to have killed his father on the same day and a man and a baby last week. What events have taken place? National flags on public buildings flew at half-staff, while bells rang out at noon to mark the start of the minute of silence, which retailers said they would also observe. Czech President Petr Pavel and speakers of both houses of Parliament attended a special Mass for the victims held at St. Vitus Cathedral in Prague, with similar religious services taking place in other cities and towns. Christmas markets in several locations were closed or reduced their programs, with other pre-Christmas events canceled. Mourners laid flowers and lit candles in front of the university buildings. What happened Thursday? The shooter opened fire at the Charles University Faculty of Arts, where he had been studying, killing 13 people immediately and wounding 25 others. The gunman then killed himself, and one of the wounded people later died in hospital. Police and prosecutors said they had evidence that the shooter also killed his father earlier in the day and a man and a baby near the Czech capital last week. The university confirmed that two staff members were among the 14 people killed. No link to any extremist ideology or groups is suspected by investigators, who say the motive for the shooting was still unclear. The Czech Republic has rarely experienced mass shootings. But in 2015 a man shot seven men and a woman dead in a restaurant before killing himself in the southeast, and in 2019 another gunman killed seven people and then himself in an eastern hospital.  
24 Dec 2023,19:41

Iran: Teen Armita Geravand 'brain dead' after hijab incident
Iranian teenager Armita Geravand, who was allegedly attacked by the country's morality police for not wearing the mandatory headscarf earlier this month, was reported "brain dead" on Sunday. The 16-year-old had been in a coma since at least October 4. "Follow-ups on the latest health condition of Armita Geravand indicate that her health condition as brain dead seems certain despite the efforts of the medical staff," the state-run Islamic Republic of Iran News Network said. What happened to Armita Geravand? According the Kurdish-focused rights group Hengaw, which is based in Norway, Geravand was attacked by the country's morality police while she was riding on the Tehran subway without a headscarf. She suffered severe brain injuries and was hospitalized afterwards. Authorities had claimed Geravand fainted due to low blood pressure. The fragmented video of the teenage girl being dragged unconscious out of the subway car has been published by government media. But no video recording of the encounter itself was released. Still, the head of the Tehran Metro meanwhile pointed to security camera footage to claim that Geravand was not attacked by passengers or staff. The teenager is originally from the city of Kermanshah in Kurdish-populated western Iran but she lived in the capital. The incident occurred roughly one year after Kurdish woman Jina Mahsa Amini died in the custody of Iran's morality police after she was approached for not wearing a headscarf in public. Her death sparked unprecedented women's rights protests in Iran.
23 Oct 2023,11:12

The Dreadful Daily Drama of Religious Persecution in China
On his way back from BRICS, the summit of the world emerging economies, where the People’s Republic of China (PRC) succeeded in more than doubling the number of countries involved in it, President Xi Jinping found time on August 26, 2023, to stop in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, which its non-Han inhabitants call East Turkestan. There he invoked a harsher repression of Uyghurs and other Muslim Turkic people, implying that what local authorities have been doing so far is not enough. This is all the more outrageous, given the fact that the measures he labelled as insufficient amount to a genocide, now largely documented as well as officially recognized by governments and Parliaments throughout the world. Xi summarized his relentless offensive in the expression “Sinicization.” It is impossible to underestimate the weight of this concept, whose message is sometimes also conveyed by using another word, “modernization,” by which the Chinese regime means lifting groups and peoples up from the supposed “backwardness” that allegedly their traditional customs and religious beliefs keep them in. Under the specious and mellifluous idea of harmonizing people and ethnicities to craft a much more robust and shared national conscience, “Sinicization” is in reality the ideological attempt to homologate all to the official doctrine of the state. Being that Chinese state doctrine is Marxism-Leninism which, I want to recall here, killed at least 100 million people in the world, most of whom exactly in China, “Sinicization” is nothing else than the “Communistization” of everything, or the classic, unchangeable totalitarian aim of all “real socialist” governments. In this perspective, pluralism is only a facade useful to deceive the rest of the world and mislead it through propaganda. Faked pluralism, a department in the tireless CCP fake news industry, which is applied even to ancient history, is in itself a major feature of “Sinicization.” In fact, while the CCP claims that pluralism does exist in the country, the only plurality of options that the CCP allows is what is approved and certified by the CCP itself. This is particularly true for religions, creeds, and beliefs and for spiritual schools, ways, movements, and groups. In Article 36, the PRC’s 1982 Constitution control by foreign forces.”be subject to use religion to engage in activities that disrupt public order, impair the health of citizens or interfere with the state’s education system. Religious groups and religious affairs shall not coerce citizens to believe in or not to believe in any religion, nor shall they discriminate against citizens who believe in or do not believe in any religion. The state shall protect normal religious activities. No one shall organ, social organization or individual shall enjoy freedom of religious belief. No state Proclaims: “Citizens of the People’s Republic of China shall The language here is unequivocal. In the PRC, it is said, there is religious liberty, and no one can curtail or deny it. But the key point here is what “religion” means for the CCP. Enter the concept of “Sinicization.” For the CCP, only “Sinicized” religion is really religion. In simpler words, religion is what the CCP says religion is. As all totalitarian regimes do, the PRC led by the CCP wants to give its own controlling definition to everything. For totalitarianisms, nothing has its own nature or reality independently from the ideological will of the state, especially what has to do with the One Party’s real rival, i.e., God, by whatever name religions and beliefs call the Supreme Being. In totalitarian Communism, the Communist state is in fact the jealous secular supreme being, which takes no prisoner and bows to no other deity. So, religion is only a function of the Communist state: its vassal, servant, lackey, slave, tool, and even weapon. Article 36 of the PRC’s Constitution says it openly. The Chinese state protects “normal” religious activities. It means that it is up only to the state to unquestionably decide what is normal and what is not normal in religious doctrines and affairs, repressing religious leaders, authorities and experts who disagree. All who engage in activities that generate unrest and turmoil under what the state judges to be only a mask of religion are subject to repression. This makes sense. However, only the totalitarian Chinese state decides what is disruptive and what is not. For the CCP simple prayers may be and often are judged as socially disruptive—or fasting on holy days, growing a beard in a certain fashion, wearing a specific garment, keeping religious literature at home, owning a Bible, going on a pilgrimage, educating children spiritually. And then, the cherry on top, religions are free only if they have no foreign connections, otherwise they are accused of betraying the country. Article 36, which theoretically affirms freedom of religion or belief, is the same constitutional provision that denies religious liberty by totally emptying the concept of any meaning and significance. Chinese citizens are only free to obey the state in all matters, religion included.  In short, Article 36 demonstrates how the now classical analysis and terminology introduced in 2006 by Chinese sociologist Fenggang Yang is still the best description of the religious scenario in the PRC. We at “Bitter Winter” have adopted his model since our beginning because it proves effective in explaining facts. Yang divided the religious market in China by using three colors: red, gray, and black. The red market is the room that the CCP grants to religions, belief and groups that have been or can be infiltrated and controlled, a practice that the regime massively begun in 1957. It is basically the field of sufficiently “Sinicized” or domesticated religions. It includes the effort to control large portions of Catholics, Protestants, Muslims, Buddhists, and Taoists through five so-called “patriotic” associations, which totally obey the state. The gray market is the middle-of-the-road field, where the repressive machine of the CCP pursues the same goals implied for the red market, but, for a number or reasons, needs to progress step by step and even to accept some temporary compromise. It is the room where, as powerful as it is, the CCP has not yet reached a status of total control. This group include Catholic conscientious objectors outside the Patriotic Catholic Church, local groups connected to Protestant so-called house churches, and independent Muslim, Taoist, and Buddhist communities. Although the gray market survived for decades, Xi Jinping has repeatedly announced that the whole field of independent religion should now be absorbed into the red market or share the fate of the black market. The latter, the black market, is the field of the “xie jiao.” Often incorrectly translated as “evil cults,” this expression (which has been in use since the Middle Ages) means “heterodox teachings,” and has no accepted scholarly definition (similarly to the Western term “cult”). As a matter of fact, it only tautologically indicates the religious movements that are included in the government-compiled list of the “xie jiao,” which includes the groups the government regards as hostile, dangerous, and not “really” religious. Being active in a “xie jiao” can cost severe jail penalties under Article 300 of the Chinese Criminal Code, which has been repeatedly amended by increasing the penalties, which now can go up to life imprisonment. This is the spectacular case of groups like Falun Gong, hunted and haunted through the horrible practice of organ harvesting, The Church of Almighty God, the Association of Disciples, the Shouters, and several groups imported into China from South Korea and other countries. Scholars, like Edward Irons explain that anyway Chinese courts of law also apply Article 300 by analogy to groups that are not included in the list of “xie jiao.” The Jehovah’s Witnesses, for example, are not in the list, but Article 300 is applied against them as well. This is the landscape of religious persecution in todays’ China. This dreadful situation is a drama that continues daily, as the cultural genocide against Uyghurs, Tibetans, and Mongols, paralleled by the repression in Hong Kong, continues daily as well. While religious liberty is the first human right, as well as the first political right, for the CCP religion remains public enemy No.1. Now, the CCP seeks no compromise on that. Thus, no compromise should be sought with such trespassers of the first human right, religious liberty.
17 Sep 2023,15:56

Republic Day tableaux highlight various facets of India
At a time when several Opposition-ruled states complained that their tableaux were not selected for the Republic Day parade, even as the government insisted that the decision was taken by an expert committee and there is no political intervention, the tableaux of four of the five poll-bound states made it to Rajpath on Republic Day. Tableaux, from as many as 12 states and Union Territories, highlighted dances, spirit of sportsmanship, biodiversity, the freedom struggle, religious destinations and development. A total of 24 tableaux were a part of the Republic Day parade, which included a dozen from the states and UTs, nine from departments of the Union Government and three from the Armed Forces and the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO).   The Navy’s tableau was the first to come down on Rajpath on a frigid Wednesday morning and depicted two main themes. First, the 1946 naval uprising, which was a part of the freedom struggle, and against the terrible conditions of the Indian sailors who were a part of the British Indian Navy and the second on the “atmanirbharta” of the Navy, with a model of the country’s first indigenous aircraft carrier, which will be commissioned later this year and named INS Vikrant.   The Air Force tableau paid homage to the victory over Pakistan in the 1971 War, with models of MiG 21, Gnat — both of which were used in the war — and the Light Combat Helicopters. DRDO showcased major weapon platforms developed by it, including the Light Combat Aircraft Tejas and an Air Independent Propulsion system it is working on for the submarines.   From the states and UT, Meghalaya came out with its tableau first, showing the importance of women-led cooperative societies and self-help groups, with bamboo and cane handicrafts, as it celebrated its 50th year of statehood. Karnataka too, highlighted the traditional handicrafts from the state, calling itself the “cradle of traditional handicrafts” with 16 artefacts on inlay carving, lacquerware toys and bronze statues possessing the Global Indicator tag.   In Premium Now |In the 73rd year of our Constitution, how many of the concerns in it will we rectify? Gujarat, like many others, highlighted the freedom movement, but through the role of the tribal population. It showcased the incident of the military killing around 1,200 people in March 1922 as Bhil tribes from Paal and Dadhvav villages had gathered to protest against the land revenue system under the leadership of Motilal Tejawat. Punjab also brought out the state’s “immense contribution” during the freedom movement with Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev and Rajguru leading from the front.   Meanwhile, Goa showed symbols of its heritage and Haryana had a simplistic tableau with several sportsmen from the state on a “victory chariot” carrying the national flag. The idea was to highlight that although it occupies only 1.3 per cent of the country’s landmass and 2.09 per cent of the population, sportsmen from the state have brought maximum medals for the country in various international sporting events, including the Olympics.   Uttarakhand tried to portray the development in the state, highlighting the increasing connectivity between the various religious sites and Jammu and Kashmir showed the rapid pace of development in the UT, with the new IIT, IIM, AIIMS and an airport that are coming up there.   Arunachal Pradesh depicted the four Anglo-Abor Wars between 1858 and 1912 during which the indigenous tribal people of the state, particularly the Adis from the Siang area, fought against the colonial expansion of the British.   Chhattisgarh portrayed the state’s Godhan Nyay Yojana for better use of rural resources, while Uttar Pradesh’ tableau showcased the One District One Product scheme of the government for the micro, small and medium enterprise industries and also the development of the Kashi Vishwanath Dham in Varanasi, which is Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Lok Sabha constituency.   Gujarat’s tableaux being displayed during the Republic Day parade in New Delhi on Wednesday. Maharashtra showed the rich biodiversity of the state, with 15 animals and 22 plants as a part of the tableau, including large models of the Blue Mormon Butterfly and more.   From the Central government, the Education and Skill Development ministries highlighted the National Education Policy, the Civil Aviation Ministry showed the UDAN scheme, Department of Posts, showed Indian post at 75 years of Indian Independence, Home Affairs highlighted the valour and sacrifice of the CRPF, Central Public Works Department under Housing and Development Ministry showed Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose, Department of Justice highlighted the Lok Adalat and inclusive legal system, Department Drinking Water and Sanitation showcased the Har Ghar Nal under Jal Jeevan Mission, and the Culture Ministry highlighted 150 years of Aurobindo Ghosh. Source: The Indian Express
27 Jan 2022,23:29

Republic Day Parade: India will show her Army’s Old, New Era
        In the 75th year of Independence, the Republic Day parade would showcase the old and the new era of the Army in terms of uniforms and weapons used while the Beating Retreat ceremony would see the inclusion of a laser mapping and drone show. In view of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the number of troops in marching contingents in the Republic Day parade has been reduced from 144 to 96, said Major General Alok Kakkar on Sunday. During a press conference in Delhi, the officer who is the Chief of Staff of Delhi Area and would be the second-in-command of the parade said that in order to be able to follow COVID norms, the number of troops in marching contingents in the parade has been reduced from 144 earlier to 96. They will be seen marching in 12 rows and eight columns, he added. Some other changes in the parade include shortening of the parade for the marching contingents to National Stadium which earlier used to conclude at Red Fort. "The Republic Day parade which starts from Raisina Hills and goes through Rajpath, India Gate till Red Fort would now only go up to the National Stadium in view of COVID-19 this time. Only tableaux will to up till Red Fort," he said. This year, the Republic Day parade will not start at the scheduled time of 10 am but with a 30-minute delay. "The parade will commence at 10.30 am instead," the Major General said. "There will be 8 contingents of the Indian Armed Forces in the Republic Day Parade, which will include 6 contingents of Army, one each from Air Force and the Navy. The Parachute regiment contingent will wear the new combat uniform with the latest Tavor rifles," he added. Major Vishesh, Contingent Commander of the Parachute Regiment has said, "Donning the new combat uniform at the Republic Day Parade will be a very proud moment for the elite force Parachute Regiment." Lt Manisha Bohra, Army Ordnance Corps Contingent Commander said, "It is a matter of great honour for all of us to take part in the Republic Day parade and all of us have been practising very hard for it." The Major Gen, during the virtual press conference, also said that a "unique" mix of vintage and new equipment will be seen in the mechanised column. "In the front, in the armour column, you will see PT-76 and Centurion tanks will be shown which took part in 1965 and 1971 wars. This will be followed by main battle tank Arjun," he said. "Total 16 marching contingents would be there. Of these, eight will be of Indian Armed Forces, four of central Armed Police Force, two of NCC and one each of Delhi Police and NSS," he added. Major Gen Kakkar said that a total of 21 tableaus will be shown in the parade. There will be two motor-cycle formations. The women's team will be of BSF and men's team will be of ITBP. "75 aircraft of the Indian Air Force in 15 formations will do a flypast," the Major Gen said. Two new things will be seen in the Beating Retreat ceremony that is held at Vijay Chowk, Delhi. The Major Gen said that after the ceremony concludes, a projection mapping with laser would be done on the wall of the North and South block. It will be followed by a drone show in which 1,000 drones will take part. The officer refused to comment on the selection of the new song Aey Mere Watan ke Logon and dropping off the Christian hymn Abide with Me from the beating retreat ceremony. Source: NDTV
24 Jan 2022,21:16

Foresee A Better Future Against All Odds
Today marks the 71st founding anniversary of the People’s Republic of China. It is a special birthday, as it comes in a year of special, which carries significant meanings to China, Bangladesh and the whole world. The year 2020 is special, for the United Nations commemorates its 75th founding anniversary when a raging pandemic of unprecedented scale is pushing the world to another crucial juncture. The year 2020 is special, for China will reach the goal of building a “Xiaokang” society in all aspects by the end of the year while Bangladesh is paying the highest tribute to Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman during his birth centenary. Together our two countries will also be celebrating the 45th anniversary of our diplomatic ties in just a few days. The year 2020 is special to China as a heroic battle was fought and won. The unknown virus crept into the world just when the bell of the New Year started to ring. As the country taking the brunt, China, under the leadership of President Xi Jinping and the Communist Party of China (CPC), quickly pulled itself together from the initial shock and took decisive actions. So far, China has reported 90,666 confirmed cases and 4,741 deaths, both comparatively low in absolute numbers or in case/population ratio. Less than one month ago, a grand national Awards Ceremony for COVID-19 Fighters was held in Beijing, declaring China’s strategic victory over the pandemic. Now China has shifted its focus to preventing imported cases and revitalizing the economy, leading the way back to routine daily track. Faced with the challenges brought by COVID-19, China didn’t turn inward by resorting to a “China First” strategy. Instead, our sense of humanity crossed national boundaries and reached a larger number of people around the world. From March 15th to September 6th, China had supplied 151.5 billion masks, 1.4 billion protective suits, 230 million goggles and 209,000 ventilators to more than 200 countries and regions in support of the global response, taking up a bigger share than any other country in the world. China has donated in total $50 million to the World Health Organization, sent 34 medical expert teams to 32 countries including Bangladesh and provided assistance to 150 countries and 4 international organizations. We believe that in an ever more globalized world, no country can, and should, face such common challenges alone, and that by building a Community of Shared Future for Mankind, we can be stronger and more resilient to live, to fight, to grow and to prosper. The year 2020 is special to China also because a long-cherished dream is about to come true. As we are at the beginning of the third decade of the 21st century, it is compelling to look back to the beginning of the new millennium when the 911 attacks in 2001 sent shock waves across the whole world, changing the international landscape in an unprecedented way, just like what the COVID-19 pandemic is doing in 2020. There is, however, another line of history that is often overlooked, which is about China as much as it is about the world. In 2020, China will reach the goal of building a moderately prosperous society, or in the Chinese language, a “Xiaokang” society, in all respects, leaving another indelible mark in the annals of the history of world development. President Xi Jinping said many times, “I have spent more energy on poverty alleviation than on anything else.” So far, China has lifted millions of people out of poverty, more than that of all other countries combined during the last 4 decades, and contributed to over 70% of global poverty reduction. In 2019 alone, over 10 million Chinese people were lifted out of poverty. By the end of this year, the last 5 million will leave poverty behind for good. Absolute poverty will be not just alleviated but eliminated among 1.4 billion Chinese people for the first time in history, bringing monumental impacts to not only the global battle against poverty, but also the overall progress of the human race. The world will eventually get over the pandemic, yet China’s success in improving people’s well being will shape the global development trajectory in a much more profound and enduring way. This Chinese accomplishment comes with another good news that China is driving world economic recovery amid the gloom prospect of global growth compounded by COVID-19. Under the leadership of the CPC and the joint efforts of all sectors and people from all walks of life, China has been recovering faster than expected. China’s economy is on a V-shaped curve and returning to the pre-pandemic level. In the second quarter of the year, China’s GDP expanded 3.2% year on year, reversing a 6.8% contraction in the first quarter, making China so far the only positively-growing country among major economies. Moreover, China’s economic rebound is expected to be further consolidated in the third and fourth quarters with a 2.5% to 3% year-end growth. Foreign direct investment (FDI) into the Chinese mainland, in actual use, expanded 18.7% year on year to 84.13 billion yuan (about 12.3 billion U.S. dollars) in August, marking the fifth consecutive month for China to witness positive growth in FDI. With the growing outreach of the “Belt and Road Initiative” and the fresh impetus of the newly proposed “dual circulation” development pattern and “new infrastructure” programs, the express train of China’s development is gaining stronger momentum. We welcome all to jump on board! For the world, the year 2020 is also distinctly special – not just because of COVID-19, but also that this year marks the 75th founding anniversary of the United Nations (UN), with “The Future We Want, the UN We Need: Reaffirming Our Collective Commitment to Multilateralism” being the theme for commemoration events. To tackle changes unseen in a century, China is with the international community in believing that multilateralism is the right way forward. Since taking office, President Xi has met heads of the UNGA, UNIDO, UNESCO, WB, IMF and WHO, and traveled to Headquarters of the UN, UNESCO and WHO in New York, Geneva and Paris. He has met UN Secretary-General António Guterres 8 times and stayed in touch with him through telephone after COVID-19 broke out. Through letters or personal attendance, President Xi renders his great support to UN activities in the fields of peacekeeping, South-South cooperation, women empowerment, climate change, global health governance, cultural exchange and so on. President Xi’s words and actions are the best embodiment of China’s commitment to multilateralism and the UN.   China was the first to sign on the Charter of the United Nations. It is a founding member of the UN and the only developing country that takes a permanent seat on the Security Council. China will continue to be a true follower of multilateralism. It will stay actively engaged in reforming and developing the global governance system. It will firmly defend the UN’s central role in international affairs. As the world now stands at a new historical starting point, we need to renew our commitment to multilateralism, work to build a Community of Shared Future for Mankind, and rally behind the banner of the UN to pursue greater unity and progress. We acutely understand, however, that our time doesn’t make it easy for talks of global unity when protectionism, unilateralism and bullying practices are on the rise around the world, sabotaging international cooperation, stoking confrontation between ideologies and social systems, and putting the world in serious jeopardy. For example, the pretexts of “national security” or “data security” are over-politicized to suppress free market and competition, as evidenced by ill-founded accusations of and unfair treatment to Chinese high-tech companies like Huawei, TikTok and Wechat, among others. But China has strong faith in the UN and multilateralism just as most members of the international community do. With the vision to uphold multilateralism, balance security and development and ensure fairness and justice, China has recently proposed a Global Initiative on Data Security. We hope the Initiative could serve as a basis for international rules-making on data security and mark the start of a global process in this area. Let multilateralism prevail in all areas of global governance! Last but not least, the year 2020 marks the birth centenary of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the founding father of Bangladesh, and a trailblazer of China-Bangladesh friendship. As we celebrate China’s National Day today, it is equally joyous for us to look forward to the 45th anniversary of China-Bangladesh diplomatic ties, which is arriving in 3 days. While uncertainties abound in today’s world, China will always see Bangladesh as an independent, self-supported, indispensable and trustworthy friend. Hand in hand, our two countries will write more chapters of friendship and good neighborliness the journey to build a “Sonar Bangla” and to achieve the great renewal of the Chinese Nation. H.E. Mr. Li Jiming, Ambassador of China to Bangladesh October 1st, 2020  
01 Oct 2020,14:24
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