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Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Fifa and Interpol join forces in $20 million bid to fight match-fixing menace



Interpol secretary general Ron Noble will join Fifa president Sepp Blatter for the announcement in Zurich, at which Blatter will pledge to the funding package over the next 10 years to develop anti-corruption programmes specifically for football.
Senior investigators from Finland and Germany, where major match-fixing prosecutions involving hundreds of club and international matches are ongoing, will also be in Zurich to brief Blatter and secretary general Jerome Valcke on the threat corruption poses.
The Interpol agreement follows Telegraph Sport’s disclosure last week that Fifa investigators, working with Interpol, have begun a major inquiry into a global match-fixing ring it believes has been specifically targeting friendly internationals.
Wilson Raj Perumal, a convicted match-fixer who The Daily Telegraph revealed last week operated for at least seven months from a flat in the shadow of Wembley Stadium, is at the heart of the investigation. He is in custody in Finland on suspicion of bribing players to fix matches.
In Germany, meanwhile, police in Bochum have uncovered a massive fixing ring that they suspect of targeting more than 300 games. Ante Sapina, a Croatian convicted of match-fixing in 2005, is on trial with six other individuals charged with manipulating 47 specific matches.
Both the Finland and Bochum cases are understood to have raised numerous international leads that Fifa investigators, under head of security Chris Eaton, are pursuing in the largest inquiry yet undertaken by the governing body.
The Fifa funding will allow Interpol to develop preventative programmes for players, administrators and officials intended to raise awareness of the methods employed by fixers.
Educating young players is a priority, as is ensuring that administrators do adequate due diligence on third parties with whom they arrange matches. Educating and monitoring match officials is also crucial to preventing games being manipulated.
The ongoing investigation has revealed significant evidence that fixers have specifically targeted talented young players in 'grooming’ operations with a view to grooming them as potential future assets.
The focus on young players has prompted Fifa to step up prevention measures ahead of the under-17 and under-20 World Championships this summer in Mexico and Colombia.
“We have to be very careful to prevent them [match-fixers] having any impact on global competitions,” Eaton said. “We have the under-17 World Cup coming up in Mexico and we will be focusing on that with an education programme for national sides to alert them to the possibility that they might be approached by fixers.”
The funding will not be used for investigations, but it will strengthen ties with Interpol, which will in turn increase Fifa’s ability to target ongoing operations.
Anti-corruption investigations by Fifa and other sports bodies are constrained by a combination of factors. National law-enforcement agencies are restrained by jurisdiction and sport-related corruption is seldom a priority.
As a sports organisation Fifa also has limited powers to tackle figures who operate outside the game’s regulations.
The cross-border nature of the suspected fixing operation thrown up by the investigation so far has convinced investigators that they need the assistance from Interpol.


Match fixing: Police say organised crime fixers in scandal have resorted to murder Match-fixing operations have resulted in murders committed by organised crime gangs in Europe, a senior German police investigator said on Monday.



Sepp Blatter


By Paul Kelso



Speaking at the launch of an anti-corruption initiative between Fifa and Interpol aimed at targeting match-fixing, Commissioner Friedhelm Althans, of the Bochum police department, said he believed there had been killings resulting from attempts to rig football matches.
“I can’t identify the people who have died, but certainly I believe it [has happened]. This is a special form of organised crime, a new phenomenon in Europe. In Asia we have seen this for many years but in Europe this problem was not so obvious.”
Althans is leading the largest investigation of its kind into the suspected manipulation of more than 300 matches in 20 European countries, including games in World Cup qualifying groups and the Champions and Europa Leagues.
Bribes worth £1.5 million have been paid to players, referees and officials but the sum is “just the tip of the iceberg,” said Althans. “We have indeed seen there is a worldwide network of people active in this field.”
Althans said that match-fixing was attractive to organised crime. “It is low-risk, high-profit. That is a system that works for them. Years ago they were working in international drug trafficking. That is difficult and dangerous, but here they have a very low risk and earn much more money
Althans was joined at Fifa House in Zurich by a senior police official from Finland who is leading the investigation into convicted match-fixer Wilson Raj Perumal.
The launch follows The Daily Telegraph’s disclosure last week that investigators from Fifa have been working with Interpol and national police units to pull together information on what they believe is an international match-fixing operation working on at least three continents.
Fifa is to give Interpol $20 million over the next 10 years to spend on education and prevention programmes intended to stop players, match officials and administrators being sucked in by fixing rings.
Interpol secretary general Ron Noble said that fixers were largely targeting lower-league football and games with a lower profile, but Fifa is increasingly concerned that international matches have been targeted.
Two recent games in Antalya, Turkey, are suspected of being part of “possible match-fixing activity” and six match officials have been suspended pending a Fifa investigation.
Investigators believe they foiled an attempted sting in Sharjah in March, and head of security Chris Eaton said on Monday that international friendlies were being targeted.
Noble said he was not surprised and that match-fixing offered the “perfect mixture” for organised crime.
“Unfortunately I am not surprised by the efforts of transnational organised crime to alter matches,” he said. “ With the internet and the ability to make bets on every possible outcome, the possibility to make huge amounts of money is very great, and the likelihood of getting caught is very low. It’s a perfect mixture for organised crime.
“Football is increasingly threatened by illegal betting and match-fixing. It poses a threat to safety because it is often controlled by trans-national criminal crime groups. It is Interpol’s duty to get involved.”
Fifa president Sepp Blatter admitted that Fifa’s rules governing friendly internationals were “not hard enough” and said they would be strengthened at the forthcoming Fifa Congress.
The changes will see Fifa overseeing the nomination of match officials and national federations having to declare who is arranging the game, rather than allowing third parties to stage games.
Blatter said ensuring football is clean was central to Fifa’s credibility. “If they cannot believe any longer (in) football because matches are fixed, then in such a case Fifa would lose all credibility,” he said. “It is crucial for us to go together with political authorities and police authorities to fight those that want to destroy our game,” the Fifa president said.
Noble added: “We needed to do something to make sure the public realises that this is a problem that’s long-term. It’s going to require law enforcement to train those groups most likely to be targeted.”

Cricket boffins meet to review game's laws



A review of the umpiring decision review system, the format of one-day internationals and floodlight Tests will be key agenda items for the International Cricket Council committee, which will meet at Lord's in London today and tomorrow.

The committee includes players, coaches, match officials, the media, law-makers, and statisticians.
A wide range of other issues, including the use of artificial lights in Test matches, use of runners in international cricket and other potential changes to cricket's laws and playing conditions will also be discussed at the two-day meeting.
The committee is chaired by former West Indies captain Clive Lloyd and is administered by former Proteas wicketkeeper David Richardson, general manager of the ICC. The committee's task is to discuss and consult on playing matters and to make recommendations to the ICC board for approval.
The next meetings of the committee are set for Hong Kong during the ICC's annual conference week, from June 26 to 30.
The committee will review the results of the umpiring review system so far and will discuss the continued application of the system, including its possible use on a permanent basis in ODIs.
The review system, introduced in October 2009 following successful trials in the series between Sri Lanka and India (August 2008), New Zealand and West Indies (December 2008), West Indies and England (February/March 2009) and South Africa and Australia (February/March 2009), has been used in 31 Tests.
It was also used in the Cricket World Cup this year and in seven ODIs between Australia and England, which were played after the Ashes series.
The committee will also consider whether to recommend the use of floodlights in Test matches. It will also consider the use of different colour balls in day/night matches.
Changes to the ODI format are also on the agenda. Split innings, power-play overs, possible use of two new balls per innings and allowing bowlers to bowl more overs than previously permitted will be some of the options that will be considered.
The committee will discuss laws governing the use of runners, bowlers attempting to run out the non-strikers and batsmen obstructing the field while running between the wickets.

Sri Lanka Cricket set for overhaul



Chairman of Sri Lanka Cricket's interim committee DS de Silva (R) has a lot to answer for. AFP PHOTO / Lakruwan WANNIARACHCHI.

May 9, 2011 (Island Cricket): After a fundamental rights petition on behalf of local cricket clubs by the United Southern Sports Club, Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court on Monday ordered elections at Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC).
The sports ministry was ordered to ensure that the current interim committee, including the controversial chairman Somachandra de Silva and secretary Nishantha Ranatunga be replaced by July 6.
The current chairman and secretary have come into heavy criticism over their professional conduct, with allegations of corruption, financial mismanagement and nepotism made against them.
Furthermore, colossal financial losses under their watch has also prompted an investigation by the parliamentary Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE).
“We have asked the SLC to appear before COPE and answer allegations of discrepancies in its accounts, misappropriation of funds and other irregularities,” COPE chairman minister D.E.W. Gunasekara told the local media today.
“The Auditor General has been asked to make available to COPE all documents pertaining to SLC transactions and payments.
Nishantha Ranatunga (2R) and Somachandra de Silva (1R) were appointed secretary and chairman respectively in 2009 by the then sports minister Gamini Lokuge. AFP PHOTO/Lakruwan WANNIARACHCHI.
“This is the first time COPE has summoned the SLC for an inquiry. The impression in the past was that COPE had no power to probe SLC activities but our legal advisors have said COPE has constitutional power to investigate the SLC,” he added.
Elected by the sports minister, at the behest of the ruling party, SLC has been governed by government appointed officials with no oversight and have been blamed for much of the problems facing Sri Lankan cricket and its governing body today.
“Good teams like Australia usually have got strong or good management backing the team up. That's an area we can improve here,” outgoing coach of the Sri Lankan side Trevor Bayliss told AFP in an interview recently, highlighting the current SLC administration as a hindrance to the Sri Lankan side’s progress on the field.
In recent days, SLC has been embroiled in a dispute with its Indian counterparts, which many say was instigated by the sports minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage after he claimed that he was mistreated during the World Cup final in India, causing tensions between SLC and its own players to soar.
In addition, the International Cricket Council (ICC) has said that it is planning on amending its constitution to ensure members and their respective bodies carry out elections and to eliminate government and political interference in member nations.

Game takes aim at bin Laden

A REAL BLAST: Kuma Games’ new...


In a computer game likely to stir controversy, Americans who wished they could have pulled the avenging trigger on arch-terrorist Osama bin Laden can now virtually storm the infamous walled-off Pakistani compound themselves in a new online video game.
While violent reality-based video games often raise eyebrows — such as “Dog Wars,” a dog-fighting game, and “JFK Reloaded” — one military expert said he believes “Kuma Wars Episode 107: Osama 2011” could help recruit the nation’s next generation of special forces heroes eager to rid the world of mass-murdering megalomaniacs.
“In forty minutes and a rain of hot lead, a decades-long, worldwide manhunt for Osama bin Laden will be ended... by you,” reads the Web site of New York-based Kuma Games, which released online the first-person shooter over the weekend.
The company claims it realistically recreated the compound, weapons and mission objectives from bin Laden’s real-life take-down May 1, based on news reports.
One screen shot on the game’s Web site creates an image that the Obama administration has refused to reveal — bin Laden’s corpse with a head wound.
“I think it might actually draw interest for young men and women to serve in the military,” said Neil Livingstone, CEO of the corporate security firm ExecutiveAction. He noted, “The Army had its own video game at one point to draw young men and women into the service.”
One local game developer, whose controversial cell phone app that let users sneak illegal aliens over a border was rejected from Apple’s App Store last month, said he thinks the trend of creating video games based on current events will continue to grow.
“If someone chooses to play it, that’s within their right to do so, and I don’t believe such games should be actively censored,” said Alex Schwartz of Owlchemy Labs. His game, renamed from “Smuggle Truck” to “Snuggle Truck” for iPad and iPhone, now involves teddy bears.
A spokesman for Kuma Games could not be reached yesterday. The free online game is the latest in a series of what the company calls “ripped from the headlines” battle scenarios. The company digitized Sen. John Kerry’s 1969 Vietnam Swift boat experience; the capture of Saddam Hussein; and the failed 1980 attempt to rescue American hostages in Iran.

Pakistan to take disciplinary action against cricket captain






The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) on Monday asked Shahid Afridi, captain of the national team, to explain his comments about the "differences within the tour management of the team in West Indies."

Taking notice of Afridi's remarks about team management, PCB sought explanation from the flamboyant skipper terming the act a violation of code of conduct.

"No statement can be issued regarding the team management in media," a spokesman said.

"If Shahid Afridi had any apprehensions on the issue, he should have taken them up at board's meeting," he added.

The captain would also face disciplinary action for violating team's code of conduct after receiving report about his remarks on return from West Indian tour.

Last week, Afridi led Pakistani team to a 3-2 win in the one-day series in the West Indies before complaining about the team coach Waqar Younis, former fast bowler, over team selection.

The Pakistani team is still to play two Test matches against the Windies but Afridi returned home as his job as captain to limited over game finished.

On his return at Karachi airport on Sunday, he said: "I don't like people interfering in my domain. I think it would be better if everyone focused on his job in the team."

Afridi criticized Younis for interference in team selection, saying that he would take up the matter with the country's cricket chief.

"Although the differences with the coach are not such kind which could not be solved, I must say that everyone should do his job," he told reporters.

Pakistan won first three matches of the five match series but did not perform well in last two matches and ended the series 3-2. Some sports analysts were of the view that the national team lost two matches against the weak team of Windies owing to differences in the team management. 

Source: Xinhua 

Myth-busting the Bangladesh war of 1971 An author discusses her new book about the historical narratives of the 1971 civil war that broke up East Pakistan.


Guerilla fighters of the Mukti Bahini prepare to bayonet men who collaborated with the Pakistani army during East Pakistan's fight to become the independent state of Bangladesh [GALLO/GETTY]


Last month, Al Jazeera published an article entitled Book, film greeted with fury among Bengalis. Here, Sarmila Bose, author of Dead Reckoning: Memories of the 1971 Bangladesh War, responds to the criticism levelled at her work.
In all the excitement about the "Arab spring" it is instructive to remember the 1971 war in South Asia. Then too there was a military regime in Pakistan, easily identified as the "baddies" -  and a popular uprising in its rebellious Eastern province, where Bengali nationalists were reported to be peacefully seeking freedom, democracy and human rights.
When the regime used military force to crush the rebellion in East Pakistan, India intervened like a knight to the rescue, resulting in the defeat of the bad guys, victory for the good guys and the independence of Bangladesh... Or so the story went for forty years. I grew up with it in Calcutta. It was widely repeated in the international press.
Several years ago I decided to chronicle a number of incidents of the 1971 war in-depth. I observed that many Bangladeshis were aggrieved that the world seemed to have forgotten the terrible trauma of the birth of their nation. Given the scale of the suffering, that lack of memory certainly appeared to be unfair, but there did not seem to be many detailed studies of the war - without which the world could not be expected to remember, or understand, what had happened in 1971.
My aim was to record as much as possible of what seemed to be a much-commented-on but poorly documented conflict - and to humanise it, so that the war could be depicted in terms of the people who were caught up in it, and not just faceless statistics. I hoped that the detailed documentation of what happened at the human level on the ground would help to shed some light on the conflict as a whole.
The principal tool of my study was memories. I read all available memoirs and reminiscences, in both English and Bengali. But I also embarked on extensive fieldwork, finding and talking to people who were present at many particular incidents, whether as participants, victims or eye-witnesses. Crucially, I wanted to hear the stories from multiple sources, including people on different sides of the war, so as to get as balanced and well-rounded a reconstruction as possible.
As soon as I started to do systematic research on the 1971 war, I found that there was a problem with the story which I had grown up believing: from the evidence that emanated from the memories of all sides at the ground level, significant parts of the "dominant narrative" seem not to have been true. Many "facts" had been exaggerated, fabricated, distorted or concealed. Many people in responsible positions had repeated unsupported assertions without a thought; some people seemed to know that the nationalist mythologies were false and yet had done nothing to inform the public. I had thought I would be chronicling the details of the story of 1971 with which I had been brought up, but I found instead that there was a different story to be told.
Product of research
My book Dead Reckoning: Memories of the 1971 Bangladesh War, the product of several years of fieldwork based research, has just been published (Hurst and Co. and Columbia University Press). It focuses on the bitter fratricidal war within the province of East Pakistan over a period of a little more than a year, rather than the open "hot" war between India and Pakistan towards the end. It brings together, for the first time, the memories of dozens of people from each side of the conflict who were present in East Pakistan during the war. It lets the available evidence tell the stories. It has been described as a work that "will set anew the terms of debate" about this war.
Even before anyone has had the chance to read it, Dead Reckoning has been attracting comment, some of it of a nature that according to an observer would make the very reception of my book a subject of "taboo studies". "Myth-busting" works that undermine nationalist mythology, especially those that have gone unchallenged for several decades, are clearly not to be undertaken by the faint-hearted. The book has received gratifying praise from scholars and journalists who read the advance copies, but the word "courageous" cropped up with ominous frequency in many of the reviews. Some scholars praised my work in private; others told me to prepare for the flak that was bound to follow. One "myth-busting" scholar was glad my book was out at last, as I would now sweep up at the unpopularity stakes and she would get some respite after enduring several years of abuse.
Scholars and investigative journalists have an important role in "busting" politically partisan narratives. And yet, far too often we all fall for the seductive appeal of a simplistic "good versus evil" story, or fail to challenge victors' histories.
So far the story of valiant rebels fighting oppressive dictators in the so-called "Arab spring" has had one significant blemish - the vicious sexual attack and attempted murder of CBS foreign correspondent Lara Logan by dozens of men celebrating the downfall of Hosni Mubarak in Tahrir Square in Cairo. It initially vanished from the headlines and has still not led to the kind of questioning of the representation of such conflicts that it should have generated. "Tahrir Square" became shorthand for freedom and democracy-loving people rising up against oppressive dictators.
People in other countries started to say they wanted their own "Tahrir Square". Logan has given a brave and graphic account of what happened to her at the hands of those supposedly celebrating the fall of a dictator and the coming of freedom, democracy and human rights. Her life was saved by burqa-clad Egyptian women and she was rescued by soldiers. Her account endows "Tahrir Square" with an entirely different meaning.
It should caution us against assuming that all those opposing an oppressive regime are champions of non-violence, democracy or human rights. It should alert us to the complexities of political power struggles and civil war, and stop getting carried away by what we imagine is happening, or would like to happen, rather than what the evidence supports.
Such was the impact of the 1971 war on South Asians that the year has transformed into a shorthand for its particular symbolism: 1971, or ekattor, the number 71 in Bengali, has come to stand for a simple equation of a popular nationalist uprising presumed to embody liberal democratic values battling brutal repression by a military dictatorship. But was it really as simple as that? Over time, the victorious Bangladeshi nationalist side's narrative of Pakistani villainy and Bengali victimhood became entrenched through unquestioned repetition.
The losing side of Pakistani nationalists had its own myth-making, comprising vast Indian plots. Pakistan had been carved out of the British Empire in India as a homeland for South Asia's Muslims. It was a problematic idea from the start - a large proportion of Muslims chose to remain in secular and pluralistic India, for instance, and its two parts, West Pakistan and East Pakistan, were separated by a thousand miles of a hostile India. In 1971 the idea of Islam as the basis of nationhood came apart in South Asia along with the country of Pakistan, after a mere 23 years of existence. What went wrong? And what do the memories of those who were there reveal about the reality of that war?
The publication of Dead Reckoning has spoiled the day for those who had been peddling their respective nationalist mythologies undisturbed for so long. Careers have been built - in politics, media, academia and development - on a particular telling of the 1971 war. All the warring parties of 1971 remain relentlessly partisan in recounting the conflict. As the dominant narrative, which has gained currency around the world, is that of the victorious Bangladeshi nationalists and their Indian allies, they stand to lose the most in any unbiased appraisal. Unsurprisingly therefore, the protests from this section are the shrillest.
Mixed reaction
The reaction to the publication of Dead Reckoning by those who feel threatened by it has followed a predictable path. First, there has been an attempt to damn the book before it was even available. Apart from random rants on the internet - which provides opportunity for anyone to rail against anything - reports have been written by people who haven't read the book, citing other people who also haven't read the book. The reason for this may be summed up as the well-founded fear of "knowledge is power".
When people read the book they will be far better informed as to what really happened in 1971. Hence the desperate attempt by those who have been spinning their particular yarns for so long to try to smear the book before anyone gets the chance to read it. A few people also seem to be trying to laud the book before reading it, an equally meaningless exercise. These commentaries are easy to dismiss: clearly, those who haven't read the book have nothing of value to say about it.
Second, detractors of the book claim that it exonerates the military from atrocities committed in East Pakistan in 1971. In reality the book details over several chapters many cases of atrocities committed by the regime's forces, so anyone who says it excuses the military's brutalities is clearly lying. The question is - why are they lying about something that will easily be found out as soon as people start reading the book? The answer to this question is more complex than it might seem. Of course the detractors hope that by making such claims they will stop people from reading the book.
Part of the answer lies also in that the book corrects some of the absurd exaggerations about the army's actions with which Bangladeshi nationalists had happily embellished their stories of "villainous" Pakistanis for all these years. But an important reason for falsely claiming that the book exonerates the military is to distract attention from the fact that it also chronicles the brutalities by their own side, committed in the name of Bengali nationalism. The nature and scale of atrocities committed by the "nationalist" side had been edited out of the dominant narrative. Its discovery spoils the "villains versus innocents" spin of Bangladeshi nationalist mythology.
A key question about the "controversy" over Dead Reckoning is why this book is stirring such passions when other works do not. One reason for this is that there are precious few studies of the 1971 war based on dispassionate research. This is the first book-length study that reconstructs the violence of the war at the ground-level, utilising multiple memories from all sides of the conflict.
Two eminent US historians, Richard Sisson and Leo Rose, published the only research-based study of the war at the diplomatic and policy level twenty years ago. Their excellent book, War and Secession: Pakistan, India and the Creation of Bangladesh (University of California Press, 1990), challenged the dominant narrative, but their work does not seem to be known among the general public as much as within academia.
However, a crucial reason for the special impact of Dead Reckoning has to do with who the author is. I am a Bengali, from a nationalist family in India. As Indians and Bengalis our sympathies had been firmly with the liberation struggle in Bangladesh in 1971. The dominant narrative of the 1971 war is the story as told by "my side", as it were. My reporting of what I actually found through my research, rather than unquestioningly repeating the partisan narrative or continuing the conspiracy of silence over uncomfortable truths, is thus taken as a "betrayal" by those who have profited for so long from mythologising the history of 1971.
It is important to note that not all South Asians subscribe to the myth-making. One eminent Indian journalist thought that my "courage, disregard for orthodoxy and meticulous research" in writing Dead Reckoning made me "the enfant terrible of Indian historians". A senior Bangladeshi scholar has found it "fitting that someone with Sarmila's links with Bengali nationalism should demonstrate that political values cannot be furthered by distorting history."
South Asians are prone to conjuring up all manner of conspiracy theories when faced with unpleasant realities, but those looking for one for Dead Reckoning are at a loss, as the only explanation for what it contains is that it reconstructs what really happened on the basis of available evidence.
The process of dismantling entrenched nationalist mythologies can be painful for those who have much vested in them, but the passions stirred by the publication of Dead Reckoning has sparked the debate that the 1971 war badly needed - and set on the right course the discussion of this bitter and brutal fratricidal war that split the only homeland created for Muslims in the modern world.
Sarmila Bose is Senior Research Fellow in the Politics of South Asia at the University of Oxford. She was a journalist in India for many years. She earned her degrees at Bryn Mawr College (History) and Harvard University (MPA and PhD in Political Economy and Government.)
Dead Reckoning: Memories of the 1971 Bangladesh War is published by C. Hurst and Co. and Columbia University Press.
The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.

Bangladesh, a Safer Place for Mothers In Big Win for Health Community, Maternal Deaths Plunge 40 Percent in Decade


For many couples that plan to start a family, the journey from pregnancy to birth is one of excitement, anticipation, and in many cases, fear. The first two emotions are universally shared, but the third varies greatly with geography and circumstance.
A couple in the United States may fear that nine months isn’t enough time to read all of the right parenting books, buy a new car, and find a bigger house. The convenience of a well-equipped health-care system allows the couple to be preoccupied with preparing for the arrival of a new family member, and focus on becoming good parents.
A couple in the developing world often experiences a very different journey. Eighty to 90 percent do not have access to health facilities. This means that an expectant mother may not receive any pre-natal care during pregnancy and will most likely give birth without trained medical personnel.
A Short, Deadly Window
Each year, more than 150,000 women die in the first 48 hours after birth throughout the world; 1.6 million newborns will die in that same time frame. Ninety-nine percent of these pregnancy-related deaths occur in the developing world. The sad reality is that during this short window, mothers die giving life and newborns are robbed of their future simply because they don’t have access to a system that affords them quality care.
Changing the tide on these staggering statistics has been one of the greatest challenges for the global health community; the problem is complex and for this particular public health issue, there is no magic bullet. The solution requires bringing health-care services directly to people in remote communities, and educating those 80-90 percent of people who are accustomed to traditional practices, and explaining the benefit of seeking care and prescribing to healthy practices.
Studies show that progress in this area is slow. The rate of maternal and newborn deaths decreases by less than 1 percent each year, respectively.
But in one country—Bangladesh—maternal deaths decreased by 40 percent in the last nine years.
The 40 Percent Miracle
The Bangladesh Maternal Mortality and Health Service Survey, jointly funded by USAID, the Government of Bangladesh, Australian Aid, and the United Nations Population Fund, recently revealed that maternal deaths in Bangladesh fell from 322 per 100,000 in 2001 to 194 per 100,000 in 2010.
“This is a tremendous achievement for a country like Bangladesh where 80 percent of the population live under $2 per day income,” says Dr. Umme Meena, maternal health specialist at USAID/Bangladesh. With numbers like that, Bangladesh is on track to meet the 2015 deadline for the United Nations’ fifth Millennium Development Goal: to reduce the maternal mortality rate by three-fourths.
While further studies are needed to accurately determine the cause of this sharp decline, many global health experts believe it is a consequence of more couples actively seeking care combined with improved access to higher-level referral care. The improved access results from women’s increased awareness and literacy levels, better roads, and an increased number of health facilities that are able to provide emergency obstetric care.
With support from USAID, an increasing proportion of women receive antenatal care. Accordingly, more women understand how to access the health-care system, and are more aware that they must seek prompt medical care when they detect any complications during their pregnancy or delivery.
Over the past five years, USAID has invested in programs that actively manage the third stage of labor, the most dangerous stage, to prevent the highest cause of maternal death—postpartum hemorrhage. Experts also give credit to successful family planning programs that have reduced exposure to high-risk pregnancies, which in turn prevented a large number of maternal deaths. The fertility decline from 3.2 to 2.5 births per woman in the last nine years is estimated to account for 46 percent of the decline in maternal deaths during this period.
Better Planning, Better Outcomes
USAID’s family planning programs in Bangladesh contributed significantly to this behavior change. USAID supports the world’s largest social marketing program—a widespread network of 200,000 pharmacies, other retail outlets, and health providers to market contraceptive and health products and provide quality health services—which accounts for 35 percent of Bangladesh’s modern contraceptive prevalence rate.
“We can confidently say that our long and unwavering investments in family planning have had a direct impact in lowering the total fertility rate, and thus the maternal mortality rate, in Bangladesh,” says Lily Kak, USAID’s senior country adviser for Bangladesh.
Amanda Glassman, director of global health policy and a research fellow at the Center for Global Development, wrote that “the results are also a good reminder that investments in family planning and girls’ education drive much of maternal health outcomes, and that USAID investment in social marketing of family planning and health seems to be paying off in improved health.”
Care for 20 Million
Through NGO clinics and community-based approaches, USAID provides basic health-care coverage to nearly 20 million Bengalis, including low-cost, quality family planning services, maternal and child care, and HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis prevention and treatment. USAID has trained and mobilized community health workers who go into communities without health facilities to provide maternal and child health care. The care also supplements broader health services that are provided in USAID-supported NGO clinics and satellite clinics in communities, thus contributing to significant declines in child mortality. And, through the social marketing program, USAID provides family planning services to the entire nation.
But the international aid community is not the sole driver of these changes. When addressing the U.N. General Assembly in 2010, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wazed committed to doubling, by 2015, the percentage of births attended by skilled health workers from the current level of 24 percent; staffing all 427 sub-district health centers to provide around-the-clock midwifery services; and upgrading all district hospitals and Mother and Child Welfare Centers for emergency obstetric care services. She also committed to ensuring universal implementation of the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness Program. As a first step towards achieving her commitment to halve unmet need for family planning by 2015, the prime minister mobilized 17 ministries in a meeting of the National Population Council in September 2010.
Last November, the Bangladesh Government and the United States jointly rolled out President Barack Obama’s Global Health Initiative (GHI) country plan—a multi-year, interagency effort aimed at improving and saving lives by strengthening health systems.
An independent review of the national health sector program concluded that “Bangladesh has already achieved most of the reduction in mortality that can be achieved through vertical programs; future progress will increasingly depend on more complex interventions requiring a more efficient, effective and equitable health system.”
The GHI offers an opportunity for the U. S. Government to make a strategic shift towards increased engagement with the Government of Bangladesh and strengthened capacity of the public sector health systems while building on the successful approach of supporting service delivery through the NGO and private sector. It will continue to focus on providing quality services to further reduce maternal and child mortality, increase family planning use, improve nutrition status among children under age 5, and strengthen overall health systems over the next five years.

Tagore life force for all Bengalis: Bangladesh minister




Kolkata, May 9 (IANS) Noble laureate poet Rabindranath Tagore, who has composed the national anthems of both India and Bangladesh, is the life force for people on both sides of the border, Bangladesh Minister of State for Cultural Affairs Promod Mankin said here Monday.
Speaking at a India-Bangladesh joint commemoration programme of the bard’s 150th birth anniversary, Mankin recalled the deep-rooted ties between the two countries.
‘There are many Indian writers, artists, a (former) chief minister (Jyoti Basu) and leaders, whose ancestral homes are in Bangladesh. Rabindranath himself had his ancestral homes in Bangladesh and his family were the zamindars (land owners) in parts of Bangladesh,’ he said.
Calling Tagore the ‘life force’ of West Bengal and Bangladesh, he said his compositions, stories, novels, dramas and songs have given a fulfilling experience to people on both sides of the border.
‘It is meaningless to argue to which country Rabindranath belonged. He belonged to all of us. He belonged to the whole world,’ Mankin said.
‘He is the cementing force in strengthening ties between India and Bangladesh. He is a soul mate of every Bengali residing on either side of the border. We can never forget the help and contributions of India during the 1971 Bangladesh liberation war,’ said Mankin.
The Bangladesh minister said his country has put its best foot forward to honour and show respect to Tagore on the occasion.
‘It is historic that these two countries have come together to celebrate Tagore’s birthday. The people of Bangladesh are happy. Currently a grand festival is going on in Bangladesh,’ he told reporters on the sidelines of the programme.
West Bengal Governor M.K. Narayanan said Tagore not only enriched India’s art and literature but also helped in the intellectual and spiritual reawakening of the country during the dark days of the bondage under foreign rule.
‘He fired the nation’s imagination in respect of nationalism. Gurudev was seen as the conscience of the nation when the country was trying to break the shackles of bondage,’ said Narayanan.
Eminent artistes of different genres from both countries, including Soumitra Chatterjee, Shirshendu Mukhopadhyay, Mohan Singh, Rezwana Chowdhury Banya and Fahim Hossain Chowdhury and Pallabi Dance centre from Bangladesh participated in the programme.

Bangladesh: Broken Promises From Government to Halt RAB Killings


(Dhaka, May 10, 2011) - The Bangladeshi government is failing to keep its commitment to end extrajudicial killings, torture, and other abuses by the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) and hold those responsible accountable, Human Rights Watch said in a new report today.
The 53-page report, "‘Crossfire': Continued Human Rights Abuses by Bangladesh's Rapid Action Battalion," documents abuses by RAB in and around Dhaka, the capital, under the current Awami League-led government. Nearly 200 people have been killed in RAB operations since January 6, 2009, when the government assumed office. While in opposition the Awami League promised to end extrajudicial killings, but since it came to office senior government officials have denied that RAB has committed abuses, and some have even justified them.
"After two years in office, the government has had more than enough time to take action to stop the RAB's murderous practices," said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "A death squad is roaming the streets of Bangladesh and the government does not appear to be doing anything to stop it. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina needs to act."
The report builds on the 2006 Human Rights Watch report, "Judge, Jury, and Executioner: Torture and Extrajudicial Killings by Bangladesh's Elite Security Force." It is based on over 80 interviews with victims, witnesses, human rights defenders, journalists, law enforcement officials, lawyers, and judges.
Although the government has made many commitments to end the killings and to punish perpetrators, no RAB officer or official has ever been prosecuted for a "crossfire" killing or other human rights abuse. "Crossfire" is a blanket term used to justify most of the unit's killings.
The government should either make major steps towards RAB accountability and reform in the next six months or disband it, Human Rights Watch said. Donors such as the US, United Kingdom, and Australia should immediately withdraw all assistance and cooperation until and unless dramatic improvements take place.
RAB was formed in March 2004 as a composite force comprising members from the military -army, air force, and navy - the police, and members of Bangladesh's other law enforcement groups. Members are assigned from their parent organizations, to which they return after serving with the unit. RAB operates under the Ministry of Home Affairs and is commanded by an officer not below the rank of deputy inspector general of the police or the equivalent military rank. The unit is regarded as an elite counterterrorism force and indeed has targeted, apart from criminal suspects, alleged members of militant Islamist or left-wing groups.
In often standardized press statements, the unit claims that criminals were shot and killed in "crossfire" after they or their accomplices opened fire on RAB. Investigations by Human Rights Watch and Bangladeshi human rights organizations have found, however, that many victims have been executed while in the unit's custody. Bodies of those killed have often carried marks indicating that they had been tortured. Many people who survived periods in the unit's custody have alleged that they were tortured there.
In one recent case, on March 3, RAB personnel in civilian clothes picked up Rasal Ahmed Bhutto while he was minding a friend's shop in Dhaka. Bhutto's brother-in-law, Gulam Mustafa, told Human Rights Watch that one of their relatives in the army was able to contact colleagues in RAB and extract a promise that Bhutto would not be killed in "crossfire." However, on March 10, Gulam Mustafa said, Bhutto was brought to the area where he lived in a vehicle belonging to the unit and was shot and killed. RAB summoned journalists to show the body of an alleged criminal killed in crossfire.
"They brought him and committed cold-blooded murder," Mustafa told Human Rights Watch.
Members of the Awami League were victims of RAB while in opposition, and senior party officials contended that it engaged in politically motivated killings. But the impunity the unit has enjoyed since it was established continues under the Awami League government.
Echoing their predecessors in the BNP-led government, the home minister and other government representatives deny any wrongdoing by the unit and other law enforcement agencies. Instead, they cling to the fiction that all of those killed were shot by authorities acting in self defense.
In March 2009, for example, Law Minister Shafique Ahmed told Human Rights Watch that the government had no intention of investigating allegations of past human rights abuses by security forces, even though the perpetrators remained in the unit's ranks and would be likely to continue their illegal methods. Ahmed said that even though he did not condone "crossfire" killings, it should be remembered that RAB had only killed "criminals." In May 2010, despite numerous reports by human rights groups, the minister said that, "No more crossfire incidents are taking place in the country."
Home Minister Sahara Khatun, whose ministry supervises the unit, said in January 2011 in response to allegations of rising extrajudicial executions: "Many people are talking and will talk about this. But as the home minister, I am saying that the law enforcers' task is to bring the criminals to the book." When asked about allegations by Human Rights Watch on continuing extrajudicial killings, she said: "What will the law enforcers do - save themselves or die - when criminals open fire on them."
Port and Shipping Minister Shajahan Khan has said that crossfire killings are not human rights violations and that such killings have helped to bring extortion and other crimes under control.
Disappointingly, the government has not renounced any of these comments, Human Rights Watch said. Awami League officials have consistently argued that they do not need to root out abusers because they could exercise effective political control over the battalion, a claim that is belied by the evidence during the government's more than two years in office.
In a worrying development, RAB has recently begun to carry out enforced disappearances. Bangladeshi human rights groups say that it has started killing people without acknowledging any role in their deaths.
Human Rights Watch said that after seven years of widespread abuses and more than 700 deaths, if the unit's human rights record does not improve dramatically within the next six months and abusers are not prosecuted, the Bangladeshi government should disband it. In its place the government should create a new unit within the police or a new institution that puts human rights at its core to lead the fight against serious and organized crime and terrorism. Neither RAB nor any new force created should draw its forces from the military, which has a different operating culture than a civilian police force, Human Rights Watch said.
The US, UK, and Australia should insist that the Bangladesh government follow through on its commitments and ensure that there are prompt, impartial, and independent investigations into torture and deaths in the custody of the unit, Human Rights Watch said.
"Instead of an elite law enforcement unit designed to control crime and terrorism, RAB has become a deadly law breaker," said Adams. "It is now fair to ask whether the government has any intention of addressing this scourge."
Selected Testimony from the Report
"I asked them how much money they got to kill my son and told them that they could kill me in crossfire as well. One RAB officer then grabbed my neck and said, ‘Get out of here, bitch. If you don't shut up, people here will kill you.' I asked him what he was doing there and if it was not his job to protect me. He then calmed down, asked me to leave and said that I could collect Pappu's body at Mitford hospital."
- Mother of Azad Hussein Pappu, killed by RAB on February 28, 2010
"The media was already there and RAB kept saying that Bhutto had been caught in a special operation. I started shouting at them, saying maybe Bhutto had done some bad things but where is the rule of law, how dare RAB kill Bhutto. The RAB officers just stared at me and said nothing, which frightened me. And then although some people supported me, a local Awami League leader came out and started raising slogans saying that Bhutto was a criminal anyway... RAB then took the body away for the autopsy. When I went to collect the body, I saw that there was only one bullet inside his ear. The police made me sign a blank sheet of paper. I didn't want to do it but then I just gave in."
- Gulam Mustafa, recounts the scene at the killing of a close relative
I was blindfolded and my hands were tied. I was forced to sit down. Four men in civilian clothes beat my legs with sugar cane stalks, while a man in RAB uniform sat on a chair watching. My legs were swollen like pillows.

- Baby Akhtar recounts her torture by RAB

 
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