Thursday, October 16, 2014

Around The World [10.16.14]

India


Strong ties among Hindus and Muslims. No more communal violence. Never.

By appointing Mr. M J Akbar as the BJP spokesperson and emphasizing the point in all of his important speeches, Mr. Modi has assured us of his sincerity.
I look forward to working with Prime Minister Narendra Modi on this issue.
[Prime Minister Narendra Modi loves me!]




"I wrote this piece not to comment on the masses or the problems of communalism in India and its villages, but because this is an issue that concerns my friends and their families. 

I have always thought about Islam as a religion of peace and submission. As I grew older, I saw religion twisted and used so badly by men.

We need a loud moderate voice to separate the good from the evil.

The fabric of India is woven from many threads — English, Muslim, Hindu and many others. A major concern in today’s India is that we keep deleting our past.

We are a blend, this great country of ours. It is our differences that make us who we are. We need to get beyond mere tolerance. We need to accept and respect and love each other."



South Asia and South East Asia

Control of 
  • Illegal Drugs
  • Illegal Arms in the hands of Citizens and terrorists
  • Gold Smuggling
  • Human (especially women and children) Trafficking
(Cross border issues)


Since January 2014, the law enforcement agencies of Bangladesh including
have taken strict measures with great success. 

Bogra Police showdown against
Illegal Drugs
 
 
RAB members (Arms)



 
Arms
Border Guard Bangladesh (Drugs)



Gold Smuggling

















We would request the Law Enforcement Agencies of all the countries of South Asia and South East Asia to join our efforts. Together - we can share our experiences and expertise and be stronger.





China - Japan Relation



I am betting whole heartedly!
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and President Xi Jinping shaking hands  - would make a nice picture in my blog!




Iran - West Relation



"A SEDUCTIVE idea is gaining ground among the West’s foreign-policy “realists”—with a bit of boldness America and Iran could end their mutually destructive enmity of the past 35 years and, in so doing, take a giant step towards resolving the conflicts that have brought misery to a large part of the Middle East.

Several times Mr Rohani emphasised that, if only a nuclear agreement could be reached, he had “no doubt that the situation between the US and Iran will be completely different”; there were “many potential areas of co-operation in the future”. He also contrasted Iran’s political stability with the chaos in the rest of region. Mr Rohani’s message could not have been clearer: cut us a little slack on the nuclear file and all sorts of other good things will flow from it; we have just two months to seize the chance of a new beginning.

.. meetings between America’s secretary of state, John Kerry, and Iran’s foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, have become almost routine and, according to one Western official, they appear to get on.

Although there seems little chance of Iran abandoning Mr Assad, its diplomats have occasionally let slip that they may not be quite as wedded to him personally as it appears; Iran could thus play a decisive role in ending the civil war in Syria. Similarly, an Iran that no longer encouraged and enabled its proxies in the region (Hizbullah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza) to provoke and threaten Israel really would be seen by the West to have changed. More plausibly, Iran could extend its existing co-operation in Afghanistan, helping to stabilise the country as NATO forces end their combat mission there."


India - US Relation


"Narendra Modi takes America by storm"




Japan






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