My comments on an article on Bangladesh by a yellow journalist


Rachel Avraham has been known to epitomize yellow journalism. Her piece on Bangladesh is one more example of her flawed analysis. It does not take too much effort to find that behind the veneer of attacking Shaikh Hasina, the Prime Minister of Bangladesh, for her known and well-established political animosity with the leader of the Opposition, BNP, what we find is her unfathomed hatred about Muslims not just in Bangladesh but across the globe. She claims to be the president of  a group to promote human rights in the Middle East, however, a closer look at her resume and writings display that she has been a promoter for Zionist expansionism in her own country, Israel, which for decades has shamed the rest of the world, including its Jewry, with its horrendous records of dehumanization and persecution of the indigenous Palestinians.
She is, of course, irate with President Erdogan, the Turkish leader, who had has challenged Benjamin Netanyahu and Israeli leaders - past and present - for its war crimes against the Palestinians in Gaza.

Anyone desirous of finding the truth can notice that she lies about Turkish stand on the Rohingya issue. Turkey has not limited its help to Hindu Rohingyas. It is a blatant lie that she tries to implant to create division within the rank and file of the Rohingya diaspora.

She sheds crocodile tears for minorities who are politically, economically and socially better off compared to Muslim majority inside Bangladesh. Her quotation of a known Hindutvadi propagandist S.K. Basu does not and should not surprise us to paint a damning, no matter how untrue, picture about Bangladesh. We have seen similar attempts by another member of the pro-RSS group, HRCBM, Ms. Saha, recently in the White House. [In the past, I have repeatedly shown how HRCBM has been involved in treason and conspiracy against Bangladesh.] Shame on her!

I wish she had shredded her yellow journalism and opted to write facts and concentrate her piece on the divisive politics in Bangladesh, which surely has pelted one woman leader against the other for the last 3 decades at the cost of democratic pluralism/inclusiveness and not dictatorship/exclusion.

Corrupt leaders should be imprisoned for their crimes, irrespective of who they are (including Benjamin Netanyahu) and when they do such crimes. That is what is desirable in any country that respects law over personality. No government should harass members of the political opposition for political expediency.

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