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Holy Cow! Assam has turned into cattle hub for Bangladesh

can you tell me why none of these women wearing red dots on their foreheads if they are biharis. These people are bangladeshis and this is the trademark bangladeshi look

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i can't explain the same thing again and again. These people are illegal b'dehis rounded up by the Assam police.

And Rounded up for what? Sent them to BD? Did BD accept? If not stop crying Go somewhere else.
 
first stop immigrating to India we already have our own problems and second atleast acknowledge what you know is the truth.

first stop immigrating to India we already have our own problems and second atleast acknowledge what you know is the truth.
And Rounded up for what? Sent them to BD? Did BD accept? If not stop crying Go somewhere else.
 
I normally don't post in trolling mudfests like this but read this, there are lessons in here for all of us in South Asia. Instead of assigning people labels - try to understand why people migrate, most don't do it willingly....

When we encourage racist ideals like this in any country in South Asia - the results are not good. And to be honest, there is no shortage of racists on the Bangladesh side either...

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Isn’t ‘Illegal Bangladeshi’ Racist Shorthand For Bengali Speaking Muslims In Assam?

By Bonojit Hussain

15 May, 2014
Countercurrents.org

The fragile and unstable peace in Bodoland Territorial Autonomous Districts (BTAD) of Assam has once again been ruptured. The recent massacre of Muslims of East Bengali descent in Kokrajhar and Baksa districts of BTAD on 1st and 2ndMay has already taken toll on 46 lives; with many people still missing, the dead count might go up.

This is not the first time that targeted ethnic violence has occurred in what is today BTAD. Through out the 1990’s armed Bodo groups have indulged in pogroms against Nepalis, Adivasis and Muslims and Hindus of East Bengali descent. But since the creation of BTAD in 2003, increasingly only Muslims of East Bengali descent are being targeted. Worst among all was the so-called ‘riots’ of 2012 where 108 people died. According to sources in Assam government, 79 were Muslims of East Bengali descent, 22 were Bodos and 4 were from other communities.

A lot has been written about the underlying causes of these recurring targeted killings and we need not dwell upon that here. (for an overview see Sanjib Barua, “Assam: The Politics of ElectoralViolence”, Outlook Magazine, May 09, 2014). What should bother us all is how quickly discourse over the recurring massacres in BTAD is transformed into a debate on the question of illegal immigration from Bangladesh, wherein the victims are immediately labeled as ‘illegal Bangladeshis’. Even if the victims were ‘illegal Bangladeshis’, the barbaric act of killing 46 people in a span of 36 hours is a crime against humanity.

Like in 2012, immediately large section of Assamese society, a section of the national media and the BJP leadership raised the bogey of ‘illegal Bangladeshi’ to justify the killings and divert attention from the real causes of the massacre. Some even went to the extent of likening victims of the massacre with locust. Verbal attacks and abuses are also being launched on social media against anyone who dares question the hypocrisies of Assamese society. Recently an Assamese research scholar at Jawaharlal Nehru University was subjected to threats and abuses by Assamese xenophobes, she was also asked to re-locate to Bangladesh owing to her sympathies for these ‘locusts’.

If one poses the question as to how these xenophobes know that Assam is being swarmed by ‘illegal Bangladeshis’, the answer is always about increasing visibility and numbers of Miyas (slur used to denote Muslim Bangladeshis) in urban clusters, new settlements in peripheries of forest land and settlements near river embankments. I argue this is a racist way of telling.

It is a difficult question to answer how many undocumented Bangladeshis are there in BTAD area let alone in all of Assam. However, it impossible to refute that from 1901 to 1941, encouraged by the colonial administration, over 10 lakhs migrated and settled in Assam from East Bengal. The geographical area of present day BTAD would fall under what were Goalpara and Kamrup districts during the colonial era. So, it is worth mentioning that East Bengali Muslim peasants first settled in undivided Goalpara district, before they spanned out to other parts of western and central Assam. The decadal growth of population in Goalpara district had shot up by 30 % as early as 1901-1911 compared to 1.4 % and 2 % in the preceding decades respectively. In 1921-1931, the decadal growth of population of Goalpara dropped to 15.8 % because most of the suitable wasteland in the district had already been occupied by immigrants who poured into the district in 1901-1921, and that the immigrants had found a larger scope for settling in Kamrup and Nagaon districts. During 1921 to 1931 Barpeta subdivision of Kamrup district saw an enormous 69 % increase in population. Between 1901 and 1931, 4.98 lakhs East Bengali Muslim peasants are recorded in Goalpara district alone. Here, then, the question arises – Where are the descendents of the lakhs of Muslim peasants of East Bengali descent who settled in the region before partition? (for a detailed discussion see, Banajit Hussain, “The Bodoland Violence andPolitics of Explanation”; Seminar Magazine, No: 640, December, 2012)

Considering the abysmal level of socio-economic development among Muslims of East Bengali descent in Assam, the reason for increasing numbers and visibility of the so-called Miyas in urban clusters, in the peripheries of forest land and near river embankments could very well be migration from rural areas to urban centres of Assam in search of livelihood. But more importantly it could be because of internal displacement from Char areas of Assam.

Chars are the extremely braided mid-channel bar of Brahmaputra and its tributaries. These Chars were populated by Muslims of East Bengali descent for cultivation in the later decades of the Colonial era. Due to subsequent neglect and apathy of the Government the socio-economic indicators among Char dwellers have remained extremely depressing. Assam Government’s socio-economic survey in 1992-93 and 2002-03 revealed that Char dwellers constituted 9.35 % of the total population of Assam; the population density in the Char area was 690 persons per sq. km (Assam’s overall density in 2001 was 340 person per sq. km); between 1992-93 to 2002-03 literacy rate in Char area increased marginally from 15.45 % to 19.31 % (Assam’s overall literacy rate in 2001 was 63.25 %); in 2002-03 67.90 % of Char dwellers lived below the poverty line, an increase of 19% from 1992-93 (34 % of Assam’s population was below poverty line in 2001).

By their very nature of being integral part of the fluvial process of the river Brahmaputra and its tributaries, Chars are pre-disposed to erosion and Chardwellers pre-disposed to become internally displaced persons. Though hard data on displacement from char areas is hard to come by, some micro-level studies provide adequate insight into flood, erosion and displacement. One such study conducted by Dr. Gorky Chakraborty in the chars of Barpeta district reveals that“during the period (1989-98) when there was no high intensity flood in Assam, 45% of the total households were affected and 51% of the total land was lost by the surveyed char households. Similar study over a period of 25 years (1980-2004) in the Beki River, a tributary of Brahmaputra in Barpeta district reveals that 77% of the surveyed households suffered due to land erosion and 94% of their land was lost.” (Gorky Chakraborty, “Assam’s Hinterland: Society and Economy in the Char Areas”; Akansha Publishers, Delhi, 2009) With such abysmal socio-economic conditions and such high degree of erosion and displacement, lakhs of Chardwellers are left with no option but to migrate to the mainland.

With such complexities involved in differentiating between an undocumented Bangladeshi migrant and a Muslim citizen of East Bengali descent; how do Assamese xenophobes and leaders of BJP conclusively declare that the villagers of Balapara, Narasinghbari and Narayanguri (3 villages where the massacre occurred) were ‘illegal Bangladeshis’?

What are the ways of telling the difference? It is most certainly not difference but similarities between an undocumented Bangladeshi migrant and a Muslim citizen of East Bengali descent. It is physical and cultural markers; in this case it is beard, lungi, religion and language. Doesn’t this make ‘illegal Bangladeshi’ racist shorthand for any Muslim of East Bengali descent in Assam?

Here it is worth looking at the cliché that are too often deployed – “illegal Bangladeshis are behind Rhino poaching, they loot innocent tribal villagers, they breed faster than dogs, rape and murder women in villages of Assam”. These clichés are becoming a part of a new discursive formation under consolidation which represents Muslims of East Bengali descent as “lesser human” or in its extreme form as “locust”. It hardly needs to be asserted that the construction of the “lesser human” other that is sexually virulent and is naturally prone to criminality has been the hallmark of racist worldview for more than half a century now.

Bonojit Hussain is a Delhi based researcher from Assam. He is associated with New Socialist Initiative (NSI)

Note: A very short version of this article was published in today's Calcutta edition of The Telegraph
 
can you tell me why none of these women wearing red dots on their foreheads if they are biharis. These people are bangladeshis and this is the trademark bangladeshi look

bangladesh_photo_feature_image_10.jpg

2014623124624436734_20.jpg



i can't explain the same thing again and again. These people are illegal b'dehis rounded up by the Assam police.

@kobiraaz would you say these people don't look a tiny bit b'deshi like @TopCat claims?

I told you these people are Indian Bihari.. go and sck some biharis.

Bengalis are already 45% of the total population of the Assam. It will not be far when they will demand Ahomis to be deported to Myanmar as illegal.
 
first stop immigrating to India we already have our own problems and second atleast acknowledge what you know is the truth.
Go work hard, study diligently instead of blaming somebody for your misery.

you don't worry about Assam!
You are our neighbor, of course we will be worry. Stable India is in our interest.
 
I told you these people are Indian Bihari.. go and sck some biharis.

Bengalis are already 45% of the total population of the Assam. It will not be far when they will demand Ahomis to be deported to Myanmar as illegal.

I told you these people are Indian Bihari.. go and sck some biharis.

Bengalis are already 45% of the total population of the Assam. It will not be far when they will demand Ahomis to be deported to Myanmar as illegal.
yeah these bangladeshi immigrants pose a similar threat.

Go work hard, study diligently instead of blaming somebody for your misery.


You are our neighbor, of course we will be worry. Stable India is in our interest.
actually its in the interest of both our countires. Stable bangladesh means less infiltration of b;deshis into Assam.
 
You Assamese should start learning Sylheti before it is too late.


Try to stabilise your country as soon Rohingiyas will enter your space as refugees, finally you are an islamic nation!
Our country is very stable and propersou. Rohingyas are our proxy. ;)
 
You Assamese should start learning Sylheti before it is too late.

the sylheti speaking bengali population in the Barak Valley of Assam has no real power in Assam politics its all controlled by the politicians of the Brahamputra Valley. They sylhetis better learn Assamese.
 
the sylheti speaking bengali population in the Barak Valley of Assam has no real power in Assam politics its all controlled by the politicians of the Brahamputra Valley. They sylhetis better learn Assamese.
Sylhetis are proud nation. They will spit on Assamese .. LOL
 
Sylhetis are proud nation. They will spit on Assamese .. LOL

proud nation? Is there a struggle going on in B'desh for a independent country for sylhetis?

btw bengali is such a beautiful language the sylheti dialect is a total menace
 
proud nation? Is there a struggle going on in B'desh for a independent country for sylhetis?
Sylhetis in both Assam and Bangladesh are proud group of people. They got money. You need to stick around them, you may get some throw aways from them. ;)
 
Hindu sylhetis ofAssam and Tripura are so better then their b'deshi counterpart
 
btw bengali is such a beautiful language the sylheti dialect is a total menace

You are a hindu Bengali then? You ran away from Bangladesh to get some freebies in India?

Hindu sylhetis ofAssam and Tripura are so better then their b'deshi counterpart
Without Muslim protection in Assam you Hindus would had been skinned alive by the apes of the Jungles ;)
 
for you i'm an Indian and not at all happy with your people polluting my land.
 

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