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Poor, overpopulated bengledash can't handle flood of Rohingya refugees

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Daniel808 is Indonesian of Chinese descent..... he was not being anti china.... you need to read again and understand what he said

I don't think it's a coincidence that these foreign "ethnic Chinese" like @Daniel808 who refuse to wear Chinese flags are always opposed to CPC policy, like with Myanmar.

China used our veto to protect Myanmar in the UNSC for Chinese interests, not for foreign interests. We have no obligation to protect the interests of foreigners.
 
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FIRST, Tell your own PM to request us before we even need to look into the matter then....or replace your PM with a better one more in tune with BD people sentiments to bring it up in first place if you feel there is issue there.

Till then basically BD has accepted these as her people and her problem. Go beg for aid instead of seeking to eject them to MM where they have illegal status.

These refugees are not Indian and will never have any stake in India....and we will expunge the few that came here back to where they ought to be (as precursor to the much larger presence of BD illegals who are being processed and segregated for later deportation to a more compromised weak and subservient BD later). Deal with it. This is the fate of your "country" and always will be.

Laughing stock for India, now add China, Russia and eventually rest of the world (as they wise up to your antics). You are a nobody....just a dumping ground for your own society decisions. You reap the bitter harvest of what you sow in first place....and if you want to learn that the hard way like the immature low IQ brats you are...so be it.

Deflecting and trying to passing the buck regarding problems created by your people through constant whining only creates this dissonance with reality. Enjoy it. Way more to come. Maybe you lot enjoy the feeling of shafting. Hopefully Bangladesh is totally destroyed ASAP and something better and more sustainable can be created from the ashes....so delta people (both those there and those that have spread illegally beyond) can actually get on with their lives and development (back within where they sprung from) without the waaah waaah nationalist types making their life a misery through grandiose promises but only massive blowback to show for it (when they arent being corrupt SOB's or flee the country and region all together and preach and whine and all bark from those sanctuaries still while doing zero bite because their inherent BD nature is stuck like a rock in front of them).

Jesus, you really need to get a life dude.
 
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This is the same country that shouts at the top of their lungis for other to treat the rohingya better..
Arakanese Muslims settled there at least six Century before from a land called India. So, India should take back all the refugees in its underpopulated, rich and big country.
 
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I asked a question. Do not get defensive.
BD government is such an Indian puppet
that it joins China's OBOR?
India has influence over BD but it is not a puppet master.
BD has no friends as this crisis has made clear.
Pacifist policy will go and in comes an even more massive military buildup than the one planned.
My bad, I sympathise with BD, I believe Bangladesh has many friends but the situation is difficult since theres lots of players and money involved. Also theres many conflicts and problems already going on around the middle east and many countries are preoccupied.
 
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Actually on this matter India and China are on the same side. They are all protecting their interests and history will be their judge.

What I know is that we did the right thing. Everyone talking sh#t here did nothing at all to help.

They think the world is stupid. We took 1.9m people in and they're trying to make out like we're the bad guys!


Awami has placed all eggs in one basket called Bharat. There is not even a day goes by where Awami is not praising India while demonizing
Pakistan.

Singing amar sonar bangla and glorifying 71 ain’t
going to strengthen our position in the world. We are Muslim so our foreign policy must be aligned with other Muslim country.

Every country protect their interest. It’s time we bury the ghost of 71, restore democracy, unite our people and get ready for the battle of survival or stay as is and face anhilation.
 
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You have two Indonesian flags, are you loyal to China or Indonesia? :lol:

My position is the same as that of the Chinese government, not some anti-China foreigner.

You can cry about China's use of the UNSC veto as much as you want. China uses our veto to protect Chinese interests in Myanmar, who cares what anti-China foreigners think.

Well said, every country must put their National interest first before anything else. You cant afford being such hypocritic and getting your larger picture jeopardized over something minuscule. Thats why PRC can get into their current position.

Even two bitter enemies can share the same sentiments in this issue.
 
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I hope you wise enough, to not see one country based on random opinion from one selfish members @UKBengali

That Chin*se-Dr*gon is a socially awkward boy, who have personal hatred to social life/person.

Even he doesn't care and hate their own overseas brother like me and other members (Overseas Chinese).
So, it's better not to expect any empathy to rohingya from a boy like that.

Regarding this Rohingya issue, I feel empathy and my wish for our bangladeshi brothers in a struggle to face this problem.
It's really a big problem, because we don't talking about hundreds people, but we are talking about half or even a million people.

But it's also hard to expect other countries to open their door to millions of refugees, with their different culture and languange.
Its impossible, even he is your best friend either. To open his door to Millions of refugees with different culture and languange.

My only wish is, condition in myanmar can get better. So, our bangladeshi brothers can end this burden.

I believe, Chinese Government is always on the side of his bangladeshi friends, even they cannot intervene in myanmar internal politics regarding rohingya issue.

I heard yesterday, China already send Humanitarian Logistics to help bangladesh for rohingya refugee there, and soon more on the way to our bangladeshi friends.
If I find the news again, I will post it in here.


@Nabil365 @TaiShang @Martian2 and others
I have mentioned earlier because of some Bangladeshi members bad-mouthing China and Chinese members bad-mouthing Bangladesh, will not harm the warm and friendly relationship between the two nations.

FIRST, Tell your own PM to request us before we even need to look into the matter then....or replace your PM with a better one more in tune with BD people sentiments to bring it up in first place if you feel there is issue there.

Till then basically BD has accepted these as her people and her problem. Go beg for aid instead of seeking to eject them to MM where they have illegal status.

These refugees are not Indian and will never have any stake in India....and we will expunge the few that came here back to where they ought to be (as precursor to the much larger presence of BD illegals who are being processed and segregated for later deportation to a more compromised weak and subservient BD later). Deal with it. This is the fate of your "country" and always will be.

Laughing stock for India, now add China, Russia and eventually rest of the world (as they wise up to your antics). You are a nobody....just a dumping ground for your own society decisions. You reap the bitter harvest of what you sow in first place....and if you want to learn that the hard way like the immature low IQ brats you are...so be it.

Deflecting and trying to passing the buck regarding problems created by your people through constant whining only creates this dissonance with reality. Enjoy it. Way more to come. Maybe you lot enjoy the feeling of shafting. Hopefully Bangladesh is totally destroyed ASAP and something better and more sustainable can be created from the ashes....so delta people (both those there and those that have spread illegally beyond) can actually get on with their lives and development (back within where they sprung from) without the waaah waaah nationalist types making their life a misery through grandiose promises but only massive blowback to show for it (when they arent being corrupt SOB's or flee the country and region all together and preach and whine and all bark from those sanctuaries still while doing zero bite because their inherent BD nature is stuck like a rock in front of them).
Irony to see "high" IQ indians unable to locate their poo taking location.
 
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Three things:

I went to a masjid yesterday and met two Bangladeshi guys. Really cool, educated, pragmatic, and balanced. Seemed like good peoples.

Secondly, I went to a rally to raise awareness of the Rohingya situation in Texas. Very small, but it was nice to see people of different faiths express solidarity on the basis of humanism.

Thirdly, the OP is a turd of the highest degree.
 
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@django @Nilgiri this article is a great read and really shows their hypocrisy.
Now to expose your mighty supa pawa's enormous wealth and bright future prospects:
India will soon have the world's biggest population, but it's not ready for the challenges that creates
large_AAj4D95yzXyodlL7Xr4ECg2GlaQDtTJjF5G_8aMkIKw.jpg

India’s rate of urban population growth is expected to climb, partly due to migratory flows, especially youths seeking jobs.
Image: REUTERS/K. K. Arora
This article is published in collaboration withQuartz
21 Aug 2017
Barry Mirkin Former Chief, Population policy section of the United Nations population division.
Joseph Chamie Former Director, United Nations population division
Key moments from India Economic Summit
  • India’s Women in the Workforce October 06, 2017 06:15
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  • Day two in New Delhi October 05, 2017 00:00
  • India's women at work October 04, 2017 12:54
  • Are you optimistic about India? October 04, 2017 08:55
  • Day one in New Delhi October 04, 2017 06:05
    Follow the live blog
This article is part of the India Economic Summit
By 2024, India will slip past China to become the most populous country, and must rapidly prepare for a fast-changing economy.

India will likely hold that rank throughout the 21st century
. Its population is 1.34 billion, nearly a fourfold increase since independence 70 years ago. China’s population, at 1.41 billion, roughly doubled over the same period. The pace of India’s population growth, now at 15 million per year, is the world’s largest. The two nations alone have more than a billion people, and their population gap is projected to widen to 500 million by 2100. By comparison, the third and fourth most populous countries in 2100, Nigeria and the United States, are projected to have populations of nearly 800 million and 450 million, respectively.

The long-term growth of India’s population, largely a function of fertility rates, is less certain. UN population projections indicate a range of possible scenarios. For example, if India’s current fertility of 2.3 births per woman remains constant, its population would grow to 1.8 billion by 2050 and 2.5 billion by 2100. Even under the instant-replacement fertility variant, with the country’s fertility assumed to fall immediately to 2.1 births per woman, India’s population would reach 1.9 billion by the century’s close.

The frequently cited UN medium projection assumes Indian fertility will decline to below replacement by 2035 and remain at 1.8 births per woman in subsequent decades. As a result, India’s population is projected to peak at 1.7 billion in 2060 before declining to 1.5 billion by 2100. The low projection assumes more rapid fertility decline to well below replacement level—about 1.3 births per woman—resulting in India’s population peaking at 1.5 billion around 2040 and falling to 900 million by 2100.
v4Ryz8WtM5sqv_PAJ7C8PUbdkQbYWWun0OS81ixStr0.jpg

Image: UN Population Division medium variant projections
While India’s fertility has declined to about half the level of the late 1980s, that trajectory may not continue. In the past eight years, contraceptive use fell by almost 35% as abortions and the use of emergency pills doubled. More specifically, reliance on oral birth control pills, condoms, and vasectomies declined by 30%, 52%, and 73%, respectively.
In 2017, the health ministry launched a campaign to expand the use of modern contraception with a focus on population stabilisation in 146 high-fertility districts across seven states.
With India’s contraceptive prevalence rate at 52%, abortion has become a “proxy contraceptive” for many women, especially those from poorer households.
For decades, India relied on female sterilisation as the primary contraceptive method, funding about 4 million tubal ligations annually, more than any other country.
In 2016, the government took major steps toward modernising that system, introducing injectable contraceptives free of charge in government facilities.
Have you read?
A relatively young age structure also contributes to India’s population growth. The median age in India is 27 years, compared to 38 years for China. Children under age 18 account for one-third of India’s population as compared with one-fifth of China’s.

However, due to fertility declines to near replacement levels, India’s population is also ageing. The proportion of elderly aged 65 years and older is expected to double to 13% by 2050, and the number of working-age adults per elderly person is projected to fall from 11 to five.

India has achieved notable progress in reducing mortality rates. Life expectancy at birth increased from 44 years in the mid-1960s to 68 years today. India’s child mortality rate at 38 per 1,000 births still lags behind China’s rate of 11.
Early marriage and pregnancy still contribute to excessive maternal deaths, and life expectancy of Indian women is eight years less than their counterparts in China.

India and China, unlike most other nations, have significantly more males than females. In both countries, infant mortality was higher for females than males in the 2000s.
Skewed sex ratios are due in part to use of prenatal ultrasound scanning to abort female fetuses. The practice of sex-selective abortion, while prohibited, is difficult to eliminate.
In coming decades, a number of “surplus males” who can’t find brides in India could reach 40 million by some estimates.
Contributing to the son preference: expected care for the elderly, traditional departure of daughters to husbands’ households after marriage, and expectations for a bride’s parents to pay a dowry to prospective in-laws.
DCQalq0lRw9K5t75BRAcJsEBGFr_3MZPJHnwLCRd3fg.png

Image: CNN
Such traditions linger in India, where the population is predominately rural in contrast to China’s urban population of 57%. Urban populations generally transition more rapidly to lower fertility rates.

India’s rate of urban population growth is expected to climb, partly due to migratory flows, especially youths seeking jobs.
By mid-century, half of India’s population, about 830 million people, is expected to be urban dwellers, which will challenge government capacities to provide basic services and infrastructure.
About one-fifth of the population lives without electricity.

Healthcare also lags with about half of Indian children reported to be undernourished.

About two-thirds of them are immunised for diphtheria/pertussis/tetanus, compared to nearly all in China.

Tuberculosis in India accounts for over a quarter of reported new cases worldwide, the highest of any country.

Another public health challenge: the lack of sanitation facilities for more than half of India’s rural population

More than half of India’s population lives in areas vulnerable to calamities such as earthquakes, floods, cyclones, droughts, and tsunamis, and the government continues to develop early-warning systems and promote community preparedness.

ZnO2UAQADWa8X7D3IAJKzklS2yCzq8gN8h8ZOkOIn70.JPG


Image: UN Population Division, 2017
International migration plays a negligible role in India’s population growth. Nevertheless, India has the largest immigrant population, with approximately 16 million Indians living abroad and millions more planning to emigrate. India is the world’s largest remittance recipient, receiving on average close to $70 billion annually in recent years. The country implements strong enforcement measures to prevent illegal entry of immigrants, especially from Bangladesh.

Despite high rates of economic growth, forecast to exceed 7% for 2017, the benefits do not trickle down to most Indians. Despite India’s relatively large middle class, many struggle to secure basic daily needs. About 25% of Indians live on less than $2 a day and the country accounts for one in three of the global population living in poverty.

India struggles to create enough jobs for its growing working-age population. Over the coming two decades, the working-age population is projected to increase by more than 200 million. Over 30% of Indians aged 15 to 30 years are neither in employment nor in education and training, more than double the OECD average and nearly three times that of China.
At the same time, Indian businesses report shortages of qualified skilled workers. In addition to its efforts to making labour regulations friendlier for job creation, the government must invest in education and vocational training.

Wary about automation and new technologies transforming workplace productivity and redefining the role of workers, education and business leaders recommend a major rethink of curricula and university training programs.
India ranks sixth in publications on AI research, between 2011 and 2015, but lacks strategic policies.

India accounts for more than one-sixth of humanity.

If the nation’s fertility rates remain unchanged, the population may double to 2.5 billion by 2100. Even if replacement-level fertility were achieved today, the population would still reach nearly 2 billion by 2100.
The government must emphasise family planning while improving public health and the status of girls and women—or be hard-pressed to sustain high rates of economic growth and meet the mounting aspirations of its billion-plus inhabitants.
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2017...l&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer
 
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FIRST, Tell your own PM to request us before we even need to look into the matter then....or replace your PM with a better one more in tune with BD people sentiments to bring it up in first place if you feel there is issue there.

Till then basically BD has accepted these as her people and her problem. Go beg for aid instead of seeking to eject them to MM where they have illegal status.

These refugees are not Indian and will never have any stake in India....and we will expunge the few that came here back to where they ought to be (as precursor to the much larger presence of BD illegals who are being processed and segregated for later deportation to a more compromised weak and subservient BD later). Deal with it. This is the fate of your "country" and always will be.

Laughing stock for India, now add China, Russia and eventually rest of the world (as they wise up to your antics). You are a nobody....just a dumping ground for your own society decisions. You reap the bitter harvest of what you sow in first place....and if you want to learn that the hard way like the immature low IQ brats you are...so be it.

Deflecting and trying to passing the buck regarding problems created by your people through constant whining only creates this dissonance with reality. Enjoy it. Way more to come. Maybe you lot enjoy the feeling of shafting. Hopefully Bangladesh is totally destroyed ASAP and something better and more sustainable can be created from the ashes....so delta people (both those there and those that have spread illegally beyond) can actually get on with their lives and development (back within where they sprung from) without the waaah waaah nationalist types making their life a misery through grandiose promises but only massive blowback to show for it (when they arent being corrupt SOB's or flee the country and region all together and preach and whine and all bark from those sanctuaries still while doing zero bite because their inherent BD nature is stuck like a rock in front of them).
your statements totally annuls the first claim that we don't care for these people then.

If you couldn't see my point you really must have a lack of education. I'm pointing out that bengeldsh criticizes others for not helping rohingya all while trying to do everything they can to not help them out either.
speaking of lack of education, is reflected on your poor spelling skills....

well, we're the ones having 500k of them for three decades, while being one of the poorest nations on earth... not you, another one of the poorest nations on earth.... talk about not helping them out either!?....

@BDforever
 
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@The Eagle @waz @Jungibaaz

I reported this guy yesterday but his post is still here.

Delete this post please while you are at it.

And no we don't have pork bandits. We have animal control which culls the unnecessary wild boar population.

Thank you

The hypocrisy is real, ain't it?

Why dont the Mods take a look at your post first, which started all this, and then his?

@The Eagle @waz

So Rohingyas if they go to India they will face the cow bandits and in Bongladesh the Hilsa bandits


They should have their own country. Like Basque or Catalans or those new ones in the middle east.
 
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The hypocrisy is real, ain't it?

Why dont the Mods take a look at your "Bongladesh" term first, which started all this, and then his?

@The Eagle @waz

Bongladesh is a legitimate pronunciation if I imagine the Bangla language.

Hilsa bandits are the activists giving hilsa a bad name.

Now let's see what narrative has the other party.
 
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Bongladesh is a legitimate pronunciation if I imagine the Bangla language.

Then I'd suggest you dont "imagine" as you dont know the language. Its Bangla, and always has been Bangla. I'd "imagine" its also intentional as your 'O' and 'A' is 10 miles away in your keyboard. So save up on the rhetoric.

Hilsa bandits are the activists giving hilsa a bad name.

Nice try. Its neither funny or rational. But, who am I to expect better?

Now let's see what narrative has the other party.

Sure keep seeing while you're at it. But if you are going to make intentional mockery of a nation's name, be ready to receive likewise. Your crocodile cry wont pay dividends.
 
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Then I'd suggest you dont "imagine" as you dont know the language. Its Bangla, and always has been Bangla. I'd "imagine" its also intentional as your 'O' and 'A' is 10 miles away in your keyboard. So save up on the rhetoric.



Nice try. Its neither funny or rational. But, who am I to expect better?



Sure keep seeing while you're at it. But if you are going to make intentional mockery of a nation's name, be ready to receive likewise. Your crocodile cry wont pay dividends.

The thread title is enough to make any mockery anyone wants to. So atleast aim your frustrations right.

Take a hint. I have never engaged myself in your country or its politics. I may have had discussions on social issues but never political.

And yes O and A are fart apart but I used the auto typed ones and curiously enough Bongladesh and Bangladesh are both there.

So cry me a hydropower plant and fry me a hilsa but that guy took it too far and that on a Pakistani forum.

OMG..how can u write all these crap things in each nd every thread??..

what is "Bongladesh" man?

Its Bangladesh spelled with an O
 
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