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Silence of elected post holders on the Bangladeshi-on-Bangladeshi violence

Committee for Bangladeshis' Rights in the United Kingdom | 15.08.2013 16:37 | Analysis | Social Struggles | London | World

Silence of elected post-holders on the Bangladeshi-on-Bangladeshi violence

This concerns the tragic loss of the life of the boy Ajmol Alom on Monday this week in Poplar in Tower Hamlets.
The news is shocking when a promising lifer is robbed whatever part of the population or whatever the culture or ethnicity.

Committee for Bangladeshis’ Rights in the UK was founded in July 1989 at a public meeting held in the Cannon Street Road area and in the immediate aftermath of the still unsolved murders of the uncle and nephew pair Esmoth Ali and Watir Ali in the Flower `and Dean walk off Brick Lane London E1

Committee for Bangladeshis’ Rights in the United Kingdom has been active as part of the Movement in Defence of the Community in the East End of London.

The most widely known campaign platform has been KHOODEELAAR!

The following statement has been issued by Muhammad Haque the Campaigning Organiser and Founding chair of Committee for Bangladeshis’ Rights in the UK

1630 Hrs GMT
London
15 August 2013

Silence of elected post-holders on the Bangladeshi-on-Bangladeshi violence

This concerns the tragic loss of the life of the boy Ajmol Alom on Monday this week in Poplar in Tower Hamlets.
The news is shocking when a promising lifer is robbed whatever part of the population or whatever the culture or ethnicity.
But the significance of this question our organisation is asking is also to be appreciated;

Why have the occupants in the elected posts in Tower Hamlets been quite about the trend?
Haven’t they got anything to say by way of general comments when violence among young people of “the same community” goes to such tragic lengths?

Why do the young people think this way?
What are their influences?
Are there people who are setting some examples?
Is there any duty that there is a most compelling and urgent need for the local and the central state to deliver some service by way of helping education among the population so that hatred of this kind is effectively understood, discouraged and hopefully got rid of?

There a thousand other questions when the details are addressed.

It is time for those who make contact wit the people with the votes at election times to come out of their indifference and state publicly their commitment to help save the lives of the young ones and also to help save the community.

Committee for Bangladeshis' Rights in the United Kingdom

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CORRECTION to spelling of Bangladeshi

15.08.2013 16:40

Silence of elected post holders on the Bangladeshi-on-Bangladeshi violence

Committee for Bangladeshis’ Rights in the UK was founded in July 1989 at a public meeting held in the Cannon Street Road area and in the immediate aftermath of the still unsolved murders of the uncle and nephew pair Esmoth Ali and Watir Ali in the Flower `and Dean walk off Brick Lane London E1

Committee for Bangladeshis’ Rights in the United Kingdom has been active as part of the Movement in Defence of the Community in the East End of London.

The most widely known campaign platform has been KHOODEELAAR!

The following statement has been issued by Muhammad Haque the Campaigning Organiser and Founding chair of Committee for Bangladeshis’ Rights in the UK

1630 Hrs GMT
London
15 August 2013

Silence of elected post-holders on the Bangladeshi-on-Bangladeshi violence

This concerns the tragic loss of the life of the boy Ajmol Alom on Monday this week in Poplar in Tower Hamlets.
The news is shocking when a promising lifer is robbed whatever part of the population or whatever the culture or ethnicity.
But the significance of this question our organisation is asking is also to be appreciated;

Why have the occupants in the elected posts in Tower Hamlets been quite about the trend?
Haven’t they got anything to say by way of general comments when violence among young people of “the same community” goes to such tragic lengths?

Why do the young people think this way?
What are their influences?
Are there people who are setting some examples?
Is there any duty that there is a most compelling and urgent need for the local and the central state to deliver some service by way of helping education among the population so that hatred of this kind is effectively understood, discouraged and hopefully got rid of?

There a thousand other questions when the details are addressed.

It is time for those who make contact wit the people with the votes at election times to come out of their indifference and state publicly their commitment to help save the lives of the young ones and also to help save the community.

Committee for Bangladeshis' Rights in the United Kingdom


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Nutter alert: code red

15.08.2013 17:21

Whatever happened to the Crossrail Hole?

Khodelaaaar!


After Ajmol Alom, Questions overdue for the Community in the East End of London

23.08.2013 02:16

AVNews
All Volunteers News
0215 GMT
London
Friday
23 August 2013


Established in 2009 by Kay Jordan and Muhammad Haque
at 160 Brick Lane London E1 6RU

AVNews is now going to publish the print journal every week
combining the resources of over 50 initiatives and centrally focussing on Education as represented by the following titles included in the list of groups and initiatives constituting the Movement Defending the Community in the East End of London Estd June 1963 in New Road London E1 1HE.

AAGAMIEUK
BENTH BULLETIN
CERTH

One of the key aims is to address the question:
do the young people in areas like Tower Hamlets,
understand their moral, ethical, social heritage and do
the formal an actual ‘Education’ processes that they go
through relate to those?
What kind of Society can we be building in the East End
if the moral, ethical and social heritage is not known,
understood and applied?
The multiplicity of questions that arise when
even thinking about the young lad Ajmol Alom
has so far been avoided by the elected post holders.
They can afford to do so because their income is
guaranteed regardless of whether they show
any care about what the youngsters are being pushed into
in the East End.
Ordinary people, including the parents, the close relatives, friends and
others who are still in mourning over Ajmol, cannot afford
to take such a position.
They want to know: why?
[The search for answers is to be continued]

AVNewsLondonE16RU


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