Dear Comrades,
Bangladesh government has blocked my website www.williamgomes.org for writing and publishing the poem Änti State”. I have taken the pen and they have taken the censorship tools. I have broken the silence. Please take your pen and break the silence.
Please give your comment on this poem with your name and professional identity.
Please send your comment within 26th May 2012. The comments will send to the Media around the world.
I am always thankful for your support.
I
believe that Censorship is a possible way for the powerful to terminate
individualism; and promotes governmental coercion and totalitarianism. Some
people urge that restrictions are valid only if they are for the sake
of a greater good, a greater liberty. But I believe that Censorship is a restriction
that is not for greater liberty, but for the deprivation of liberty.
I strongly protest about the Block of my website www.williamgomes.org
I do publish rights based issues and the poems i wrote again is regarding rights .
There should not be any reason to block my site and it is clearly violations of right to freedom of expression.
The poem - http://www.williamgomes.org/anti-state/
Thanks
William Gomes
William Nicholas Gomes--
Weekly Press Pakistan - Canada --> http://weeklypresspakistan.com
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Dear William Gomes
I read your different poem. It is full of emotions with the flare of aggression and overwhelming desire to change and an outstanding intention to resist the existing and established description of state. Well that is your personal expression and expression is purely a private affair. I personally feel that if we the journalists poets writers critics and intellectuals are convinced to change something as you proposed than we first turn the world into a Hide park London so that the change we the intellectual propose may be acceptable to the humanity that has been tuned to live within the orbits of so-called socially approved features of living and such is a Herculean job that you know and I am also aware of the fact that is why that although I liked a different creation that is full of ‘something different’ but as an editor of a daily newspaper I shall hesitate to register such approval and that is what the life is and it is humanity that has unanimously decided to live the prison of existing rules and procedures. I am thankful to you for sending me a very different creative effort. I do hope that we shall be interacting in future also. Whenever you come to Pakistan please do let me know about your visit.
Sincerely
Dr. Naveed Shibli Assistant Professor Applied Psychology Government College University Faisalabad Pakistan And Editor Daily Easy English 430/E Millat Town Faisalabad 092-41-8814799
--- On Thu, 5/24/12, William Gomes <williamg...@gmail.com> wrote: |
| Below info is self evident Reg Mehtab Bangladesh has placed extraordinary security clearance arrangements for granting visas to Pakistani journalists, exposing level of mistrust in relations between the two countries. Even in case of seeking visa for India, such security clearance is not required as recently experienced in case of Bangladesh where journalists trying to get visa for professional purpose are asked to give undertaking that they will not conduct any interview, will have to abide by ban on taking snaps, making commitment not to file any report and restrict movement to specified placed during their stay in Bangladesh. “Even this all is not required if u seek visa from India,” a seasoned and experienced journalist said. The International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of World Bank Group, had arranged three day media workshop for South Asian journalists on issue of corporate governance in Dhaka by mid of this ongoing month. For initiative of corporate governance, the IFC launched a project and it wanted to promote this concept by extending training to working journalists to equip them with skills to ensure enforcement of prescribed rules, procedures and mechanism to maximize benefits for inhabitants of nations of this region. When visa form along with invitation of IFC was submitted into Bangladesh High Commission (BHC) in Islamabad one week ago, the designated Press Attaché of BHC told this scribe that security clearance from Interior Ministry of their country as well as from concerned intelligence agencies took almost two weeks to accomplish the required procedures so it seemed difficult to give visa for participating into this scheduled training workshop. He also claimed that Pakistani side took more time for giving visa to Bangladeshi journalists. However, he said that there was nominal visa fee to the tune of only Rs 200 for getting visa of Bangladesh and common Pakistani citizen could get visa within two to three days. The IFC high-ups took extra pain and wrote letter to Dhaka authorities for granting No Objection Certificate for granting visa. On condition of anonymity, they admitted that they never faced such a difficult situation for getting visa of any country as they faced in case of seeking visa for Journalists from Bangladeshi authorities. After one week, one IFC representative contacted and told that partial clearance was given with the condition of giving undertaking that you would not undertake any journalistic activities during their stay in Dhaka. Even you will not get photos or conduct any interviews while staying in Dhaka. They were told that being a journalist it was not possible to give such kind of undertaking that compromised u professional duties. According to BHC’s press section, it was confirmed that partial clearance was given for Pakistani journalists who are supposed to participate into scheduled training workshop in Dhaka. When asked reasons for such kind of arrangements placed by Bangladeshi authorities, he said that these were the instructions which could not be violated by BHC. (Ends) --- On Thu, 5/24/12, nadeem mirza <nade...@hotmail.com> wrote: |
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I live in a country, called Pakistan, which is far more weak, intolerant and afraid state than that of Bangladesh. So, I can understand the very mind set that showed Bangladeshi State toward your poem. I wish I could have read your poem by any means.
In Solidarity,
Muhammad Atif Aleem
Fiction Writer, Playwright and a commercial right based in Rawalpindi, Pakistan