পাতা:বাংলাদেশের স্বাধীনতা যুদ্ধ দলিলপত্র (পঞ্চম খণ্ড).pdf/৪৯৫

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47| বাংলাদেশের স্বাধীনতা যুদ্ধ দলিলপত্রঃ পঞ্চম খন্ড to secure market for Manchester's textile industry. We had also heard about the brutality of the British indigo planters. It seems that history has remained stand still ever since. I Only nobody knew about it until these Pakistani sub-humans got to work in Bangladesh. ২৭ জুলাই, ১৯৭১ UN TO PAKISTAN'S RESCUE A highly sinister move has been reported from the glass house of the United Nations. Needless to say that the move has been masterminded by someone no less than the UN Commissioner for Refugees, Prince Sadniddin Aga Khan. Prince Sadruddin, it might be realized, to hide his sympathy for the Pakistani fascists even after touring the battered Bangladesh occupied areas and the refugee camps in India where six million refugees from Pakistani brutality were staying. A callous indifference toward the terrible plight of the people of Bangladesh seeped through his guarded and diplomatic cliché-ridden statements to the press. Needless to say that his latest design against our people-a design that aims to send 50-member team of U.N. observers to Bangladesh for only he and his mentors know what-has the wholehearted support of Nixon Administration that has now taken a clearer stand on the issue and seems to be bent upon scheming and doing anything possible to fix up a puppet regime of hated Pakistani colonists in Bangladesh-a design that is even more obnoxious than the one with which USA tried to prop up Ngo Din Diem regime of South Vietnam. This is, indeed, the first diplomatic offensive of Nixon Government against the people of Bangladesh after its decision to supply more and more arms to the killer junta. Against such a formidable backgrounder there should be no reason for us to have any illusions about this proposed U.N. team of observers. Its intentional are clearly antagonistic to the struggle for freedom now being waged by the people of Bangladesh. The animalistic butchery of a million innocent lives by the Pakistani military fascists who have also been subjecting the entire population of Bangladesh to an infernal and senseless brutality for last four months made little impression on the United Nations. Its Secretary General, although had publicly expressed his personal shock at the tragedy, failed utterly as the chief executive of a body that once used to be looked upon as the protector of world's suffering humanity. Week after week the ravaged humanity in Bangladesh waited in vain for the United Nations to do something to reduce the agony of a genocidal war treacherously imposed on them by a group of Sub-human conspirators. But nothing happened. The U.N. proved a shockingly heartless, silent spectator. When such an organisation suddenly becomes too active it certainly gives rise serious concern. The proposal of sending the so-called observers is not only sinister in motive but is ominous of an even worse predicament for the people of Bangladesh. The team's presence is surely meant to help the Pakistani junta to consolidate its position in the occupied areas of Bangladesh. Its army, cripplingly harassed by freedom fighters, badly needed a breather. The U.N. observers, in a way known to themselves, intend to provide just that. The overall design is to try and shift the emphasis from the liberation struggle and to divert