17.5.14

142 / TO David Cameron: JUST IN A FEW WORDS / August 28, 2011 / ENGLAND


On Sunday, August 28, 2011 3:56 PM, bagher mohammadpour <bmp1337@yahoo.com> wrote:
 
JUST IN A FEW WORDS
 The Right honorable David Cameron
Prime minister of England
1-The attached letter is a short report on a long and unbelievable national crisis in pharmaceutical industries of Iran: a disastrous crisis.
2-This crisis is the biggest case of human rights violation of all members of a nation and incomparable with all the known cases till now.
3-Experts of pharmaceutical industries and law would confirm the disastrous nature and dimensions of this crisis.
4-My request of help DOSE NOT require any direct engagement of your country in this matter practically. I need only to be in your country to divulge this crisis internationally.
For an English-speaking pharmacist having a normal life in France is impossible regardless of his situation and professional experience for all those reasons and causes you know better.
5- Iran and Iranians have never been in need of supports of democratic countries in their bloody struggle for their rights and freedom more than today.
6-Albert Camus says "unreasonable silence of the world" is the root of absurdity:
The absurd is born of this confrontation between the human need and the unreasonable silence of the world.
During the last five years, watching the descent of my HOPES from the top of the mountain of reasonable expectations from democracies, I have been the Sisyphus of democratic world: the epitome of the absurd hero according to Camus! I hope this letter could bring an end to the absurdity of this situation mostly in favor of a nation living the darkest period of their history after the attack of barbarian Arabs! 
7-My last and least request is be informed of your final decision even by few words or only a single "no" as soon as possible!
I hope this request be reasonably easy enough to be fulfilled! Victor Frankel believes nothing is more exhausting than an endless waiting:
Former prisoners, ...agree that
the most depressing influence of all was that
a prisoner
could not know how long his terminal 
of imprisonment [Here: My term of waiting] could be.
Victor Frankel, Man's search for Meaning,
Rider, London 2008, page 78.
Days are passing fast and like the stones boys throw, they are killing my life:
"Though boys throw stones at frogs in sport,
the frogs do not die in sport, but in earnest."
 Plutarch
Respectfully yours
B Mohammadpour
Paris
29.08.2011
Respectfully yours

No comments:

Post a Comment