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Bangladesh climbs up eight notches on Democracy Index

The Ronin

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Bangladesh has gained eight places on the latest Democracy Index, compared to the previous year, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit, or EIU.

Although there was no big movement at the top and bottom of the index, there have been sizeable movements in the rankings elsewhere with Bangladesh among the countries making ‘notable improvements’, according to EIU’s findings.

Bangladesh ranks 80th with an overall score of 5.88 on the Democracy Index 2019, up from the 88th position with a score of 5.57 a year ago.

Despite gains on the latest index, Bangladesh is still classified as a hybrid regime and lags behind neighbouring India, a flawed democracy, which dropped 10 places to the 51st spot with a score of 6.90. The primary cause of the democratic regression in India is an erosion of civil liberties in the country, according to the report.

It came after the Indian government stripped the Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) state of its special status by repealing two key constitutional provisions granting it powers of autonomy.

Meanwhile, a separate citizenship registration exercise in Assam, a state in north-eastern India, has excluded 1.9m from the final list of the National Register of Citizens (NRC).

The vast majority of people excluded from the NRC are Muslims. The ruling nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) says that most of the people excluded from the list are immigrants from Bangladesh, whose government denies this.

The new citizenship law has enraged the large Muslim population, stoked communal tensions and generated large protests in major cities.

Meanwhile, China is now ranked near the bottom of the rankings at 153rd place with a score of 2.26 as discrimination against minorities in the country intensified over the past year. The widespread imprisonment of Muslim minorities, coupled with other infringements of civil liberties, underpins the decline in China’s overall score.

Overall, the average global score for democracy fell from 5.48 in 2018 to 5.44 in 2019. It is the worst average global score since the index was first produced in 2006.

https://bdnews24.com/bangladesh/2020/01/22/bangladesh-climbs-up-eight-notches-on-democracy-index
 
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Bangladesh has gained eight places on the latest Democracy Index, compared to the previous year, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit, or EIU.

Although there was no big movement at the top and bottom of the index, there have been sizeable movements in the rankings elsewhere with Bangladesh among the countries making ‘notable improvements’, according to EIU’s findings.

Bangladesh ranks 80th with an overall score of 5.88 on the Democracy Index 2019, up from the 88th position with a score of 5.57 a year ago.

Despite gains on the latest index, Bangladesh is still classified as a hybrid regime and lags behind neighbouring India, a flawed democracy, which dropped 10 places to the 51st spot with a score of 6.90. The primary cause of the democratic regression in India is an erosion of civil liberties in the country, according to the report.

It came after the Indian government stripped the Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) state of its special status by repealing two key constitutional provisions granting it powers of autonomy.

Meanwhile, a separate citizenship registration exercise in Assam, a state in north-eastern India, has excluded 1.9m from the final list of the National Register of Citizens (NRC).

The vast majority of people excluded from the NRC are Muslims. The ruling nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) says that most of the people excluded from the list are immigrants from Bangladesh, whose government denies this.

The new citizenship law has enraged the large Muslim population, stoked communal tensions and generated large protests in major cities.

Meanwhile, China is now ranked near the bottom of the rankings at 153rd place with a score of 2.26 as discrimination against minorities in the country intensified over the past year. The widespread imprisonment of Muslim minorities, coupled with other infringements of civil liberties, underpins the decline in China’s overall score.

Overall, the average global score for democracy fell from 5.48 in 2018 to 5.44 in 2019. It is the worst average global score since the index was first produced in 2006.

https://bdnews24.com/bangladesh/2020/01/22/bangladesh-climbs-up-eight-notches-on-democracy-index
With each hanging, this index goes higher and higher.
 
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For real?!?
Why surprised? Bangladesh govt is democratic, doesn't matter if elections are rigged or not! BNP joined in 30 December election and later joined the Parliament, and still regularly participating! Infact when they were major opposition ( 1996 and 2008) they never joined in Parliament so frequently!

Now major opposition jatiya party and 2nd opposition BNP , both are participating regularly in Parliament. So what else you want?
If it's not democracy then what is democracy actually?

forget about election rigging, as it had been the part and parcel of Bangladeshi election since it's birth! :lol:

Bangladesh has gained eight places on the latest Democracy Index, compared to the previous year, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit, or EIU.

Although there was no big movement at the top and bottom of the index, there have been sizeable movements in the rankings elsewhere with Bangladesh among the countries making ‘notable improvements’, according to EIU’s findings.

Bangladesh ranks 80th with an overall score of 5.88 on the Democracy Index 2019, up from the 88th position with a score of 5.57 a year ago.

Despite gains on the latest index, Bangladesh is still classified as a hybrid regime and lags behind neighbouring India, a flawed democracy, which dropped 10 places to the 51st spot with a score of 6.90. The primary cause of the democratic regression in India is an erosion of civil liberties in the country, according to the report.

It came after the Indian government stripped the Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) state of its special status by repealing two key constitutional provisions granting it powers of autonomy.

Meanwhile, a separate citizenship registration exercise in Assam, a state in north-eastern India, has excluded 1.9m from the final list of the National Register of Citizens (NRC).

The vast majority of people excluded from the NRC are Muslims. The ruling nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) says that most of the people excluded from the list are immigrants from Bangladesh, whose government denies this.

The new citizenship law has enraged the large Muslim population, stoked communal tensions and generated large protests in major cities.

Meanwhile, China is now ranked near the bottom of the rankings at 153rd place with a score of 2.26 as discrimination against minorities in the country intensified over the past year. The widespread imprisonment of Muslim minorities, coupled with other infringements of civil liberties, underpins the decline in China’s overall score.

Overall, the average global score for democracy fell from 5.48 in 2018 to 5.44 in 2019. It is the worst average global score since the index was first produced in 2006.

https://bdnews24.com/bangladesh/2020/01/22/bangladesh-climbs-up-eight-notches-on-democracy-index
Hmm not surprised by this results. Democracy always had been a tool to deceive common folks, so by this standard, I think we are actually top on the index!
 
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Why surprised? Bangladesh govt is democratic, doesn't matter if elections are rigged or not! BNP joined in 30 December election and later joined the Parliament, and still regularly participating! Infact when they were major opposition ( 1996 and 2008) they never joined in Parliament so frequently!

Now major opposition jatiya party and 2nd opposition BNP , both are participating regularly in Parliament. So what else you want?
If it's not democracy then what is democracy actually?

forget about election rigging, as it had been the part and parcel of Bangladeshi election since it's birth! :lol:


Hmm not surprised by this results. Democracy always had been a tool to deceive common folks, so by this standard, I think we are actually top on the index!
Sad but true. Third world.
 
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We do not need Democracy, we need a benevolent autocracy/authoritarianism.

People who sell their votes for a cup of tea neither know the meaning and power of democracy, nor deserve it.

India is a democratic farce. There is no difference between an uneducated Indian and an uneducated Bangladeshi. Look at how the uneducated people of India are helpless langotis in front of goonda autocrats (not even disciplined autocrats like in Bangladesh).
 
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LOL...looking at this index even BBS personnel would be like "wow....those are some dodgy stats right there."
 
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We do not need Democracy, we need a benevolent autocracy/authoritarianism.

People who sell their votes for a cup of tea neither know the meaning and power of democracy, nor deserve it.

India is a democratic farce. There is no difference between an uneducated Indian and an uneducated Bangladeshi. Look at how the uneducated people of India are helpless langotis in front of goonda autocrats (not even disciplined autocrats like in Bangladesh).

I agree. We need political stability. We cannot go back to the days of strikes and interruptions. We should look to the model of Singapore.

If Hasina Govt. Can cut down on the BCL goons, focus on development, not impede people's right to practice Islam freely and not sell out the country's interest, I wouldn't mind her staying for 10 more years.

But she has to demonstrate that Bangladesh always comes first.
 
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