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Conspiracy to bring Awami League to power?

General election on Dec 29

Dhaka, Nov 23 (bdnews24.com) – The general election will be held on Dec. 29 and Upazila Parishad polls on Jan. 22, the chief election commissioner announced on Sunday after a week of intense negotiations between the EC, government and major parties.

"The changes have been carried out to ensure the participation of all parties in the election and we hope that these amendments will be acceptable to all," ATM Shamsul Huda said at a crowded press conference at the Election Commission Secretariat.

According to the third amendment to the electoral schedule, the last date for the submission of nomination for the parliamentary election is Nov. 30.

Selection and evaluation of the nomination will be done on Dec. 3 and 4 and Dec. 11 is the last date for the withdrawal of nomination.

For the upazilla election, the last date for filing nomination is Dec. 13 and the selection and evaluation will be done on Dec. 17 and 19.

The last date for withdrawal is Dec. 31.

Huda held a series of parleys with top government functionaries and representatives of political parties from morning, leading up to the televised announcement.

He announced on Saturday that the general election, scheduled for Dec. 18, would be deferred. The EC claims that the changes are being carried out to ensure an all-inclusive election.

The top election official met with the chief adviser early in the day, but CAO spokespersons would not divulge details about the likely decision.

Back in his office at Sher-e-Bangla Nagar, Huda sat with his fellow commissioners before a meeting with BNP.

Asked about the new date for polls in between the two meetings, the chief election commissioner said, "Wait, you will soon get the answer."

A BNP team comprising party vice president MK Anwar, joint secretary Nazrul Islam Khan and office secretary Rizvi Ahmed met with the EC officials at around 2.30pm.

A similar meeting was held with Awami League representatives, acting general secretary Syed Ashraful Islam and co-chairman of the party's election committee HT Imam, from 4-5pm.

A six-member delegation of AL and its allies began talks with the Election Commission on Saturday on the revised election schedule.

Following the meeting, Huda said the new general election date is likely to fall between Dec. 27 and 29, adding that the new schedule would be announced on Sunday.

The CEC also said the time to submit nomination papers was also likely to be extended.

According to the latest schedule, Sunday is the last date for submission of nomination papers.

The original election schedule was announced in Nov. 2 but amended twice on Nov. 9 and on Nov. 19 keeping the election dates—parliamentary polls on Dec 18 and Upazila polls on Dec. 28—the same.

After intense negotiations in the face of BNP's demand to push back the election date last week, the CEC said they were ready to reschedule the national election if all parties agreed.

bdnews24.com/mhc/zr/th/mi/tf/rah/1700hours

BREAKING NEWSGeneral election on Dec 29 :: Politics :: bdnews24.com ::
 
These are the anti-Bangladesh comments of Sheikh Hasina's son Joy. This received a strong response from Farhad Mazar on the conspiracy against Bangladesh -

Sajeeb A. Wazed is an adviser to Sheikh Hasina, the former Prime Minister of Bangladesh and President of the Awami League, the largest and oldest political party in Bangladesh. He has been a key negotiator for the Awami League on several occasions, most recently in the negotiations for the restoration of democracy in Bangladesh with the present military government. He has a Master's in Public Administration from Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.

Carl J. Ciovacco graduated from the Kennedy School of Government with a Masters of Public Policy in International Security and Political Economy. His recent thesis on Al Qaeda's media strategy and was written for the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point. He received his Bachelor of Science in International Relations from West Point and served as an Army officer in Iraq and Saudi Arabia.

Bangladesh has been a secular Muslim state since its independence from Pakistan and founding by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in 1971. While its short history has been full of military coup d’états, it has always returned to its roots as a secular democratic state. There are, however, troubling new signs of a shift towards a growing Islamism that could jeopardize the sanctity of secularism in the country. While the governing construct’s legitimacy is suffering politically from the past two years of emergency military rule, Islamism may be the biggest threat to the country’s Constitution and secular underpinnings. As elections are scheduled for December 18th and the two major political parties jostle over the country’s future, each party’s vision for the proper mix of Islam and government will be at the forefront. Rahman’s Awami League has long been the standard bearer of secularism and if elected, it could roll back the growing tide of Islamism in Bangladesh. The Awami League must, however, implement certain changes to proactively check this Islamism if it hopes to secure long-lasting secularism and democracy. If successful, an Awami League-led Bangladesh could be the global example of secular governance in a Muslim country.

The Situation on the Ground

During the turmoil in Bangladeshi politics over the past two years, the military government has imprisoned two former Prime Ministers on trumpted-up charges of corruption. Yet, Sheikh Hasina of the Awami League and Khaleda Zia of the Bangladeshi Nationalist Party (BNP) continue to enjoy overwhelming support from their party’s grassroots. While Sheikh Hasina has already been released and is on parole in the United States for medical treatment, Khaleda Zia remains in prison. Though the military caretaker government had originally intended to imprison all of the popular politicians before the impending December election, it appears that both Sheikh Hasina and Khaleda Zia will be allowed to participate.

Bangladeshis will once again go to the polls to decide between the Awami League and its record of secularism and the BNP with its public support of Jamat-e-Islami (which supports Islamic-leaning governance). If July’s local elections, where the Awami League won 12 of 13 Municipal elections, are any portent of future national elections, the League appears to be the favorite in the national election. This result would return Hasina, the daughter of the country’s founding father Rahman, to the Premiership that she held from 1996 until 2001. If however, the BNP wins by consolidating its Islamic-leaning power base, Zia will reoccupy the nation’s top position that she held from 2001 to 2006.

School children preparing for class. Photo courtesy flickr.com/BBC World Service Bangladesh Boat

With the rise of Islamic extremism encouraged by the last two years of military rule and five years of BNP governance, the Awami League will certainly be fighting an uphill battle both before and after the elections in stemming this movement. The ascendancy of Islamists (moulobadi in Bangali) in national politics was partly due to how Zia and the BNP structured their 2001 campaign to include the Islamic party Jamat-e-Islami (JI). When the BNP formed a coalition government with JI, it opened the door to increased Islamic influence on the governing party. Before JI became part of the ruling coalition, it had minimal influence on the government. The greatest number of seats that JI had ever garnered in any election prior to 2001 was three. After the BNP allied with JI however, its legitimacy grew within the governing construct.

BNP has begun to rely heavily on JI’s highly focused fundamentalist Islamic base. The Islamists tend to support reunification with the Islamic Republic of Pakistan and do not share the Awami League’s affinity for Rahman and the liberationists that fought Pakistan in the 1970s. The alliance of anti-liberationists , JI, and the BNP has also had direct and indirect involvement with Islamic fundamentalist groups that masterminded 500 coordinated bombings across Bangladesh in 2005. This display of terror was an attempt to showcase their growing power. These shadow groups, namely Jamat-ul Mujahid Bangladesh (JMB), Jagrata Janata Muslim Bangladesh (JMJB) and Harkatul Jihad (HuJi), have been the militant arm of JI. They overtly denounce the Constitution and seek to replace democracy and secularism with a governing construct based on Sharia Law.

Islamic extremism is also on the rise in Bangladesh because of the growing numbers of Islamists in the military. The Islamists cleverly began growing their numbers within the Army by training for the Army Entrance Exams at madrassas. This madrassa training was necessary because of the relative difficulty associated with passing these exams. The military is attractive because of both its respected status and its high employment opportunities in a country where unemployment ranges from 20 percent to 30 percent for younger males. High demand for military posts has resulted in an entrance exam designed to limit the number of recruits. Before this madrassa Entrance Exam campaign, only 5 percent of military recruits came from madrasses in 2001. By 2006, at the end of the BNP’s reign, madrassas supplied nearly 35 percent of the Army recruits. In a country that has seen four military coup d’états in its short 37 year history, the astronomical growth of Islamists in the military is troubling to say the least.

Toward Renewal: A Secular Plan

As the country was founded on a secular system of governance, the entire political system is now vulnerable. Can the Awami League stop the growing tide of Islamism in a country that has seen the sale of burkas rise nearly 500 percent in the last five years? The answer is yes if it implements the following secular renewal plan. First, it must modernize the curriculum of the madrasses. Second, it must build proper, secular elementary schools and hospitals. Third, it should increase the recruitment of secular-minded students into the military from secular cadet academies. Fourth, it must attempt to rehabilitate known extremist clerics. Lastly, and perhaps the most abstract solution, it must push to vanquish Bangladeshi poverty and illiteracy that consistently ranks among the worst in the world. This plan would make the country less hospitable to a growing Islamist movement and help return Bangladesh to its secular roots.

Since madrassas are educational institutions within the country, they are under the purview of the country’s educational ministry. While almost all funding for these institutions comes from private donors in Saudi Arabia, there is no statute against their regulation by proper national authorities. Furthermore, nowhere in Islam or the Koran does it say that science, math, and history cannot be taught alongside religion. This enlightened education would show students that there is more to the world than only religion and that there are additional opportunities to earn a livelihood than merely religious or radically religious pursuits.

Build Effective, Secular Elementary Schools and Hospitals

Too often, the excuse that Bangladesh is a poor country is offered to counter the idea that proper, secular schools can be built. In reality, funding from international organizations and domestic tax revenue is sufficient to build these schools if they are a high enough priority. They should be, and each student should be taught to read and write and understand basic math and science. These schools would be a deterrence to the monopoly on education that madrassas currently enjoy. Relying on Saudi and Kuwaiti funding that dictates rote Koranic memorization is counterproductive for a nation that desires growth, productivity, and a brighter future, because it limits the population’s skill-set. Currently, madrasses have the advantage, because they recruit from poor families with many children; promising to feed and educate one or two children who are not absolutely necessary for the harvesting of crops. Secular schools could be a popular alternative to the madrasses that have been so attractive to poor farmers. The national government could help by building free secular schools and encouraging families to send their children by providing a small stipend to offset the lost income tied to not having children in the fields.

This same idea of providing a viable alternative to Islamic-leaning institutions can be applied to hospitals. When people are sick or dying, they are most vulnerable, and Islamic hospitals capitalize on this to convert Bangalis to a more extremist lifestyle. Secular hospitals would serve as an antidote to the Islamism that is propagated in these Islamic hospitals.

Increase Recruitment into the Military from Secular Schools

To counter the increased military recruitment from the madrassas, more youths—especially the secular-minded— must also be taught how to pass the Army’s Entrance Exams. It is not enough to desire more secularly-taught youth to enter to the military, but the plan must place them on the same playing field with the madrassa recruits. Instead of outwardly restricting madrassa training for the Entrance Exams, secular school Entrance Exam training would counter JI’s strategy to Islamify the military and thus the nation. An alternative source of recruits could switch back the military’s ideological balance to a more secular recruit base.

Rehabilitate the Extremist Clerics

The Bangladeshi government should ask moderate Muslim clerics to issue fatwas contrary to the Jihadist movement and its extreme clerics. While fatwas are technically illegal in Bangladesh, they regularly occur and people continue to live by them. Thus, the use of fatwas to dissuade potential Islamists from following extremist preaching could do much to stem the growth of extremism. This proposal would first require the identification of moderate clerics.

This rehabilitation campaign would also target extremist clerics and pressure them to recant and recall their previous incendiary remarks. This would have an incredible impact in cutting off the cancer of Islamic extremism at the root. Peter Bergen, a counterterrorism expert, has compared this type of intervention on the part of clerics to religious chemotherapy that eradicates extremism. Since only a small number of extremist clerics around the world spawn a disproportionately high number of jihadists, this targeted chemotherapy would remove the instigators of violence. In fact, Bergen has stated that three clerics living in Britain, Sheik Omar Bakri Mohammed, Abu Hamza Al Masri, and Abu Qatada, have had a critical influence on global terrorism. By removing the few, radial clerics around the world, Islamism will whither on the vine.

Bangladesh should attempt to replicate the recent successes in Saudi Arabia and Egypt to force the hand of extremist clerics to recant their past remarks and speak out against jihadists. They have even used moderate and reformed clerics to retrain jihadists in prison with a more moderate interpretation of the Koran. Heading the list of notable ex-extremist cleric success stories is the Saudi religious scholar Sheik al Oudah. Lending to his credibility within the jihadist movement, he was the founder of the Islamic awakening movement in the 1980s known as Sahwa. In September 2007, he began to criticize Osama bin Laden, stating that al Qaeda’s leader had “hijacked Islam.” While Oudah believed he was unable to influence bin Laden himself, he wanted to inform bin Laden’s followers about the problems with al Qaeda. The transformational impact of Oudah on future jihadist recruitment and retention within al Qaeda has been enormous and his further exposure can only hurt the jihadist movement.

Sayyid Imam al Sharif, aka Dr. Fadl, is another significant cleric who has turned his back on extremism and jihad. As the ideological godfather of al Qaeda and Ayman al-Zawahiri’s mentor, Dr. Fadl published the Bible of modern jihad called, “The Basic Principles in Making Preparation for Jihad.” He also provided the religious basis for the idea that Muslims martyring themselves in an act of jihad go straight to paradise. Then, in November, 2007, Fadl momentously withdrew his support for al Qaeda in the blistering book entitled “Rationalization of Jihad.” Fadl later called bin Laden and Zawahiri “extremely immoral” and cautioned Muslim youth against being “seduced by them.” With similarly influential clerics in Bangladesh, the government must utilize them to show how Islamists within their own country have hijacked religion for political reasons.

The significance of Oudah’s and Fadl’s reversals cannot be overstated. Whether they were products of the new reprogramming initiatives or not, these rehabilitation programs in the Middle East and Asia have thus far had an excellent track-record and should be attempted in Bangladesh for both radical clerics and captured militants. Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan currently run very effective programs in which those rehabilitated persons must sign forms agreeing to avoid jihadist activity. In honor-based societies, those family members and local clerics that pick up their ex-jihadist from prison agree to ensure there is no relapse. In Saudi Arabia, this type of program is called de-radicalization and in Afghanistan it is amnesty. Semantics aside, Yemen, Indonesia, Egypt, and Singapore have also followed suit with similarly effective retraining systems

In the 500 separate bombings by Islamists in 2005 in Bangladesh, 82 Islamists remain in prison and should undergo this type of rehabilitation program. The power of moderate clerics working in prisons and using their religious backgrounds to debunk violent interpretations of the Koran has paid huge dividends in dissuading jihadists from returning to action. This policy will work in Bangladesh as well.

Reduce Poverty and Illiteracy

Islamists have capitalized on the poverty-stricken nature of Bangladeshis in recent years. They have harnessed the age-old recruiting technique of telling the people that they are destitute and that only complete servitude and support for an Islamic state and a radical interpretation of Islam will solve their problems. Many poor Bangladeshis have fallen prey to this line and have begun to internalize the hope for a better life in an Islamic state. If, however, poverty is reduced and Bangalis see the potential for progress, they will not be as beholden to radical Islam. Simply put, if the economy gets better, the grip of JI and Islamists will weaken.

The numbers from the last term of the secular Awami League speak for themselves. With Sheikh Hasina’s five year term bookended by the BNP, it is relatively easy to see the effect of secularism on the country. From 1996 at the start of her term to 2001 when she left, the poverty rate decreased from 58 percent to 40 percent, literacy rate increased from 45 percent to 66 percent, longevity was extended from 57 to 64 years, foreign investment from the United States rose from US$20 million to US$2 billion, inflation dropped from 6.4 percent to 1.59 percent, and GDP growth increased from 4 percent to 6 percent. Also of great import, the national food deficit of 4.5 million metric tons was transferred into a 2.6 million metric ton food surplus by the end of her term. Moreover, the focus on education, jobs, food-growth, and secular government kept the numbers of Islamists within the government down and marginalized the power of JI.

The success story of Sheikh Hasina was nullified by questionably administered elections in 2001; however, the Awami’s loss allows us to see the deleterious effect of the BNP and JI on the country. In 2006, after five years of BNP-JI rule, poverty increased again from 40 percent to 48 percent and the literacy rate fell from 66 percent to 63 percent. The military caretaker government has only aided in this downward death spiral that has seen poverty increase, literacy decrease, and the growth of Islamism. Notwithstanding the systemic corruption introduced since 1975 by past military dictators, the correlation of secularism and positive results is difficult to dispute in Bangladesh.

If Sheikh Hasina and the Awami League win the upcoming December election, this downward trajectory of poverty, literacy, and Islamism will be averted. This de-radicalization plan has great potential for success. The Bangladeshi people are starting to see the connection between secularism and success in Bangladesh. The time is ripe for them to support these initiatives. In the careful balancing act between Islam and governance in a Muslim country, it appears that the pendulum has tipped to the side of secularism. The Awami League must build on this momentum to ensure its long-term success.
 
These are the anti-Bangladesh comments of Sheikh Hasina's son Joy. This received a strong response from Farhad Mazar on the conspiracy against Bangladesh -

Sajeeb A. Wazed is an adviser to Sheikh Hasina, the former Prime Minister of Bangladesh and President of the Awami League, the largest and oldest political party in Bangladesh. He has been a key negotiator for the Awami League on several occasions, most recently in the negotiations for the restoration of democracy in Bangladesh with the present military government. He has a Master's in Public Administration from Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.

Carl J. Ciovacco graduated from the Kennedy School of Government with a Masters of Public Policy in International Security and Political Economy. His recent thesis on Al Qaeda's media strategy and was written for the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point. He received his Bachelor of Science in International Relations from West Point and served as an Army officer in Iraq and Saudi Arabia.

Bangladesh has been a secular Muslim state since its independence from Pakistan and founding by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in 1971. While its short history has been full of military coup d’états, it has always returned to its roots as a secular democratic state. There are, however, troubling new signs of a shift towards a growing Islamism that could jeopardize the sanctity of secularism in the country. While the governing construct’s legitimacy is suffering politically from the past two years of emergency military rule, Islamism may be the biggest threat to the country’s Constitution and secular underpinnings. As elections are scheduled for December 18th and the two major political parties jostle over the country’s future, each party’s vision for the proper mix of Islam and government will be at the forefront. Rahman’s Awami League has long been the standard bearer of secularism and if elected, it could roll back the growing tide of Islamism in Bangladesh. The Awami League must, however, implement certain changes to proactively check this Islamism if it hopes to secure long-lasting secularism and democracy. If successful, an Awami League-led Bangladesh could be the global example of secular governance in a Muslim country.

The Situation on the Ground

During the turmoil in Bangladeshi politics over the past two years, the military government has imprisoned two former Prime Ministers on trumpted-up charges of corruption. Yet, Sheikh Hasina of the Awami League and Khaleda Zia of the Bangladeshi Nationalist Party (BNP) continue to enjoy overwhelming support from their party’s grassroots. While Sheikh Hasina has already been released and is on parole in the United States for medical treatment, Khaleda Zia remains in prison. Though the military caretaker government had originally intended to imprison all of the popular politicians before the impending December election, it appears that both Sheikh Hasina and Khaleda Zia will be allowed to participate.

Bangladeshis will once again go to the polls to decide between the Awami League and its record of secularism and the BNP with its public support of Jamat-e-Islami (which supports Islamic-leaning governance). If July’s local elections, where the Awami League won 12 of 13 Municipal elections, are any portent of future national elections, the League appears to be the favorite in the national election. This result would return Hasina, the daughter of the country’s founding father Rahman, to the Premiership that she held from 1996 until 2001. If however, the BNP wins by consolidating its Islamic-leaning power base, Zia will reoccupy the nation’s top position that she held from 2001 to 2006.

School children preparing for class. Photo courtesy flickr.com/BBC World Service Bangladesh Boat

With the rise of Islamic extremism encouraged by the last two years of military rule and five years of BNP governance, the Awami League will certainly be fighting an uphill battle both before and after the elections in stemming this movement. The ascendancy of Islamists (moulobadi in Bangali) in national politics was partly due to how Zia and the BNP structured their 2001 campaign to include the Islamic party Jamat-e-Islami (JI). When the BNP formed a coalition government with JI, it opened the door to increased Islamic influence on the governing party. Before JI became part of the ruling coalition, it had minimal influence on the government. The greatest number of seats that JI had ever garnered in any election prior to 2001 was three. After the BNP allied with JI however, its legitimacy grew within the governing construct.

BNP has begun to rely heavily on JI’s highly focused fundamentalist Islamic base. The Islamists tend to support reunification with the Islamic Republic of Pakistan and do not share the Awami League’s affinity for Rahman and the liberationists that fought Pakistan in the 1970s. The alliance of anti-liberationists , JI, and the BNP has also had direct and indirect involvement with Islamic fundamentalist groups that masterminded 500 coordinated bombings across Bangladesh in 2005. This display of terror was an attempt to showcase their growing power. These shadow groups, namely Jamat-ul Mujahid Bangladesh (JMB), Jagrata Janata Muslim Bangladesh (JMJB) and Harkatul Jihad (HuJi), have been the militant arm of JI. They overtly denounce the Constitution and seek to replace democracy and secularism with a governing construct based on Sharia Law.

Islamic extremism is also on the rise in Bangladesh because of the growing numbers of Islamists in the military. The Islamists cleverly began growing their numbers within the Army by training for the Army Entrance Exams at madrassas. This madrassa training was necessary because of the relative difficulty associated with passing these exams. The military is attractive because of both its respected status and its high employment opportunities in a country where unemployment ranges from 20 percent to 30 percent for younger males. High demand for military posts has resulted in an entrance exam designed to limit the number of recruits. Before this madrassa Entrance Exam campaign, only 5 percent of military recruits came from madrasses in 2001. By 2006, at the end of the BNP’s reign, madrassas supplied nearly 35 percent of the Army recruits. In a country that has seen four military coup d’états in its short 37 year history, the astronomical growth of Islamists in the military is troubling to say the least.

Toward Renewal: A Secular Plan

As the country was founded on a secular system of governance, the entire political system is now vulnerable. Can the Awami League stop the growing tide of Islamism in a country that has seen the sale of burkas rise nearly 500 percent in the last five years? The answer is yes if it implements the following secular renewal plan. First, it must modernize the curriculum of the madrasses. Second, it must build proper, secular elementary schools and hospitals. Third, it should increase the recruitment of secular-minded students into the military from secular cadet academies. Fourth, it must attempt to rehabilitate known extremist clerics. Lastly, and perhaps the most abstract solution, it must push to vanquish Bangladeshi poverty and illiteracy that consistently ranks among the worst in the world. This plan would make the country less hospitable to a growing Islamist movement and help return Bangladesh to its secular roots.

Since madrassas are educational institutions within the country, they are under the purview of the country’s educational ministry. While almost all funding for these institutions comes from private donors in Saudi Arabia, there is no statute against their regulation by proper national authorities. Furthermore, nowhere in Islam or the Koran does it say that science, math, and history cannot be taught alongside religion. This enlightened education would show students that there is more to the world than only religion and that there are additional opportunities to earn a livelihood than merely religious or radically religious pursuits.

Build Effective, Secular Elementary Schools and Hospitals

Too often, the excuse that Bangladesh is a poor country is offered to counter the idea that proper, secular schools can be built. In reality, funding from international organizations and domestic tax revenue is sufficient to build these schools if they are a high enough priority. They should be, and each student should be taught to read and write and understand basic math and science. These schools would be a deterrence to the monopoly on education that madrassas currently enjoy. Relying on Saudi and Kuwaiti funding that dictates rote Koranic memorization is counterproductive for a nation that desires growth, productivity, and a brighter future, because it limits the population’s skill-set. Currently, madrasses have the advantage, because they recruit from poor families with many children; promising to feed and educate one or two children who are not absolutely necessary for the harvesting of crops. Secular schools could be a popular alternative to the madrasses that have been so attractive to poor farmers. The national government could help by building free secular schools and encouraging families to send their children by providing a small stipend to offset the lost income tied to not having children in the fields.

This same idea of providing a viable alternative to Islamic-leaning institutions can be applied to hospitals. When people are sick or dying, they are most vulnerable, and Islamic hospitals capitalize on this to convert Bangalis to a more extremist lifestyle. Secular hospitals would serve as an antidote to the Islamism that is propagated in these Islamic hospitals.

Increase Recruitment into the Military from Secular Schools

To counter the increased military recruitment from the madrassas, more youths—especially the secular-minded— must also be taught how to pass the Army’s Entrance Exams. It is not enough to desire more secularly-taught youth to enter to the military, but the plan must place them on the same playing field with the madrassa recruits. Instead of outwardly restricting madrassa training for the Entrance Exams, secular school Entrance Exam training would counter JI’s strategy to Islamify the military and thus the nation. An alternative source of recruits could switch back the military’s ideological balance to a more secular recruit base.

Rehabilitate the Extremist Clerics

The Bangladeshi government should ask moderate Muslim clerics to issue fatwas contrary to the Jihadist movement and its extreme clerics. While fatwas are technically illegal in Bangladesh, they regularly occur and people continue to live by them. Thus, the use of fatwas to dissuade potential Islamists from following extremist preaching could do much to stem the growth of extremism. This proposal would first require the identification of moderate clerics.

This rehabilitation campaign would also target extremist clerics and pressure them to recant and recall their previous incendiary remarks. This would have an incredible impact in cutting off the cancer of Islamic extremism at the root. Peter Bergen, a counterterrorism expert, has compared this type of intervention on the part of clerics to religious chemotherapy that eradicates extremism. Since only a small number of extremist clerics around the world spawn a disproportionately high number of jihadists, this targeted chemotherapy would remove the instigators of violence. In fact, Bergen has stated that three clerics living in Britain, Sheik Omar Bakri Mohammed, Abu Hamza Al Masri, and Abu Qatada, have had a critical influence on global terrorism. By removing the few, radial clerics around the world, Islamism will whither on the vine.

Bangladesh should attempt to replicate the recent successes in Saudi Arabia and Egypt to force the hand of extremist clerics to recant their past remarks and speak out against jihadists. They have even used moderate and reformed clerics to retrain jihadists in prison with a more moderate interpretation of the Koran. Heading the list of notable ex-extremist cleric success stories is the Saudi religious scholar Sheik al Oudah. Lending to his credibility within the jihadist movement, he was the founder of the Islamic awakening movement in the 1980s known as Sahwa. In September 2007, he began to criticize Osama bin Laden, stating that al Qaeda’s leader had “hijacked Islam.” While Oudah believed he was unable to influence bin Laden himself, he wanted to inform bin Laden’s followers about the problems with al Qaeda. The transformational impact of Oudah on future jihadist recruitment and retention within al Qaeda has been enormous and his further exposure can only hurt the jihadist movement.

Sayyid Imam al Sharif, aka Dr. Fadl, is another significant cleric who has turned his back on extremism and jihad. As the ideological godfather of al Qaeda and Ayman al-Zawahiri’s mentor, Dr. Fadl published the Bible of modern jihad called, “The Basic Principles in Making Preparation for Jihad.” He also provided the religious basis for the idea that Muslims martyring themselves in an act of jihad go straight to paradise. Then, in November, 2007, Fadl momentously withdrew his support for al Qaeda in the blistering book entitled “Rationalization of Jihad.” Fadl later called bin Laden and Zawahiri “extremely immoral” and cautioned Muslim youth against being “seduced by them.” With similarly influential clerics in Bangladesh, the government must utilize them to show how Islamists within their own country have hijacked religion for political reasons.

The significance of Oudah’s and Fadl’s reversals cannot be overstated. Whether they were products of the new reprogramming initiatives or not, these rehabilitation programs in the Middle East and Asia have thus far had an excellent track-record and should be attempted in Bangladesh for both radical clerics and captured militants. Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan currently run very effective programs in which those rehabilitated persons must sign forms agreeing to avoid jihadist activity. In honor-based societies, those family members and local clerics that pick up their ex-jihadist from prison agree to ensure there is no relapse. In Saudi Arabia, this type of program is called de-radicalization and in Afghanistan it is amnesty. Semantics aside, Yemen, Indonesia, Egypt, and Singapore have also followed suit with similarly effective retraining systems

In the 500 separate bombings by Islamists in 2005 in Bangladesh, 82 Islamists remain in prison and should undergo this type of rehabilitation program. The power of moderate clerics working in prisons and using their religious backgrounds to debunk violent interpretations of the Koran has paid huge dividends in dissuading jihadists from returning to action. This policy will work in Bangladesh as well.

Reduce Poverty and Illiteracy

Islamists have capitalized on the poverty-stricken nature of Bangladeshis in recent years. They have harnessed the age-old recruiting technique of telling the people that they are destitute and that only complete servitude and support for an Islamic state and a radical interpretation of Islam will solve their problems. Many poor Bangladeshis have fallen prey to this line and have begun to internalize the hope for a better life in an Islamic state. If, however, poverty is reduced and Bangalis see the potential for progress, they will not be as beholden to radical Islam. Simply put, if the economy gets better, the grip of JI and Islamists will weaken.

The numbers from the last term of the secular Awami League speak for themselves. With Sheikh Hasina’s five year term bookended by the BNP, it is relatively easy to see the effect of secularism on the country. From 1996 at the start of her term to 2001 when she left, the poverty rate decreased from 58 percent to 40 percent, literacy rate increased from 45 percent to 66 percent, longevity was extended from 57 to 64 years, foreign investment from the United States rose from US$20 million to US$2 billion, inflation dropped from 6.4 percent to 1.59 percent, and GDP growth increased from 4 percent to 6 percent. Also of great import, the national food deficit of 4.5 million metric tons was transferred into a 2.6 million metric ton food surplus by the end of her term. Moreover, the focus on education, jobs, food-growth, and secular government kept the numbers of Islamists within the government down and marginalized the power of JI.

The success story of Sheikh Hasina was nullified by questionably administered elections in 2001; however, the Awami’s loss allows us to see the deleterious effect of the BNP and JI on the country. In 2006, after five years of BNP-JI rule, poverty increased again from 40 percent to 48 percent and the literacy rate fell from 66 percent to 63 percent. The military caretaker government has only aided in this downward death spiral that has seen poverty increase, literacy decrease, and the growth of Islamism. Notwithstanding the systemic corruption introduced since 1975 by past military dictators, the correlation of secularism and positive results is difficult to dispute in Bangladesh.

If Sheikh Hasina and the Awami League win the upcoming December election, this downward trajectory of poverty, literacy, and Islamism will be averted. This de-radicalization plan has great potential for success. The Bangladeshi people are starting to see the connection between secularism and success in Bangladesh. The time is ripe for them to support these initiatives. In the careful balancing act between Islam and governance in a Muslim country, it appears that the pendulum has tipped to the side of secularism. The Awami League must build on this momentum to ensure its long-term success.

The whole idea is an affront to democratic values. Nowhere does it mention why Islamic rule is not acceptable if the majority of the people want that. This is what we get from the so-called champions of democracy, a fake democracy where the playing field is unfair and unjust, where the election commissioner and the army chief works for the political party favoured by the Americans. This is the only way the friends of India and America can come to power, so much for democracy.
 
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Shelve RPO 91E: Khaleda to govt

Dhaka, Nov 23 (bdnews24.com) – BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia has demanded suspension "at least" of Section 91(E) of the Representation of the People Ordinance 2008, claiming it was meant to "harass" people.

She also said full withdrawal of emergency would be a relief for the people, though she welcomed the Election Commission's announcement of new dates for parliamentary and upazila polls on Sunday.

"The EC should at least shelve the clause 91 (E) of the RPO if it cannot annul it," the BNP chairperson said at her Gulshan office.

"The issue can be later resolved through discussions in the parliament."

She reiterated her demand to lift the state of emergency from the day of withdrawal of nominations.

The two demands were included in the four conditions for going to election, set by BNP and its allies last week, along with rescheduling the polls.

The BNP chairperson criticised the government for "pushing the country 20 years back" adding there was no employment generation and investments fell and there were reports of rigging in the elections of four city corporations – all providing enough proof that elections amid emergency is not possible.

"The recent city corporation election proved that polls under emergency is not possible. So people will be relieved if the emergency goes immediately."

She also said, "The Jan 22 election in 2007 was obstructed on the plea of absence of suitable environment. The government will have to shoulder the blame if the situation recurs now."

Khaleda urged the authorities to create a "proper" environment without any further waste of time.

The former PM was speaking at a function to mark former Barisal PDP leader Sharfuddin Ahmed Shantu joining BNP on Sunday evening.

She welcomed leaders of different parties and organisations who had joined her party.

BNP leaders, including general secretary Khandaker Delwar Hossain, leaders from Barisal and Bhola and former MPs were also present on the occasion.


bdnews24.com/snd/jk/mt/rah/2207hours

Shelve RPO 91E: Khaleda to govt :: Politics :: bdnews24.com ::
 
The government has rescheduled the general election according to the demand of the Four-Party Alliance and there has been assurance that the emergency will be lifted most probably on 15th December. So, what now ?
 
What the BNP really wants is the repeal of article 91E of the RPO which would then allow many of its old candidates to stand for elections. As long as this provision remains the BNP will find it very difficult to contest the elections.
 
What the BNP really wants is the repeal of article 91E of the RPO which would then allow many of its old candidates to stand for elections. As long as this provision remains the BNP will find it very difficult to contest the elections.

Been reading losts of these " conspiracy" posts. Cud u pls in a nutshell educate me what the prob is or is foreseen ?

Being unaware of the provisions of the BD constitution & electoral system, I am unable to grasp the gist.
 
The last parliamentary elections were supposed to be held on or before January 22, 2007 as per our constitution. Due to disagreement between the Awami League and the President and several advisors of the caretaker government these elections were ultimately canceled and a proclamation of emergency was declared with a new caretaker government installed headed by Dr. Fakhruddin Ahmed and backed by the military.

During the 2 year period since the proclamation hundreds of BNP and AL supporters were arrested on charges of corruption. The BNP, however, suffered far more than the AL in this purge with many of its ministers and MP's behind bars. Most of those convicted can no longer stand for election as per emergency rules and their candidature can be canceled by the Election Commission as per article 91E of the Representation of the People's Ordinance 2008. It is for this reason the BNP is demanding the immediate lifting of emergency and repeal of 91E so it can allow its candidates (who were convicted under emergency but are now appealing) to stand in the elections now scehduled for December 29, 2008.

The conspiracy part of all this relates to an apprehension that the COAS General Moeen U. Ahmed as struck some kind of deal with the AL so that they can come to power. It is felt that the last two years has been an effort to weaken the BNP and for the AL to consolidate its position. Some of the recent comments of the CEC has also raised questions on the impartiality of the Election Commission to fairly conduct these elections. The concern of the COAS may be that a return of the BNP may result in them exacting revenge against him as he was promoted by them in the last government and he has effectively betrayed them.
 
Four-party sticks to its demands


Alliance views EC''s explanation on RPO not correct

Harping on the demand for withdrawal of emergency and suspension of article 91(e) of RPO, BNP led 4-party alliance has given to understand their participation in the December 29 election is not certain, reports UNB.
"When we see our demands are ignored, we will take decision in a meeting and we will let the nation know our decision," BNP secretary general Khandkar Delwar Hossain told newsmen after the alliance meeting at the Gulshan office of BNP Monday afternoon.

Sources close to the meeting told UNB the alliance candidates would file nomination by the last date of November 30 and wait for acceptance of the two minimum demands.

BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia on Sunday welcomed the rescheduling of parliamentary and upazila polls without committing to take part in the fray.
"Our least two demands - lifting of emergency and suspension of clause 91(e) of RPO - have to be accepted," insisted Delwar.

The clause 91(e) gave the Election Commission an absolute power to disqualify any candidate on ground of violating the electoral code of conduct.
Delwar said Government indirectly assured of withdrawing emergency from December 11. "Our apprehension of (wrong doing) has to be removed by suspending article 91 (e) of RPO and prove the sincerity of purpose of the government by lifting of emergency…. If the government is sincere, emergency can go even today."

Pointing to the former MPs of BNP now in jail or under trial under the emergency power rules Delwar pleaded for their immediate release. He said they could be tried under the usual law of the country.

Delwar said the alliance meeting expressed satisfaction for acceptance of some of its demands. But it viewed the explanation of EC on clause 91(e) of RPO is not correct. "Maintenance of the controversial clause seems motivational."

He said the Election Commission has lost confidence of the alliance by its controversial, partisan deeds. "Despite that we want to go to polls." The lengthy meeting of the alliance beginning at 4pm was attended by Delwar, Chowdhury Tanvir Ahmed Siddiqi and Salahuddin Quader Chowdhury of BNP, Ali Ahmed Mohammad Mujahid and Quader Mollah of Jamaat, Shamim Al Mamoon of BJP, Abdul Latif Nezami of IOJ and Ahmed Abdul Quader of Khelafat Majlis.

The News Today
 
No govt word on end to emergency

The government spokesman, adviser Hossain Zillur Rahman, says he does not know when emergency rule will end, pouring cold waters on speculations after the general election was rescheduled, reports bdnews24.com.

When reporters asked him about the next step of the government after the declaration of the new schedule, he said Monday: "Now everything is in the hands of the Election Commission."

The EC does not have the powers to lift the emergency.

His cabinet colleague home adviser MA Matin reignited speculations on Sunday when he said he did not see a decline in security if the state of emergency was lifted.

It has been one of the key demands of the BNP while the other major political party Awami League have been asking the interim administration to lift emergency rule to facilitate a fair, credible election.

Chief election commissioner ATM Shamsul Huda said he would ask the emergency government to lift the state of emergency on the last day for the withdrawal of nomination after declaring the new schedule on Sunday.
After talks with the alliances led by BNP and AL over the polls rescheduling, adviser Hossain Zillur said on Nov. 19 that the two parties were given four conditions. One of the conditions was the end to the emergency after an assessment of the law and order situation.

Elections of four city corporations and nine municipalities were held in August after president Iajuddin Ahmed declared a state of emergency on Jan. 11, 2007.

Foreign diplomats have been saying that the emergency rule had better go, but the European Union said last week it would send observers even if the general election was held amid emergency.

The News Today
 
Parliamentary polls - Credibility in Question

With the government rejecting BNP’s demands and Awami League all set for a virtually one-sided election, the credibility of the parliamentary polls is very much in question

by Badiul Alam

Attempts to hold a credible election with the participation of all the major players are likely to be frustrated, although the stage had been set for a compromise with the major parties, BNP and Awami League in particular.

The formula of compromise was that the poll schedule would be changed and the new date of the polls would be December 28 and the upazila election would be held either at the end of the first week or in the third week of January 2009. The contentious issue about withdrawal of the state of emergency was near being resolved. The government side agreed to consider total withdrawal of the emergency before the polls and it also agreed to suspend the operation of Section 91(E) of the RPO (Representation of Peoples Order), which gave power to the Election Commission (EC) to cancel the nomination of any candidate upon any complaint against that contending candidate.

The cancellation of nomination papers is tantamount to capital punishment for any candidate, and can be done in the court of law. The EC has apparently upstaged the power of the court and this has been termed as unconstitutional by the major political parties. Awami League first raised objection to the provision of 91(E), but later found that this provision would not affect them and thus agreed to join the polls, keeping 90(E) intact.
Earlier on several occasions, Awami League made it clear that it would not participate in the national election under the state of emergency, but later its leaders seem to feel that the state of emergency would not harm them and eventually went ahead to complete all preparations to participate in the upcoming national election, with the state of emergency hanging above their heads. The Awami Leaguers justified their stand by saying that they had past experience of contesting in elections under martial law and under the LFO (legal frame order).

BNP, on the other hand, did not feel comfortable with the state of emergency and also with the 91 (E) provision of the RPO. BNP considers the whole state machinery has been working against them and that the 91(E) provision of the RPO would be applied against them without any hesitation.
The apprehensions of BNP were hardly unfounded. After sending former finance minister Saifur Rahman, Jamaat chief Moulana Matiur Rahman Nizami and Jamaat Secretary General Ali Ahsan Al Mujahidi to jail because of their alleged involvement in Barapukuria coal mine irregularities, both BNP and Jamaat declared protest programmes. In an instant reaction, Jamaat workers bought out a procession from the north gate of Baitul Mukarram national mosque. Their procession came under police attack and Jamaat workers retaliated to the police’s baton charge by throwing brickbats. As a consequence of this particular street battle, the Home Ministry used the powers of the state of emergency to impose a ban on all political activities till November 27.

The EC allegedly had been involved in creating a rift within BNP by officially recognising a BNP committee which had emerged from a “coup” of October 29 2007. The EC could not prove itself a neutral body. On the contrary, most of its actions prove that it has a partisan outlook. Under these circumstances, BNP can’t feel safe by keeping if the EC has these special powers. So they strongly came out about the withdrawal of the state of emergency and repeal of the provision of 91(E) of the RPO.

The government earlier had no intention to listen to BNP, but later on it came under pressure from various quarters to bring the BNP and the 4-party alliance to the election. Accordingly, the government activated its machinery to reach an understanding with BNP, but only after it received a 48-hour ultimatum from BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia on Monday evening.
The five-member advisory committee led by Commerce Adviser Dr Hossain Zillur Rahman held parleys with BNP and the leaders of the ‘grand alliance’ led by the Awami League. Emerging from both the meetings, Hossain Zillur expressed his optimism about finding a solution to the deadlock. Awami League had raised objections about the shifting of the poll date beyond December and it made it clear that the election must be held within December, although publicly it insisted on the December 18 poll date.
Sources from the negotiating team said that as part of the agreement, EC had agreed to shift the poll date to December 28 and last date of filing the nomination papers to November 27. The government also agreed to suspend the operation of the 91 (E) of the RPO. They also agreed to lift the emergency from the date of withdrawal of nomination papers. BNP’s demand was that the emergency should be withdrawn before the filing of the nomination papers. Still, BNP could not have minded the announcement for the withdrawal of the state of emergency. This would be a political victory for them.

Everything had been going on track till noon of Wednesday. From the afternoon of Wednesday, the situation veered in the opposite direction. Things came to a head at three in the afternoon of Wednesday when an important meeting was held at the Chief Advisor’s office. Except changing the poll date, the government backed out of its earlier position regarding the withdrawal of the emergency and the suspension of the operation of the provision of 91(E) of the RPO.

In the meantime, Awami League also changed its stance. On Tuesday evening, the Awami League spokesman said that the party wanted the election within December. This was an indication of accepting the new poll date of December 28. But on Wednesday evening Awami League stated that they would not accept any shift of poll date from December 28, which gave the administration the excuse to point to the “failure of understanding among the political parties” to change their stance.

After the government announced that the polls would be held according to the old schedule, all doors were shut to a credible and participatory election, which was the basic spirit of 1/11.

Till wiring this report at noon of Thursday, the components of the 4-party alliance were in meeting, discussing their next course of action.

.: PROBENEWS :.
 
EC explains 91E, says UZ polls to go ahead

Dhaka, Nov 25 (bdnews24.com) –There is no easy way to abuse Section 91E of the Representation of the People Order, nor any way to defer Upazila elections, said election commissioner M Sakhawat Hussain on Tuesday, addressing separate election concerns of BNP and Awami League.

BNP has demanded annulment or suspension of 91E which gives the EC power to cancel candidacy, claiming it is meant only to "harass' candidates.

Stressing it would not be misused under any situation, Sakhawat said Tuesday: "In case of a violation of electoral code, the EC has the power to annul the candidature."

"The EC has the authority to apply this section only in case there is a serious written allegation of influencing the election or making the election process difficult."

"But it has to be proved under the EC inquiry. The commission will hear the accuser and the accused on the report to be submitted by the EC enquiry committee on the flagrant violation of the electoral code of conduct," the election official clarified.

Even if the commission wanted to take measures against anybody, all the commissioners had to be unanimous and, if need be, the aggrieved person could go to the court, he stressed.

"Since this section has not been studied well, questions are being raised in different ways, giving rise to misunderstanding," Sakhawat said.

BNP and its allies called for cancellation of the provision earlier this month, as a condition for the alliance's participation in the upcoming election, along with three other demands including rescheduling elections and lifting the state of emergency.

Since then, Transparency International Bangladesh has issued a statement calling Section 91E "indispensable". If it is annulled, "there will not remain any institutional process to effectively enforce the electoral code of conduct on candidates," said the corruption watchdog.

On Monday, constitutional experts voiced their support for the section, but added that it "may be open to abuse".

Explaining the process, Sakhawat said Tuesday, "If there is only one candidate left for a constituency after the candidatures of other contestants are cancelled, there is provision for re-inviting nominations. There is no scope for election of a candidate uncontested in this section. Under Section 17 of the RPO, if a candidate or an elected member dies, re-election takes place".

The election commissioner also stressed that there was no scope for shifting the Upazila election date beyond Jan 22.

Awami League after deliberations on Monaday announced that it would accept the EC's newly scheduled parliamentary polls to be held now on Dec 29, but wanted Upazila polls, that have been rescheduled for Jan 22 to be cancelled so they may be held under the next elected government.

However, Sakhawat said Tuesday: "There is provision for updating the voter list at the beginning of the year; so the Upazila election date must not be changed or the next possible date will be uncertain."

"Current schedules should make it more convenient to hold parliamentary and Upazila elections because of the wider time gap".

Replying to a question on another much-debated electoral issue, Sakhawat said, "If mayors of city corporations or municipal bodies want to contest the parliamentary election, they must resign from their mayoral posts."

"But ward councillors can contest the election since they do not hold the 'office of profit'. Union Parishad chairmen also have the scope to participate in the Upazila election on resignation," he said.

Sakhawat said letters would be sent to 39 registered political parties requesting them to abide by the electoral code of conduct.

Turning to the registered parties, he said, "There is a wide scope to nominate more than one candidate by political parties, but it has to inform the returning officer before finally withdrawing nomination papers in favour of one."

He also made a request to nominate candidates on the basis of recommendations from the grass-root level in accordance with the constitution of the party.

bdnews24.com/mhc/al/ja/mt/rah/2121hours

EC explains 91E, says UZ polls to go ahead :: Politics :: bdnews24.com ::
 
I have never heard this interpretation before but it is new angle I guess. You are suggesting the Hindus are working with the 'Interest Group' to weaken Muslims.
Not only you but also almost all Bangladeshis didn't know/hear this interpretation. The reason behind it was leaders and historian's deviation from reading from different angles and complacency in connecting dots where murkiness were found in social transformation in contained, occupied lands by empires. It will open up your eyes if you read 'Islam between East and West' to find out how much West owes to Islam for its current materialistic success, thanks.
 
If emergency not lifted, article 91(E) of RPO cancelled, BNP’s participation in JS poll will be uncertain: Delwar

BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia and Secretary General Khandaker Delwar Hossain collected the nomination forms from the party's Central Nayapaltan office on Wednesday, the last date of collecting and submitting of nomination papers.(The Bangladesh Today)

As Wednesday was the last day for collecting nomination forms, the BNP's Central Party office witnessed a heavy turnout of nomination aspirants for contesting the national parliament election. Leaders with their supporters from different parts of the country came to the party office and collected nomination forms. Some 3000 nomination forms have been sold out to the BNP leaders. Of these some 1500 forms have already been submitted till filing of this report last night. After the completion of submission of nomination papers, the BNP will start taking interview of its nomination aspirants from today (Thursday) morning.

However, party insiders hinted that the interview date of the nomination aspirants may be extended for scrutinizing suitable candidates who have the probability to win the national parliament election.

It may be pointed out that in favour of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, three nomination forms from Bogra-6, Comilla-5 and Feni-1 have been collected at about 11.30am yesterday. BNP Secretary General Khandaker Delwar Hossain has also collected forms from Manikganj-2, and Manikganj-3

Meanwhile, BNP Secretary General Khandaker Delwar Hossain on Wednesday said BNP wants to know about the specific date of lifting of the state of emergency and cancellation the article 91 (E) of amended RPO 2008.

"The government and army chief are saying that the state of emergency will be withdrawn in shortest possible and logical time. But the government did not make clear its stand on what it means by 'logical period the time' for lifting the state of emergency," Delwar said this while talking to reporters at BNP central party office in the capital yesterday.

He said BNP and its alliance will never accept government's plans if it lifts the state of emergency just 24 hours before the 'Election Day'.

"On the other hand, article 91 (E) of RPO is a controversial issue as the Election Commission applying this article can cancel the candidature of anyone who wants to contest the election. This Act might be misused by the Election Commission. If the government doesn't want to withdraw the state of emergency and suspend article 91 (E) of RPO, BNP's participation in the parliamentary election will be uncertain," Khandaker Delwar Hossain said.

http://www.bangladesh-web.com/view.php?hidRecord=233365
 
This is an article by an American close to the State Department and Israel Lobby and many other secret agencies -


Will there be Elections in 2008?

Dr. Richard L. Benkin

Mahboobur Rahman's recent article in Weekly Blitz, "Rigidity of both AL & BNP foils government's efforts," should cause readers to wonder if the caretaker government will come through on its promise to hold democratic elections before the end of 2008. Bangladeshi representatives in Washington continue to stand behind their previous assurances to the US State Department that the elections will proceed as scheduled on December 18; but one source speaking on the condition of anonymity told me that he is not so sure. He refused to say, however, how the government would explain itself if the elections were not held this year. And while there are some explanations for a postponement that the US and others might accept, the closer we get to the election date, the less likely that becomes.

Since the spring, I had been counseling a proactive course to prepare the international community—and especially the United States whose imports drive the Bangladeshi economy—for the possibility of no elections in 2008. That course also involves a measure of transparency and honesty, qualities that Washingtonians do not associate with Bangladesh's representatives. That was not heeded, and now any postponement would now be laid at the feet of the current government. When western powers pressed for a commitment to hold elections in 2008, the government assented instead of taking a stand as, for instance, the Turkish military has in several similar situations and making it clear that genuine elections might not be possible by the end of 2008. In other words, it over promised. The caretaker government committed itself to accomplishing something that was not within its control. The problem is made even larger since Bangladesh's track record in Washington is one of broken promise after broken promise regardless of individual ambassadors and governments. Many in DC were hoping that the current government was bringing something new to the table.

And so were most Bangladeshis. It was impossible to find any Bangladeshi not happy about the military intervention of January 11, 2007—except for those who had reason to fear being called to account for their past misdeeds. I had arrived in the capital three days earlier with just under two weeks before scheduled elections. The situation was chaotic with Awami League head Sheikh Hasina publicly calling for her followers to "shut down the country," with violence if necessary; and her followers were listening to her. She did this even though the international community already supported her contention that rival Bangladesh National Party (BNP) had rigged the upcoming elections in their favor. In fact, in a historically unparalleled move, every western democracy was urging the Bangladeshis not to hold their election, so transparent was BNP's fraud. With both major parties now out of control and a far more dangerous situation looming for Bangladeshis, the military intervened.

The new government started out with a pledge to sweep away the corruption that was preventing truly free elections. It fearlessly arrested former corrupt officials who had been robbing the people of Bangladesh for decades with complete impunity. With the arrests of Hasina and BNP leader Khaleda Zia, it looked like the government was trying to create an entirely new political dynamic in the country and exclude the old parties from any new elections. Donor and importing nations were quiet at first, speaking in general platitudes about "speedy" elections, and left it to the government to define what speedy is. The government could have referred to its gargantuan task of undoing decades of corruption, inefficiency, and sponsorship of radical Islam; but rather than insisting on Bangladesh's sovereign right to determine when elections would bring real democracy to the people, it scurried to placate the international community. Nor did it take any action when groups with ties to both BNP and especially Awami labeled it as a military dictatorship in many of those capitals. Once that happened, the same powers that called for the 2007 election halted insisted on holding them now. Thus was squandered a great deal of time and Bangladesh's ability to control its own destiny.

Recent negotiations with the two major parties have brought the process full circle. There no evidence that either party is any different today than they were on in January 2007, but the caretaker government has tacitly let the parties know that their participation is critical for the election's credibility. How bizarre is that? The two parties responsible for a halt to elections are now told they are necessary for elections. Nor has their participation been made contingent on actions to end their corruption, sponsorship of radicals, and oppression of minorities. What assurances do the people of Bangladesh have that they will not see a return to the previous status quo when Awami and BNP both used the Bangladeshi treasury as their personal ATM machines? How can the tens of millions of minorities see any hope for them in either party? There also is no evidence that the caretaker government tried to make a case for itself with the international community. Its Anti-Corruption Committee had uncovered piles of evidence indicting the parties and their leaders with massive corruption. Figures on the amount of spoils Awami and BNP reaped from the racist Vested Property Act are alone enough to discredit them before the international community; but that was never done.

Fixing the mess is not impossible, but time is running out for this government to avoid the inevitable consequences of its inaction. Bangladeshis now face a twin dilemma: either postpone the promised elections—and face potential sanctions from nations whose aid and imports are critical for the economy; or saddle the people of Bangladesh with the same bad government and massive corruption they had know for decades.

Weeklyblitz.net : Internet Edition
 

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