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Elections 2019.

ROLE OF MILITARY REGAINS PROMINENCE
Khaleda throws first dice in electoral gambling

Shahid Islam
The electoral gambling is slated for a year from now, end of 2018, but the main players are setting the stage by keeping people informed of what they plan to do.
Following 19 months of virtual embargo on holding any public rally in the nation’s capital, and, overcoming the stigma of perennial negation of eight formal requests to the police to do so, country’s main opposition party, the BNP, has had its first shot on November 12 to tell the nation how it wants the next general election to unravel.
Caretaker demand revived
“No election under Hasina,” Khaleda declared during the mass rally — insinuating on the necessity of reviving the caretaker regime—which took place amidst withdrawal of public transports from the street to prevent people from attending the rally, and, under the hermetically tight preconditions of about two dozen restrictions imposed by Dhaka Metropolitan Police about the dos and the don’ts during, before, and after the rally.

The former PM added: “No EVM” and “military deployment with magisterial power” is needed to ensure electoral fair play. These three main demands of the BNP denote total lack of confidence on the incumbent PM; in so far as the PM’s intent and the ability to holding a fair election are concerned.
Message and the messenger
That’s nothing surprising. What does inject doses of awe and wonder is the message the demands of the former PM carried in that speech, and, who she is. Khaleda Zia shot herself into political pre-eminence as an uncompromising leader during the anti-autocracy movement of the 1980s when her party abstained from two consecutive elections in 1986 and 1988.

Little wonder then, that, despite being under the threat of being arrested and sent to the prison any time; either through court verdict awaiting dispensation—or under the quintessential section 54 of the criminal procedure that allows pre-emptive detention of any person under the pretext of maintaining public safety – Khaleda Zia exuded regained confidence in staying glued to her party’s previous demand for a neutral caretaker government; abrogating her moderated stance few months ago of consenting to the formation of a ‘cooperative regime’ of some sort to oversee the election.

This buoyancy – laden tossing of the first dice in what observers believe is the beginning of an electoral gambling for both the main parties has consigned politics back to its former cage: a deadlock that had hung over the nation’s shoulder like the pouncing predisposition of a roaming vulture for over five years.
The nation must brace now for a rough winter of discontent after this new initiation of the BNP leader.
Government’s response
The government will certainly throw its responding dice sooner; which shall be primed by, and premised on, the following presuppositions:

First: That the BNP has no faith on the efficacy and the neutrality of the EC, the police, RAB, BGB and other auxiliary forces, excepting the armed forces, when it comes to overseeing the polling and ensuring prevention of rigging and other foul plays by the authorities and their marauding political cadres.

Second: That the BNP is adamant to reverting to the pre-15th amendment modalities of the constitution to revive the caretaker system during the electoral interregnum.
Third: That the BNP feels it can lure and trap the incumbent regime into an anomalous electoral fray like the one held in 2014 in order to pulp its credibility and stir a public uprising sometimes by the end of 2019.
Bane of the regime
In all probability, such a stratagem has another compulsive ingredient in its stocking, and, the latest posturing of the BNP does indicate the adoption of such a gambit in the midst of unbridled price hikes of the essentials, shrunken employment opportunities, unabated corruption, and the government’s apparent inability in having a resolution passed by the UN Security Council branding the Myanmar’s military-backed regime as a violator of fundamental human rights of the Muslim Rohingya minority, and, committing crimes against humanity by engaging in ethnic cleansing of a designated minority group.
Above all, the internal fractionalization and squabbling within the ruling AL relating to rent-seeking and kickback dividends are being used by the BNP as political boon.
Fear of Islamic resurgence
While these are realities that boggle minds of sane observers, and the government is aware of such entrenched banes and hamstrings, the government is yet reluctant to shun aside the calls of its grass root supporters, who’re dead scared of relinquishing power due to fear of wanton vengeance-spree by the political Islamists who had remained silent for years; only to resurface at the most opportune moment like a Phoenix.

That fear in particular is making wary a section of the civil society too, who seems poised to bank on the military’s benevolence to thwart the possibility of another Islamic resurgence. Does BNP too have the same thing in mind?
One wonders.

Khaleda’s speech having insisted on military deployment with magisterial power – and the backdrop of the stage from where she’d delivered her latest sermon having been adorned prominently by a uniformed picture of her late husband, General Zia – did insinuate something of that vintage.
Or, did it? Stay tuned.
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EDITORIAL
Should not Sheikh Hasina accept Khaleda Zia’s challenge?
Despite persistent violent terrorization, depraved intimidation and thousands of brazenly fabricated criminal cases, arrests, enforced disappearances and custodial extrajudicial deaths of even senior leaders of the de facto popular opposition political party BNP by police and/or other law enforcement agencies—-under the ruling Awami League (AL) Government headed by PM Sheikh Hasina since 2009 until date—-the mammoth meeting of Khaleda Zia has proved to be still the most popular figure in politics.

This was evident in 12 November 2017 mammoth public meeting in Dhaka of the former properly and formally elected Prime Minister Khaleda for three terms.

Apprehensively enough commuters heading towards Dhaka city suffered immensely as public transport services from nearby districts were stopped by police prior to BNP’s rally set to be held at the Suhrawardy Udyan in the capital.
Police were seen stopping buses near Gabtoli bridge to obstruct the leaders and activists of BNP and its alliances from entering Dhaka city to attend the rally, newspaper reports claimed.

Reiterating that no election will be held under Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and challenging her to hold the national election under a neutral polls-time government, the BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia stated that “No fair polls can be held under Sheikh Hasina,” and requested Sheikh Hasina: “Face the electoral challenge under a neutral government.” Throwing a challenge to PM Hasina, she said the next government will be formed on the people’s mandate. “We don’t fear the people.”

Khaleda also called for a national unity and said the path of the democratic practice will not be smooth without it. She also underscored the need for deployment of army with magistracy power so that the next general election is held in a free, fair and credible manner.

None need forget that the autocratic Pakistani rulers had started digging their own graves when they denied the then East Bengal (what is now Bangladesh) its democratic rights since the inception, soon after the Partition in 1947, which tyranny was vehemently challenged under the very wise and able guidance and leadership of no other personage than the great statesman Moulana Abdul Hamid Khan Bhashani who founded the first powerful opposition party, the Awami Muslim League which was later renamed Awami League.
The sage statesman Bhashani could foresee that the quasi-colonialist Pakistani oligarchs would not see reason.

The very judicious Moulana could anticipate the ramification of economic exploitation and political repression here—rebellion and resistance emanating from the resolved will to right of self determination—and accordingly inspired the masses long, long ago.
In 1957 the patriarch of democratic politics in what is now Bangladesh, Bhashani gave clarion call “Walaikum salam to Pakistan” (meaning ‘goodbye’) just one decade after Pakistan came into being in 1947.

Only a damn fool will forget that our Liberation War was initially a struggle for Democracy, pure and simple—as the fascist dictatorial regime refused to accept people’s verdict—and the masses’ resentment finally morphed into a full-scale armed struggle.

It is an irony of fate that after long 46 years this wretched country is back to square one because its 20 opposition parties led by the BNP have been demanding people’s voting rights since Democracy has been rendered ridiculous by the incumbent government.

The indispensability of political opposition in a democracy is universally recognised—but not in Bangladesh, at least no by the AL chief and PM Hasina. A good statesman, like any other sensible human being, always learns more from his opposition than from his/her fervent supporters.
Alas, not in Bangladesh where the main opposition BNP has been subjected to severe repression from early 2009 till today.

With many custodial deaths, violent crimes, enforced disappearances of opposition political leaders, killing of a journalist couple, involvement of law enforcing agencies like RAB in political murders, corruption of gargantuan proportions, huge stock market swindling and scams galore in government-owned banks, the Awami League (AL) has been widely condemned in the media abroad, while at home the body politic by and large rejected her party.

Despite the farcical charade of polls of 5 January 2014, which Sheikh Hasina described as a matter of mere obligation to go by the rules indicating mid-term general election, the ruling AL bigwigs are now showing a brazen 180-degree volte-face.
This and other conspiracies indicate that the AL government has least consideration for democracy in Bangladesh.

An indispensable foundation stone of democracy and a safeguard against arbitrary governance, the rule of law is the principle that everyone —from the prime minister down to the man in the street — is subject to the law.
In this country the premise is very different when it comes to proper application of law.

As the present regime of Sheikh Hasina has been widely reproached at home and abroad—-except of course in India whose civil servant Sujatha Singh, former foreign secretary, and her bosses desired the 5 January 2014 stupid, farcical as well as voter less election and the AL government faithfully obeyed it in which 153 so-called MPs were not elected—-it is worthwhile and rational to heed Khaleda Zia’s good counsel to Hasina—-at least for the sake of her own prestige—-to give the people their right to vote freely by holding the next general election under a neutral government.

Why does not Hasina accept Khaleda’s challenge and give minimum effort to ensure absolute independence of the EC, level playing field for all eligible political parties by deploying army troops with magisterial powers who will see to it that the AL’s hoodlums do not unleash a reign of terror and resort to violence for rigging elections?
Why should Bangabandhu’s daughter fear neutral, free and fair election if she has minimum respect for Democracy?
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FOREIGN HANDS IN BANGLADESH POLITICS
On subservient political elite and uncritical intelligentsia

Nurul Kabir | Published: 18:26, Nov 16,2017 | Updated: 19:52, Nov 16,2017
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THE couple of rhetorical slogans of the ruling class political parties, the Bangladesh Awami League and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party in particular, that most Bangladeshis hear almost every day, and that too for years, are the ‘spirit of liberation war’ and ‘nationalism’ while the politically conscious sections of the people have painfully been observing for years now that both the parties, when in trouble to retain or return to power, rush to foreign powers, far and near, for multidimensional blessings.
Understandably, the foreign powers find the phenomenon very useful, for it provides the foreigners with ample opportunity to interfere easily with the host country’s domestic affairs and twist arms of the pleading political parties when necessary to get things done in their national interests, more often than not at the cost of Bangladesh’s.

Under such a political circumstance, any country’s patriotic intelligentsia is expected to critically intervene in analysing the actions and inactions of the political class as to how the latter’s subjugation to foreign powers compromises the ‘spirit of liberation war’ – national progress with dignity being one, and ‘nationalism’ – preference of national interests to any other things on earth that is, and mount popular pressure by way of guiding public opinions in the right direction.

But, alas, Bangladesh’s mainstream intelligentsia is sharply divided on a partisan line and, therefore, they support, and make efforts to justify, whatever approach their respective parties take to foreign powers and whatever foreign policies those parties adopt and pursue, instead of presenting before the public the critical analyses of the approaches and policies from the point of view of the ‘spirit of liberation war’ and ‘nationalism’.

The result is obvious: foreign powers continue to interfere with Bangladesh’s national politics, and at times substantially influence the process of change of guards in power in gross disregards for the country’s liberation war spirit and nationalistic pride of the people at large. The people of Bangladesh, after all, did not fight for national independence to get the state controlled by any foreign country, including India that had helped us achieve independence from Pakistan in 1971.
II
THE subservience of the ruling class parties of Bangladesh to foreign powers has reached such an ugly state that some foreign countries, India for an example, do no longer feel constrained to hide their interferences with Bangladesh’s internal political process – the recent public disclosure of such interference in 2008 by Pranab Mukharjee (b 1935), a former minister and president of India from the Indian National Congress, being a glaring example.


Mukharjee has unambiguously stated in the recently released third volume of his biography as to how he had decided the course of Bangladesh’s internal politics in 2008, which, understandably, led to the process of Awami League’s return to power and a smooth exit of General Moeen U Ahmed who had illegally grabbed power in 2007.
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General Moeen U Ahmed, former chief of the Bangladesh army, who had illegally grabbed power in January 2007 and misruled the country until the Awami League was voted to power in December 2008, escaped a trial for sedition despite pervasive popular demand.

The general and his civil and military cohorts illegally ran the affairs of the state through a proxy cabinet, headed by Fakhruddun Ahmed, for two years.

Those two years, they had humiliated the entire political class, harassed many a member of the dissenting section of the intelligentsia, disrupted national economy by arresting almost all the big industrialists, jeopardised livelihoods of thousands of small traders and their families by way of demolishing their makeshift establishments in the name of cleanliness drive, so on and so forth.

However, a new parliament was eventually elected under the supervision of the military-driven government in late December 2008 and the Awami League-led political alliance formed government in early January 2009 with a command over the two-thirds of members in the parliament. Then, the House repeatedly witnessed a bi-partisan demand for trying General Moyeen U Ahmed and his military and civilian associates for their seditious activities.

But the government of Sheikh Hasina refused to meet the justified demand, without providing any explanation in or outside the parliament. Meanwhile, the general left the country.

The government’s silence about the proposed trial gave birth to many ‘speculations’ in the country’s political arena. Some of the League’s political opponents attributed the general’s safe exit to his juntas behind-the-scenes contributions to the Awami League’s electoral victory while others attributed it to the League’s long history of overt and covert cooperation with the military coup leaders.

There was hardly any reason to take seriously the allegation of the army assistance for the League’s victory for, given the fresh memory of the BNP’s misgovernance and Hawa Bhaban excesses, the League was sure to win the national elections in 2008, without any military cooperation although the victory by more than two-thirds majority had genuinely raised some eyebrows.

The second allegation that it was the League’s post-independence tendency to cooperate with military juntas, barring only that of General Ziaur Rahman, dissuaded the party leadership from taking the guilty generals to justice found some grounds.

The League, after all, had first appreciated General HM Ershad’s illegal takeover of power in 1982 through its party’s now-defunct Bangla daily newspaper, Banglar Bani, the next day and later cooperated with Ershad in legalising its martial law regime by participating in general elections in 1986 when most opposition parties refused to do so.

Then the party sympathised with General ASM Nasim’s abortive coup d’état in 1996, and finally Sheikh Hasina publicly announced in 2007 that her party would give retrospective endorsement to General Moyeen’s illegal regime, if, in the end, the Awami League goes to power.

Even earlier, following the gruesome murder of Bangladesh’s founding president and the Awami League supremo Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, along with most of his family members, in August 1975, a large section of the League leaders had joined hands with the commanders of the brutal military putsch and joined the government installed by the coup leaders on the Sheikh’s unattended body.

Then, some League leaders, such as Mizanur Rahman Chowdhury, admittedly, aspired to work with General Ziaur Rahman. (Mizanur Rahman Chowdhury, Rajnitir Tin Kal, Hafez Mahmud Foundation, Dhaka, 2001, p 179) Given the history, it was not unusual for many to believe that the government of the Awami League, despite its bitter rhetorical criticism of the political parties born out of cantonments, must have politically reconciled with another military regime, and this time that of General Moeen U Ahmed.

Now that Pranab Mukharjee has publicly stated the role that he had played in shaping the Bangladesh’s politics those days, it is crystal clear that Moyeen’s job security and impunity from seditious crime were directly related to Sheikh Hasina’s release and return to power, and that too through Indian mediation.

Mukharjee writes: “In February 2008, Bangladesh Army Chief Moeen Ahmed came to India on a six-day visit. He called on me too. During the informal interaction, I impressed upon him the importance of releasing political prisoners. He was apprehensive about his dismissal by Sheikh Hasina after her release.

But I took personal responsibility and assured the General of his survival after Hasina’s return to power.” (Pranab Mukharjee, The Coalition Years: 1996–2012, Rupa Publications, New Delhi, 2017, p 114) The sequence of events, after all, took place exactly in the order that Mukharjee had suggested to Moyeen: Sheikh Hasina was released, her party returned to power through an election supervised by the military-driven government, General Moyeen’s job was saved and he left the country after his regular retirement safely, without being tried for the seditious crime that he had committed. The general, then, reportedly received his Indian mentor’s assistance for his medical treatment in the United States. Mukharjee writes, “I also facilitated General Moeen’s treatment in the US when he was suffering from cancer.” (Pranab Mukharjee, The Coalition Years: 1996–2012, p 115)

Be that as it may, this is indeed very difficult for a people, who had created Bangladesh by fighting a bloodied liberation war, to reconcile with the fact that a foreign state plays a role in shaping the politics of their independent country. Moreover, it is equally difficult to accept that the chief of Bangladesh’s national army, which is a prime symbol of the independent republic’s national sovereignty, sought his job security from the politician of a foreign state – India in the present case.

The general should have been court-martialled for the offence against the country’s sovereignty.

It is, on the other hand, a matter of serious disappointment that the Awami League, the country’s oldest political party, which had presided over Bangladesh’s liberation war and is still having a substantive amount of popular support, allowed an errant general and his partners in crimes to go unpunished at the advice of a foreign power.

On top of these all, it is strange that a section of the country’s mainstream intelligentsia has indulged in appreciating the Indian politician in question, Pranab Mukharjee, for doing a ‘great service’ by helping Bangladesh come out of a grave political crisis in 2008.

Some of the members of the intelligentsia in question have even gone to the extent of claiming that by doing the ‘service’, Mukharjee has rather proved once again that India remains ever-ready to help Bangladesh since in 1971! The self-defeating strange observations might, who knows, further inspire India to continue poking its hegemonic nose into the Bangladesh’s internal affairs.

III
THE sections of the Bangladeshi intelligentsia that tend to consider Indian political and intelligence establishments, or those of any other countries for that matter, philanthropic forces dedicated to Bangladesh’s interests, one is forced believe, suffer from certain dangerous intellectual inadequacies — ranging from the lacking in the sense of history to the inability of grasping the importance of geopolitics in determining international relations.

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That Bangladesh has all the reasons to remain thankful to India for the latter’s multi-dimensional assistance during Bangladesh’s liberation war is unquestionable, but it is very important for the Bangladeshi intelligentsia to understand that the Indian friendship in 1971 was neither altruistic nor philanthropic in nature.

They need to note that when India was arming the patriotic youths who were from East Bengal to fight for liberating Bangladesh from Pakistan, the Indian army and special police were brutally repressing the patriotic Mizo and Naga youths making similar efforts for their respective national liberation from India.

On top of that all, the Indian military, as well as diplomatic and political establishments, did hardly hide their self-seeking objectives behind helping Bangladesh get liberated from Pakistan. K Subrahmanyam, director of India’s Institute for Defence Studies and Analysis, publicly persuaded the political establishments in Delhi to get involved, even intervene, in the East Bengal crisis for the sake of India’s ‘national interest’.

Subrahmanyam argued at a meeting of the Indian Council of World Affairs in Delhi on March 31, 1971, as was reported by the Hindustan Times the next day: “What India must realise is the fact that the break up of Pakistan is in our own interest, an opportunity, the like of which will never come again.” (The Hindustan Times is cited in Zaglul Haider, The Changing Pattern of Bangladesh Foreign Policy: A Comparative Study of the Mujib and Zia Regimes, The University Press Limited, Dhaka, 2006, p 31. Also Mizanur Rahman Shelley, Emergence of a New Nation in a Multi-polar World: Bangladesh, Fourth revised and enlarged edition, Academic Press and Publisher’s Library, Dhaka, 2007, p 60) Subrahmanyam would also defend his position in a post-independence interview to a Bangladeshi researcher, saying that ‘it was the chance of a century for India to divide Pakistan’. (K Subrahmanyam’s interview in Afsan Chodhury, Bangladesh: 1971, Vol 4, Mowla Brothers, Dhaka, 2007, p 663.)

JN Dixit, an Indian foreign ministry official who headed a ‘special unit to deal with East Pakistan crisis’ in 1971 and later became the first Indian deputy high commissioner in Dhaka, also admits that it is ‘correct’ that ‘India’s primary motivation for supporting the Bangladesh liberation war was its own strategic interests’. (JN Dixit, Liberation and Beyond: Indo-Bangladesh Relations, University Press Limited, Dhaka, 1999, p 175)

Dr Triguna Sen (1905–1998), a leader of the Indian National Congress and former education minister, unequivocally admitted to Swadhin Bangla Betar Kendra-famed Belal Muhammad in the last week of April 1971 that he had been working for dismembering Pakistan since 1949. Dr Sen said, “We had set up a ‘Bangladesh Cell’ in 1949. I have been heading the Cell since then. After so many years, the two rivers have met in the same confluence.” (Belal Muhammad, Swadhin Bangla Betar Kendra, 2nd reprint, 4th edition, Anupam Prokashni, Dhaka, 2012, p 84)

Finally, Indira Gandhi, prime minister of India, unambiguously told her cabinet on December 10, 1971 that Indian objectives were ‘to emerge from the [Bangladesh] war as the dominant power in South Asia and the Indian Ocean’, following which ‘China would respect India and might even decide to improve relations with New Delhi’. (BZ Khasru, Myths and Facts: Bangladesh Liberation War: How India, U.S., China, and the U.S.S.R. Shaped the Outcome, Rupa Publications, New Delhi, 2010, p 376) After all this confessions by the eminent Indians, one cannot have any justified reason to find Indian assistance for the Bangladesh cause in 1971 to be a selfless political and military exercise.

Nevertheless, the fact remains that India’s strategic interests to dismantle Pakistan and Bangladesh’s legitimate aspiration for independence converged at that point of the sub-continental history. Evidently, it was in the mutual interests that Bangladesh and India helped each other to achieve their respective objectives in 1971, which does not bind either of the parties to sacrifice their ‘national interests’ for the other in the post-1971 realities.

Indian political elite and its nationalist intelligentsia hardly appear to be confused about the national interests in international relations, which is being reflected in their changing foreign policies towards different countries on many occasions, the latest being Delhi’s present support for Myanmar vis-à-vis Bangladesh.

The government of Myanmar has been conducting, what the United Nations has said ‘a textbook example of ethnic cleansing’ against the poverty-stricken Rohingya population of the country’s Rakhaine state since the early 1980s, forcing as many as 10,00,000 people so far, of them more than 6,00,000 since the end of August this year, into bordering Bangladesh while the Indian establishment has unequivocally been supporting the Rohingya genocide for its own geostrategic interests in the region.

For the same reason, India helped Myanmar in more than one ways in the latter’s dispute with Bangladesh over maritime boundary. Bangladesh or its intelligentsia should not blame India for pursuing its national interests with Myanmar, or any other country for that matter, but at the same time they also should not preach that Bangladesh’s interest lies in the eternal unilateral friendship with India, even if Indian political, economic, cultural and diplomatic manoeuvres continue to hurt Bangladesh’s interests.

Bangladesh’s political force/s and their partisan intelligentsia tolerating, let alone making efforts to justify, Pranab Mukharjee’s meddling with the country’s internal political process serves, wittingly or unwittingly, Indian interests at the cost of Bangladesh’s. It is now common knowledge that India has reaped many a unilateral benefit from Bangladesh particularly since 2008.

That such subservience to foreign powers in national politics inspires the foreigners to continue with the interference rather more zealously became evident in Delhi’s direct intervention in Bangladesh’s electoral process and political polarisation in late 2013.

While visiting Dhaka on December 4, 2013, Sujata Singh, then foreign affairs secretary of India when Pranab Mukharjee was the foreign minister, bluntly asked Jatiya Party chairman HM Ershad, as the latter told the national media which reported the event the next day, to participate in the ensuing elections, although his party had decided earlier not to on grounds that there was no environment for inclusive elections scheduled for January 5, 2014.

Following Ershad’s disclosure about Singh’s persuasion, he was forcibly taken to the Dhaka cantonment and admitted to the military hospital and then Ershad gave in, for reasons any citizen with average level of intelligence can understand. While the Awami League and Indian establishments of the day succeeded to coerce Ershad’s Jatiya Party into the ‘elections’, with all the opposition parties boycotting the polls, the farcical event has actually produced poisonous consequences for both the Awami League and Bangladesh.

The disastrous episode began with the entire opposition’s refusal to participate in polls under the ruling Awami League’s crude partisan control of the electioneering process — a situation that the country had witnessed in 2006 when the Awami League took the same stance as the erstwhile government of the BNP tried to conduct polls the same way.

However, even after Ershad’s Jatiya Party was coerced into the similar polls by the Awami League in 2014, no other political party, not even any non-party individual, outside the League’s ruling coalition set any candidate in 153 of 300 seats of the parliament while there were some apolitical or non-political ‘independent’ individuals contested in the rest 147 parliamentary constituencies where, again, less than 10 per cent of voters visited the polling stations.

But at the end of the process, a subjugated Election Commission declared the Awami League and its partners to have own the polls by more than two-thirds majority, with 153 candidates elected uncontested, and thus the Awami League retained its power.

Naturally, it was considered illegitimate by all at home and abroad, excepting India.

It was unquestionably a duplicitous stance on part of the Indian political establishment for Mukharjee and the likes of India would not have reconciled with such an elections in their own country. Be that as it may, the installation by and the continuation of Sheikh Hasina’s government through such a sham election has not only further shattered the people’s aspiration for inclusive elections, but also damaged almost irreparably the Awami League’s political credibility.
Besides, nobody knows how many years Bangladesh would need to overcome the political and constitutional crises that the disastrous political event has pushed the country into.

While the politically conscious sections of the Bangladeshis primarily blame the political class of their own for the present political impasse, they also hold responsible for the crisis the foreign politicians interfering with Bangladesh’s political process — the reason the patriotic Bangladeshis dislike Pranab Mukharjee, no matter what his wishful thoughts about it are. (Mukharjee believes that, as reflected in a recent interview published in a Dhaka-based Bangla daily, Prothom Alo, in November 7-8, ‘every Bangladeshi loves’ him and that ‘none in Bangladesh is ready to accept’ his criticism!!) Mukharjee and the like are only expected to realise that a people who laid down their lives in hundreds of thousands for achieving national independence cannot appreciate foreigners irrationally poking noses in the internal affairs of their independent country.

The people of Bangladesh, after all, are completely aware of the facts that taking away voting rights of the citizens by fraudulent electoral practices amounts to denying ‘people’s sovereignty’ in making and unmaking laws of the republic through the elected representatives while committing the political offence in question collaboration with any foreign power/s is tantamount to compromising ‘sovereignty of the republic’ in the community of states.
IV
WHILE the ruling class political forces of Bangladesh have visibly deviated from the ‘spirit of liberation war’ and ‘nationalism’ in the true sense of the terms, the country’s intelligentsia committed to the ideals is expected to remain critical of the policies and performances of the political parties and their foreign ‘friends’ in question.


The people of Bangladesh fought the liberation war with the unambiguous objective of creating a democratic republic based on the professed principles of ‘equality, human dignity and social justice’, but the successive governments of the ruling class have pursued policies that generate pervasive inequalities, strip the citizens of human dignity and breed injustice across society.

The freedom fighters laid down lives for creating a state that would shape its own destiny based on the consent of the people at large, but the political forces of the ruling classes have developed the habit of retaining or returning to power with the help of their ‘foreign friends’, ignoring the people’s consent.

Under such circumstances, it is time that the country’s intelligentsia presented before the public multidimensional critical analyses of the shameful phenomenon and provided the citizens with a clear sense of direction towards a democratic future, imbibed with liberation war spirit and, thus, did justice to those who sacrificed their lives for the country’s independence.
Nurul Kabir is editor of New Age.
http://www.newagebd.net/article/28495/on-subservient-political-elite-and-uncritical-intelligentsia
 
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05:28 PM, November 17, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 05:34 PM, November 17, 2017
Supportive govt through movement: Fakhrul
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BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir on November 17, 2017, speaks of materialising a non-party supportive government for the next elections through a tough movement. File photo
Star Online Report
BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir today spoke of materialising a non-party supportive government for the next elections through a tough movement.
“The upcoming general election must have to be held under a supportive government,” he said after placing wreath the grave of Maolana Abdul Hamid Khan Bhashani this noon.

“Otherwise, we will wage a tough movement to materialise the demand,” he added.

Fakhrul along with a good number of leaders and activists of the party went to Santosh in Tangail and placed wreath at the grave of the legendary politician marking his 41st death anniversary.

“A repressive and oppressive government is hanging on to power forcibly,” Fakhrul said calling up on his party men to unite and wage a movement.

“We all will have to participate in the movement so that people can exercise their voting rights in the upcoming general election,” he added.
http://www.thedailystar.net/politic...ent-next-election-bangladesh-movement-1492678
 
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12:00 AM, November 19, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 05:58 AM, November 19, 2017
People bear the brunt of traffic chaos
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With people heading towards Suhrawardy Udyan in small processions for the “Nagorik Samabesh” yesterday, traffic on the other side of Kazi Nazrul Islam Avenue came to a halt. The photo near Karwan Bazar was taken at 2:00pm. Photo: Palash Khan
Staff Correspondent
City residents suffered dreadful traffic snarl-ups yesterday afternoon as Nagorik Committee organised a huge rally at the Suhrawardy Udyan.
Police made the roads around the venue off limits to vehicles since noon. Many other roads were filled with processions by the Awami League men.

Traffic went haywire near the entrance to the emergency unit of Dhaka Medical College Hospital, with ambulances getting stuck.

“My mother suffered head injuries. I was taking her to the hospital in a rickshaw. It took me around 20 minutes to enter the emergency gate of the hospital,” said Mahbub Alam.

On way to the hospital from Company Ghat, he was caught in a tailback at Chankharpool around 4:30pm.

Liver patient Abdur Rouf from Mohakhali was stuck in traffic near the hospital gate for around half an hour, said his son-in-law Noor-e-Alam.

Usually, the entrance to the emergency unit is kept accessible to vehicles by Ansar members. But they could not control the huge traffic yesterday.

The AL organised the rally under the banner of Nagorik Committee to celebrate the Unesco recognition of the historic March 7 speech of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman as a world documentary heritage.

Rizia Begum, who came to Dhaka from Barisal last week for treatment, wanted to return home yesterday. But she had to cancel her trip due to the traffic chaos.

“I took a bus from Mirpur-11 at 1:00pm. After reaching Banglamotor intersection around 3:30pm, the vehicle got stranded for nearly an hour. At one stage, the driver asked the passengers to get down as the bus would not move forward.”

“I wanted to go to Sadarghat to take a launch, but I had to get down from the bus with my luggage. Now I am waiting for a bus to return to my daughter's home in Mirpur,” she said.

It was getting difficult for the cardiac patient to wait there for a long time. “Though I am not sure when I will get a bus, I have no other option but to wait here,” Rizia told this correspondent at 4:30pm.

Amena Khatun from Patuakhali also faced the same problem. “Like us, thousands of others have been suffering due to gridlocks triggered by the public rally.”

Sabur Hossain, who came from Mymensingh to the Birdem Hospital for his brother's treatment, said the ambulance carrying his brother got stuck in a long tailback on Panthapath for nearly three hours.

“Such a hassle might cause a major health problem to my brother. Everybody is aware of such dangers, but the government doesn't realise it and barely cares about our problems,” he alleged.

Mozammel Huq was returning home after visiting the Dhaka Literary Festival at the Bangla Academy around 1:30pm. He said the roads in and around Shahbagh were made off limits to vehicles to allow AL men enter the meeting venue with processions.

“There was no public transport at Shahbagh intersection as the road leading to Matsya Bhaban was made off limits to vehicles to facilitate holding the rally,” he said.

He saw empty buses parked on both carriageways of the road stretching from Banglamotor intersection to the Sonargaon roundabout. Such parking of vehicles choked the road, causing severe traffic jam in the area, Mozammel said.

Carrying banners and festoons, AL leaders and activists brought out processions on Kazi Nazrul Islam Avenue, Elephant Road, Mirpur Road, Topkhana Road and Captain Mansur Ali Avenue.

Many chanted slogans taking position at different points on the streets.

Law enforcers also restricted vehicular and public movements on some roads adjacent to the Suhrawardy Udyan, on part of Kazi Nazrul Islam Avenue, Maulana Bhasani Road and High Court road for security reasons.

As a result, traffic came to a near-halt in those parts of the city from around noon to 5:00pm.

Most of the commuters either had to walk to their destinations or stay stranded in vehicles for hours. Patients, women and elderly people became the worst victims of the chaotic traffic situation.

People using roads in Katabon, Hatirpool, Shahbagh, Dhaka Medical College Hospital, Chankharpool, Banglamotor, Press Club and Doel Chattar areas suffered the most.

Traffic situation turned for the worst around 4:50pm when a huge number of people came out from the meeting venue after it ended. Police had to stop vehicular movement on some roads at that time as well.
http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/people-bear-the-brunt-traffic-chaos-1493104
 
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1,028 deaths and 52,000 injuries
Fazlur Rahman Raju
Published at 02:03 AM November 20, 2017
Last updated at 11:58 AM November 20, 2017
Capture-22.jpg

In 2017, there were 256 clashes from January to September – at least 44 were killed and 3,506 injured across the country
At least 1,028 people have been killed and 52,066 injured in 3,540 instances of political violence over the last five years in Bangladesh, according to data from the Ain o Salish Kendra (ASK).

On January 17 this year, three people – Tajul Islam, 35, Shaharul, 25, and Ujjal Miah, 28 – were killed and 20 others injured during a clash between two groups of local Awami League members over the possession of a water body at Jarulia village in Dirai upazila.

On May 8, 2016, 16 people were shot during a factional clash of two ruling party groups – one led by lawmaker Aslamul Haque Aslam and other by reserved woman lawmaker Sabina Akter Tuhin – over organising a demo under Mirpur Awami League unit, against the Jamaat-e-Islami.

Politicians and commentators say violence has been a staple of Bangladeshi politics for a long time, largely due to the inherent nature of political organisations, which is built around loyalty purchased through the distribution of spoils.

Researcher, journalist and political commentator Afsan Chowdhury said: “Politics in Bangladesh is driven by money; there is nothing in it about people’s welfare and political parties carry out attacks on rival groups for issues related to money.”

Political leaders and activists never clash on ideological grounds; it’s always for personal interest. Usually leaders engage in clashes while trying to grab tenders, different government projects and lands

Afsan pointed out that the Awami League has been in power for nine years now and during this time, people from different backgrounds with different interests have joined the party, which often leads to infighting and clashes.

Nur Khan, former director (investigation) of Ain o Salish Kendra (ASK), told the Dhaka Tribune that political conflicts are the manifestations of unstable and unethical politics.

He said: “Unethical politicians who lust for power and money are normalizing conflicts among political parties.”

The ASK data is based on reports compiled over 57 months from January 1, 2013 to September 30, 2017.

Awami League and its affiliate organizations have had 15 incidents of internal conflict per month on average, leading to the loss of three lives on every occasion.

On Monday, Awami League General Secretary Obaidul Quader said that decency and tolerance are no longer present in politics, but only in posters and banners.

Awami League Presidium Member Pijush Kanti Bhattacharya said: “Awami League is a huge political party. There are many people with different perspectives which lead to conflicts.”

He said: “Political leaders and activists never clash on ideological grounds; it’s always for personal interest. Usually leaders engage in clashes while trying to grab tenders, different government projects and lands.”

Over the past five years, BNP has engaged in 160 clashes – killing 14 and injuring 1,702.

BNP Joint General Secretary Syed Moazzem Hossain Alal said: “There are all sorts of people in BNP. There are some disputes among the leadership and activists, which leads to the clashes. It is completely normal.”
Political-violence-corrected-info-1024x820.jpg

National University Vice-Chancellor and political scientist Harun-or-Rashid said the basic principles of democracy were absent in Bangladeshi politics.

“Politicians, intolerant towards opposing views, usually engage in violent clashes over frivolous matters,” he told the Dhaka Tribune. “These are people who think they are above the law and hence have no qualms about ordering the deaths of others.”

Mahmudur Rahman Manna, former vice-president of Dhaka University Central Students Union (DUCSU), told the Dhaka Tribune that the culture of political violence emerged in the wake of the 1971 Liberation War and has been thriving since.

“Today, political parties are more dependent on weapons, money and muscle, which are the main reasons behind any political conflict,” he claimed.
2017
In 2017, there were 256 clashes from January to September – at least 44 were killed and 3,506 injured across the country.

Among them, at least 28 people were killed and 1,917 suffered various injuries during 115 incidents of infighting between Awami League and its affiliates.

Nine people were also killed during the same period when law enforcement agencies clashed with political activists.
2016
In 2016 alone, 177 people, including 83 Awami League activists and 84 bystanders, died in 907 political clashes, which also injured 11,462, according to the ASK data.
2015
In 2015, the country’s political parties had locked horns 865 times, leading to the deaths of at least 153 people while injuring 6,318. There were 66 days of blockades and shutdowns where 78 people died and 1,861 injured in 390 conflicts.

There were 226 instances of Awami League infighting which resulted in 33 deaths and 2,378 injuries.
2014
In 2014, political activists and law enforcement agencies clashed a total of 664 times, killing 147 and injuring 8,373.

Awami League and BNP clashed 82 times. Their clashes killed 21 and injured 784.

There were 171 instances of Awami League and affiliates infighting, killing 34 and injuring 2,206.

The January 5 election saw 22 clashes – killing another 34 and injuring 497.

The upazila elections saw innumerable clashes which saw 24 killed and 2,850 injured.
2013
In 2013, there were 848 clashes between law enforcement agencies and political activists. At least 507 were killed and 22,407 injured.
BNP
Over the past five years, BNP has engaged in 160 clashes – killing 14 and injuring 1,702.

BNP (including Chhatra Dal) and Jamaat (including Chhatra Shibir) clashed 11 times, killing three and injuring 137.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/2017/11/20/1028-deaths-53000-injuries/
 
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12:00 AM, November 22, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 04:11 AM, November 22, 2017
Won't take part in polls without a neutral govt
Says Khaleda
khaleda_zia_25.jpg

BNP Chief Khaleda Zia. Star's file photo
Staff Correspondent
BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia yesterday said her party would not take part in the next general election without a neutral polls-time government.

She also stressed the need for taking preparations for the elections and a movement to force the government to accept their demands.

The BNP chief said these while meeting members of her advisory council at her Gulshan office.

The meeting began at 9:30pm and continued for nearly three hours.

BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir and 53 members of the 72-strong advisory council attended the meeting.


Several advisors said the BNP chief told them that there would be no election in the country with Sheikh Hasina in power.

The BNP chief also called upon her party men to carry out pro-people activities.

An adviser said issues like the upcoming city polls, including Rangpur city polls, framework of the election-time government, preparations for the general elections and her plan to visit some cities and districts came up for discussion.
http://www.thedailystar.net/backpage/wont-take-part-polls-without-neutral-govt-1494850
 
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12:00 AM, November 22, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 04:11 AM, November 22, 2017
Won't take part in polls without a neutral govt
Says Khaleda
khaleda_zia_25.jpg

BNP Chief Khaleda Zia. Star's file photo
Staff Correspondent
BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia yesterday said her party would not take part in the next general election without a neutral polls-time government.

She also stressed the need for taking preparations for the elections and a movement to force the government to accept their demands.

The BNP chief said these while meeting members of her advisory council at her Gulshan office.

The meeting began at 9:30pm and continued for nearly three hours.

BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir and 53 members of the 72-strong advisory council attended the meeting.


Several advisors said the BNP chief told them that there would be no election in the country with Sheikh Hasina in power.

The BNP chief also called upon her party men to carry out pro-people activities.

An adviser said issues like the upcoming city polls, including Rangpur city polls, framework of the election-time government, preparations for the general elections and her plan to visit some cities and districts came up for discussion.
http://www.thedailystar.net/backpage/wont-take-part-polls-without-neutral-govt-1494850

So basically setting up for a boycott then? @Mage @UKBengali @bluesky

I dont see SHW handing over to any kind of caretaker govt, she didnt last time after all and got away with that.

This is the big problem when you dont have a credible EC to all parties in BD.
 
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So basically setting up for a boycott then? @Mage @UKBengali @bluesky

I dont see SHW handing over to any kind of caretaker govt, she didnt last time after all and got away with that.

This is the big problem when you dont have a credible EC to all parties in BD.

Awami League needs to stay in power till mid-2020s.
BNP government would be disaster for BD.
 
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So basically setting up for a boycott then? @Mage @UKBengali @bluesky
Nah... they'll take part. There is immense pressure on her from party members who want to take part in election. There are many seats where BNP candidates would be shoe in to get elected, even in an election under Hasina. And they want to get elected. There are many high level BNP leaders stated that BNP will take part in the next election.

This is the big problem when you dont have a credible EC to all parties in BD.
One party rule FTW. I have always been a fan of China's political system.
 
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I agree with her. Hasina is a thief. No election will be fair under this wrong headed lady.


Let see if Hasina has aspiration to digest another illegal term.

BNP got nothing to loose.
BNP is not Khaldea Zia alone. If BNP contests in the election they will get many seats. So yes they have many seats to lose. Many MPs.
 
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I agree with her. Hasina is a thief. No election will be fair under this wrong headed lady.


Let see if Hasina has aspiration to digest another illegal term.

BNP got nothing to loose.

So you think BNP simply will boycott again and bring pressure to bear in an all out way (for caretaker govt + actual credible election etc). Regarding the pressure, what new things can BNP do, given nothing really changed the course for SHW this term?

BNP is not Khaldea Zia alone. If BNP contests in the election they will get many seats. So yes they have many seats to lose. Many MPs.

Has there been example of BNP going against its leader directive on such an important issue? Won't it be pretty much an internal coup? This is literally all or nothing position.
 
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