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Monday, April 28, 2008

[vinnomot] Conviction of war criminal ....From The New Age, published on April 29,2008

Conviction of war criminal


It is a good initiative. One of the many ordinances approved by the military-controlled government suggested the banning of convicted war criminals from local polls. Now, the government should take initiatives to try and convict war criminals.
   The sooner, the better. This process must be completed before national polls are held. If for some reason this job cannot be completed within a short period, local polls can be deferred.
   The people of Bangladesh are not pressing for hurriedly organised local polls now.
   MH Khan
   On e-mail
   

* * *

   The Local Government Ordinance 2008 kept a provision for a ban on the war criminals convicted by any local or international court or tribunal.
   Are the caretaker government and the EC happy in making such a vague ordinance without the trial of those criminals when millions of our people were killed, a large section of the intellectual community of Bangladesh were murdered, numerous women were tortured, raped and killed during the war?
   Gopal Sengupta
   Canada

Next on Quick Comments
a. Hasina asks party not to contest polls without her: Says she will not retire from politics (New Age, April 28)

b. BNP splinter group for strong presence of army during polls: EC holds talks with the group amid tight security (New Age, April 28)

c. Govt, EC plotting farcical polls, says Delwar (New Age, April 28)

d. Chevron suspends Lawacherra survey work (New Age, April 28)

e. Anti-terrorism ordinance to be promulgated soon: spokesman: Acts of terrorism now defined in a much broader spectrum (New Age, April 28)

f. Disruption of power the main reason for water crisis, says Anwarul Iqbal: WASA can supply only 170cr litres against demand for 210cr litres (New Age, April 28)

g. Nepal Maoists need to convince opposition for power (New Age, April 28)


'Quick Comments', 01713-065-354, ( letters@newagebd.com, quickcomments@gmail.com ) seeks the readers' instant reaction on different national and international issues. Comments should be brief, not exceeding 150 words. Submissions should mention 'Quick Comments' and will be subject to editing for quality and clarity.

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[vinnomot] Saudis Want Control of Israeli Nuclear Arsenal



---------- Forwarded Message ----------



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Chuck Brucks <brucksc@bellsouth.net>
Date: Mon, Apr 28, 2008 at 7:56 AM
Subject: Saudis Want Control of Israeli Nuclear Arsenal
To: Chuck Brucks brucksc@bellsouth.net
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, April 27, 2008 9:58 AM
Subject: Saudis Want Control of Israeli Nuclear Arsenal

Betreff: [wvns] Saudis Want Israel to sign  Non-Proliferation-Treaty 

Riyadh: Pressure Israel to sign NPT
Sat, 05 Apr 2008 20:29:14

Saudi Arabia has called for international pressure to compel Israel to accept the international monitoring over its nuclear activities.

"The Issue of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) is still a serious threat to peace and security in the world," IRNA quoted Saudi Arabia's deputy Foreign Minister Prince Turki Bin-Muhammad on Saturday.

WMDs are dangerous whether they are used in wars or trigger arms race among countries, the Saudi official said in resort city of Sharm al-Sheikh, Egypt.

He described Israel as the only owner of the nuclear weapons in the Middle East, saying the regime is not subject to international monitoring.

He went on to say that to resolve this problem we have to get rid of double-standard-policies.

Washington is widely accused of practicing double standards over proliferation of WMDs when it comes to its allies particularly Tel Aviv.

"The international community must pressure Israel to open its nuclear facilities to UN inspectors and sign the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)," Bin-Muhammad concluded.

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[vinnomot] The Islamist challenge to secular Bangladesh


"Abdur Rahim Azad"@flpi115.prodigy.net wrote:

The Islamist challenge to secular Bangladesh
Nicholas Schmidle
The headquarters of Al-Markazul Islami, an Islamic organization in Bangladesh, is a single tower whose frosted green windows rise several stories above the coconut trees and rooftops of Muhammadpur, a neighborhood in central Dhaka. Below, in the streets of this capital city of seven million, bicycle rickshaws with handlebar tassels, tin wheel covers, and carriages painted with faces of Bengali film stars ding-ding-ding along. Car, dump-truck, and bus horns blast four- and five-note jingles, and ambulance sirens wail. But none of the commotion reaches Mufti Shahidul Islam, the founder and director of Al-Markazul Islami, through the thick windows of his fifth-story office.

Al-Markazul Islami provides free healthcare and ambulance services. Many Bangladeshi journalists, analysts, and politicians think it is just a cover, and that Shahidul's real business is jihad. "Mufti Shahidul is a very dangerous man," the owner of my Dhaka guesthouse cautioned the morning I headed off to meet him. Besides running Al-Markazul Islami, he is a former member of parliament. His party, Khelafat Majlish, wants to transform Bangladesh into an Islamic state. In 1999, Shahidul was charged with involvement in a bomb blast that killed eight Ahmadiyyas, members of a sect of Islam that denies that Mohammad was the final prophet. Islamic fundamentalists consider Ahmadiyyas heretics. When I asked about it, Shahidul denied any involvement, rolling his eyes and letting out a dismissive laugh. He does openly admit that some of the organization's funds are used to build mosques and madrasas.

Before I left my home in Islamabad, Pakistan, for Bangladesh, I had visited a radical yet friendly cleric there-someone who talks openly about fighting in Afghanistan, his links to international jihadi organizations, and his relationship with Osama bin Laden. When I asked if he knew anyone I could speak with in Dhaka, he scribbled down Shahidul's name on a business card. Clutching the card, I entered the downstairs reception area of Al-Markazul Islami one recent morning to find barefoot men conversing over cups of tea while custom ring tones and land-lines clattered away in the background. I took the elevator to the fifth floor where Shahidul sat behind a large desk, surrounded by assistants and relatives. His aging father-in-law looked on proudly.

"Assalaamu alaikum," peace be unto you, he said as I opened the door. Shahidul is in his 40s. His face is framed by a scraggly, henna-died beard, and his forehead boasts a puffy, nickel-sized mehrab, a bruise that pious Muslims acquire from intense and regular prayer. He wore a white dishdasha and a diamond wristwatch. We exchanged greetings and made small talk in Urdu. Shahidul wore a wide, comic-book grin the whole time.

Local newspapers describe Shahidul as a former mujahideen who fought against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. When I asked him if he knew the cleric in Islamabad from Afghanistan, Shahidul shot back, "No, no, no. I never went to Afghanistan." He recited his life story, which included a stint at the infamous Binori Town madrasa in Karachi and, later, a short fundraising trip to Saudi Arabia. No stops in Afghanistan. And since he started Al-Markazul Islami in 1988, how could he have the time to wage jihad? "My main business is driving ambulances and carrying dead bodies," he said later during lunch, as we sat around a blanket covered with plates of french fries, cheeseburgers, and pizza.

Last December, Shahidul sparked a nationwide furor and reinvigorated a long-standing debate in Bangladesh. Four weeks before the parliamentary elections scheduled for January 22 (but later postponed), his party signed a "memorandum of understanding" with the Awami League, one of the nation's two mainstream parties and traditionally its most secular one. The agreement stipulated that Shahidul's Khelafat Majlish would team up with the Awami League for the elections. If they won, the Awami League promised to enact a blasphemy law, push legislation to brand the Ahmadiyyas as non-Muslims, and officially recognize the fatwas issued by local clerics. The deal outraged secularists across the country. "Khelafat Majlish is a radical Islamist militant group which is against the spirit of the Liberation War," said the Anti-Fundamentalism and Anti-Militant Conscious Citizens' Society in a written statement. "By ascending to power through a deal with a section of fundamentalist militants, the Awami League... will never be able to create a secular Bangladesh."

The Western media had been predicting similar things for years. In January The New Republic suggested that, "Left unchecked, Bangladesh could become another Afghanistan-a base for regional terrorism."

But the prospects for Bangladesh, a country roughly the size of Minnesota, with 170 million inhabitants, are not nearly as certain as such reports would suggest. Islamist parties have multiplied over the past decade and public support for them has grown. Yet Bangladeshi society remains overwhelmingly secular, even militantly secular. And while the Islamists have grabbed headlines, the secularists are holding their own in an intense power struggle. Bangladesh has a long history of civil activism, and people are passionate and eager to voice their opinions in the streets. The secularists may not have the finances and weapons that the Islamist groups have access to. But the same leaders who fought against the imposition of Islamic politics in the Liberation War of 1971 are not about to hand the country over to men like Mufti Shahidul Islam. And he knows it.

For the most part, Islamic militancy or anti-American sentiment is not what draws support to politicians like Shahidul. While voters in Pakistan or Afghanistan might be impressed by a politician's links to the Taliban or his jihadi credentials, in Bangladesh such affiliations are a political liability. This is why Shahidul hurries to change the subject whenever his are brought up. While he mentioned to me that he didn't believe in secularism, he didn't care to elaborate. He prefers to discuss other things. Take his constituency of Narail, a city in western Bangladesh, for example. "There is no corruption there," he said. "And it is a big Hindu area." Before the partition of India in 1947, more than half of Narail's population was Hindu. Shahidul boasted that, because of his work, "Hindu people now say, 'Islam is a nice religion.' "

Three days after our meeting, I went to Itna, a village near Narail, where I met a teacher, Rajib Asmad, at a local girls' school. "Mufti Shahidul Islam has helped a lot of poor people-Muslims and Hindus," Asmad said. "He's not only built mosques. He also drilled a lot of tube wells and distributed a lot of money. So everyone will vote for him again." A local journalist later told me that Shahidul has funded at least 40 mosques, 13 madrasas, and 350 wells. Of course, this phenomenon, where Islamist parties gain support by providing basic services, is not specific to Bangladesh. Hezbollah has done it in Lebanon. Hamas in the West Bank and Gaza. The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. Since the October 2005 earthquake in Pakistan, Jamaat-i-Islami and numerous other groups, some actively involved in waging jihad across the border in Indian-held Kashmir, have provided unflagging relief and reconstruction aid. The Islamists in Bangladesh are pursuing a similar strategy. The major difference in Bangladesh is that the public is almost completely uninformed about their political aims.

"Do local people support his vision of an Islamic state?" I asked.

"Most people don't understand what he really wants," Asmad said. "They think, 'Mufti gave us so much money.' "

Bangladesh is one of the few post-colonial countries whose demographics almost make sense. Whereas Pakistan is a hodgepodge of nations, where hardly 10 percent of the country speaks the national language, Urdu, in their homes, 98 percent of people in Bangladesh are ethnically Bengali and speak Bengali, an Indo-Aryan language derived from Sanskrit. More than 80 percent are Muslim; the rest are Hindu (15 percent), Christian (less than five percent), or Buddhist. Historically, this religious mix has contributed to the vibrancy of Bengali culture. Rabindranath Tagore, a poet and winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913, was a Bengali-speaking Hindu. Poems of his later became the national anthems of both Hindu-majority India and Muslim-majority Bangladesh.

Tagore composed both poems during the first partition of Bengal, which lasted from 1905 to 1912. In "Amar Shonar Bangla," Bangladesh's national anthem, he writes: "My Bengal of gold, I love you / Forever your skies, your air set my heart in tune, as if it were a flute." After seven years of unrest and a flurry of nationalist poetry, the British capitulated and reunited Bengal. In 1947 it was divided again, this time for good. As the British were leaving the Subcontinent that year, they created two new states: India and Pakistan. West Bengal joined India; East Bengal became the East Wing of Pakistan.

From early on, the founders of Pakistan faced huge challenges trying to reconcile the West Wing (present-day Pakistan) and the East Wing (present-day Bangladesh). More than 1000 miles separated them, with their hostile neighbor, India, sandwiched in between. Bengalis accounted for more than half the population, yet the country was led by those from West Pakistan, a mix of Punjabis, Pashtuns, Sindhis, Balochis, and Mohajirs. Meanwhile, Urdu, a language spoken by less than five percent of the population, became the national language. Because the written script was derived from Arabic, and Bangla was derived from Sanskrit, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the founding father of Pakistan, said Urdu was a more "Muslim" language. "What nonsense," recalled Kamal Hossain, Bangladesh's first law minister. "Identifying language and religion? Bangla was our language. We were Muslims. What was the problem?"
Decades of economic and cultural neglect took their toll on the Bengali masses. Between 1965 and 1970, the West Wing of Pakistan was allotted a budget of 52 billion rupees (about $865 million), while the East Wing, despite its larger population, received 21 billion. Then, in the 1970 parliamentary elections, Bengalis voted almost unanimously in support of the Awami League, which, because of the Bengalis' numerical advantage, gained an overall majority in the national assembly. Sheik Mujibur Rahman, the head of the party, should have been named prime minister, but the leaders in the West Wing delayed the opening session. On March 25, 1971, Bengali leaders declared their independence and the Bangladesh Liberation War began. The Pakistani Army sent soldiers into the streets to crush the Bengali nationalists, an effort code-named Operation Searchlight.

Shahriar Kabir was one of hundreds of thousands of mukhti bahini, Bengali nationalists who took up arms. "It was total guerilla warfare," he told me. Today, Kabir is a squat man in his late fifties with a comb-over and a hand-broom mustache. On the night I visited him in his Dhaka home, Nag Champa, a type of incense from India, was burning and the room smelled of sandalwood. Between the incense and the hemp tote bag he held on his lap, Kabir didn't strike me as a freedom fighter.

During the Liberation War the mukhti bahini faced volunteer brigades of Bangladeshi Islamists who were collaborating with the more than 100,000 Pakistani army troops stationed in the East Wing. The brigades, known as razakars, came from Jamaat-i-Islami, a fundamentalist political party formed in 1941. "They were a killing squad, like the Gestapo in Nazi Germany," Kabir said. The razakars lurked in places where uniformed soldiers could never go. They targeted intellectuals, whom they considered, according to Kabir, "the root of all evil for promoting the ideas of Bengali nationalism and identity." In December 1971, in the final days of the war, they murdered hundreds of prominent doctors, engineers, journalists, and lawyers.

On December 16, 1971, the Pakistani army surrendered at Dhaka's Ramna Racecourse, and Bangladesh became an independent state. It emerged from the war as a fiercely secular nation. The 1972 constitution declared "Nationalism, Socialism, Secularism and Democracy" to be the four pillars of Bangladesh. The constitution also banned religious-based politics.

But Bangladesh lasted only five years as an officially secular state. In November 1975, General Ziaur Rahman, a hero of the Liberation War, seized power after a quick succession of military coups and counter-coups following the assassination of Mujib, who had become the first prime minister of Bangladesh, and his family in August 1975. To solidify his rule, Zia felt it necessary to appeal to the Islamists. In 1977 he removed "Secularism" as one of the constitution's principles and lifted the ban on religious-based politics. Jamaat-i-Islami bounced back and has been steadily gaining power ever since. Its members occupied 17 out of 300 seats in the last national assembly, including the leadership of two ministries-Social Welfare and Agriculture. "With the Ministry of Agriculture, they have access to grassroots and can reach the farmers. The Ministry of Social Welfare can reach the common people by providing funds. From here, they recruit and build their power," said a journalist with The Daily Star in Dhaka who reports on the Islamists and requested anonymity. According to Shahriar Kabir, Jamaat-i-Islami receives "enormous amounts of money" from the Middle East and "enormous amounts of arms" from Pakistan, part of what he calls their "global jihad network."

Most of Jamaat-i-Islami's top leaders, says Kabir, are former razakars and "enemies of Bangladesh." Fifteen years ago, Kabir formed the Ekattorer Ghatak Dalal Nirmul Committee, which had two demands: to try former razakars as war criminals, and to reinstate the 1972 constitution's ban on religious-based politics. (The Nirmul Committee is known alternatively as the Voice of Secularism.) He feels that the rise of parties like Jamaat-i-Islami and Khelafat Majlish contradicts everything he fought for in 1971. "We wanted a secular democracy," he said. "Three million people were killed during the Liberation War. If we now have to accept Islam as the basis of politics to run the country, then what was wrong with Pakistan?"

A few days later, I made an appointment with Muhammad Kamaruzzaman, the assistant secretary general of Jamaat-i-Islami, whom the Nirmul Committee has accused of war crimes. According to the committee, Kamaruzzaman was "the principal organizer" of one of the most ruthless razakar brigades. Their pamphlet alleges that in 1971 Kamaruzzaman dragged a professor naked through the streets of Sherpur, a city in central Bangladesh, beating him with leather whips. It also claims that he ordered numerous killings and supervised torture cells. When I asked Kamaruzzaman about these charges one morning in his Dhaka office, he scowled and replied: "Is there any evidence? Not a single piece! I was only a 16-year-old college boy. How can I lead such a political force?"

Kamaruzzaman wears nice suits and gold-framed glasses, and his mustache and goatee are so finely kempt they look stenciled. Critics sneer at him for being "all suited and booted," which they say reflects Jamaat-i-Islami's aims to dupe the masses. We snacked on two plates of potato chips, which he ate with his pinky askance.

Despite Jamaat-i-Islami's advances in recent elections, Kamaruzzaman admits that there are numerous barriers to its growth. Its role in the 1971 war, he told me, "can be an obstacle. But we are addressing it. We have accepted reality and are now working for Bangladesh. In 1971, the leaders of Jamaat-i-Islami didn't want to see our Muslim state separated. We wanted the country to be united, but the game is over. The countries are independent. We made a politically wrong calculation," he said. Another obstacle is poverty. Kamaruzzaman added, "People in the villages don't want to hear you talk on and on about religion if you can't provide food to them."

But what about the "Hindu factor"? If Jamaat-i-Islami ever hopes to enact its Islamic revolution, then it will have to undo centuries of cross-pollination between Hindu and Muslim cultures in Bangladesh. Jamaat-i-Islami's puritan vision of Islam simply has no foundation in Bangladeshi society. I asked Kamaruzzaman who was winning the culture war in Bangladesh: the Islamists or those promoting a secular, pluralist vision of Bangladesh. "We are neither winning nor losing at this moment," he said. "But one day people will realize the effects of this so-called openness. Pornography and nudity in these types of Western and Indian films are encouraging violence and terrorist activities. Children shouldn't be distraught by such things. Society cannot be a boundless sky.

"We don't want to impose anything. Of course, there should be a law that, in public places, someone should not be ill-dressed or undressed. But sense should prevail." He paused a moment before reaching in my direction, palm upturned as if to present his next idea on a silver platter: "You know, self-censorship."

Bangladesh has more than 50 Islamic political parties, militant organizations, and terrorist groups, according to Abul Barkat, an economics professor at Dhaka University. Barkat, a middle-aged man with a penchant for coining technical terms, contends that each of these groups comprise "operational research projects," ultimately overseen by the most adept of the bunch, Jamaat-i-Islami. "They know they will never capture state power through democracy, so they all work in different ways," he told me. "Harakat-ul-Jihad-i-Islami is not doing the same thing as JMB"-Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh-"and JMB is not doing the same thing as Khelafat Majlish. They are trying different things to find the best way to get power."

Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh may not be the biggest of the Islamist groups, but its activities provide a terrifying example of how even the tiniest outfits can shake-or destabilize-a society. On the morning of August 17, 2005, JMB simultaneously detonated 459 bombs in 63 of Bangladesh's 64 districts. Near each of the blast sites they left leaflets claiming responsibility in Bengali and Arabic. "It is time to implement Islamic law in Bangladesh," the leaflets read. "There is no future with man-made law."

The irony of the leaflets was that just a year earlier the government and its man-made law had built up Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh in order to fend off a menace from the left. Bands of Communist rebels known as Sarbaharas had been growing stronger near the northwest city of Rajshahi. The Sarbaharas arose during the Liberation War, when they fought to expel the Pakistani army from Bangladesh. They have been trying to bring an armed, Maoist revolution to Bangladesh ever since. Some prominent secularist leaders may have sympathized with the Sarbaharas in the past. But, as Shahriar Kabir told me, the Sarbaharas are "no longer political agents." Kabir, who has interviewed Maoist rebels in India and remains a leftist revolutionary at heart, sounded somewhat despondent when he said that these days the Sarbaharas are "just gangsters. They are looting and plundering the common people. Nothing more."

Meanwhile, just across the border in India, Naxalite rebels were murdering policemen and raiding government offices in several districts. In nearby Nepal, Maoists were threatening to topple King Gyanendra. The government in Dhaka, led by Zia's Bangladesh Nationalist Party in conjunction with Jamaat-i-Islami and Khelafat Majlish (before it defected to join the Awami League alliance), formulated a strategy to crush the Sarbaharas. They assigned the Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh, a previously unknown militant group, to the task.

The government initially treated JMB with respect. At least eight members of the national assembly bankrolled the group, according to a report in the January 30, 2007, edition of the Bengali daily Prothom Alo. In a phone interview, a member of JMB recalled police officers publicly saluting the JMB operations chief, Siddiqul Islam, or "Bangla Bhai"-Bengali Brother. At the time, Bangla Bhai was torturing and terrorizing anyone who he thought was even remotely sympathetic to the Sarbaharas.

Gradually, as the Sarbaharas were defeated, the government withdrew its support for Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh and had several of its members arrested. Bangla Bhai felt betrayed and used. JMB resolved to send the government a message. "We wanted to frighten everyone about our strength," the JMB member told me. The organization trained in camps alongside remote riverbanks and in jungle clearings. Maulana Abdur Rahman, the group's spiritual guide, would stand in front of the blackboard, sketching out tactics and strategy. Both Rahman and Bangla Bhai carried gym bags filled with grenades wherever they went and clutched field-hockey sticks to use in the event of an ambush. In a Daily Star interview, Rahman warned, "We don't believe in the present political trend," which is to say in democracy and elections.

The bombings in 2005 stunned the nation. Parents rushed to pull their kids out of school and offices closed early. But for Swapan Bhuiyan, it was a call to action. For years, people like him and Shahriar Kabir had been warning people about the threat militant Islamic groups posed to Bangladesh, though few wanted to listen. The bombings proved that their concerns were credible, but did they have any coherent strategy to respond with?

Bhuiyan, a gentle-seeming middle-aged man with dark skin and a grey beard, represents a growing class of militant secularists. Many of them are former socialists or communists who have refashioned their ideology to oppose everything that the Islamists stand for. Bhuiyan told me, "I know you shouldn't kill other humans, but these Islamic fundamentalists are like wild dogs. The Islamists have been destroying our values since 1971. They killed our golden sons in the last days before liberation." I had met Bhuiyan about a year earlier in Karachi at the World Social Forum. On one of my first nights in Dhaka he brought me to the office of his organization, the Revolutionary Unity Front. The electricity was out and a single candle splashed light on a poster of Chairman Mao hanging on one wall and a framed photograph of Lenin on another.

Bhuiyan has fought for a secular Bangladesh twice before. In 1971 he was a freedom fighter. Then, in 1975, while he was serving as a lieutenant in the Bangladeshi army, news broke about Prime Minster Mujib's assassination. Incensed by the murder of the nation's founding father, Bhuiyan led a mutiny at the Dhaka airport against those in the army who sympathized with Mujib's killers. After a couple days, the mutiny was suppressed. Bhuiyan's seniors sentenced him to die by firing squad. That sentence was commuted to four months of solitary confinement. "No one goes longer than three months," he said with a slight twitch. "Four is unheard of. They tried to make me crazy."

When the lights in the Revolutionary Unity Front's office eventually powered on, I could make out the faces of the other six people in the room. Most of them were in their 30s, born after the 1971 war. "We are all anti-fundamentalists," Bhuiyan said, gesturing around the room. The others nodded. Although their brothers, sisters, and cousins weren't killed by razakars, their generation is no less militantly secular. "The secular culture of the common people is strong enough to defeat Islamic fundamentalism here," Manabendra Dev, the 25-year-old president of the Bangladesh Students Union at Dhaka University, told me later.

I asked Bhuiyan how he viewed the contest of ideologies in modern Bangladesh. "There is only one -ism," he replied. "That's Marxism. When it joins with Bengalism-and it will-there will be a great revolution in Bangladesh." His neck jerked and he ran his hands through his long, silver hair. "But first, if I had the money, I would train a brigade of people in India and return to kill all the Islamic fundamentalists in Bangladesh."

Bangladesh has a rich, turbulent legacy of civil, political, and cultural activism, starting from 1971, immediately after the war. "There was no government and we had no experience of ruling ourselves," said Abul Barkat, the economics professor. "We organized to reconstruct bridges and rebuild the country. The rise of NGOs"-Barkat estimates there are more than 70,000 nongovernmental organizations in the country today, compared to 300 30 years ago-"stems from local-level initiatives. These were people's organizations."

The boom of NGOs is indicative of Bangladeshis' inclination to act in the name of some greater calling. Perhaps more than in any other country, protests and strikes are seen as legitimate avenues of political discourse here. Dhaka University is a battleground between the student arms of the two major parties-the Awami League and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party. The campus cafeteria is referred to as "the second parliament" due to the number of student leaders who later became members of the national assembly. "It is a landmark for identity because of its powerful influence in shaping the ethos, the values, and the goals that were pursued by the country's founders," said Kamal Hossain. The Language Movement, which initiated Bangladesh's campaign for independence, began at Dhaka University.

"The history of our country is one of sacrifice and struggle," Manabendra Dev said to me one afternoon in the "second parliament." People's movements have defeated foreign armies, overthrown a military government, and forced concessions from a multinational energy giant. (In August 2006, Asia Energy Corporation abandoned a lucrative open-pit coal-mining project in Fulbari, a city in the northwest, after months of demonstrations against their shady dealings and environmentally damaging work.) With this kind of track record, people are optimistic that society will be able to repel the forces of fundamentalism.

As part of their efforts, Shahriar Kabir's Nirmul Committee has built 80 private libraries around the country, targeting places where the Islamist parties are strongest. Each library doubles as a museum for the Liberation War; while Jamaat-i-Islami is trying to put 1971 behind them, Kabir's libraries are keeping the narrative alive. In Chittagong, the second-largest city, there are 13 libraries. At the Double Mooring library there, 105 members-mostly teenage boys-pay an annual fee of five taka, or about 14 cents, for borrowing privileges. The shelves contain some of Kabir's own work (he has written more than 70 fiction and nonfiction books), classics by Tagore, Bengali translations of The Old Man and the Sea and Harry Potter, and a section about the mukhti bahini. Arif Ahmed, a boy in his early teens with a spiky haircut, had just finished reading a Bengali translation of Hamlet on the day of my visit. His thoughts on Shakespeare? "Not my favorite. It was too much all about kings."

Later that night, Kamran Hasan Badal, the president of Nirmul's Chittagong chapter of libraries, explained what he hoped to accomplish. Badal and I sat on a bench in front of a hip bookstore in downtown Chittagong where poets regularly gather to sip tea and converse. He wore a blue plaid shirt and was freshly shaven. "Secular education is often not available outside of the cities. There is only madrasa education," Badal said. "We want to start a debate through the libraries about what kind of secularism is best for Bangladesh." While children are allowed to check out books for older siblings and parents, the Nirmul libraries are oriented toward the minds of the next generation-and their thoughts about secularism. Badal added that a top priority of a secular state should be to protect the rights of religious minorities. "When the Hindus and the Ahmadiyyas have been attacked by Islamists in the past, the government doesn't do anything. It has to ensure the safety of minorities."

The longer we spoke, the more I sensed Badal's animosity toward anyone who wore a headscarf or beard. I asked how he differentiated between symbols of religious revivalism and so-called "Talibanization." There seemed little room for compromise in his mind. "We are against anyone who capitalizes on religion for political gains," he said.

After our conversation I left the quiet alley where the bookstore was located and stepped into the frenetic streets of Chittagong. A slight chill made the February night air refreshing. I thought about Badal's ideas and compared them to things I had heard from Swapan Bhuiyan, Abul Barkat, and Shahriar Kabir. Besides being staunch secularists, all four men's world views were rooted in intellectual traditions springing from the left. They romanticized the downtrodden. But in trying to protect the rights of tens of thousands of downtrodden Hindus from the aggressive Islamists, were they neglecting the plight of tens of millions of downtrodden Muslims?

On the night of January 11, 2007, after three months of violent protests, President Iajuddin Ahmed declared a state of emergency. The move dashed the hopes of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and Jamaat-i-Islami, whose alliance was heading for a landslide victory in the January 22 elections; in early January, the Awami League-led opposition bloc had announced its intention to boycott the polls. The decision to boycott convinced the international community that January elections could be neither free nor fair. By the time I arrived in Dhaka on the morning of January 13, the army had postponed the election.

In the following weeks, army and police units launched an aggressive anticorruption drive. Scheduling an interview in Dhaka became difficult. Many politicians turned off their mobile phones and slept at a different place each night. Dozens of high-ranking politicians from the Bangladesh Nationalist Party were arrested, including the son of Khaleda Zia, the former prime minister. But Jamaat-i-Islami remained unsullied by corruption charges. In fact, they emerged sounding like model democrats. "The constitution has been violated," Muhammad Kamaruzzaman, the Jamaat-i-Islami leader, said during our meeting in late January. "The election should have been held. Whether a party decides to participate or not, this shouldn't be a consideration."

Mustafizur Rahman, the research director at the Center for Policy Dialogue, a think tank in Dhaka, said, "Jamaat-i-Islami has handled things very tactfully. They just aren't into the business of extortion like the other two parties," he added, referring to the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and the Awami League. A top army general, who asked not to be identified, said, "Every devil has its pluses and minuses. And at least Jamaat is relatively honest." Their party workers, the general added, are the only people in the country who show up for anything on time, "pencils sharpened and ready to take notes."

Even Harry K. Thomas, the former American ambassador to Bangladesh, described Jamaat-i-Islami on several occasions as a "moderate" and "democratic" party. It is the only large party in Bangladesh whose internal affairs and promotions are based on merit and elections. (The mainstream parties are driven by personality cults and family connections.) Most of its members are university educated, English-speaking, and know how to speak to Western journalists. "Our idea is to bring change through a constitutional and democratic process," Kamaruzzaman said.
Jamaat-i-Islami's commitment to elections puts voters in an awkward situation. What constitutes democracy? Is it elections? Or liberalism? Should voters back a liberal, one-woman party like the Bangladesh Nationalist Party or the Awami League? Or the democratic but illiberal Jamaat-i-Islami? Who is a liberal, democratic Bangladeshi to support?

In light of the mainstream parties' autocratic ways and backroom deals with Islamist parties, Abul Barkat is relying on civil-society groups to build and sustain a convincing model of secularism. Though the Islamists are strong, he is confident that they aren't going to win. "Jamaat-i-Islami can only succeed if we, as civil society, fail," he said. He rehashed his days as a freedom fighter and nodded slowly, as if impressed by his own strength of character. "The burden is on us."

After our first meeting at Al-Markazul Islami, Mufti Shahidul Islam and I stayed in frequent contact. I think he liked having an American friend; perhaps he thought our relationship would shield him from allegations of being pro-Taliban. But on the first Friday in February he didn't show up for a planned meeting at the headquarters of Al-Markazul Islami. When I inquired into his whereabouts, a colleague of his told me that he was in bed. "High blood pressure," he added. Four days later, Shahidul was arrested for having links to militant Islamist organizations.
The following morning, I visited Kamal Hossain, the former law minister, who wrote the 1972 constitution. Hossain has a deep voice and modest bulges of fat around his cheeks and knuckles. He heads a political party known as the People's Forum. I met him at his house, where we sat in a room with towering ceilings, Turkmen carpets, and glass coffee tables.

"I see that the army arrested a political ally of yours yesterday."

"Mine? No, no, no," Hossain said. His party belonged to the Awami League's electoral alliance that Khelafat Majlish had joined. He glared at me. "I feel insulted and offended and outraged that I should be called an ally of this man. The signing of the deal with Khelafat Majlish was about rank opportunism and totally unprincipled politics," he said. Spittle collected on his lips. "Some of us are still guided by principle."

Hossain describes himself as faithful Muslim, but he is also a militant secularist. He admires the way that the U.S. Constitution framed secularism. The rise of groups like Khelafat Majlish and Jamaat-i-Islami, he believes, is totally anathema to that style of secularism. "I go into the Jamaat areas and tell them, 'You have completed misinterpreted Islam. The Prophet didn't summon you as guides. We had Islam in Bengal for 700 years and we didn't need you then. You did the wrong thing in 1971-and it would be just as well if you stayed out.' " From 1998 to 2003, Hossain had similar conversations with the Taliban government of Mullah Omar while he was serving as the UN Special Rapporteur to Afghanistan. " 'Who keeps telling you this nonsense that women can't work?' I'd ask them. 'The Prophet's wife was a business lady and you don't even let them go to school.' "

As the author of the 1972 constitution, Hossain played as pivotal a role as anyone in deciding the nature of secularism in Bangladesh. I asked him if he ever imagined that he would see the day when the Awami League would be signing agreements with Islamist parties. "Absolutely not," he said. In fact, he says he often asks himself, "What have we done to deserve this?"

Hossain struggles to determine a proper course of action. Immediately after the Awami League signed the memorandum of understanding with Khelafat Majlish, many secular-minded people experienced near paralysis. Hossain cautions that, especially now, society should be vigilant not to be "psychologically blackmailed" into inaction.
But inaction is only one possibility. Overreaction is another.

One evening, near his hometown of Dinajpur, Swapan Bhuiyan and I were sitting on a flat-bed trolley being pulled by a bicycle when we passed a one-room madrasa standing in the middle of a rice patty. Banana and coconut trees leaned over the ramshackle structure. "They are training terrorists there," Bhuiyan said.

The madrasa sign was written in Bengali and Urdu, and I could see that the seminary was for young women memorizing the Quran. "Swapan, it's a girl's madrasa," I chuckled. "Not all madrasas and mosques are training terrorists."

He jerked his head side to side. Then he shared a short Bengali parable with me. In it, a cow gets burned by fire. The rest of its life, the cow is too afraid to even look at the sunset.
Bhuiyan paused. "We are thinking like that," he said. "When we hear about a new madrasa we get frightened."
Source: BOSTONREVIEW Link:   http://bostonreview.net/BR32.3/schmidle.php
 Boston Review � schmidle.php
Revolution. The Islamist challenge to secular Bangladesh Nicholas Schmidle.
The headquarters of Al-Markazul Islami, an Islamic organization in Bangladesh, ...
bostonreview.net/BR32.3/schmidle.php - 56k - Cached - Similar pages

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[vinnomot] Daily star and prothom alo- collaborator of Black money holder Dr.Kamal

সার-সংক্ষেপ
বিশেষ এজলাসে মিগ-২৯ দুর্নীতির মামলায় চার্জ শুনানি শেষে আইনজীবী ও স্বজনদের সঙ্গে সাবেক প্রধানমন্ত্রী শেখ হাসিনা অনেক বিষয়ে কথা বলেন। বিভিন্ন সংবাদপত্রে প্রকাশিত তার বক্তব্যের কিছু অংশ নিচে দেয়া হলোÑ


আমার ওপর অত্যাচার-নির্যাতন চালিয়ে যদি আমাকে মৃত্যুমুখেও ঠেলে দেয়া হয়, আমি রাজনীতি থেকে সরে দাড়াবো না। আমি মৃত্যুর জন্য প্রস্তুত।


সরকার আমার রাজনীতি বন্ধ করার কে? আমার রাজনীতি বন্ধ করলে দেশের চৌদ্দ কোটি মানুষ করবে।


আদালতে এখন বিচারের নামে প্রহসন চলছে। যেনতেন রায় দিয়ে নির্বাচনে অযোগ্য ঘোষণার ষড়যন্ত্র চলছে।


আমাকে বাদ দিয়ে কিংবা জেলে রেখে আওয়ামী লীগ নির্বাচনে যাবে না, দলের প্রত্যেক নিবেদিতপ্রাণ-নেতাকর্মী-সমর্থকের প্রতি আমার এ আস্থা ও বিশ্বাস রয়েছে।
ড. কামাল দেশদ্রোহী ও জাতীয় বেইমান। দেশ বিরোধী সব ষড়যন্ত্রের পেছনে তার হাত রয়েছে। তিনি ১০২ কোটি কালো টাকা শাদা করেছেন। দেশবাসীর কাছে আমার আবেদন, ড. কামালের ষড়যন্ত্রের বিষয়ে সতর্ক থাকুন।


দেশের শীর্ষ দুর্নীতিবাজ বললে ড. কামালকেই বলতে হবে। তার ভূমিকা বরাবরই রহস্যজনক। তিনি সব কিছুতেই ছিলেন, আছেন এবং থাকবেন।

আমাদের দুর্নীতিবাজ বলা হলে এরা কি? এ সরকারই হচ্ছে নাম্বার ওয়ান দুর্নীতিবাজ।


জেল কর্তৃপক্ষ শনিবার হসপিটালে গিয়ে আমাকে চলেন যাই বলে আবার জেলে নিয়ে আসে। এটি মানবাধিকারের চরম লঙ্ঘন।


তোমরা ভয় পাও কেন? সংবাদপত্রেও বিধিনিষেধ আছে। আমি যা বলেছি তা সব ছাপা নাও হতে পারে।


(সাংবাদিকদের শেখ হাসিনার কাছ থেকে সরিয়ে দিতে চাইলে পুলিশ অফিসারদের উদ্দেশে সাবেক প্রধানমন্ত্রী। উল্লেখ্য, শেখ হাসিনার আশঙ্কা সত্য প্রমাণ করে প্রথম আলো ও ডেইলি স্টার পত্রিকা
ড. কামালের কালো টাকা শাদা করার বিষয়টি চেপে যায়।)


http://www.jaijaidin.com/details.php?nid=67155



হে আল্লাহ, অত্যাচারী,প্রতিক্রিয়শীল মঈনের অদক্ষ আর তাবেদার
উপদেষ্টাদের হাত থেকে বাংলাদেশের দরিদ্র মানুষকে মুক্ত কর


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[vinnomot] Re: [notun_bangladesh] Soaring food price ...published in the Daily New Age, April 28,2008

Friends

The artices pubished in New Age is a practical appraoch to the direction to take Bangladesh to development. I may sound a bit pessimistic that all the heavy and hyazardous and tricky waork has to be done by the poitical governments but are they (poiticians) ready to take up the challenge ? ? 

To me they are not. We have had very many successive so-democratic governments by the party,of the party and for the leaders/chella chamundas to reap all square benifits not the general public as they aimed in "Bagaramber".

During all the democratic(????) govt. we had seen the existence of all types of erudite people,prudent people,expert people hovering around the power. But could they either make right "Lagsoi" plan or could they make those happens no hey miserably failed to do so.
 But interestingly those so-called " Matha Bhari" economist/sociologist/ technocrats and paa chata dalals are now spreading "Gwan" on each and every nitty gritty matters to the CTG and making not ony the CTG but also the people confused.

Let me quote few comments of the erudite economists :


" In democracy ther can not happen any femine" so there was no democracy during 1974"

"CTG must try the Janawar Razakars else they will be awarded with same tittle". The proponenet's "pochonder dal" were in power in two term for 9 years but did not perform the ONUS. On the contrary they want this shshu CTG to do all th clan up of trash left by all the so-called peoples lover demo dal's.

"Jonogon khub kostery achey" After allowing the prince(s) and chela chamundos to empty the country's exchequere the leader felt that the people are in pain!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! There is a limit of making fun out of pain of the teeming millions and millions caused by the churu chamaris politics.

As the writers of the treatises attached tried to paint a rosy picture that all the concerned quarters specially the politicians are equipped with the spirit of patriotism ( which 0% I beleieve !! ) and readiness to do good not harmng the poor motherland.
Friends I am sorry to say that we must be in fools paradise if believe in the old sets of thug/criminal/characterless/imbeciles must be totaly eradicated and let us start afresh with fresh but committed people as by now we have the estimation who can do what ?

The galring example is that we see that presently  the rogue politicians cannot abondon the path of dissention and be united for the purpose that the  country needs badly. Internal intrigues are impeding the politics to take a new shape that is required.
The BAL and the BNP stalwats are busy in mud slinging against each other and puting the political future of the country in total disarray. The infight is paving the way for the Janwars and the luichchato regroup and strengthen their capacity buliding and go near the innocent illiterate people to win their confidence. This is a very dangerous signal for the future. We must stop the Janwars once and for all if we have sacrifice our Beai Mosharraf.



I wish some sane person of the party should ask the interned under trial netri to show due respect to the rule of law (which she failed in her time) and keep the mouth under control.

Finally I would like to stress that please let us help the CTG (not threaten/ intimidate /hold them at ransom and confuse any further) to hold a free and fair election and chose our future leaders to steer us to the right destiny that we all deserve.

Faruque Aamgir


Salahuddin Ayubi <s_ayubi786@yahoo.com> wrote:

I feel that our first priority would be to secure our energy needs. This can best be done by (a) maximisng use of coal for the generation of eletrical power. (b) by having a nuclear power plant without any further delay and (c)  While gas from Myanmar is still avilabeel; we should enter in to sa lonmg term agreement with Myanmar for purchasing their gas. As Myanmar gas fields are very close to Cox's  Bazaar  we could have a power plant and a fertilizer factory using gas from Myabmar. Due to the close proxzimity of the gas field  the cost to transmit the gas would be negligible. Many may be wondering what will happen if we strike big gas field? Answer is simple , a country on its way to rapid industrialisation will require eneormous amount of energy. We have to make our own petroleum exploration company powerful and they should be made capable to go oversease for exploration for energy to ensure our energy security
                    I very strongly feel that we should immediately sign agreement with Myanmar fr purchawe of their gas.to ensure our immediate enrgy needs.
                Salahuddin Ayubi
gopalsengupta@aol.com wrote:

Way out of an impending
energy disaster
To save our nation from energy disaster there are no alternatives to exploration and discovery of oil, gas and coal fields with our own financial and technical resources. Like agriculture and education, we need a separate national budget exclusively for exploration and drilling and there should be no two ways about it, writes Dr Aftab Alam Khan

NATURAL resources like gas and coal are the most important raw materials for electricity generation. Energy is the backbone of national development and energy solvency largely depends on the generation of electricity. We generate 80 per cent of electricity from natural gas that consume about 51 per cent of our daily gas production and the remaining 20 per cent is produced from oil, coal, and water combined. Forty-nine per cent of the daily gas production is consumed for fertiliser, industrial and domestic purposes. The present electricity demand is about 5,000 megawatts while the electricity generation capacity is about 4,200MW, of which around 3,600-3,800MW is being generated every day. Approximately, 3,100MW electricity is being generated by gas that requires around 800mmcfd of gas. The hydroelectricity project at Kaptai contributes a maximum of 100MW to the national grid. The remaining 600MW or so is being produced by oil and diesel and solely depends on the import of crude oil.
   The national daily demand of electricity will be about 15,000MW by 2020. To meet such a huge demand, the country will require gas production to the tune of 4,500mmcfd. In addition, about 4,000mmcfd will be needed for fertiliser and other industrial productions. On the other hand, the demand for domestic use is also growing fast. So, the gas demand for electricity, fertiliser, industries, and domestic use will be more than 8,500mmcfd by 2020. It is clear that the demand for gas will increase threefold in 2020. Surprisingly, Wood Mackenzie, a reputed energy consultant from the United Kingdom, hired by Petrobangla, calculated the gas demand scenario of Bangladesh for 2020 on a wrong demand estimate of about 4,000mmcfd. Considering 6 per cent GDP growth for 2020, total gas consumption would be more than 12tcf, while for 7 per cent GDP growth it would be more than 13tcf.
   How much reserve of gas do we actually have? Two estimates of gas reserve as of December 2003, done by the National Committee of Gas Demand and Reserve 2002, suggest that in 2007 the recoverable gas reserve would be around 9.5tcf (conservative estimate) and 12.8tcf (liberal estimate) respectively. As of June 2000, our net recoverable gas reserve was 9.7tcf for all the discovered fields except Bibiyana. On the other hand, we have already consumed about 3tcf gas up to 2007. Subtracting 3tcf from 9.7tcf and adding 2.5tcf (?) from Bibiyana, we are actually left with 9.2tcf of gas. So it does not require any explanation as to how shall we meet the target of 15,000MW daily electricity demand by 2020 when our gas reserve will be empty even much before 2020 unless new gas fields are discovered. The bottom line is that new discoveries shall have to be made by our own financial and technical resources.
   In the onshore blocks, especially blocks 12, 13, 14, 15, and 16, several international oil companies have already relinquished their rights on the acreage from further exploration. The relinquished acreage must be given to BAPEX immediately on a priority basis for exploration and drilling of new discoveries. If any future discoveries are made by international oil companies, it will bring no true solution to the energy crisis rather will aggravate it. The manipulated and flawed cost recovery mechanism of production-sharing contracts and the purchase of our own gas at international price from international oil companies have already incurred irreparable damage to our national economy. Possibly, we cannot have any more luxury to afford any further damage. The manipulations and flaws of production-sharing contracts are exemplified from Cairn’s classic cost recovery of $89 million to $267 million in Sangu gas.
   This is not the end of the story. Sangu was declared with a net recoverable gas reserve of 0.85tcf. Cairn will take 0.12tcf as cost recovery. The rest should be shared in accordance with the production-sharing contract as 30 per cent equal to 0.26tcf for Cairn and 70 per cent equal to 0.51tcf for Petrobangla. So, Cairn was supposed to get the benefit of 0.38tcf. Today, it appears that Sangu has much less recoverable reserve (about 0.5tcf) than what was declared. It is evident from the very sharp decline from 120mmcfd to as low as 50mmcfd in the daily production of gas from Sangu. Hence, the reality is that Cairn got the benefit of 0.24tcf and Petrobangla will get the benefit 0.26tcf. On top of that Cairn took the PSC advantage of 7.2 per cent yearly production of the exorbitant total recoverable reserve and eventually destroyed the gas reservoir. The PSC does not have any clause for compensation even though it is proved Cairn has destroyed the reservoir.
   Similarly, we are purchasing gas from our own discovered Jalalabad field (0.9tcf) worth Tk 17,500 crore ($2.5 billion) from Unocal at about $3 per 1,000cft and selling at about $1.5 per 1,000cft. Possibly, we will continue to purchase until the Jalalabad field is exhausted. Unocal is taking straightaway 30 per cent (0.27tcf) gas worth $800 million as profit share having invested only $55 million, that too possibly was a ghost payment. At the end of the day, we will have to give subsidy of about $400 million from our revenue earning. The nation has possibly earned only $55 million giving away the Jalalabad field to Unocal in such an unfair way. Unfortunately, the same is applied for Moulvibazar gas field where the Magurchara blow-out occurred due to absolute negligence causing 267bcf gas loss and other environmental damage. Although the Moulvibazar gas reserve was estimated by Occidental, the discovery of very good structure for gas reserve was discovered earlier by our own effort. If Moulvibazar structure had not been given to Occidental, the nation could derive the benefit of 350bcf gas.
   Our next energy resource is coal, which is one of the most important raw materials needed for electricity generation. Coal has been used for electricity generation globally for centuries. The economic deposit of high grade bituminous coal in Bangladesh was discovered quite a long back. However, out of five discovered fields only the Barapukuria coal field has gone into production for some years. The four coal fields, except the Jamalganj field, because it simply cannot be mined, together contain about 1,000 million tonnes of coal reserve. The pertinent question is whether we can derive maximum benefit from such a deposit or not.
   It is absolutely clear that open-pit mining in Bangladesh will never be possible, although some vested interest groups are trying to make the ball roll in favour of open-pit mine. Hence, only underground mining of the discovered fields can recover a maximum of 200 million tonnes of coal during the mine lifetime. If all the mines attain full-phase production limit even then the yearly production of five million tonnes, as opined by some energy experts, would be very hard to achieve. Even if a daily production of 13,700 tonnes (5 million tonnes yearly) coal is achieved and the entire coal is used for electricity generation, it will generate a maximum of 2,000MW daily. At present 250 megawatt electricity is being produced daily from the plants at Barapukuria at the expense of 1,200 million tonnes of local coal and 800 million tonnes of low-grade (possibly lignite) imported coal. It is learnt that to increase the efficiency of Barapukuria power plants high-grade coal will be imported from abroad at $170 per tonne against the present international price of $70 per tonne. We have already explored 12 basins in the north-western shelf, of which only 4 basins contain coal at exploitable depths. Only time will tell if any further coal exploration programme is undertaken.
   Those who think of importing crude oil and coal to replace gas-run power plants after 2011 may be living in fool’s paradise. Currently, we are importing crude oil worth of about Tk 10,000 crore every year to meet the requirement of a small percentage of daily electricity production and other purposes. It is needless to say that total dependence on imported crude oil and coal for power generation is a fairytale. To save our nation from energy disaster there are no alternatives to exploration and discovery of oil, gas and coal fields with our own financial and technical resources. Like agriculture and education, we need a separate national budget exclusively for exploration and drilling and there should be no two ways about it.
   Dr Aftab Alam Khan is professor, Department of Geology, Dhaka University

Resetting local government
in Bangladesh

A strong local government system through the devolution of authority and fiscal transfer has been an expectation of the people for long. The local government and decentralisation has also been the centrepiece of debate and discussion among civil societies, local-level government institutions, researchers, policymakers, and donors over the past decade. Moreover, with every change of government, there has been renewed focus on local governance and decentralisation. Still, local governance and decentralisation is yet to transform in the shape envisaged in the constitution. It continues to be manipulated to serve the sweet will and wishes of the government of the day, writes Majibar Rahman

THE present structure of local government in Bangladesh is an infringement of the constitution. It is guaranteed in the constitution (articles 9, 11, 59 and 60) that people’s active participation should be ensured at all levels of administration. However, the local government used to be a tool to collect revenue by the masqueraders during the British rule and an agent of the provincial government during the Pakistan era. Now, it is an extended hand of the central government. The local government has never been by the people, of the people and for the people. It seems that neither are the bureaucrats sincere to strengthen the local government nor do the people’s representatives have the courage, interest and genuine capacity to steer it in a proper way.
   We say three tiers of local governments, i.e. union, upazila and district councils, are in existence in Bangladesh. The question is: How far is the claim compatible with the ground realities? Except union parishad, which is composed of people’s representatives, the other tiers are constituted, administered and led by public officials.
   A strong local government system through the devolution of authority and fiscal transfer has been an expectation of the people for long. The local government and decentralisation has also been the centrepiece of debate and discussion among civil societies, local-level government institutions, researchers, policymakers, and donors over the past decade. Moreover, with every change of government, there has been renewed focus on local governance and decentralisation. Still, local governance and decentralisation is yet to transform in the shape envisaged in the constitution. It continues to be manipulated to serve the sweet will and wishes of the government of the day.
   
   Gram Bangla our identity
   The recommendations of the local government policy advocacy body, constituted by the present government, appear very conventional. While the issue of governance has been underscored, extensive participation at the grassroots has not been ensured in the recommended mechanism. In the existing ward system, 40,500 union parishad members belong to an equal number of villages. What about the remaining 25,000-30,000 villages? Even if the number of wards were to be increased from 9 to 12-15, more than 20 per cent of the villages would still not have their representatives on union parishad. Are we not then starting the voyage of democracy by excluding at least 20 per cent of the villages?
   The village stands on its own by geographical boundary, family tradition, social custom and values, the village stands and can be clearly defined from sociological, socio-economic, anthropological, historical, political, geographical, revenue and/or administrative points of view. The village has always maintained its own identity by dint of its characteristic features, tradition and separate entity. In other words, below the artificial ward there is a traditional local institution. We make all politics adding and cutting to constitute a ward for election purpose. We should forego the so-called concept of ward and opt for village representative/member as village is our identity, not ward.
   
   One village one member
   As regards the size of Union Parishad, it may vary with the number of villages for true community participation. One village one member instead of one ward one member can be the cardinal principle of composition of local government at the union level. A third of the villages in a union can be represented by women to ensure women’s participation in higher numbers. This should, however, not pose any bar to competent women candidates contesting in other constituencies with their male counterparts. Also, if the number of villages in a union is 22, the share could be 7 + 1 = 8 for women and 7 + 2 = 9 if the number of villages is 23.
   The local government policy advocacy body has recommended that the number of wards in a union be increased from 9 to 12-15. Its implementation is likely to create intricacies in the shape of further bifurcation and reconstitution of wards and may not be possible in a short time to the satisfaction of all segments of the people. Besides, as said before, increasing the number of wards will not ensure representation of all the villages.
   On the contrary, the one village one member concept will certainly increase the number of people’s representatives, albeit with some cost on the government’s part. However, the cost will be compensated by multiple benefits such as better assessment of union tax, better collection, good village development planning, establishment of better linkage between the service providers and recipients which in a way will lead to better governance at the micro level. In the present ward concept, more than 25 per cent of the villages are deprived of their village representatives. All the services mentioned above are very likely not to be accomplished neutrally and timely by a non-villager representative who is very likely to be biased to his own villagers.
   At present there is only the provision for a chairman of union parishad. There should be a provision for vice-chairperson. The chairman of union parishad will be elected by direct votes from all the villages in a union. If the elected chairperson is a man, the vice-chairperson may be elected from women members by all the members of the parishad and vice versa.
   
   Good governances at micro level
   In addition to union perished, there should be a union development committee comprising all union parishad members and all union-level field workers and representatives of non-governmental organisations. This committee, headed by the chairperson, should be constituted by a gazette notification by the Cabinet Division. All members of the committee will meet once a month where all service providers will report their achievement during the month and inform their plan of action for the next month. They will also inform about deliverables available at their disposal. There should also be a village development association comprising all eligible voters/head of household of the village. The association will be led by the UP member and meet once a month at a particular place and time decided by the villagers. It will facilitate two-way communications between the service providers and the recipients and thus ensure efficient and effective service delivery.
   We have a very strong central government, which may be likened with an ocean, and local governments, which may be likened with ponds. For the welfare of the local people, we need to reconstruct and renovate the derelict ponds first because the common people have better access to ponds rather than the ocean. Fourteen ministries, thirty-five agencies and thousands of NGOs are engaged in rural development and poverty alleviation in Bangladesh. Union-level employees working in different line ministries are about 263 and including schoolteachers, they are about 800. In the upazila, activities of different agencies are coordinated by the UNO and at the district level by the deputy commissioner. But at the ground level where different ministries, agencies and NGOs are working there is no one, either from the central government or the local government, to coordinate their activities. The service providers, both government and non-government, are not accountable to the service recipients. Union parishad, accountable to the people, has neither the adequate financial resources nor human resources at their disposal to perform the responsibilities entrusted upon them by the government.
   We always complain that local government cannot function well without adequate manpower. It is true. But do we have the resources to equip local government with additional manpower? We do not. As we are now looking desperately for alternative renewable energy, similarly we can think of placing the central government staff to work under the leadership of local government at all level as an alternative.
   Thana training and development centres have provided one-stop services. Likewise, the union parishad complex concept is moving ahead, albeit slowly and not so objectively. It is a proven better concept and mechanism for effective and efficient delivery of public services. Half of the unions, perhaps well-off, are blessed with UPC offices all over the country. As union is envisaged as the focal point of development, all remaining unions should be covered under this programme without any delay. It does not require construction of a brick built complex everywhere. The concept of UPC can be combined with flood shelter/cyclone shelter and community centre/schools, etc.
   
   Reviving upazila parishad
   There has not been any people’s body at the upazila level after the departure of the Ershad regime. Union parishad chairpersons within the upazila and line ministry upazila officials are the members of the upazila development coordination committees which are steered by the UNO, although monthly meetings are chaired by the union parishad chairpersons by rotation. In the present system union parishad chairmen are in the front seat but the steering wheel is in the hand of the UNO, a government servant. UP chairperson are used to addressing the UNO ‘sir’ or ‘UNO shaheb’; it should be the other way round.
   The average number of unions per upazila is about 9. The size of the upazila parishad may be 12-20. The upazila parishad will be the representative body of all the union parishad chairmen within the upazila. In addition, equivalent to one-third of elected chairperson will be selected from among the women members of the union parishad within the upazila as the member of the upazila parishad for better representation of women. They will be selected by the women members of the union. If the number is not divisible, the benefit of odd number will go in favour of women as mentioned earlier. The chairperson will be selected by direct votes. The provision of vice-chairperson should be inducted who will be elected from among the members of the upazila parishad by the elected members. If the chairperson is male the vice-chairperson will be female and vice versa. The UNO will act as secretary to the upazila chairperson. All upazila-level staff will be accountable to the parishad.
   
   Birth of Zila Parishad
   In order to avoid interferences and interventions of members of parliament at the lower levels, people’s representatives are also essential at the district level. Under the existing structure of local government, as we do not have people’s representative at upazila and zila, members of parliament get free ground to pursue their political agenda and serve political purposes through party cadre. People at large and people in opposition particularly are either underserved or not at all considered for public services. Districts are still the planning, allocating and sanctioning focal points of government services. Deprivation starts from top.
   The average number of upazila per district is 7-plus. The zila parishad should be the representative body of all the upazila parishad consisting of 15-25 members with one governor and one deputy governor. All the upazila chairpersons should be ex-officio-members of zila parishad. Instead of direct votes all the union parishad members and chairpersons, and upazila parishad chairpersons will elect the zila governor, deputy governor. If the governor is a man the deputy governor will be a woman and vice versa. One member will have one vote. For example union parishad chairperson also being a member of upazila parishad will have one vote. The deputy commissioner may be renamed as district coordinator who will work as secretary to the district governor. All district-level staff will be accountable to zila parishad.
   
   Local government polls before
   national elections
   The government is now in a dilemma whether to hold national elections first or to start with local government elections. No positive change in the local government system will come into force unless it is non-party political in nature and action. How can we expect neutral services from a party political person who is elected by his party people? He is likely to serve first the people who voted for him and may be some others who are deemed to be neutral, but one segment that opposed him will always be sidelined. In our context, majority of the elected chairpersons/members get verdict from not more than half of the voters. It is not enough to say local governments in Bangladesh are non-party political government; it has to be ensured that local government elections are held in a non-party political manner and environment. It may be possible if the local government elections are held before the parliament election and under a non-party political government.
   The role of members of parliament should not go beyond activities which are legislative in nature. They must be away from sanctions and distribution of public goods at all levels. This has to be accomplished by representatives of local government. At best they can monitor when they will be on site and can advice and suggest for better delivery of services.
   Local government is shadowed by the central government and the former is always used as extended hands of the central government. The local government minister in the country was always the secretary general or equivalent of the party in power. He along with his party affiliated disciples and cadres manipulated the local bodies’ election although local government tends to be non-party political by nature. In ground realities local bodies are now the real focus of the political parities mainly because the local government minister steers the ruling party. After the Ershad regime only to retain and maintain political intervention and influence the local bodies both the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and the Awami League did not continue and re-introduce the upazila system with people’s representative as the head of the upazila. None of the governments thought about people’s representatives at district level. If we really want a non-party political local government, there are no other options but to hold local government election first. Let us start with union parishad, municipalities and city corporations followed by upazila and zila parishads. The position of the local government chairperson and the member of parliament is like captain and coach. Both are important. But captain is more important than the coach.
   If there is a will, there is a way. The separation of the judiciary from the executive bench is also embodied in the constitution under Article 22 but it took three decades after our independence for its implementation. What could not be done in 36 years was executed in a few months after assumption of power by the army-backed caretaker government. Likewise, the Anti-Corruption Commission, Election Commission and Public Service Commission have been reconstituted. A better local government of non-party political nature with full representation from the whole community is possible. It would be idealistic to expect a non-party political local government from a political government.
   Majibar Rahman, PhD is with the Centre on Integrated Rural Development for Asia and Pacific




Soaring food price

Soaring food prices are a ‘Silent Tsunami’ around the globe, Bangladesh being not an exception. The rising cost of oil and fertiliser and changing food consumption patterns have all contributed to the current crisis. The donors are silent and the government actions are not yet in proper place for meeting the silent Tsunami of hunger.
   Gopal Sengupta
   Canada
Published in the Daily New Age, April 28,2008.... www.newagebd.com
 


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