BANGLADESH: Politics and the Two Ladies
Guest Column by Bhaskar Roy
The interim Caretaker Government in
Bangladesh appears to be finally confirming something which
everybody knew. Talking to foreign correspondents in Dhaka
on October 7, Law Adviser Moinul Hossain said they had
intended to keep Awami League President Sk. Hasina and NP
Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia out of the country, but the
two did not cooperate. In other words, what Moinul Hossain
was saying a quid pro quo was being offered by the Interim
government you stay out and keep your ill-gotten money
which really belongs to the people, with you.
Was the intention to repeat the
Pakistan example keeping former Pakistani Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif and Benazir Bhutto out of the country? The
army backed Caretaker Government failed to realise that
there was no Gen Pervez Musharraf ruling the country and
that Bangladesh was not Pakistan. Dhaka is not USAs
frontline non-NATO allyagainst terrorism working against the
USA and its interests all over the world. Efforts were made
in a ham-handed way keep Sk. Hasina out of the country
earlier this year to visit her son and daughter-in-law in
the USA. The government go egg in its face and Sk. Hasina
returned home triumphant.
The interim government also tried to
exile Khaleda Zia to Saudi Arabia or the UAE. Neither
country would comply. They certainly would not be an
accomplice to the political downfall of a friend who is also
Pakistans main friend in South Asia.
The minus two formula i.e. neutrality
both Hasina and Khaleda from politics have been doing the
rounds for the last few years. Some say the plan was
hatched covertly by
a certain western country who perceived
both the ladies as obstacles in taking their strategic
interests forward in Bangladesh. It is, however, true when
either of the two ladies were in power they spent a greater
position of their time getting at each others throats. It
is also correct to presume corruption in Bangladesh through
the politician-bureaucrat-businessman nexus have been so
high as during the government run by Hasina and Khaleda.
The next best option the Caretaker
Government had was to proceed against both Khaleda and
Hasina in corruption cases. In fact, al the corruption
cases against the political and business leaders are being
tried under the Emergency Powers Regulations (EPR). There
has been a lot of short-cuts taken by the prosecuting
agency, mostly using testimony by a single witness rather
than incontrovertible evidence. Convictions if any, under
the present procedures, may be challenged when a democratic
government returns to power after next year elections.
If the question is whether the
Caretaker Government is acting neutrally between Hasina and
Khaleda, the answer is no. In every democratic country the
ruling government places their own people in important
positions, but the armed forces are generally left
apolitical. During its last stint in power (2001-2005), the
BNP became political iconoclasts breaking every rule,
regulations and honourable precedents. There were bizarre
promotions, supercessions and dismissals in the armed
forces, other security forces and the bureaucracy to ensure
their acolytes would remain in power for a long time.
Khaleda Ziia and her son did not understand that generally
purchased loyalty have short lives. But some loyalties are
Khaleda Zia can still count upon some in the decision making
machinery to come to her assistance.
The army-backed Caretaker Government
seems to have differentiated between the Hasina-Khaleda
issue and the Awami League-BNP question.
There has been a seesaw of support to
Khaleda Zia from different quarters of the Caretaker
Government which includes the army. Actions against her and
her immediate family have generally followed similar actions
against Sk. Hasina and those close to her, but sometimes
reluctantly. Notwithstanding this, the fact remains that
Khaleda Zia and her two sons are apparently being proceeded
against seriously. This would suggest that some powerful
voices in authority today are inimical to Khaleda Zia and
her family returning to power. These same people may have
been recipients of BNP largesse but fell out somewhere
sensing the tsunami that Khaleda Zia and her older son Tareq
Rehman Zia, were about to inflict on the country.
Almost across the board, Tareq Rehman
is seen as the Enemy No.1 of Bangladesh. A lot of blame
on Khaleda Zia emanates from the blind support to her elder
son and his close group who indulged in everything illegal
including promoting Islamic radical terrorist like Sheikh
Abdur Rehman and Bangla Bhai, now executed leaders of the
Jamatul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), the master minds of the
August 17, 2005 countrywide bombings.
Sk. Hasina falls in a totally different
category from Begum Zia, notwithstanding her fleeting
flirtations with Islamic parties trying expand her vote
bank. She was ill advised
by some close to her by whom she
swears. Unfortunately, Sk. Hasina functioned as a powerful
matriarch of the Awami League family with strong likes and
dislikes, and deep suspicion bordering on paranoia that some
of those who helped her return to the country and power were
plotting against her. In due course she created an
atmosphere with the potential to split the party. Awami
league veterans find it difficult to accept Johnny Come
Lately leaders with proven pro-Pakistan identities to have
Sk. Hasinas ears and dominate over the liberation
constituency of Sk. Mujibur Rehman. The resentment has
become so strong that some of these old leaders are willing
to cooperate with the interim authorities to keep Hasina
out. But they are not willing to split the Grand Old Party
of Bangladesh.
The BNP, however, has been split
between the Khaleda loyalties and her opponents. This was
bound to happen at some point of time. The BP was formed by
President Zia-ur-Rahman, late husband of Khaleda Zia. Zia.
Stands next to Sk. Mujibur Rehman in Bangladeshs war of
Liberation. The BNP, however, was formed by a coalition
progressive and rightists. It was an opportunities
succeeded in splitting the party using the good officer of
its, or rather the armys, premier intelligence. Agency,
the DGFI.
The armys efforts to float a Kings
Party has not succeeded and unlikely to. The last Kings
Party was General and President H.M.Ershads Jatiyo party.
It has bee a lesson for the astute and serious Bangladeshi
politicians. Therefore, a formation of viable Kings party
is not an option.
The cards are not in Khaleda Zias
favour, especially after the split in the BNP recently.
Politics I Bangladesh is a strange world. It is a
concoction of religion, secularism, army rule and god knows
what. The Jamaat-e-Islami (JeI) in Bangladesh which
collaborated with Pakistan in the rape and massacre of
Bengalis in 1971, is back in politics and a partner of the
BNP (Zia faction).
A power struggle on between the Khaleda
faction of the BNP and the expelled General Secretary Mannan
Bhuyian over which side will inherit the party symbol. Both
factions are also in touch with the DGFI which is overseeing
the political re-engineering of the country.
As regards the Awami League, despite
internal factions Sk. Hasina still remains the consensus
leader of the party. If she is sentenced to jail and the
leadership would have take over, but it would be one that
would take decisions by consultations. But this scenario is
still at some distance. If Sk. Hasina is jailed, the
government would have immense problems on its hands. Street
actions by Awami Leaugers is a definite possibility.
(The author is an eminent China
analyst with many years of experience of study on the
developments in China. The views expressed by the author are
his own. He can be reached at
grouchohart@yahoo.com)