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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Fight for future of Bangladesh plays out on streets as violence reflects political maneuvering


A.M. Ahad/Associated Press - Bangladeshi police fire rubber bullets after activists of main opposition group, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, (BNP) clashed with them in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Wednesday, March 6, 2013. The BNP activists were protesting police firing on activists during a series of nationwide general strikes this week. The strikes were called after a special tribunal sentenced a top leader of Islamic party Jamaat-e-Islami , an ally of BNP to death for atrocities linked to the country’s 1971 independence war.

DHAKA, Bangladesh — The fight for the future of Bangladesh is playing out in the streets of this troubled south Asian nation.
For a month, masses of moderate activists have camped at a Dhaka intersection demanding harsh punishment for those accused of crimes during the 1971 independence war from Pakistan, a stance that dovetails with the prime minister’s position.


Meanwhile, their bitter enemies in a hardline Islamic opposition party that wants to install Shariah law have been attacking government buildings and setting fire to trains in a rampage that — along with a crackdown by security forces — has killed more than 60 people. The party, Jamaat-e-islami, says the government is using a war crimes tribunal to decimate the party leadership, and claims it is in a fight for its very existence.

“Our backs have been pushed to the wall. If we can’t stop the fascist government from holding the trials, all our main leaders will be hanged,” said Rafiqul Haq, a Jamaat leader based in Dhaka’s Uttara district. “We will die rather than let the government kill our leaders.”The latest round of violence — sparked by the tribunal sentencing a party leader to death — has prompted calls for Jamaat to be branded a terrorist organization, and Law Minister Shafiq Ahmed told Parliament this week that the government was looking into ways to ban the party.

Looming over the protests and violence are general elections expected within the next year, and fears that in this fledgling democracy with a history of coups, the military might take over if the situation in the streets gets too far out of hand.“The people are deeply worried about what is going on,” said Hassan Shahriar, a political analyst. “If the violence continues, the government may hit back with harsh measures like a state of emergency.” Military intervention is possible as well, he said.
Much of the chaos centers on the fate of Jamaat, the country’s largest Islamic party. Its leaders are facing charges they helped Pakistani forces in the fighting four decades ago, which Bangladesh says left 3 million people dead and 200,000 women raped.

Jamaat had opposed breaking away from Pakistan, arguing that staying as one strong Muslim-majority nation would be better for Islam. Citizen brigades formed by Jamaat helped Pakistani forces, unfamiliar with Bangladesh, identify independence activists. Jamaat leaders deny any link to war crimes.After independence, founding President Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, father of current Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, banned the party and stripped many of its leaders of citizenship. But he was slain in 1975 and military ruler Ziaur Rahman, husband of current opposition leader Khaleda Zia, lifted the ban and wooed Jamaat as an ally for his Bangladesh Nationalist Party.

Though Jamaat has never won big at the ballot box, routinely garnering around 4 percent, it has been an important coalition ally for Zia, and even received Cabinet posts when she won elections in 2001
Despite its violent history, Jamaat developed a loyal cadre by devoting attention to the poor. It runs a bevy of charities, hospitals and hundreds of Islamic schools. It has gained the loyalty of poor students through its scholarships and earned a reputation, even among opponents, for honest behavior amid the usual government corruption.

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