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Bangladeshi regime arrests former prime minister
By Wimal Perera
13 August 2007
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In a further crackdown on its political opponents, the military-backed
interim regime in Bangladesh arrested and jailed former
prime minister and Awami League leader Sheikh Hasina Wajed on
July 16. Hasina faces charges of extortion and complicity in murder.
The arrest was a huge operation involving more than 1,000 uniformed
and plainclothes personnel from the police, military and intelligence
agencies. The security forces cordoned off the area surrounding
her residence around 4.45 a.m. but did not arrest Hasina until
some three hours later. She was brought before a court where she
was denied bail. On July 19, she was issued with a notice by the
Anti Corruption Commission (ACC) to submit statements of her finances
and assets.
Anticipating an eruption of protests over the politically-motivated
arrest, the interim government led by former central bank governor
Fakhruddin Ahmed deployed more than 15,000 troops in the capital
Dhaka. Additional forces were mobilised in the countrywide. Hundreds
of demonstrators defied emergency regulations and clashed in Dhaka
with police, who baton charged and fired upon the protests.
According to the governments legal adviser Moinul Hosein,
13 cases have been filed against Hasina. The arrest was based
on a case filed on June 13 by a common citizen, Azam
J Chowdhury, managing director of East Coast Trading Ltd, who
accused her of extorting 29.6 million Taka ($US441,000) in relation
to building a power station.
Bangladesh is notorious for corruption at all levels of government.
However, the jailing of Hasina has nothing to do with her alleged
involvement in extortion. The interim government, which is increasingly
functioning as a military-backed junta, is determined to suppress
any potential political challenge from Hasina or her rival Khaleda
Zia, leader of the Bangladesh National Party (BNP). Zia was prime
minister until last October when she stepped down in preparation
for fresh national elections.
Amid widespread Awami League protests, Bangladesh President
Iajuddin Ahmed postponed elections that were due on January 22,
appointed an interim caretaker government led by Fakhurddin Ahmed
and declared a state of emergency. In April, the regime put off
elections until next year and proclaimed that its priority would
be a far-reaching anti-corruption drive. Army chief, Lieutenant
General Moeen U Ahmed, has vociferously supported the administrations
claim that it has to clean up the country before any
election.
On the pretext of stamping out corruption, the regime has arrested
political leaders, senior bureaucrats and businessman. On July
19, the ACC served notice on Khaleda Zia to submit statements
of her wealth. Others accused of corruption include seven leaders
of the Awami League, eight from the BNP and two from Jamaat-e-Islami.
Jamaat-e-Islami was a partner in the previous BNP-led coalition
government.
In April, the Fakhurddin administration tried to exile Hasina
and Zia, but had to back down after criticisms by the US and Britain.
Hasina, who had been abroad, was finally allowed back into the
country. Zia, who had been ordered to go into exile, was allowed
to stay. Now the regime is seeking to silence any opposition with
a round of high-level arrests.
At the same time, the military is seeking to boost its political
powers. In early July, the army chief, president and government
head met to consider a proposal to establish a national security
council (NSC). A legal adviser told the media the plan did not
mean military involvement in politics. In the same breath, however,
he declared: Members of the armed forces have both love
of and responsibility for the country. So they havent allowed
the political leaders to do anything at their whim.
Just before Hasinas arrest, General Moeen U Ahmed said
there was a need to correct the constitution after
a new parliament was in place. According to the Bangladeshi press,
the military is considering changing the constitution along Turkish
linesthat is, to provide the armed forces with powers to
oversee the government and parliament.
Hasinas arrest has not drawn international condemnation.
The US, UK and Germany have simply called for proper legal procedures
to be followed. This tacit backing for the detention is one more
sign that the major powers are quite content with the Bangladeshi
regime, its suppression of political opposition and implementation
of market reforms.
The interim government is not restricting itself
to a caretaker role. Its three-year economic program includes
the closure of four state-owned jute mills with the loss of 6,000
jobs. By the end of the year, another 8,000 workers will be retrenched
from 18 state-run mills, some of which will be privatised. The
workforce is expected to be casualised to further cut labour costs.
The regime also decided to raise prices for fertiliser, gas,
electricity and fuel but backed down in the face of widespread
public opposition. The price of urea would have increased by more
than 50 percent. On July 4, rice farmers, angered over the failure
to provide enough fertiliser, attacked several government offices
and beat up officials at Nachole in Chapainawabganj.
Successive BNP and Awami League Party governments also implemented
the demands of the IMF and World Banks for economic restructuring.
Their bitter rivalry was not over fundamental political differences
but was aimed largely at diverting widespread popular discontent
over the social impact of their economic policies. The current
government is resorting to outright repression.
Rather than mobilising opposition, the Awami League and the
BNP have been seeking to accommodate to the new regime. On July
21, acting Awami League president Zillur Rahman, while demanding
the unconditional release of Hasina, thanked General Moeen U Ahmed
for restoring her father Sheikh Mujibur Rahman as Father
of the Nation. Rahman reassured the media that the Awami
League would follow a legal course, not street agitation,
to secure her [Hasinas] release.
The support bases of the traditional ruling parties have significantly
eroded over the past two decades. Neither the Awami League nor
the BNP want to unleash a popular, political movement that may
slip out of their control. Whatever the divisions within the ruling
elite, there is unanimity that the program of economic restructuring
has to be implemented and any opposition from working people suppressed.
See Also:
New wave of political arrests
in Bangladesh
[4 June 2007]
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