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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Indian
Subcontinent
Social explosion looms in Bangladesh
By K. Ratnayake
8 December 1998
Bangladesh opposition parties staged a hunger strike on December
2 in Dhaka in which thousands participated. The Bangladesh Nationalist
Party (BNP) of Begum Khaleda Zia, together with smaller opposition
parties, is demanding dissolution of the Awami League government
and an early general election. The BNP lost power in the June
1996 elections and is bidding for a comeback.
The BNP is seeking to exploit discontent among the masses over
the rapid erosion of living standards, extreme poverty and unemployment.
BNP leader Zia, addressing the hunger strikers, accused the government
of "miserably failing to contain soaring prices of essentials
and hiding the truth from the public".
Bangladesh has been rocked by frequent strikes called by the
opposition. A three-day strike beginning November 9 forced businesses,
ports and the stock exchange to close. According to government
figures the strikes have caused losses to the economy of US$83
million (4 billion takas) each day. Businessmen are pressing the
opposition to "find alternative methods, instead of calling
strikes".
Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed stated at a November
16 press conference that her Awami League would not call general
strikes in the future, and promised general elections in the year
2000, one year ahead of schedule.
Seizing on the prime minister's no-strike call, the Dhaka-based
foreign diplomatic missions and donor agency chiefs held talks
with Ms. Zia, the leader of the main opposition party, urging
her to match Wajed's action. Ms. Zia replied with a conditional
"yes", saying "future actions will depend upon
government actions". After the discussions the US ambassador
said, "It is good and great." The British ambassador
said, "It is good, but we have to watch the opposition's
reactions."
The prime minister's no-strike call is aimed at averting the
growing mass unrest and satisfying the needs of international
finance capital. Her announcement on early elections is a manoeuvre
to diffuse the tense political situation and strengthen the hand
of her regime. For the same purpose, she is seeking political
advantage from the trial of the murder of her father and the first
prime minister of independent Bangladesh, Mujibur Rahman. She
has also organised another trial on the killing of four other
"heroes of liberation".
On November 8, the District and Sessions Judge of Dhaka, the
capital city, gave his verdict on the case relating to the assassination
of Mujibur Rahman on August 15, 1975. The courts convicted 15
out of 19 accused and issued death sentences. Fourteen of the
accused have fled and Prime Minister Wajed appealed to other countries
to extradite the convicted.
The other pending trial is for those accused of the killing
of four national leaders inside Dhaka central jail on November
3, 1975. Two of the accused are from the BNP and another accused
is from the Jatiya Party, party of the former military dictator
Ershad.
Though the strikes were called by the right-wing bourgeois
parties, workers, students and other sections of the oppressed
have come out to show their anger against the worsening living
conditions. A country-wide famine is developing following major
floods in August which claimed more than 1,500 lives and rendered
30 million homeless.
In Bangladesh one-third or 35.6 percent of the labour force
is unemployed. Life expectancy in the poverty-ridden country is
56 years. Sixty-three percent of the population cannot read or
write. According to a report of one non-governmental organisation,
200,000 children have been smuggled across the country's borders
for prostitution and slavery.
According to World Bank figures annual per capita income is
US$270 and 53 percent of the people live below the poverty line.
Bangladesh was ranked as a least developed country and Bangladesh
workers are among the lowest paid in the world.
However, in the course of the past five years only US$1.4 billion
in direct foreign investments were attracted to Bangladesh. The
main concern of foreign investors is the explosive political situation
in the country and the factional clashes between rival cliques
of the bourgeois parties. A recent World Bank report warned, "Overall
business conditions remain fragile due to political disturbances,
slackening of industrial reforms, poor governance and slow pace
of reforms in recent years."
See Also:
India: BJP routed in state elections
[3 December 1998]
Victory of international defense campaign
strengthens Tamil struggle
The SEP and the fight for the Socialist United States of Sri Lanka
and Eelam
[1 December 1998]
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