Wednesday, 23 October 2013

True or trick?

News Analysis
Khaleda's Pledges

True or trick?

While most of the media focus of Khaleda Zia’s press statement on Monday has been on her interim government formula, there were other parts of her speech which deserve close scrutiny.
Her statement was a refreshing departure from her past stance and tasks relating to terrorism and militancy, which is very significant in nature.
We welcome this posture, which basically was to respond to the West’s and Indian concern and to assuage their fear about the rising trend of militancy during the last BNP tenure. But given her past records and BNP’s gradual shift from its centrist politics to extreme religious right in the last one decade, the big question is can she pull it off?
It is possible that she can pull it off, but it will definitely entail tremendous steadfastness on her part.
In the past we have not found any willingness of BNP to keep the militants and terrorists at bay. And in recent times, especially following the Hefajat mayhem, we have not seen any change in BNP’s attitude. We have not seen her ever condemning terrorism and when the Hefajat carried out its widespread violence, she had falsely called the police action as ‘genocide’.
And when Hefajat came up with its highly reactionary 13-point demand that basically advocated for a radicalized society, BNP supported it.
These actions of BNP only cast a serious doubt on how truly Khaleda can deliver on her promise.
In fact, in the face of AL-government’s continued oppressive actions against BNP, the party has moved significantly to the ultra right Jamaat and other religious parties. It is so much so that once what had been Jamaat’s survival tactic to shield behind BNP has turned the other way round. Today BNP has rather adopted the survival tactic of depending on Jamaat, which has a large regimented activists.
Much of Khaleda’s Monday’s postures and remarks, analysts believe,  showed how desperate BNP is right now to win over the hearts of the West, which it lost during its last stint in power due to its pandering to various terrorist groups like Huji and JMB.
It is also a clear indication that it has dawned on her that BNP’s past stance on India does not suit the present global political situation where India and America are close allies in their common fight against terrorism.
She has also promised change in political culture, pledge we had earlier heard from Sheikh Hasina in the last election of 2008 and which was then grossly violated by Hasina herself.
These realities apparently dawned on Khaleda following her advisers’ repeated meetings with the western powers. It was clearly indicated to her advisers that the West wants to see a clear distancing between BNP and the militant groups.
Khaleda’s attempt to squarely drop the blame of terrorism on AL was ironic. The moment she stated that ‘people knew fully well that militancy and terrorism took its root during the past Awami League rule’, a series of images cross our minds who do not suffer from dementia. Among the images appear Bangla Bhai, JMB, Huji, simultaneous blasts of 200 bombs across the country, the brutal killing of former finance minister SAMS Kibria, and of course, the horrible scenes at Bangabandhu Avenue where grenades were thrown on an AL rally with the aim to finish off the entire AL leadership including Sheikh Hasina. The dying images of Ivy Rahman with her legs blown away will stay with us forever.
Also will stay with us the memories of how the BNP had tried to trivialize the August 21 grenade attack by destroying all evidence, by spurring its lawmakers to say that the attack was in fact a doing of AL itself, and by instituting a farcical one-man judicial inquiry which came to the absurd conclusion that a foreign neighbouring country (read India here) was behind the attack.
And we remember those famous words: “There is no Bangla Bhai, it is a creation of media” by Motiur Rahman Nizami, Ameer of Jammaat, a key ally of BNP, and “We are looking for Shatrus” by Lutfozzaman Babar, then state minister for home, after the grenade attack while he had invented a petty thief named Joj Miah who he insisted had carried out the attack.
The 10-truck load of arms accidentally seized while being unloaded in Chittagong for supply to insurgents in India has shown how the BNP policy was for destabilizing the region. The trail progressed so far reveals a fascinating story of how the state machinery was used in this regard.
We have seen in the past how Hasina had promised many good things like change in political culture, good governance and fight against corruption. We also have seen how she could not deliver on them. They remained only vote gaining rhetoric.
Now as Khaleda promises a change in policy, she has to navigate through the mines of extremists with extreme dexterity. Her party’s every move in this regard will be closely watched by everybody including the USA.
Only time can say if she really means business.
Published: Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Most of the bigwigs unaware of caretaker proposal, letter to Ashraf

Surprise for BNP policymakers

Most of the bigwigs unaware of caretaker proposal, letter to Ashraf

Surprise for BNP policymakersSome of the BNP chairperson’s policymakers were seen whispering at Monday’s press conference while their party chief was unveiling the proposal on formation of a non-partisan polls-time government.
The BNP policymakers appeared clueless about the contents of the much-talked-about proposal.
“We were glancing at each other in surprise and enquiring whether any of us knew about the proposal’s contents,” a BNP standing committee member told The Daily Star on condition of anonymity.
The opposition policymaker said he also talked to some other members over the phone about the issue later. None of them had any knowledge about the proposal’s contents before attending the press conference.
Another standing committee member said he wouldn’t even acknowledge that he had all along been kept in the dark about the proposal. “It will be a shame for me if I do that.”
The Daily Star yesterday talked to six members of the 18-member BNP standing committee, highest policymaking body of the party.
They all said the committee neither prepared nor finalised the proposal the BNP chairperson announced in a city hotel on Monday.
The BNP policymakers said they were not against the spirit of the proposal, but they felt embarrassed by the loopholes in the formula that was placed to counter the prime minister’s offer to form an all-party polls-time government.
A group of pro-BNP former civil and military bureaucrats, academics and business leaders drew up the proposal and Khaleda’s speech in consultation with some foreign diplomats, anti-terrorism experts and minority community leaders, said sources.
More surprise awaited the majority of the BNP standing committee members yesterday, as they learnt out of the blue that the acting secretary general had written to the AL urging it to initiate talks on Khaleda’s proposal.
“I was watching television. I suddenly noticed a scroll on a TV channel over a letter for talks. I was confused whether the Awami League sent the letter to the BNP. Then I read very carefully and found that it was the BNP that had sent the letter,” said a standing committee member.
“Then I phoned some of my colleagues in the committee and asked about it. They said they too were completely unaware of the letter.”
Even at its last meeting on Saturday, the standing committee didn’t discuss the issue of sending any letter to the AL for holding talks, said the BNP policymaker.
In her proposal, Khaleda suggested forming a non-partisan election-time government headed by a respected citizen to be chosen by consensus between the ruling and opposition parties.
She proposed that the AL and the BNP nominate five advisers each from among the former advisers of the 1996 and 2001 caretaker governments.
The two caretaker governments had 10 advisers each. But two of the advisers served both the governments. Of the 18 individuals in the two councils, four have passed away, a few are suffering from old-age complications, and some are unwilling to take the responsibility again.
Wishing anonymity, another standing committee member said, “The party could have avoided embarrassment had it allowed us to discuss the proposal at the committee meeting. We know almost all the individuals who served as advisers in the two caretaker governments.”
At its last meeting on Saturday, the standing committee only discussed the proposal for picking a non-partisan person as the head of the election-time government by consensus.
It also agreed to propose a search committee for picking a respected person to head the interim government. This proposal was also discussed and endorsed when top leaders of the BNP-led alliance met the following day, said sources.
But the proposal for the search committee was not included in the formula that Khaleda announced at Monday’s press conference.
A top business leader, who helped prepare Khaleda’s speech, said the party made pledges to fight militancy to allay concern of the West and India that Islamist militancy and trans-border terrorism would be encouraged if the BNP comes to power.
“We put emphasis on the issue on advice of some foreign diplomat friends,” said the business leader.
Through Khaleda’s speech, the BNP also gave a message that “those who were involved in ousting the BNP chief from her cantonment residence and torturing her elder son Tarique Rahman would not be victimised if BNP is voted in”.
Former military bureaucrats had drafted this part of Khaleda’s speech, said the business leader.
Published: Wednesday, October 23, 2013

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