Bangladesh, where polls are farce!
-DR. ABDUL RUFF COLACHAL
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Bangladesh has again made a complete
mockery of elections as the means for standard democracy.
The just concluded elections in Bangladesh have been declared
almost universally as farce and fake. The European Union, a duty free market
for nearly 60 percent of Bangladesh's garment exports, refused to send election
observers, as did the United States and the Commonwealth, a grouping of 53
mainly former British colonies.
However, the Bangladesh regime ignored all this
and still went ahead with its election schedule to stay
in power as many years as it is possible for the ruling Awami league
party. . .
The government of Bangladesh has showcased a
parliamentary poll gimmick to fool the world and somehow obtain legitimacy for
continued rule for the Awami League party led by Sheik Hasina. In the farcical
polls, Bangladesh's ruling Awami League, as already known, won a
violence-plagued parliamentary election whose outcome was never in doubt after
a boycott by the main opposition party. With fewer than half of the 300 seats
being contested, voters in modest numbers cast ballots on Sunday amid heavy
security in polling that lacked the festivity typical of Bangladeshi elections
and was shunned by international observers as flawed.
The Awami League won 105 of the contested
seats, on top of the 127 seats where it ran unopposed, giving it a more-than
two-thirds majority. Hasina is expected to form a new government this month.
"It is the ultimate sign of protest by Bangladeshi people and tells us
that they are unhappy with the way elections have been held in this
country."
Eighteen people were killed in separate incidents
on Election Day, according to media reports, and voting was halted at about 400
polling stations. More than 100 people were killed in the run-up to the ballot,
mostly in rural areas, and fears of violence kept many voters away. Police said
they had been forced to fire on opposition activists in six incidents. Apart
from a handful of crude bomb explosions, Dhaka was calm. In Satkania, near the
port city of Chittagong, a poll official's arms were broken and police were
attacked.
The impasse between the two main parties,
which showed no sign of easing, undermined the poll's legitimacy and is
fuelling worries of economic stagnation and further violence in the
impoverished South Asian nation of 160 million.
Turnout figures were not yet available; though
election officials acknowledged that they had anticipated low numbers and
voting appeared slow at Dhaka polling stations. At one, in the Lalbagh area,
626 of 2,274 voters, or 28 percent, cast ballots. At another nearby site, final
turnout among male voters was 21 percent. The BNP said low turnout vindicated
its denunciation of the poll as a farce. "The turnout is a clear
indication that the common people rejected this election and it is almost an
election without voters," a BNP spokesman told Reuters on Sunday.
Junior Law Minister Mohammad Quamrul Islam
said the election was necessary for the democratic process and repeated that
another poll could be held anytime in agreement with the BNP. "But they
must stop violence before dialogue for the next elections could start," he
told reporters after voting.
Hasina has spoken of holding talks with the
opposition on the conduct of future elections which, if successful, could lead
to another poll. The BNP had demanded a halt to the current electoral process.
The BNP denounces Hasina's scrapping of the practice of having a caretaker
government oversee elections. The Awami League says the interim government
system has proved a failure. Many BNP leaders are in jail or in hiding, and
Khaleda says she is under virtual house arrest, which the government denies.
Either Hasina or BNP chief Begum Khaleda Zia
has been prime minister for all but two of the past 22 years while military did
the rule intermittently. The two leaders are bitter rivals claiming power at
any cost
Low voter participation could pile new
pressure on incumbent PM Sheikh Hasina to find a compromise with the opposition
Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) for holding new elections. The immediate
fallout of this dismal voter turnout will be the Hasina government coming under
greater pressure to hold talks with the opposition.
The country's $22 billion garment industry,
which accounts for 80 percent of exports, has been disrupted by transportation
blockades ahead of the election. BNP officials said party supporters would
maintain the blockade and called another in a series of general strikes
starting Monday morning.
For many Bangladeshis, this is a suicidal
election as it will not bring any peace in the country.
The elections have to happen to ensure a
government is formed and the country can start functioning again normally, but
elections should not be as farcical as they are in Bangladesh.
Muslim leaders should learn basics
of Islamic faith.
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