Can the mass activity now, the spring, overwhelming Bangladesh society and politics be ignored?
There are two ways: either to ignore it,
non-recognize it, or the opposite. Either of the two bears relevant
questions, and has source.
The section of Bangladesh press that reports the
masses of people getting mobilized at an intersection of the capital
city and around the country bear the responsibility for factual
reporting. The numbers of people getting mobilized are cited as tens of
thousands, hundreds of thousands; the places of these mobilizations are
cited as around the country, major towns and cities, educational
institutions; the style of these mobilizations cited is spontaneous,
self-mobilized, people from all walks of life.
The press reports of people’s mobilizations are
appearing for weeks. Bangladesh press reporting the political incident
is aware that factual reporting is an editorial responsibility, the
responsibility of editorial institution. The section of the press shall
stand on the dock of history if its reports turn fabricated and
orchestrated.
Serious questions related to the state of the
society shall emerge if the press reports are fabricated, etc. and the
fabrication, etc. go unchallenged.
Serious questions shall also emerge if the press
reports don’t turn fabricated, etc. Serious questions have to be
encountered if the press reports turn factual, credible, responsible.
Bangladesh politics also faces similar questions. Either of the two,
politics and press, can’t shed respective responsibility.
Bangladesh politics of all manifestations have to
realize the reality and compromise with the reality if the press reports
are factual. Or, the press reports are to be ignored.
One can ignore it or not. The stance depends on
respective outlook, and outlook stands on economic interests. Shall it
be wise and prudent to ignore the press reports if the reports are
credible, if the reports telling a spring bloom of protests and yearning
for justice are factual?
Brushing off the facts reported in the press or
trying to comprehend the reality shall influence acts of those
concerned/related.
Comprehending reality pulls one to living with
reality. A failure brings nothing but doom, and with no scale of force
the doom can be averted.
Examples of coming into terms with reality are many in the pages of modern history:
The British colonial rulers took initiatives to
organize political parties in this subcontinent as they realized the
situation might go beyond their control.
The same reason pressed the colonial rulers, to accelerate their date of leaving the subcontinent.
Powerful Latin American generals had to experience
the same experience after waging a Dirty War against people. The
well-planned DW that went on for years killed many. Many disappeared for
ever. But, at last, the mighty generals preferred retreat.
The Russian rulers under the leadership of Gorbachev
had to compromise with the reality created out of years of
misgovernance, etc. by the Russian managerial class.
The racist rulers of South Africa had to bow to the black people under the leadership of Mandela.
The subcontinent bears a few more examples:
In Pakistan, following a mass upsurge, Ayub had to
relinquish power on a March night. Niazi had to brace humiliation and
surrender following the War of Liberation in Bangladesh.
Failure to make compromise with reality also bears examples: Hitler and Mussolini with a wrongly crafted economy on a crumbling social base exerted a supremacist ideology. At the end, they failed to find themselves.
Failure to make compromise with reality also bears examples: Hitler and Mussolini with a wrongly crafted economy on a crumbling social base exerted a supremacist ideology. At the end, they failed to find themselves.
All of them wielded magnificent intimidation machine
fuelled by a brutal power of money, intellectual capacity and coercion.
The biggest empire in the pre-WWII world had to face the half-fed, bare
bodied masses of people in this subcontinent. With an efficient
blackmailing power and skill to hatch intrigues Hitler’s war machine
went unchallenged for a period while his Gestapo terrorized all under
his rule. But, all and everything turned useless and stood idle in the
face of sociohistorical force.
A part of the cited examples realized futility of
their intimidating power and wealth while another failed. One was
maturity while the other was the opposite. One realized the role of
people and the other ignored the determining factor. One made a retreat,
but the other chose a head on collision. One identified the importance
of consent of citizens while the other had a contrary outlook.
Facts that come out from reports by the Bangladesh press are:
1. A small number of youth with yearning for justice
assembled on a capital city- intersection; within a short time the
number of people joining the youth increased to thousands and on certain
days, it grew to tens/hundreds of thousands. Similar assemblies got
organized in different parts of the country. On occasions, people around
the country joined in minutes of silence, candle light vigil, singing
national anthem. All their yearning is for a fair judgment of war
criminals accused of crimes against humanity committed during the War of
Liberation of Bangladesh.
2. There are reports of a beggar contributing his
day’s earning to the assembled masses for buying food; poor villagers
joining an assembly with a huge number of pithaa, Bangla cake, which
they made collectively; students, youth, freedom fighters, petty trader,
educationists, artists, housewives, old lady joining protests, which is
going on for two weeks.
3. In the face of demands by the protesters, Jatio
Sangsad, the Bangladesh legislative assembly, made amendments to the
relevant law. The JS, a number of ministers and many members of the JS
have expressed solidarity with the masses.
4. The ruling party and its allies have expressed
solidarity with the people. The ruling party and the main opposition
party, in a way or another, have expressed their willingness to carry on
trial of war criminals.
Questions that appear from the facts provided by the
cited section of the press are: (1) Shouldn’t the yearning be taken
into account? (2) What’s the galvanizing factor that pulled together
such a big mass of people in such a short time? (3) What’s the factor
that keeps them vibrant, relentlessly raising slogans, rendering song,
as part of voicing demand, for already passed two weeks? (4) Why so many
people around the country are spontaneously joining the programs
announced from the assembly in Dhaka? (5) What’s the social reality that
now reveals such yearning at mass level? (6) Is it part of unresolved
contradictions within Bangladesh society?
Political forces shall identify further and
fundamental questions and dynamics of the incidents. Questions have to
be encountered whatever the questions are.
Even, one can prefer not to search questions. But can one ignore people’s spirit? Shall that help reach a proper conclusion?
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