A charged
Bangladesh mainstream politics now finds flowing blood everyday as the
politics is delivering deaths daily. Common persons – public transport
drivers, day laborers, low salaried employees, and similar
“insignificant” citizens – are being burned to death. The acts reaffirm
mainstream’s monopolization of violence.
Deaths of children, young and middle aged
persons, mainly burned to death, now overwhelm mass psyche today. Dhaka
press carries the numbers daily. It’s a mainstream politics that now
finds violence as the main form of political struggle! It’s a mainstream
political struggle that hurts the common persons, their life and their
bread! Liberty, as it appears, is a pipe dream to the commoners now.
Should one despise? Should one lament? Future bears the answer.
None claims responsibility of this sort
of political action – spraying of petrol on humans and setting them on
fire, and similar acts – and the actors are mysteriously cloaked. The
common people don’t know the real political actors as they go unexposed.
And, the mainstream’s common people-killing-political struggle, a
variety of lynching, roars on.
It’s a politics, and the politics is of
the mainstream as no contending class is now wrestling political power.
The contending classes have been effectively demobilized and
depoliticized long ago. Instead, the ruling elites with all its factions
are engaged with itself. It’s a scrap within the same segment that
dominates the society.
Its acts create controversy within its
system and question the system. The controversy ranges from legislative
assembly to court of law to administration, and contravenes all limits
of humanity as the deaths declare.
One can leaf through a few old pages to have a hunch of today’s mainstream politics.
An article in Aneek, a Bangla monthly
from India, said in June 2001: It will not be strange if the caretaker
government system [a poll-time arrangement] turns controversial.
Factions of the ruling segments are resorting to violence and blaming
each other. Another general election will complicate the situation
instead of improving it. (Sadek Rashid, “Bangladesh: the perspective of
election”)
Another article in the same monthly said
in August 2001: Accusation of election rigging shall not cease as
efforts for unity of the ruling factions will fail until a force is
used. (Sadek Rashid, “Bangladesh election”)
This reality has not changed since the
statements were made about 12 years ago. So, Bangladesh people find them
in a despicable and savage situation.
The controversy
Controversy with the form of poll-time
government is not only alive; it has compounded with fundamental
questions coming to the fore. Now, the debate is: whether a non-party
caretaker government or an all-party government will preside over the
poll-period? Other issues have joined the debate. From both ends,
credibility is at stake. Ultimately, it’s the credibility of organs of a
ruling machine, and of the factions of the ruling segment.
In the last days of 1990, immediately
after the fall of Ershad regime, the controversy on the issue of
caretaker form of government was not in the imagination of the
mainstream politics although seeds of the controversy were there.
Now, not only the form of poll time
government, but also institutions of the state and principles of
governance are pulled into the controversy that constantly questions
credibility of a number of instruments of the ruling machine, which in
turn also questions acceptability of these. It’s not the classes opposed
to the mainstream, but the competing factions of the ruling elites that
are raising the controversy and questions, and thus eroding
acceptability of institutions and organs of the state. A “strange” act!
It’s a political fight. It’s quite
natural. One should not expect an overnight resolution of all political
questions as the issue is control over resources.
But the form the political fight takes
harms the class rule as institutions of the state are being questioned
and ignored by none other than the same class interests, which fail to
find a common forum and peaceful form instead of resorting to force, an
antagonistic approach, and a political practice that ultimately hurts
the common people, and thus sows reasons for alienating the common
people. It’s a limitation of the ruling elites irrespective of factions.
Politics of the dominating segment
imposes the limitation. Inviting and accommodating of and relying on
external interference with variance in level and form are a
manifestation of this limitation.
Interference
Moving back to another old page again:
An article in Sanskriti, a Bangla monthly
from Dhaka, said in September 1991: The Bangladesh ruling elites shall
increasingly rely on external masters with the exposure of their
incapacities and incompetence and decline in their credibility.
The observation was made more than 20 years ago.
Now, the reliance has increased as has
increased the interference. Sometimes, it’s in a crude and vulgar
appearance. Sometimes, it goes to the limit of hurting dignity and honor
of a people.
But changes are appearing in the broader
society that even factions of the dominating segment can’t ignore.
Contradictions are bringing in the changes.
Now
Now
The last few weeks have found articles in
Dhaka dailies and online news daily, at least three in number,
discussing US role in Bangladesh politics. Tone of these discussions was
critical. A few observations and comments were not soft. To some
readers, a few of the comments may sound caustic. These came out from
mainstream pens.
The articles, in Bangla, discussed
working of lobby in US political system, and media, and the style of
influencing and manipulating in the system. At least one of the articles
discussed, in brief, the working of committees and sub-committees of
the US Congress. At least two of the articles discussed a recent hearing
on Bangladesh in a sub-committee. There are information, and a tone of
criticism in these articles.
At least one of the articles pointed out a
Congress member, who recently visited Bangladesh, and identified him as
a lobbyist. The tone was not soft.
At least one article mentioned, with not a
sweet tone, the US ambassador in Dhaka. A responsible discussant
belonging to a mainstream political party made satirical comment, in a
panel discussion/dialogue sponsored by an international news outlet,
with a foreign diplomat. In the mainstream, this was unimaginable only a
few months ago. It’s not a regular experience in this region also.
One report in a Bangla online daily
mentioned the ambassador was trying for a long time to have audience
with the prime minister. This, a long wait to have the PM’s audience by
the ambassador, if factual, is a new development in Bangladesh political
scene.
In the mainstream, this tone was absent
in the 1980s and ’90s. Now, a critical tone is being heard. All
political visitors, mediators or lobbyists, now don’t have an easy ride
in Bangladesh. Lobby, committee, etc., and their functioning are now
discussed. The information is reaching a section of readers, a part of
the people.
Marketing of everything political is not
now an easy job in Bangladesh society. Shall this diminish? Or, shall it
spread more? The information already presented by a section of the
mainstream will reach wider Bangladesh society as conflicting interests
will widen its spread. This carries impact.
Further exposure by a part of the
mainstream will not be an act of astonishment. Circumstance in future
may push a part of the mainstream to expose names of lobbyists,
contracts, the amount of money involved, techniques of manipulation with
information and presentation of facts, propaganda style. The exposure,
if it happens, can be cited as a gift from the mainstream to the
political forces outside the mainstream.
This is part of political education of
people that helps people understand everything is not black and white
and all are not holy souls and many deals are driven by petty interests
and many personalities and pronouncements are not as sacred as they
appear and the sound they make. Elites like to ignore this process. An
exercise with elitist politico-historical “blindness”!
Not a cycle
This controversy and conflict shall
continue as the contradictions within the dominating sphere still go
unresolved. These are getting intensified, and the intensification is
manifested in the form and style of political struggle the competing
ruling interests/factions carry on. There are, no doubt, causes,
material, which not only keep these unresolved, but also escalate these.
But the factional fight among the elites
shall not move in a cyclic form, election-boycott-election or
violence-temporary tranquility-violence, as changes entering the scene
with further developments in the society will push for new equation
between the dominating interests. A politically aware people, a people
mobilized politically, a people with its own leadership shall shatter
silence of death and change the entire political scene soaked with blood
of common persons.
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