The Sunday Guardian

Hasina seeks final solution to BNP problem

Through the ruling Awami League’s past actions, it has been made pretty clear that it will get its wish.

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With the announceme­nt that Bangladesh opposition leader Khaleda Zia is likely to be brought to trial for the fire-bombing deaths during the BNP (Bangladesh Nationalis­t Party) anti-government campaigns in the first few months of this year, and with arrest warrants issued against 28 BNP leaders and activists in associatio­n with a bus burning on January 30, it is clear that the Sheikh Hasina government is heading towards a final solution of the BNP problem.

The march towards a de facto one-party state thus seems close to unstoppabl­e. By the time the next elections roll around in 2019, Khaleda Zia’s BNP may well have ceased to exist as any kind of a political force capable of providing any kind of challenge to the ruling Awami League (AL). The question then of whether the party will contest in the next national elections or under what dispensati­on such elections will be held becomes a moot point. Come 2019, there is every chance that the BNP will no longer be with us, or at least not in any recognisab­le form or in the form of a viable opposition party that has a realistic chance of coming to power.

In short, it looks as though the AL will get its wish, which, if you have been following the public and private pronouncem­ents of its leaders and fellow travellers for the past few years, has been made pretty clear.

The AL feels that having to alternate in office with the BNP throughout the 1990s and 2000s has kept them from being able to enact the policies this country needs and to see through their vision for developing Bangladesh into a middle-income country and beyond. What Bangladesh needs, according to this school of thought, is steady, uninterrup­ted, and focused leadership for the next decade or so, with none of the distractio­ns and inefficien­cies that come with regular alternatin­g of power, and the end result will be a thriving, prosperous, and developed nation.

The catch-phrase (which, interestin­gly enough, was precisely the same one used by the BNP, who had a remarkably similar vision, differing only in that they envisaged themselves at the epicentre of power) in vogue is the “Malaysia Model”. Another one is “developmen­t before democracy”.

I very much doubt that the AL will abandon the party’s commitment to formal democracy in the sense that regular elections will still be held. The only difference will be that without an opposition worth the name, the election results will be a foregone conclusion and elections will appear as little more than small blip in the multi-year planning for Bangladesh’s future.

Is this all bad? Proponents of the scheme and supporters of the government will point out that de facto oneparty rule has worked very well for countries in SouthEast Asia, and that it was the ability to stay in power for a long period of time to see through the vision of the ruling party that was instrument­al in their developmen­t.

The argument is that being able to stay in power for a long-time allows government to be able to focus on the long-term and not govern according to electoral cycles.

In addition, constantly switching government­s means that continuity is lost, especially in a country like Bangladesh where each incoming government typically spends the first few years undoing the policies and projects of its predecesso­r in office, ensuring that growth and developmen­t take place at a glacial pace, if at all. The key is delivery. If the government in question really can deliver growth that makes the lives of the Bangladesh­i people palpably better and improves the standard of living visibly, then my guess is that a multitude of other sins will be forgiven. But it cannot be a question of pointing to high economic growth or GDP numbers and then haranguing the public for not recognisin­g how good we have it. Numbers don’t tell the whole story and people recognise improvemen­t in their standard of living when they see it, or, to be more precise, when they feel it.

But there are a number of factors weighing against de facto one-party rule being able to deliver us to the promised land of developmen­t and middle-income nation status, and this is something that the govern- ment should bear in mind as it draws up its plans for our brave new world.

The first is that the entire edifice of democracy is built upon the premise that a strong opposition is what keeps the government honest and in check, and that without any opposition worth the name, the government of the day would constantly run the risk of descending into criminalit­y and corruption. The real danger for the AL is that without an opposition it will find it very difficult to rein in its worst elements, who are already causing havoc around the country and harming the image and reputation of the government and the ruling party.

But there is another cause for concern.

The ideas of Prof Mushtaq Husain Khan of SOAS are pertinent here. He has pointed out that part of what has allowed Bangladesh to function is that the spoils of power have been fairly evenly distribute­d between the two sides, and it was recognitio­n that they would one day be out of power that kept those in office in check, and hope of coming back to power at the next election that kept those in opposition within the frame.

With no hope of returning to power, these people will now have no incentive to stay their hand and to engage constructi­vely with the government, instead of working towards the destructio­n of the system and everything that entails. In short, if both sides do not get a share of the spoils, the one on the outside will do everything in its power to make the country ungovernab­le.

This has more than the ring of plausibili­ty to it, and we have already seen to what lengths an increasing­ly desperate BNP is willing to go to disrupt the government and put pressure on it.

The BNP is today now more of an insurgency than an opposition party, but this is nothing compared to where things could go in future. If the BNP is wiped off the face of the earth, I think the chances of it being replaced by a similar, saner right of centre political party (that many would hope for) are far lower than the chances of that space being occupied by a much more hardcore right-wing party, if we are lucky, and by radicals or militants, if we are not.

There will always be opposition to the AL. For the last four decades the BNP has been the face and focal point of this opposition. If they go, I am not at all sure that what will rise to take their place will be an improvemen­t. Zafar Sobhan is the Editor, Dhaka Tribune

In a country like Bangladesh, each incoming government typically spends THE fiRST FEW YEARS UNDOING THE POLICIES AND PROJECTS OF ITS PREDECESSO­R IN OFfiCE.

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