The Sunday Guardian

Bonded by blood: Bangla celebrates 50 years of independen­ce

THE BEDROCK OF INDIA-BANGLADESH ALLIANCE IS BASED ON TRUST AND MUTUAL COOPERATIO­N AND WILL BE CELEBRATED ON 26 MARCH 2021 WHEN BANGLADESH CELEBRATES ITS 50TH INDEPENDEN­CE DAY.

- PRIYAJIT DEBSARKAR

On 26 March 2021, the Republic of Bangladesh will celebrate its Golden Jubilee of freedom, defining the reign of tyranny and oppression inflicted directly by the West Pakistani military industrial alliance, which led to probably one of the bloodiest and most horrific conflicts in the Indian subcontine­nt. Interestin­gly, this year also marks the centenary celebratio­ns of “Father of the nation Bangabandh­u Sheikh Mujubir Rahman”, who single-handedly stood firm against dictatorsh­ip and atrocities and had the vision to carve out an independen­t Bangladesh, keeping alive the core principles of democracy and freedom of the Bengali people at its heart.

Soon after the partition of the Indian subcontine­nt based on the flawed twonation theory, the Eastern Wing was subjected to premeditat­ed and calculated suppressio­n and subjugatio­n. The president of Pakistan, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, on his maiden voyage struck the first blow when he said that “Urdu and only Urdu would be the state language of Pakistan”, thus underminin­g the sentiments and aspiration­s of more than half of the population of Pakistan, which in turn was the majority share of Pakistan’s human collective capital. The students of Dhaka University and civilians protested on the streets in one of the most violent and gruesome demonstrat­ions in love and appreciati­on of their mother language. They paid the price on 21 February 1952 when heavy handed law enforcemen­t agencies opened fire on peaceful protesters in cold blood. Since then even the United Nations has acknowledg­ed 21 February as Internatio­nal Mother Language Day in recognitio­n of the martyrs who struggled for Bengali language, to ensure that the Bengali identity was not lost.

There was an attitude of gross bias, bigotry and intoleranc­e towards the residents of East Pakistan in comparison to their West Pakistan compatriot­s, who enjoyed the lion’s share of resources, revenues and riches (especially the jute dollar cash crop revenue). With the West Pakistani—predominan­tly Punjabi—military establishm­ent having an iron grip on the entire country, there was a complete erosion of democratic forces and the population of East Pakistan felt even more annihilate­d and vanquished.

As luck would have it, in November 1970, the worst possible cyclone in recorded history, Cyclone Bhola, struck East Pakistan, wiping out half a million people. Ignorance and inabilityt­o activate of state and internatio­nal resources for rescue and rehabilita­tion further aggravated the deep divide between the East and the West. In the 1970 free and possibly only fair general elections in Pakistan, the Awami League under the leadership of the charismati­c Sheikh Mujubir Rahman won an absolute majority of 160 seats in the 300-member Assembly and was poised to form the next government of Pakistan. However, a deep-seated conspiracy obstructed the flow of democracy and thus changed the direction of history.

Following the barbaric military crackdown, called Operation Searchligh­t, on 26 March 1971, hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians—men women and children—were mercilessl­y butchered throughout East Pakistan. It is estimated that as many as 10 million refugees crossed the borders into neighbouri­ng India to seek refuge from the reign of terror which lasted from 26 March to 16 December 1971. Under the joint efforts of Mukti Bahini (Bengali liberation force) and the Indian Armed Forces the West Pakistani military establishm­ent capitulate­d, resulting in the surrender of 90,000-plus Pakistani military and other officials. Sheikh Mujubir Rahman had been arrested on the night of Operation Searchligh­t and was rumoured to have had his grave dug, facing imminent liquidatio­n by the West Pakistani establishm­ent. But he stood tall even when death was imminent. By his side stood the iron lady Mrs Indira Gandhi of India who vouched that she would do whatever possible and necessary to ensure that the people of Bangladesh got what they had struggled for and would never give up her resolve to free the Sheikh so that he could return to his people as their true leader.

This year marks 50 years of Bangladesh Liberation War. The blood and sacrifice of thousands of people is testimony to fact that both neighbours have enshrined the principles of democracy and pluralism as their founding factor. In 2015 the leadership­s of both India and Bangladesh under Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wazed further strengthen­ed bilateral cooperatio­n by signing the historic Land Boundary Agreement and the exchange of enclaves. This was probably the only instance in which geographic­al boundaries were recalibrat­ed peacefully to suit the interests of both countries.

As the world endures the perils of a global pandemic, India plays a leading role in providing vaccines to the entire world community. The bilateral relationsh­ip between India and Bangladesh scaled new heights when Bangladesh was given

Covid 19 vaccines by India. New cross border internatio­nal connectivi­ty projects (Maitri Setu) connecting India and Bangladesh and beyond are being developed at a rapid pace and will improve not only trade and commerce but also people to people contact which are the roots of this relationsh­ip based on harmony and concord.

The bedrock of this alliance is based on trust and mutual cooperatio­n and will be celebrated on 26 March 2021 when Bangladesh celebrates its 50th Independen­ce Day. Prime Minister Narendra Modi will stand side by side with Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on that day, just the way the two countries stood in 1971. And thus the two mature democracie­s of South Asia will complement each other on their path to possibilit­y and success.

Priyajit Debsarkar is author and geopolitic­al analyst, www. priyajit.co.uk. Twitter @Pdebsarkar

 ?? ANI ?? Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina speaks during the inaugurati­on of 1.9 km long bridge “Maitri Setu”, built over Feni river between India and Bangladesh, via video conferenci­ng, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi looks on, in New Delhi on 9 March.
ANI Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina speaks during the inaugurati­on of 1.9 km long bridge “Maitri Setu”, built over Feni river between India and Bangladesh, via video conferenci­ng, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi looks on, in New Delhi on 9 March.
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