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Bangladesh
Thousands of BD candidates withdraw poll nominations
2007-01-05
Thousands of candidates in Bangladesh’s upcoming national election have withdrawn their nomination papers after opposition parties announced a boycott of the polls, officials said on Thursday. “Out of 4,146 candidates, 2,370 have withdrawn their nomination papers,” said election commission official SM Asaduzzaman. The candidates belonged to the main opposition Awami League and other opposition parties.

Awami League leader Sheikh Hasina Wajed on Wednesday announced a boycott of the January 22 elections, saying the polls would not be fair. The Awami League leads a 14-party coalition of opposition parties. It has demanded a string of reforms which it says are necessary to ensure the elections are not tilted in favour of the outgoing Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP).

Two other parties also announced a boycott: the Jatiya Party of former army ruler Hossain Mohammad Ershad and the Liberal Democratic Party of former president AQM Badruddoza Chowdhury. The immediate past prime minister, Begum Khaleda Zia, launched a full-scale election campaign on Thursday outside the capital Dhaka, unfazed by the boycott threat.

The coalition accuses the BNP of trying to rig the elections by appointing biased officials to key positions in the election commission and the interim government which has to organise the polls by the end of January. The reforms demanded include revision of the voter list, changes to judiciary and intelligence agency chiefs, and the replacement of two election commissioners.
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Bangladesh
BD former ruler 'missing' after court sentence
2006-12-18
Bangladesh’s former army ruler Hossain Mohammad Ershad was “missing or hiding” on Sunday, three days after the High Court confirmed a two-year jail sentence against him, his associates said. “He (Ershad) has remained unreachable since Sunday morning,” said his brother, GM Quader, a former lawmaker and senior leader of Ershad’s Jatiya Party.

Another party leader Kazi Zafar Ahmed, a former prime minister, said Ershad was in a hospital in his home town of Rangpur in northern Bangladesh “for rest and medical check ups”. Hospital officials told reporters that Ershad had not been admitted. Kazi Feroze Rashaid, another leader of the Jatiya Party, said: “Our chairman is at his home, taking a rest.” Calls made by Reuters to his Dhaka residence were not answered. Police declined to comment. Some people said he might be trying to escape arrest after the confirmation of his sentence.
No! Reeeeeally?
Ershad was sentenced by a lower court years ago for squandering state funds in a deal to purchase patrol boats from Japan while he was in power from 1982 to 1990.

The High Court confirmed his sentence suddenly on Thursday, as the retired general was planning to conclude a deal to support a 14-party alliance headed by Sheikh Hasina, chief of Awami League. Ershad will not be able to contest the Jan. 23 election unless the High Court ruling was overturned by the Supreme Court, legal officials said.
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Bangladesh
Dhaka Begins New Year With Clashes, 1 Dies
2006-01-02
At least one person was killed and 60 others were injured in clashes between police and supporters from rival political groups in Dhaka yesterday, sources said. Most of the injuries occurred when supporters of the opposition Jatiya Party, led by former President Hossain Mohammad Ershad, stormed a rally of Bangladesh Communist Party, witnesses said.
"Arrrrr! Kill the commies!... Ow!"
The attackers burned books and furniture, and roughed up communist supporters before police arrived and chased away angry crowds, witnesses said. Jatiya supporters also attacked and damaged a number of vehicles, including buses, he added. As panic spread to nearby streets, a speeding bus knocked down a man, killing him on the spot, police said. The victim was a Jatiya supporter.
"Run away! Run away!"
"Hey! Look out for that..."
[VROOM! SPLAT!]
"... bus."
As supporters of the rival parties fought with bricks and bamboo sticks, and burned several buses and cars in the busy office district, hundreds of vehicles were blocked in the area and office workers fled in panic. Shops and cafes also closed their doors.
"Quick, Fatimah! Hide your jewelry!... Hey! You! Leggo of her!"
More than 60 people were injured in the melee. Riot police and firefighters broke up the fighting after about an hour. At least 18 seriously injured people, including party activists and bystanders, were taken to nearby Dhaka Medical College Hospital.
... and a wonderful time was had by all, except for the dead guy and the guys on life support.
Both parties accused the other of instigating the clash.
"They started it!"
"Did not!"
"Did, too!"
The Jatiya Party was celebrating its 20th anniversary yesterday, while the communist party staged the rally to protest imperialism and price hikes, party sources said. Jatiya Party has a few seats in the Parliament, while the Communist Party has none. The communists have been an ally of the main opposition party, the Awami League, during its campaign to force out Prime Minister Khaleda Zia out, accusing her government of failing to control prices and harboring militants.
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Bangladesh
Is Bangladesh terrorism's next frontier?
2005-12-20
Ever since its independence from Pakistan in December 1971, Bangladesh and India have been locked in a love-hate relationship.

The initial gratitude over India's assistance to the Mukti Bahini -- the guerrilla force which fought the Pakistan army -- quickly turned into distrust in Dhaka, particularly after Generals Zia-ur Rehman (1975 to 1981) and Hossain Mohammad Ershad (1982 to 1990) wooed the fundamentalist, anti-independence and pro-Pakistan lobby to retain their grip on power.

Chief among these pro-Pakistan organisations was the Jaamat-e-Islami, which is part of the four-party alliance currently in power. The ruling coalition is led by Bangladesh Nationalist Party Leader Khaleda Zia, Zia-ur Rehman's widow. The general was assassinated in 1981.

Till the late 1990s, India's main concerns with Bangladesh involved the massive illegal migration, which among other things radically changed the demography of neighbouring Indian states like Assam, and the fact that anti-government rebels in the northeast states found refuge on Bangladeshi soil.

Before Bangladesh's independence, Mizo and Naga rebels were trained and sheltered in the Chittagong Hill Tracts by the Pakistan army.

There were also violent spats over patches of the the 4,096-kilometre border, 180 km of which is marked by rivers that keep changing their course. Conflicting claims to ownership of the Muhurichar Island in South Tripura's Belonia subdivision led to clashes between the Indian Border Security Force and the Bangladesh Rifles in 1975, 1979 and 1985.

Dhaka consistently denies all charges of illegal migration and the presence of Indian rebels on its soil, and accuses India of playing hardball over water sharing and sheltering criminals wanted in Bangladesh.

Post 9/11 and the United States-led War on Terror, many fundamentalist outfits under the American scanner found Bangladesh an easy country to disappear in. The huge amount of foreign aid flowing into the country also made money laundering relatively easy.

Charities in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan known to have Al Qaeda connections are among the major donors to Bangladeshi non-governmental organisations, and a large chunk of that money is used to fund madrassas which spawn willing recruits to the jihadi cause.

In 2001, Khaleda Zia returned to power for the second time on an essentially anti-India platform -- her predecessor Hasina Wajed -- whose late father Sheikh Mujibur Rehman was independent Bangaldesh's first President -- and her Awami League were tagged as pro-India.

The presence of the pro-Pakistan Jaamat and Islami Oikya Jote in Khaldea Zia's government ensured that the Pakistan high commission in Dhaka became, in the words of one Indian diplomat, "an ISI den".

The nexus between Pakistani and Bangladeshi intelligence is hardly new. Several activists of the outlawed United Liberation Front of Asom arrested in India admitted that batches of ULFA cadres were flown to Pakistan from Dhaka for training by the ISI.

"The ISI started re-growing its roots in Dhaka during Khaleda's earlier stint, from 1991 to 1996," the Indian diplomat says. "But despite her being marked as pro-India, or perhaps because of it, Hasina Wajed is no worse. You must remember that the worst border clash between the two countries occurred in April 2001, barely two months before the election which brought down her government."

The rapid rise in fundamentalism in Bangladesh and its growing nexus with Pakistan's ISI has added to India's concerns over its eastern neighbour.

The crackdown on minorities by the ruling coalition's goons soon after it assumed power in 2001 led to a spike in migration to India, and officials note that these migrants comprised not just Hindus and Christians fleeing persecution, but also Muslim activists of the Opposition Awami League, who were being targeted by the ruling clique.

"God alone knows how many of these migrants are actually ISI agents," mutters one Indian official.

The leeway given to fundamentalists has already started to hurt the government in Dhaka, with judges and government officials being bombed by radicals who are demanding Muslim rule in the country.

Indian officials, while wary of being accused of interference in Bangladesh's internal politics, note that both the Jaamat and the Islami Oikya Jote have been virulently anti-Indian. The Jaamat, for instance, accuses India's external intelligence agency, the Research and Analysis Wing, of being behind the recent spate of blasts in Bangladesh, despite the Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh, a radical outfit outlawed in early February, claiming responsibility for most of the terrorism.

The main jihadi groups active in Bangladesh are the Harkat-ul-Jehad-al-Islami, the Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh and the Jama'atul Mujahideen Bangladesh. All three are known to have close ties with the Jamaat and Islami Oikya Jote.

"Why do you think activists of these supposedly outlawed outfits are released within days, if not hours of their arrest?" asks a taxi driver in Dhaka.

But if Indian officials are diffident about accusing Bangladesh of fomenting trouble, BSF Director General R S Mooshahary candidly told journalists in Delhi on November 30, that 'Bangladesh will soon pose a bigger problem than Pakistan.' According to him, the India-Bangladesh border is more difficult to man than the India-Pakistan border. 'At the Pakistan border, both the army and the BSF are deployed, whereas the India-Bangladesh border is manned solely by the BSF,' he pointed out.

Expressing concern over the continuing illegal migration into the northeast, Mooshahary said: 'I've sought the home ministry's permission to raise a women's battalion to deal with infiltrators, many of whom are women.'

Asked about the repeated provocative moves by the Bangladesh Rifles, including the killing of BSF officers like Assistant Commandant Jeevan Kumar earlier this year, Mooshahary angrily rebutted the charge that the BSF was a 'soft' force, saying it had to behave 'responsibly.'

'We cannot always work by eye-for-an-eye principle. They (the Bangladesh Rifles) will not repeat it (such murders). If they repeat, they know the consequences,' he warned.

India has presented concrete evidence about at least 172 terrorist camps being run in Bangladesh, and the presence of at least 307 'wanted people', including top ULFA leaders Paresh Baruah and Arvind Rajkhowa, in the country, he said. But 'Dhaka has denied their presence without verifying the details given to them.'
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