Bangladesh |
Embattled Bangladesh opposition forges new alliance |
2018-10-15 |
[Al Jazeera] Bangladesh's main opposition party has forged an alliance with centrist parties, with an 82-year-old former foreign minister emerging as the main leader ahead of upcoming elections. The Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) is hoping the alliance will help it boost its support and move on after a series of setbacks, including the jailing of its leader ![]() Three-term PM of Bangla, widow of deceased dictator Ziaur Rahman, head of the Bangla Nationalist Party, an apparent magnet for corruption ... for corruption in February and the sentencing of exiled acting leader, her son, last week. The Jatiya Oikya Front (United National Front) was formally announced in the Bangladeshi capital late on Saturday after months of negotiations among opposition parties. Kamal Hossain, a former foreign minister and an eminent lawyer who drafted the secular constitution just after independence in 1971, has emerged as the main leader. "There is no alternative to a free and fair election," Hossain told a press briefing late on Saturday. The new alliance issued a seven-point list of demands including the dissolution of parliament and the holding of free and fair polls organised by an interim government. "The launch of the Jatiya Oikya Front will go down in history as a turning point," senior BNP leader and former law minister Moudud Ahmed told news hounds. |
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Afghanistan |
Afghan opposition courts Taliban |
2008-04-03 |
![]() If successful, officials argue that the talks will change the way the United States deals with Afghanistan, by forcing Washington to contend with the opposition. Representatives of the United National Front an assemblage of ministers, members of parliament, and warlords led by former Northern Alliance commanders say they have held secret talks with the Taliban for at least five months. "Leaders of some Taliban sections contacted us," says Front spokesman Sayyid Agha Hussein Fazel Sancharaki, "saying, 'We are both Muslims, we are both Afghans, and we are both not satisfied with the government's performance.' " The government, which has had a series of secret talks with the "moderate Taliban" since 2003, has in contrast taken a different approach to negotiations. It insists that the Taliban must first surrender completely disavow armed insurrection and accept the foreign presence. But some observers say this strategy is too stringent and will not produce fruitful talks. "Why are they negotiating with Taliban who aren't fighting?" former Taliban official turned political analyst Wahid Muzjda asks. "The problem is with those who are fighting the government, and yet the government refuses to speak to this group." Loosening the rules for talks Mr. Sancharaki notes that his party will be more flexible in negotiations. "The Karzai government is using peace negotiations for political gain," he says, referring to President Hamid Karzai. "They will only talk to the Taliban if they lay down their weapons. This is impossible. But the National Front will have an agenda and a clear program for talks." Perhaps to avoid being outmaneuvered by the opposition, Mr. Karzai's office responded by stating that both houses of parliament can negotiate directly with the insurgent group. The response marked a shift from previous policy in which Karzai tightly controlled the negotiation process. The announcements come at a time when the government and the Taliban are feeling increased pressure to come to the table. Last year marked the bloodiest year of the insurgency yet the United Nations reports that Taliban attacks and NATO reprisals killed more than 6,000 people, including at least 1,200 civilians. The nation also saw more than 130 suicide attacks in 2007, and 10 percent of the country is under Taliban control, according to a recent US intelligence estimate. Using Taliban to angle for power As frustration with the poor security conditions has chipped away at the government's support, analysts say that the Front is announcing the talks now in order to increase pressure on Karzai. "[They] are trying to use the Taliban to enhance their leverage vis-à-vis Karzai, to force him to make concessions in terms of ministerial posts and other appointments," says Antonio Giustozzi, a research fellow at the London School of Economics. |
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Afghanistan | |
Afghan strongmen form 'united front' | |
2007-04-03 | |
Strongmen from Afghanistan's war-filled past, some of them once staunch enemies, launched a new political coalition Tuesday saying they wanted to build unity in the divided country. About 300 people, many of them key players in the country's turbulent past, gathered at a ceremony to launch the United National Front with former president Burhanuddin Rabbani as its leader. The new coalition is perhaps the most significant political group to emerge since the fall of the extremist Taliban government in 2001 set the country on an internationally agreed path to democracy. Coalition member Prince Mustafa Zahir, grandson of ailing former king Mohammad Zahir Shah, said the front would promote unity. "It's important to bring different people and factions together for peace in the shattered country," he said at the event attended by heavyweights like ex-defence minister Mohammad Qasim Fahim and parliamentary speaker Yonous Qanooni. Among its goals is to change the 2003 constitution to allow for political parties to stand for proportional representation in parliament and for the appointment of a prime minister, Rabbani said. The 2005 parliamentary election, the first to be fully democratic, used the "single non-transferable vote" system in which ballots are cast for an individual and not political parties. The next legislative vote is due in 2010. The president is elected separately. "We are in favour of a parliamentary system under which both individuals and parties could be candidates for election," Rabbani said. The new front also wanted governors of the 34 provinces to be elected by direct vote rather than appointed by the president, said Rabbani, a parliamentarian. It would "not work against the government. It will work besides the government for the betterment of the nation," he said. The front is mainly made up of various leaders of the armed resistance to the 1979-1989 Soviet occupation who turned on each other in a 1992-1996 civil war that was fought along ethnic lines. It includes former communists. Many of the men in the new alliance were behind a rally of up to 25,000 people in Kabul late February that backed parliamentarians' demands for an amnesty for crimes and abuses committed in wars and conflict since 1979. Karzai later agreed to allow amnesty for groups but said individuals still had the right seek redress for atrocities.
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Afghanistan/South Asia | |||
U.N.F. ministers met renegade Tiger leader: LTTE | |||
2004-07-07 | |||
The split in the Tamil rebel organisation took another dramatic turn with the Tigers alleging that at least two frontline ministers of the former United National Front and the party's General Secretary had met a renegade leader of the rebels who fled to Colombo. Four of the female Tamil rebels who accompanied renegade V. Muralitheran alias Karuna from eastern Batticaloa had decamped and regrouped with the rebel organization to which they revealed that Former Ministers Rajitha Senaratne and S.B. Dissanayake met Karuna in a Colombo hotel.
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