Is President Sheikh Mujib`s Death a Murder or a Mutiny
Transcription
Is President Sheikh Mujib`s Death a Murder or a Mutiny
AN ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF BANGABANDU AND BANGLADESH Sheikh Mujib addresses the foundation meeting of BKSAL, sitting on a throne like a king Dr. Abid Bahar PREFACE The present query is part of a series of studies on the leaders of Bangladesh. It is still in its draft form was originally undertaken for a personal and a professional reason. It is primarily because I myself as a Bangladeshi by birth to know about our leaders in their contexts. Secondly in the role of a researcher with specialization on ethics of leadership for the others and me it is to learn important lessons from the leader’s lives to help the nation for a continued multi democratic system in Bangladesh. I believe that the past is always prologue to the future. There is much to learn from the life of Bangabandu. In this series, I am probing to know Bangabandu Sheikh Mujib to understand some of the core national issues that persist till today related to the Bangabandu phenomenon. I am certain; there are many researchers like me who would like to know the flipside of the hero-worshipping about who the real Bangabandu was. Here we will be dealing mostly with the nature of his techniques he employed in politics. I must confess that I was one a Mujib devotee but here as a researcher often I came up with findings that could be the flipside of the picture some readers have in their head and might find as disturbing and a humble request to them to refrain from reading this sensitive piece of research work. The work is not yet in its final stage to its publication therefore acknowledgements to all the sources are not yet made. This work is dedicated to the people who care about the future of Bangladesh. 2 CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION Bangabandu and Bangladesh are two interrelated names. Bangabandu was not an ordinary leader of Bangladesh. He played both positive and negative roles in the history of Bangladesh. There are abundance of materials praising him in great details. The present research findings points out that he was also a Machiavellian leader. It seems that AL in promoting him as a semi-god that he was not is causing disrespect to his many positive contributions. This work still in its draft form is an attempt to show the real Bangabandu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman as different from the AL’s hero-worshipping of him. Like most Bangladeshis, once I was a devotee of Bangabandu. But the present work is about research not about our personal loyalty. Therefore, I began my research with the premise that when we criticize politicians we take them as public figures not as private citizens or the father or brother of somebody. As public figures we have the right to criticize them because people elected these leaders. Reciprocally they volunteered their time for people and they are expected to allow people to criticize them. When that is done it is a practice in democracy, because they are required to be accountable to people. It is true picture says a thousand words. This book uses a more nontraditional approach with illustrations were compiled together with online links for details are to help Bangladeshi people see through its difficult past and understand it to take the necessary measures to help reform the country for a multi party democracy so as to be able for Bangladesh to develop into a prosperous country. In Chapter 2 we have a brief description of Bangabandu’s early life. In Chpater 3 it is about Bangabandu’s political career during Pakistan time. In Chapter 4 his return from Pakistan and in chapter 5 his imposition of BKSAL rule and that he was killed. Chapter 6 is about a debate. Chapter 7 is about Hasina’s politics; chapter 8 is about Moin U’s caretaker government ‘s 1/11ake over. Chapter 9 is about Hasina’s rule and the transit questions. Chapter 10 is about institutionalizing fascism (Bangabandukoron of Bangladesh. Chapter 11 is about the Bangabondukon politics in Bangladesh. Chapter 12 is about question dealing with the founding fathers of Bangladesh. This series accompaniies interesting reading questions for researchers. AL’s declared “Father of the Nation” Mujib in his early life 3 CHAPTER 2: BANGABANDU: HIS EARLY LIFE (19201939) Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, later Bangabandu was born in Tongipara of Faridpur district in Bangladesh in 1920 A.D. He was the third child among four daughters and two sons of Sheikh Lutfar Rahman and Siara Begum. The parents were very affectionate to him and called him Khoka. Due to eye problem in his left eye, the parents withdrew him from attending school for four years. During this time, the compulsive Mujib’s prolonged break of study must have created anger in him, for he had no home education either. What would he do except to play with one eye with children who skipped classes. When he returned back to school, compared to his fellow students, he found himself way behind in education. He also found himself physically taller and liked skipping classes. It is obvious when he attended classes he liked to create trouble to other students. In 1938, the bring a change to Mujib’s grubby reputation at the age of only eighteen, the parents forced Mujib to get married to Begum Fazilatnnesa. In the following year in1939 “Bongobondhu’s political career was effectively inaugurated while he was a student at Gopalganj missionary school. There he led a group of students to demand that the cracked roof of the school be repaired” this was when Suhurwardhy came to visit the school.(1) No one at the moment knew that Suhurwardhy just met a rebel who years later would be claimed by the successive AL governments as the father of Bangladesh nation. Suhrawardhy the populist leader of his time originally recruited Mujib to counter his political rivals. Under Suhurwardhy, Mujib began his career as a muscleman student leader. Mujib remained loyal to him until his death in 1962. In the Calcutta riot he was with his mentor Suhurwardhy who was behind the Hindu-Muslim Calcutta riot in the Jinnah called Direct Action Day that claimed many innocent lives for which the Congress Party leadership continue to blame Suhurwardhy. Mujib’s dress and mannerism and his association with Suhuwardhy show the sign of Mujib’s role at the time. See below the picture with his mannerism and his nonverbal expressions especially his shirt’s collar. He was hardly a student. He finished his matriculation examination at the age of 22. Despite his busy time, it seems that he managed to complete his education. In Calcutta, one Mazharul Islam from Kutubdia of Chittagong was known to have written his BA examination from Calcutta Islamia College. Back in Dhaka he again became a student of law at the Dhaka University; probably recommended by Suhurwardhy to help him prepare for a future statesman. But Mujib was seen by his fellow students to be sitting at the backbench with a group of his friends causing trouble to his professor in the law faculty classroom.(2) Despite his disinterest in education, he was out and out a 4 political person and unfortunately never finished his law degree from Dhaka University. He was deeply involved with the 4th class employees association of Dhaka University. The university authority fined him for his involvement in worker's politics. He refused to pay the fine.” Who was Sheikh Mujibur Rahman? Mujib’s upbringing made him more of a populist leader politician than a statesman. But he was no ordinary and a naïve leader as many people wish to believe. He was a complex figure in politics; a Machiavellian and as a very powerful rebel rouser ready to take risks but almost always knew how to save himself. Personally he showed pride and confidence in his work and in his accomplishments in one hand on the other hand he would show mockery to the opposition. These were his early sign of intolerance to the opposition continued when established the BKSAL party. During his entire career; we see almost always before a serious threat to his life he prepared the necessary grounds to be arrested and be in jail. During the time of language movement as expected he was in jail. This reminds us of a story in a film where a perilous person the jail authority just released to lessen the extra burden but he insisted that they keep him in jail where he will be safe. Not surprisingly, once Mujib was just released from jail and hearing the report of an imminent trouble, he did something violent in front of the jail premise causing the death of a child (3) His critics claimed that after his 7th March Speech to the 25th March in 1971 at the critical juncture of the national life instead of leading the nation he repeated his similar behavior and for his and his family’s safety surrendered himself to the Pakistan army. 5 Sheikh Mujibur Rahman with Suhrawardy in Rajshai, 1954. Mujib the Complex Figure in Politics The sophisticated actor politician 6 Mujib, the man of the hour giving the Historic 7th March Speech “Aberar Sangram, Sadhinatar Sangram, joy Bangla, Joy Pakistan.” Mujib CHAPTER 3: MUJIB THE POLITICIAN Mujib the traitor Mujib negotiating to save Pakistan until 24th March while the two other Pakistani autocrats preparing to strike genocide Realizing trouble the ambitious AL top leaders (who wanted to be the Pakistani Ministers of a confederate Pakistan), escapes to India, Mujib surrenders and 7 Mujib’s entire family remains safe during the liberation war receiving monthly allowance from the Pakistani government while the Generals planned out and executed a genocide against ordinary people. The Mujibnagar government leaders Fearing any challenge to his leadership. Mujib, the absentee leader and autocrat never cared to know about the liberation war from these officials. Ziaur Rahman declares independence on behalf of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman 8 Mujib returning from Pakistan after war as an absentee leader And claims for himself the title: “father of the Nation.” CHAPTER 4: ‘There I Come and there I Go’: MUJIB’S FALL Mujib’s well-known characteristics in the pre liberation period were: Anti establishment agitation Anti constitution, anti institution and Anti bureaucracy. After the liberation, logically he considered himself as the source of all power. In this situation, the constitution was considered as subordinate to Mujib’s power. Bangabandu, the 25 year Indo- Bangladesh Treaty maker Mujib, in the family of the Indian Congress syndicate 9 Prime Minister Indira Gandhi signing the agreement of friendship and cooperation with Bangaldesh, Dacca, March, 1972 Farakka dam is only a temporary test case: AL’s pro-Indian minister- Abdur Razzak 1976 Bhasani’s Farakka March: Long March to Rajshahi 10 CHAPTER 5: MUJIB THE DICTATOR: FOUNDER OF THE BKSAL (Dolio Koron Rajniti of Bhai Culture) Hero-worshipping of the BKSAL leader 1975: Civil servants and intellectuals were asked to show support to Mujib’s one party government Mujib’s Fourth Amendment: Mujib from a Democracy preacher into a lover of Dictatorship “The Constitution (Fourth Amendment) Act 1975 was passed on 25 January 1975. Major changes were brought into the Constitution by this amendment. The presidential form of government was introduced in place of the parliamentary system; a one-party system in place of a multi-party system was introduced; the powers of the Parliament were curtailed; the Judiciary lost much of its independence; the Supreme Court was deprived of its jurisdiction over the protection and enforcement of fundamental rights.” . Prime Minister Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in the parliament, 1973. Mujib’s Fascist style: Mockery of the opposition and the Self Pride:His three blunders Standing in the parliament Mujib said “Sheraj Sikder Tumi Akhon Khotai” “Jatir Pitahoichee bole noito Lal Ghora Dabaiea Ditham” 11 “Tribals, Tumra Bangali hoye Jao, triggering unrest in Chittagong Hill Tracts.” Over the precipice: fate of the fascists The dead Mussolini lies Deadbody of Mujib Bangabandu’s Killers It says, All's well that ends well. True, Jalal Uddin Khan says:“No assassination can ever be supported (it is always a heinous crime) but the rejoicing at the death of Sheikh Mujib, even by the elements of his own party, was indeed a fact. He was a great leader but his rule was highly compromised and controversial with people suffering from famine, anarchy, lack of security, Rakkhi-Bahini torture and the dictatorial operation of his government.(4) “Mujib’s sycophants think that only Mujib and family blood is the most worthy, pure and valued. And that of all other people are Dholai Khaler dirty water. That’s their problem.” Mujib’s killers are his own people. His opportunism in 1971 led his surrender to the Pakistan army and a genocide of the ordinary people in Bangladesh. While Pakistan army spared him but Mustaque’s diplomatic success with Kissenger to save Bangladesh from becoming Red led Kissenger’s initiatives to release Mujib from Pakistani jail, but realizing him as a traitor and a cunning politician his own people and the foreign connection it is alledged led by Mostaque got him killed. 12 Taj Hashmi says” I think had there been no BKSAL, Dalim, Faruq and his gang would not have dared to touch Mujib and his family. And even if they succeeded, there would have been mass protest and counter-revolution against the killers. I firmly believe that the killings were one of the darkest events in our history.” The AL Minister Mostaque Ahamed who led the coup and replaced Mujib “Bhutto who remained apologetic and on the defensive ever since March 1 was thus compelled to further expose his ambition in Karachi on March 14. Here he introduced West Pakistan for the first time to the concept of the Two Nation theory and demanded that power be handed to the two majority parties of Pakistan, namely the Awami League in Bangla Desh and People's Party in West Pakistan.” 13 CHAPTER 6: A DEBATE ZIA THE DICTATOR- AL ZIA IS THE FATHER OF MULTI PARTY DEMOCRACY IN BANGLADESH -BNP Fifth Amendment of President Ziaur Rahman The Fourth Amendment was made by Bangabandu and the Fifth Amendment was by Ziaur Rahman “The Constitution (Fifth Amendment) Act was passed by the Jatiya Sangsad on 6 April 1979. This Act amended the Fourth Schedule to the Constitution by adding a new Paragraph 18. The expression ‘BISMILLAH-AR RAHMAN-AR-RAHIM’ was added before the Preamble of the Constitution. The expression ‘historic struggle for national liberation’ in the Preamble was replaced by the expression ‘a historic war for national independence.’ One party system was replaced by multiparty system. Fundamental principles of state policy were made as ‘absolute trust and faith in the Almighty Allah, nationalism [Bangladeshi nationalism], democracy and socialism meaning economic and social justice.’ President Ziaur Rahman established the multi party democracy and allowed Hasina to enter in politics.”And brought order over chaos. President Ziaur Rahman, founder of the SARCC with Indra Gandhi Hasina and Pronok Drama -------------------------------------------Hasina:Dada, I am afraid that people will find out Zia the General was actually the one who allowed multiparty democracy and gave newspaper freedom. Pronok: Don’t worry we have the Daily Star to lie daily about Zia as the betrayer; and as the military dictator. We also have Prothom Alo to help you. Your father didn’t have that help. 14 Hasina: I am also afraid that some intellectuals call themselves as the independentminded Bangladeshis. They opposed Pakistan and now opposes India. What am I going to do about them? Pronok: Call them Jamat! Hasina: But they were freedom fighters. Pronok: Look, if could turn Zia from a freedom fighter into a Jamati, why not these brainless intellectuals. It’s propaganda that matters for perception but not the reality. It’s called manufacturing consent. Hasina: Due to the killing of Bangladeshi border guards and the fence dividing Bengal, I am afraid that one day most of my countrymen are going to abandon our ethnic identity Bengali for the territorial nationalism, Bangladeshi. Bangladeshi nationalism has an advantage that it includes all the Bangladeshis well being. Pronok: True, your opposition has many advantages but they don’t have the support of your country’s cultural groups. Your country’s cultural groups are connected to the West Bengali and Indian groups. Only if the opposition can create strong media support and pro-Bangladeshi cultural group in drama, cinema, music, you will be really in trouble. Tarek was taking such dangerous moves. He is your enemy #1. Now that you have our full support at least for now you don’t have any thing to worry. The Daily Star and Prothom Alo supporting Hasina:Why? We have no clue except that most freethinkers are anti-Islamic. The newspapers preach Indian style secularism and are also aligned with Indian Congress syndicate preaching Indian supremacy over Bangladesh. Mahfuz and Motiur (Editors of mainstream dailies: Pro-Indian ex-communist free-thinkers now “manufacturing consent” for the AL) 15 CHAPTER 7: HASINA’S BKSAL PLUS ANTI BANGLADESH POLITICS:OVER THE PRECIPICE AGAIN The Fascist shadow behind Hasina Julfikar Ali Manikwww.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details MIG 29 purchases Hasina escorted by RAB on corruption charges 16 CHAPTER 8: A Glimpse at the 1/11 Motiur- Mahfuz and Pronok’s Indian Bollywood Show in Bangladesh(20072008) __________________________________________ Moin U, the Mirjaffor of Bangladesh: The five feet tall General and his Jagu Bangladesh Moin U and India’s 6 horses BDR MUTINY to finish BD army with Indian horses http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uFlqZhc1IQk http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cb-er6F9DqE MBI MUNSHI’’S INDIA DOCTRINE Abid Bahar, Capitalist Development Chocked in Bangladesh Tuesday September 09 2008 20:31:49, NFB Abid Bahar, From Polashy to Bangabhavon: A Drama on U Ah’s Selling Bangladesh Link: "http://newsfrombangladesh.net/view.php?hidDate=2009-0720&hidType=OPT&hidRecord=0000000000000000275469 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cb-er6F9DqE http://svaradarajan.blogspot.com/2001/04/dateline-dhaka-bdr-chief-is-not-our.html 'Resistance against India in BD' http://www.hvk.org/articles/0305/14.html Weekly Blitz report: http://www.weeklyblitz.net/314/strange-happenings-in-bangladesh Abid Bahar, The 1/11 Hijacking of Bangladesh, http://www.bangladeshweb.com/view.php?hidDate=2008-12-27&hidType=&hidRecord=237359 17 CHAPTER 9: HASINA IN OPPOSITION OR IN POWER 26th October 2006, AL members killing political opponents Awami Tandob( Logi Boiytha) 2006 Part 2 youtube Digital Deception http://nimg.sulekha.com Mujiber Muscleman Chalera http://nimg.sulekha.com Namoste, Hasina! When are you going to start the war crimes trial? Hasina: Never! It’s a good strategy. Never finish it http://nimg.sulekha.com http://nimg.sulekha.com India’s dam will not be a problem for Bangladesh-Hasina 18 Hasina- Pronok Drama: Hasina: Dada, I am having some problems: I have to show to my people that you gave us something. Pronok: Ok we will give you the Tipaimukh dam, how about that? Hasina: Ok, ok, thank you. Pronok: In exchange what will you give? I am sure we will get the transit to the NW. Hasina: Yes, Yes! Pronok: You are a very intelligent lady; you are just like your father, your father of the nation. Hasina: No, he is my father and and also the father of the nation. Pronok: Yes, he will be the father until Padma, Magna Jamuna will be there. Hasina: I heard that you are leaving for your posting in Thailand? Pronok: I am a Bengali, before I leave I will make sure for get more from India. -----------------------------------“DHAKA: Bangladesh on Sunday blocked video website YouTube after it hosted a audio tape, which appeared to depict army personnel 'shouting' and 'showing anger' at Premier Sheikh Hasina for alleged Tender anarchy of inept handling of the BDR mutiny that killed 73 Chatra League military officers.” http://www.prothomBDR Mutiny why? 73 officers dead alo.com/detail/date/2009- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-jTBqbqfPUY 12-24/news/27554 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SuQYGE2HqZs 19 CHAPTER 10: AL’S INSTITUTIONALIZING (INTOLERANCE TO THE OPPOSITION) FASCISM 97125105&aid=-1&id=1419151844&oid=91797125105 http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=30267967&o=all&op=1&view=all&subj=917 20 CHAPTER 11: BANGABANDUKORON HeroWorshipping, A Fascist tendency in the AL/BCL Hero-worshiping: Little children are indoctrinated to see Mujib as the father of the nation When there are no enemies, find some around you, fight against them to remain popular.AL ideology of populist politics. http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=30267967&o=all&op=1&view=all&subj=917 97125105&aid=-1&id=1419151844&oid=91797125105 Abid Bahar, Mob Mentality of leaders and the Future of Bangladesh www.bangladesh-web.com/view.php?hidRecord=140365 21 Mujiber Chalera: Hasina’s petite Fascists in action(2) Mujib’s BKSAL tradition of anti_Islamic pro-Indian politics, his technique of using violence and deception against political opponents is institualized in AL politics. Bangladesh has to fight against the shadow of Mujib, the fascism in Bangladesh BCL men go for'change (BNGBANDUKORONIZATION OF BANGLADESH) “31-year old sculpture 'Shelly', made by a freedom fighter, a group of leaders and activists of Bangladesh Chhatra League recently put the statue of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman at Shahnewaz Hostel of Dhaka University. Photo: Syed Zakir HossainÈ 22 FASCISM IN ACTION:Following Bangbanduès ideals, Sheikh Salim and the other leaders controlling the streets for Hasina: Joy Bangla Attendants lead New Age staff correspondent FM Masum into Dhaka Medical College Hospital late into Thursday night after he was picked and beaten up by the Rapid Action Battalion in detention for 23 more than 10 hours and a half. — New Age photo Politics of anarchy AL’s SECULARISM: AL writes at the top of their web page ‘Allah sharbasaktiman’ Mujib’s politics was a politics of deception. In the same vain Hasina’s AL calls for the separation between religion and politics but “AL writes at the top of their web page ‘Allah sharbasaktiman’ (Allah is almighty’)? Then what is the big difference between the BNP and the AL?” It is the AL’s more powerful hypocrisy. The pious Hasina.Hasina’s Khalafat alliance in 2007. God bless Hasina’s Secularism in Bangladesh 24 CHAPTER 12: Father or the Founding fathers! Joinal Hazari (a Mujib recruit) is back in politics. “My last wish is to die with state honor, I have done enough for my party.”-Hazari Picture says a thousand words. In the above we have seen Sheikh Mujibur Rahman being a muscleman in the 50’s rose to the status of the president of Bangladesh.Perhaps Joinal Hazari wouldn’t be as lucky as Bangabandu was. As time changes people also changes, we have seen that in Bangabandu. In the above pictorial tour he dramatically changed especially in his mannerism and dress that he began to dress like a muscleman then to his imitation of Suhwardhy’s western style dress to Jinnah’s dress to after Suhwardhy’s death he took up the West Bengali dada style dress. While his dress style changed dramatically he seemed to remain the same person in his use of political technique. In his short rule of just a little more than three years his use of violence caused 3200, 00 people to lose their lives. Thus he remained the same person of the 50’s preaching violence when he finally established the dictatorial BKSAL party. Unfortunately though, in a country like Bangladesh instead of identifying Mujib’s death as the death of a dictator, the AL party continued to recognize him as the father of the nation. It says, an abusive biological father's role shouldn't be glorified. In today's Bangladesh, questions are repeatedly asked, why to honor an "absentee," "authoritarian" and "partisan" leader, the founder of BAKSAL even as the symbolic "father of the nation" of an emerging democracy. Mujib was accused of killing the infant democracy in Bangladesh setting the stage for the bloodbath and subsequent anarchy in Bangladesh. Now, asking him to be recognized as the "father" it seems as if in the democratic Russia, Stalinists asking to recognize the Fascist dictator Stalin to be the "father of the Russia." It is true, Mujib missed his chances and surely doesn't deserve to be the father of the nation also for the following reasons: (1) Mujib was not the biological father of the nation, (it is not possible) nor he was an ideal fatherly political figure of Bangladesh requiring to be recognized as the "father of the nation." An abusive biological father is not generally glorified. Even in a symbolic form, why to glorify Mujib who loved only his people; the ALs and was abusive to other anti BAKSAlite democratic Bangladeshis? He is the one who led Bangladesh from democracy to BAKSAL dictatorship. In doing so he even put elderly leaders like Bhasani under house arrest. It is a known fact that Mujib's Rakhi bhani, Lal bahini, Shaschasevok bahini, Mujib bahini and the other para military bahinis killed thousands of activists who opposed him. Which means he didn't tolerate opposition. He didn't tolerate the Tribal's demand for accepting Bangladeshi nationalism. Mujib said, "Forget your ethnicity, be Bengali." Now some people (former BAKSAL leader/ supporters) out of personal devotion and favor/ love received from Mujib want to elevate him to the status of an ideal father. But was he an ideal father? History tells us that he wasn't. On record Mujib, established dictatorship of one party system, banned newspapers, he was an elected leader but him as if like a king demanded intellectuals to visit him to their show of allegiance, and in the process divided the nation. The legacy of that divide still continues. (2) He was an elected leader, instead of staying in his house until the last moment he was supposed to be 25 with his people to lead them. (See Zahirul Quaium's interview, Quaium was the senior vice president of the AL, Mujib waited until March 25 afternoon for a fresh negotiation to begin on the 28th of March). Mujib surrendered to the Pakistani army. Before his death, Mujib shied away from explaining to reporters why he surrendered to the advancing army when each and every top member of the AL leadership could escape to Calcutta. Kamal Hossain who was with Mujib never clarified the issue either. (3)Mujib was clearly not a statesman but a demagogue and shows he believed in Pakistan. Even US state department shows, he wanted confederation not independence. On March 2, he even sent Rao Farman Ali to peruse Yahya Khan in then West Pakistan to save Pakistan. (See Farman Ali's book Bhutto, Mujib and Bangladesh.) He even said to him that time was running out. For not being a statesman he continued his foolish negotiation of the 6 points with the pretender Yahya Khan until the 24th of March. Like most other leaders, even Bashani could escape hiding as a refugee when the Pakistani army went to Tangail to hunt down "the Kafir" Bhasani, but why not Mujib? It was not definitely his courage to surrender as somr ALs claim, nor his love to save people as most neo-BAKSalites claim. It appears that at the last moment, he didn't have much of a choice but to save himself and his family. Alas, such an opportunist person (Hasina's father) who had left his people to such a helpless situation in 1971, just to become the Prime Minister of Pakistan (power hungry politics) at last in 1975 could neither save himself nor his family! But again killing was not the solution; especially his family was innocent. But nature takes its own course, his family suffered for his failures. The point is if you know that Pakistani military rulers will not accept the 6 point demands and you will not sacrifice a bit of the 6 points, why to negotiate until March 24 when Yahya left Dhaka after finishing all the preparations to attack? If it was not his foolish love for Pakistan, what was it? Negation means to come to a common ground. What was going on from the 7th March to the 24th March? What made him so confident? How can a Pakistan lover be the father of Bangladesh? Bhasani reminded Mujib again and again, Pakistanis will not accept his 6 points. Bhasani declared independence in December. Why Mujib didn't is a question repeatedly asked? BAKSAlite explanation, "This great patriot, wanted to save lives," Could he save innocent lives?" Then why he had to be a coward not a revolutionary? Bhasani used to call Mujib lacking in enough intelligence in the upper chamber. The truth is as a very powerful agitator he was dealing with big and small political issues he couldn't handle. Some Als even believes that the Pakistan army feared to kill him. It will be foolish to forget, the notorious Pakistani army didn't fear to hang Bhutto, the Prime Minister of Pakistan. But why Mujib was saved and his family even received protection and allowance in Dhaka? Was there a secret deal at the last moment? If there was one does he deserve to be a father? These are some unanswered questions about Bangabandu’s role in Bangladesh’s crucial hours. That is the untold "Bangabandu story" of Bangladesh. If Mujib had some love for Pakistan, or most love for his family at the expense of the millions of people facing the organized Pakistani military, what does he deserve? Not glorify him as the father of the nation. Under the circumstances, if historians consider him as a pretender, an absentee political leader at times of national distress, while in power only proved himself a dictator, no govt. should open the controversial issue to further lower his credibility. In opening the issue we are only dividing the nation and doing a disservice to it because to many, Mujib's BAKSAL was similar to Sadam's Bath party, or like any other African Fascist dictatorships. In conclusion, will glorifying this man as the "father" likely to create consensus in Bangladesh? To me they are only opening the Pandora ’s Box which will be a recipe for further chaos. If we desire for a developed Bangladesh for the common masses, but not help benefit Hasina’s, or Khalidas, or the hero-worshippers, the wisest measure to take would be either to ignore the issue altogether or recognize this controversial partisan BAKSAL founder/figure/ absentee politician as only one of the founding fathers of Bangladesh (for his role in the pre liberation period (leading up to March 7, 1971.) Bhasani, the spiritual leader of Bangladesh, the founder of AL, and the Ittifaq, the leader of 1969 movement that ousted Ayub and saved Mujib, and was the chairman of the government in exile in India and declared independence, was a fatherly figure to Mujib also deserve to be one of the founding fathers. Then it was Zia who declared independence and brought order after Mujib's BAKSAL and its subsequent anarchy. It seems that until the nation recognizes Bhasani, Mujib and Zia as the founding fathers of 26 Bangladesh, there will not be any political consensus. Seen in the favorable light, Bhasani, Mujib and Zia could be seen as our Gandhi, Nehru and Patel of Bangladesh. But the question will continue to be asked to the thinking Bangladeshis if the followers of the rebel rouser Bangabandu and their India backers will accept something positive about the contributions of the other national leaders in order to save the nation from the shadow of fascism that was first installed by Bangabandu. Hasina with the SAARC leaders The Heads of State/Government of SAARC Nations at a Retreat near Colombo on July 30, 1998. Photo shows (from right) the Prime Minister of Bangladesh Sheikh Hasina Wajed, the Chair of Council of Ministers of Bhutan Mr. Jigme Tinley, the Prime Minister of Nepal Mr. G.P. Koirala,the Prime Minister of India Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee, the President of Sri Lanka Ms. Chandrika Kumaratunga, the President of Maldives Mr. Maumoon Abdul Gayoom and the Prime Minister of Pakistan Mr. Nawaz Sharif. Symbol of Bangladesh’s future 27 Source: BANGLAPEDIA: National Assembly building; vision of a world famous American architect, Luis I Kahn. End notes and References: 1. Mozahed Alam, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman The Father of the Nation: A Political Profile, 1999. www.bangabandhu.org/profile.html; Early life of Bangabandhu « Moktel Hossain Mukthi muktimusician.wordpress.com/2009/11/.../early-life-of-bangabandhu early-life-of-bangabandhu 2.http// Wikipedia .org 3. Information compiled from interviews done on the the contemporaries of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. 4. Jalal Uddin Khan, Sonar Bangladesh, BAL & Amar Desh Support AWAMI LEAGUE(NOWKA) for a Revolutionary democratic Change.'dan Fotoğraflar facebook; Hasina’s Logi Boitha Viloence youtube video link http://www.youtube. com/watch? v=hjWhLD1- JLk&feature= player_embedded; Abid Bahar, Bangabandu Vs. Mussolini of Italy: Striking Similarities http://www.bangladesh-web.com/view.php?hidDate=2008-08-25&hidType=&hidRecord=216675; BCL men go for 'change'Dec 2, 2009, Daily Star; Shahidul Alam, Sheikh Mujib: A people's dictator , Notun Bangladesh, August 14, 2008. Farman Ali, Bhutto, Sheikh Mujib and Bangladesh, Published by Altaf Hossain: Translated by and published in Bengali by Mostofa Harun, 1978, Abul Monsur Ahamed, Amer Dhaker Rajnatir Ponchas Botchas, Dhaka:Khroz Kitab Mohal, 1984.; Azizul Karim, From Awami League to BAKSAL, http://newsfrombang ladesh.net/ view.php? hidRecord= 42362; 28 Abid Bahar, The 1/11 Hijacking of Bangladesh, http://www.bangladeshweb.com/view.php?hidDate=2008-12-27&hidType=&hidRecord=237359 Abu Rushd edited "Secret Affidavit of Yahya Khan," Published by: Bangladesh Defence Journal, February 2009 http://www.probenewsmagazine.com/index.php?index=2&contentId=5049 M A S Molla,Tajuddin's prophecy, Daily Star, November 03, 2006 Ibid Syed Muhammad Hussain, "A book, a coup, some thoughts" http://www.newagebd.com/edit.html#2; http://www.bdsdf.org/forum/index.php?showtopic=3478 Awami League and its role betwen 1971 and 1975, Jamshed Chowdhury, Bangladesh: Failed Years —- 1972-75, based on his thesis dissertation for his PhD from Heidelberg University; Amartya Sen, Poverty and Famines (Famine in Bangladesh, p. 131), New York: Oxford University Press, 1981; Abid Bahar, Bangabandu Mujib and Benito Mussolini: Striking Similarities, News from Bangladesh, http://bangladeshweb.com/view.php?hidRecord=218125. Submissions - Khan Saifur Rahman (Senior Advocate) Case of Mutiny leading to Murder or a Case of Murder Simpliciter? Defence arguments presented on behalf of Col. Syed Farook Rahman and Col Mohiuddin Syed Muhammad Hussain, "A book, a coup, some thoughts" http://www.newagebd.com/edit.html#2;http://www.bdsdf.org/forum/index.php?showtopic=3478 MUJIB MURDER CASE Court rules on reading of 3rd verdict today, New Age Front Page. http://www.newagebd.com/2009/oct/13/front.html; Mujibès Killers http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l292yT1FHDo&feature=related Kamruddin Ahamed, Banglar Ak Modhubetter Atho Kahini (Bengali), Dhaka, p. 1-4, 15, 1979; also quoted in Syed Abul Maksud, Bhasani, First edition, 1986, 122, 126-127, p. 146-147. Toffozal Hossain Manik Mia, Pakistani Rajnitir Bish Botshor, pp. 68-69, 86-87, 90-91 talks about Mujib’s widespread use of blackmailing intimidation and force to push through his agenda. Also see in Syed Abul Maksud, Bhasani, First edition, 1986, pp.146147. The director in charge of the Radio station recorded that Mujib personally warned him for giving Bhasani a grand coverage as a hero as at Bhasani’s return from India. But openly he showed great respect for Bhasani. 29 Kamruddin Ahamed, Banglar Ak Modhubetter Atho Kahini (Bengali), Dhaka, p. 1-4, 15, 1979; Henrik Ibsen, The Enemy of the People, “An Enemy of the People addresses the irrational tendencies of the masses, and the hypocritical and corrupt nature of the political system that they support. It is the story of one brave man's struggle to do the right thing and speak the truth in the face of extreme social intolerance; see for Properties stocked in Mujib’s house Ittifaq, 30th October 1975/ (Among the illegal weapons recovered were one heavy machine gun, two light machinre guns, 3 SMGs, 8 Stan guns, 10 rifles, 60 grenades and ammunitions.) .http://www.amardeshbd.com/dailynews/detail_news_index.php?NewsID=247355&New sType=bistarito&SectionID=home Logi Boitha Viloence youtube video link http://www.youtube. com/watch? v=hjWhLD1- JLk&feature= player_embedded Sheikh Hasina http://sajeeb. blogspot. com/2007/ 04/charges- against-sheikh- hasina.html; BDR MASSACRE; Part 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wpmr4gKFHww&feature=related, part 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eWI3Ybe2hfs&NR=1 Dr. Abid Bahar's exposure of Mujib and BKSAL By Zoglul Husain, UK London 26 November 2009. I read with much interest Dr. Abid Bahar's three articles on ... www.wikio.com/themes/Abid+Bahar Reading Questions 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. What do we learn from the early life (1920-39) of Bangabandu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman? Was Mujib a compulsive person? Why was he force to marry at the age of 18? What did he do during his high school years that helped him become the future leader of Bangladesh? What kind of changes we see in his mannerism and political techniques Mujib employed from the school years to 1975? What were the underlying reasons for his rise and also fall? Mujib was fined by Dhaka university for his involvement in the 4th class employee labor union politics. He refused to pay the fine? Was it a fair or unfair act? In the independent Bangladesh, there are demands for banning student’s involvement in politics, is there anything to be learned from Mujib’s life as an example? Why during his rule, there were so many murders in the university campus? Who were the killers? Shall today’s students follow Mujib as an ideal to suceed in life or consider it inappropriate in an independent country? Was he a populist leader or a statesman? Was he an honest leader or he used deception in politics? Was Agartala conspiracy a true event? 30 If Agartala was true, why Mujib was negotiating from the 7th to the 24th March? Was he for an independent Bangladesh or a confederation? 11. Did Mujib declare independence? Why the AL claims that the declaration was send to Chittagong and was made from Kalurghat and not from Dhaka?Is it to undermine Zia’s declaration? 12. Why in 1971 he preferred to surrender than remain outside as a rebel? Was that a pattern in Mujib’s leadership? 13. What made Mujib powerful, is it his strong loyality and favouratism to the political party or his love for rational institutions and democracy? 14. Why during his rule, Mujib loved to help his party man than the countryman? 15. Why Mujib boosted in extra-judicial killings?Is it his demonstration of the style a roughshot muslman or demonstration of frustration? 16. Why AL people do do hero worship of Mujib? 17. What is Fascism? 18. Are there elements of Fascism in Mujib’s leadership? 19. What are the similarities and differences between Mujib and Mousilini? 20. Who killed Sheikh Mujibur Rahman? Who were the parties involved? 21. Was Sheikh Mujibur Rahman’s death the of a dictator or the death of a statesman? 22. Mujib gave his great historic 7th March speech but a failure in the post liberation as a statesman? Does this make Mujib a pre liberation hero or a post liberation hero? 23. AL followers claim that Mujib founded the AL, the newspaper Ittifaq, the autonomy demands and he declared the independence of Bangladesh and should be the rightful father of the nation. What are the elements of truth in this statesment? 24. Who founded the two national institutions, Awami League and the Ittifaq and led the language movement, the 1969 mass movement to release Mujib from Agartala conspiracy, made the declaration of independence, his politics was to serve god (called ibada), and all his life lived in hut with peasants, and was the chairman of the government in exile in India and a fatherly figure to Mujib? 25. What is the story of Major Dalim and Golam Mostafa’s son – Sheikh Kamal and the army involvement in the death of Mujib? Why Mujib took side of Golam Mostofa? What was Shafiullah’s advice? 26. Why the AL wants everything in Mujib’s name and defame the other national leaders? Does this have anything to do with the concept of ownership? It this a democratic act? 27. A debate: ZIA THE DICTATOR- AL ZIA IS THE FATHER OF MULTI PARTY DEMOCRACY IN BANGLADESH –BNP. In the light of the constitution’s Fourth and the Fifth Amendment what is true? 10. 31 28. Why the AL leadership that wanted independence from Pakistan is naturally show subordination to India?Is is a matter of opportunism or leadership to Bangladesh’s continued independence? 29. Who were the parties to the 1/11 drama? 30. Why the AL capture of power is the fruit of violence? 31. What does Hasina’s logi boitha movement refers to? 32. Why AL election win also brings the commonly known “tender league anarchy?” 33. Is Bangladesh in the list of nations favourable toward development or toward debt? Where does Bangladesh’s development money come from? 34. What is India Doctrine? Why India has continued trade surplus with Bangladesh? 35. Why AL politics is based on controlling the media and the media propaganda? 36.What connection Hasina has in the wider world of international alliance? 37. What are the prospects of a multiparty democracy leading upto a continued development in Bangladesh? 32