http://www.sacw.net/article3804.html

Anwar Dayal: Deconstructing Jamaat-e-Islami in Bangladesh

27 February


Alal o Dulal - 26 February
2013<http://alalodulal.org/2013/02/26/deconstructing-jamaat/>

Wali Nasr’s Vanguards of the Islamic Revolution is perhaps the best known
book on the party available in English. That book, as well as Jamaat’s own
literature—in both Bangladesh and Pakistan—makes it clear that it does not
believe in western-style electoral, representative democracy. Nor can it be
characterized as a mass political party. At the risk of oversimplification,
Jamaat’s internal organization may be described as following some form of
“democratic centralism”: the top leadership collectively takes a decision,
and through a hierarchy and network of members, cadres, or activists, the
party’s decision is carried out. The top leadership is, in turn, chosen
from the rank and file through elections and other representative
mechanisms.

As in Pakistan, the party’s aim in Bangladesh is to create an Islamic
state, where the party is the sole arbiter of what counts as Islamic. The
essential question for the party leadership is how it will achieve power.

After the Pakistan Army launched its murderous crackdown in East Pakistan
on 25 March 1971, Jamaat threw in its lot behind the generals. Whereas a
number of Islam-pasand politicians—including many from various factions of
the Muslim League—supported the junta’s quest to maintain a united
Pakistan, Jamaat went a step further.

Activists of its student wing, Islami Jamiat-e-Talaba (IJT) / Islami
Chhatra Sangha (ICS), volunteered for the pro-Pakistan militias set up by
the army. Matiur Rahman Nizami, head of the East Pakistan IJT/ICS, led a
particularly fierce group called the Al Badr whose death squads are alleged
to have killed several prominent progressive intellectuals and activists
during the war. A reading of contemporary newspapers suggests that Jamaat
expected that the army would militarily defeat the Mukti Bahini resistance,
but would find it hard to fill the political vacuum created by the
elimination of the Awami League. Jamaat aspired to fill that vacuum.

Much like the Pakistani generals, Jamaat leaders blame the Indians for the
defeat of 1971. They believe that the main reason behind India’s
intervention was a fear of a Jamaat-dominated East Pakistan. The lesson
they took away from 1971 is that for Jamaat to achieve power in Bangladesh,
it must contend with India.

The immediate post-war years were a difficult for Jamaat. Even before Dhaka
was liberated on December 16th, the provisional government of Bangladesh
banned Jamaat. Some of its leaders, including the provincial chief Ghulam
Azam, escaped to Pakistan, the Gulf and the United Kingdom. Others went
into hiding. Azam tried to lead a movement to “recover East Pakistan,”
which fizzled when Zulfikar Ali Bhutto received Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in
Lahore for the 1974 Organization of Islamic Countries (OIC) summit. At the
local level, party members abstained from direct political activities,
concentrating on social work instead.

Bangladesh politics took several dramatic and tragic turns in 1975. The
country’s first leader, Sheikh Mujib, responded to instability by imposing
a draconian one-party state, and then was killed by a military coup.
Countercoups followed, descending into a larger armed mutiny. By the end of
the year, many of the people who politically or militarily led the
country’s freedom struggle in 1971 were dead or marginalized, with the
exception of Major General Ziaur Rahman, who emerged as the country’s de
facto ruler.

Zia gradually reintroduced electoral politics, and a parliament was elected
in 1979. The ban on Jamaat, which had begun in 1971, was not, however,
formally lifted because the Election Commission was not convinced of the
party’s commitment to Bangladesh’s sovereignty. Nonetheless, six of its
members were elected to the 300-member assembly under the banner of the
Islamic Democratic League. Azam returned to Bangladesh on a Pakistan
passport around this time. (His citizenship was revoked by the Bangladesh
government in 1973.) The IJT/ICS was also re-launched under the name of
Islami Chhatra Shibir. Zia was assassinated in 1981, and Lt. Gen. H.M.
Ershad assumed power in 1982. As Ershad moved to legitimize his rule
through elections, the ban on the Jamaat was lifted.

>From here on, Jamaat’s aim was to achieve political legitimacy first, and
capture state power ultimately.

How to do it?

Azam devised a multi-pronged strategy.

First, Jamaat was to become a parliamentary party and contest elections,
under its own name if possible, but under other names if needed. But, they
would not contest across the country. Rather, they targeted 50 seats
bordering India. The idea was to turn these seats into strong Jamaat
bastions that could become centers of resistance if India were to “invade
again.”

Of course, 50 seats are far short of a majority in a 300-seat parliament.
This is where the second strategy comes in. Jamaat would seek alliance and
coalition with anyone and everyone depending on the specific circumstance.
So, for example, Jamaat and the Awami League (AL) participated in the
parliamentary election in 1986, breaking a promise to boycott it because it
was held under martial law. The election helped give constitutional cover
to the Ershad’s military regime. But in 1990, Jamaat again joined the AL
along with its rival, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), and the
leftists in an urban uprising that toppled the Ershad government. In 1991,
the BNP formed a government with Jamaat’s support. By the mid-1990s, Jamaat
had once again allied with the AL in a series of street protests against
the BNP government.

By 2001 however, Jamaat had entered into an electoral alliance with the BNP
for the upcoming election. This alliance seems to have held through
electoral triumphs (2001, when BNP won 197 and Jamaat 17 seats) and
disasters (2008, BNP 32, Jamaat 2). During the quasi-military “caretaker
government” rule of 2007-2008, there were strong rumors of a Jamaat-army
tacit understanding: while both AL and BNP leaders were jailed, Jamaat was
practically untouched.

These alliances conferred one major benefit. Jamaat regained, at least
partially, the legitimacy it lost by violently opposing the country’s birth.

In conjunction with these tactical alliances, Azam had a third prong.
Drawing on various revolutionary movements across the world, Jamaat has
pursued infiltration—putting ideologically committed men and women in key
sectors of state, society and the economy, so that, if and when the time
comes, a coordinated putsch could catapult it to power. This was pursued
most vigorously between 2001 and 2006. When the BNP led alliance (of which
Jamaat was a key partner) won the 2001 election, Jamaat demanded two
things. First, they wanted a suitable official post for Matiur Rahman
Nizami. The former Al Badr leader had been the party’s parliamentary head
in the early 1990s, and had replaced Azam as the party chief by the end of
the decade. Second, the party’s number two, Ali Ahsan Mujahid (who was not
an MP), had to be made the minister of social welfare.

The social welfare ministry was chosen because this ministry regulated the
country’s massive NGO sector and was supposed to look after sociocultural
organizations throughout the country. In 1971, Jamaat targeted progressive
voices violently. During the 2001-2006 period, it made things difficult for
progressive activities, while generously supporting Islamic institutions
that adhered to its interpretation.

And finally, there is the fourth prong. IJT lost control of the campuses in
the 1960s, first to the leftists, then to the nationalists led by the AL.
They wanted to rectify it in the 1980s. They focused on the universities of
Rajshahi and Chittagong for their proximity to the border — consistent with
their electoral strategy.

Have these strategies worked?

Up to 2007, many observers would have answered in the affirmative. While
its larger ally, BNP, was hobbled by corruption scandal, Jamaat was seen as
relatively clean — consistent with its mantra: Allah’s law, and honest
men’s rule. After the quasi-coup of January 2007, BNP seemed to be in
disarray, and many expected Jamaat to emerge as the main alternative to the
AL. In the post-9/11 world, Jamaat offered a so-called moderate Islamism to
the west.

But, its role in 1971 continued to shackle the party. While Azam played
down 1971—evading answers or shifting the discussion whenever the war and
the party’s role in it was raised—the newer leaders made a series of
confrontational statements that tried to rewrite the history of 1971,
erasing any allegation of war crimes. This provoked a backlash, and the
demand for trials of its leaders (and a few individuals in other parties)
on charges of war crimes gathered momentum.

The Shahbagh Movement

Trying the killers and collaborators of 1971 was a key electoral promise
made by the AL in the 2008 elections, which it won in a landslide (232 out
of 300 seats). Most of the top leadership of Jamaat was arrested in 2010,
when the war crimes trial process started. When Abdul Quader Mollah, also
known as the “Butcher of Mirpur,” escaped the death penalty after being
convicted of atrocities in 1971, protestors came out to the streets in
droves. The Shahbagh movement is the largest movement since the 1990
toppling of the Ershad government. Among other things, the movement demands
banning of Jamaat and of religious politics.

It is too early to tell how the movement will play out. Perhaps Jamaat will
be banned. Perhaps, not. However, the party has found the past few years
quite difficult. With its top tier in jail for alleged war crimes, and the
second tier in jail for opposing the war crimes trial process, the party is
essentially being run by its 3rd or 4th tier leaders. While they formally
adhere to the strategy devised by Azam, in practice, the limitations of
that strategy in the current circumstances have resulted in significant
internal debate.

One faction, led by what is understood as the business wing of the party
(with significant financial connections in the Gulf), want to reboot the
party along the lines of the Turkish AKP. Mir Quasim Ali, a business
tycoon, and Barrister Abdur Razzaq are often touted as potential leaders of
such a revamped party. Some speculate that the ruling AL condone, if not
bless, such a scenario. A revamped JI would draw votes away from the BNP
and benefit AL.

But another faction, led by former Chhatra Shibir men who saw the triumph
of violence in Chittagong and Rajshahi, want to take direct action. They
are also inspired by various Arab uprisings, and dream of emulating them in
Bangladesh. Since November, they have taken to coordinated violence across
Dhaka and other cities.

Finally, there are former Jamaat members who found the party too moderate
when it was in government in the 2000s and too pusillanimous in opposition
since. Some of them joined violent jihad under the banner of organizations
like Harkatul Jihad or Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh—both effectively
suppressed in 2006-2007. If Jamaat is banned, some of its more radical
elements may well return to the ways of the bomb.

The people who led the party in 1971, and committed horrific crimes while
collaborating with the murderous Pakistan army, will soon be gone. If not
in the gallows, these old men will die soon in their beds. What their
younger followers choose remains to be seen. And the choice will have
significant ramifications for Bangladesh.

Anwar Dayal is a political analyst who blogs with Alal-o-Dulal.


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Peace Is Doable

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