[Tragically, when Zia was riding to power on the crest of a post-9/11
Islamist wave across the world, and Hindus were facing huge pogroms
across the country, India’s national security adviser Brajesh Mishra
was rushing to Dhaka to congratulate the new prime minister on her
victory
...
Bangladesh is, as Lawrence Lifschultz said, burdened with an
‘unfinished revolution’. This is the country which buried Jinnah’s
Two-Nation theory in the muddy swampy battlefields of 1971.
This is the Muslim dominated country that prides itself on its Bengali
heritage; where young bloggers fall to the sword of the radical but do
not flinch from upholding liberal Bengali values that led to the
creation of the nation.
This is a Muslim country where men and women recite Tagore, Nazrul,
Jibananda Das, and Michael Madhusudhan on February 21 to remember the
fallen heroes of the Bengali language movement.
...
Bangladesh is the best example India can find to torpedo Jinnah’s
Two-nation theory that remains the edifice of a failed state called
Pakistan. Bangladesh does not have nuclear weapons like Pakistan, but
it has overtaken not only Pakistan, but even India in most indices of
human development.
....
For those in Delhi who equate Bangladesh and Pakistan, a free ticket
to Dhaka to witness Shahbagh 2013 would be an eye-opener:
Demonstrations in support of secularism and the demand for a ban on
religion-driven politics.
Hasina’s government took the cue from the movement, where women
outnumbered men on any given day and where Lucky Akhtar raised
sloganeering to state-of-art, to enforce a ban on Jamaat-e-Islami. It
stands in stark contrast to what has happened in India in recent
months where some in Shiv Sena have gone to the extent of supporting
Jinnah’s Two-nation theory.]

I/II.
http://opinion.bdnews24.com/2015/06/09/why-bangladesh-is-indias-most-important-neighbour/

Syed Bashir
Why Bangladesh is India’s ‘most important neighbour’
June 9, 2015

Prime Minister Narendra Modi (L) and his Bangladeshi counterpart
Sheikh Hasina clap during signing ceremony of agreements between India
and Bangladesh in Dhaka June 6, 2015. Reuters

Prime Minister Narendra Modi (L) and his Bangladeshi counterpart
Sheikh Hasina clap during signing ceremony of agreements between India
and Bangladesh in Dhaka June 6, 2015. Reuters

Indian National Security Advisor Ajit Doval described Bangladesh as
India’s “most important neighbour”, as the Sikri couple had done years
ago.

I remember Rajiv Sikri, then an additional secretary in MEA, coming up
with that description during a Kolkata seminar. His wife Veena, one
time Indian High Commissioner in Dhaka, could be heard pushing for a
more active Bangladesh policy in the corridors of power in Delhi,
where there were enough bullheads who would compare Pakistan and
Bangladesh because both were Muslim majority countries.

I once ran into a former Indian intelligence tsar who had served in
Dhaka under consular cover, and was shocked to find him arguing loudly
in a party that Bangladesh and Pakistan as “Muslim countries” deserved
a similar policy response from India.

It is true he said that when Khaleda Zia’s government was backing
anti-Indian rebels, both the ethnic rebel groups of north-east and the
Islamist radicals, in all possible ways.

But he conveniently forgot that even in 2001, when Awami League lost
the elections and Zia came to power, Hasina’s party was the single
largest party in terms of vote share. It was undone by many of its own
failures, and the usual anti-incumbency tendency of the Bangladesh
electorate.

***Tragically, when Zia was riding to power on the crest of a
post-9/11 Islamist wave across the world, and Hindus were facing huge
pogroms across the country, India’s national security adviser Brajesh
Mishra was rushing to Dhaka to congratulate the new prime minister on
her victory.*** [Emphasis added.]

“We should not place all our eggs in one basket,” Mishra said to
justify friendly engagement with the Zia administration that was in
power with Jamaat-e-Islami as coalition partner. Vajpayee fell for the
trap as he got carried away to Lahore, and India got Kargil.

Thankfully, Modi has played the opposite.

He has been cautious and tough on Pakistan and has gone out of his way
to engage and be friendly to Bangladesh under Sheikh Hasina. He did
meet Khaleda Zia in Dhaka, if only to prove the point that she had
made a huge mistake by not keeping her scheduled appointment with
President Pranab Mukherjee in Dhaka two years ago.

***Bangladesh is, as Lawrence Lifschultz said, burdened with an
‘unfinished revolution’. This is the country which buried Jinnah’s
Two-Nation theory in the muddy swampy battlefields of 1971.***
[Emphasis added.]

***This is the Muslim dominated country that prides itself on its
Bengali heritage; where young bloggers fall to the sword of the
radical but do not flinch from upholding liberal Bengali values that
led to the creation of the nation.*** [Emphasis added.]

***This is a Muslim country where men and women recite Tagore, Nazrul,
Jibananda Das, and Michael Madhusudhan on February 21 to remember the
fallen heroes of the Bengali language movement.*** [Emphasis added.]

This is the country which never fails to celebrate December 16 as
Victory Day, and where the surrender ceremony of Pakistan’s Lt. Gen.
Niazi to India’s Lt. Gen. J S Arora, is religiously re-enacted every
year when dozens of veteran freedom-fighters relive their experience
of fighting alongside Indian troops to liberate their country from the
brutal Pakistanis.

True, this is also the country where bigots continue to sometimes
attack minorities, but one should never forget that liberal Muslim
Bengalis suffer as much in their hands as Hindus.

For every Avijit Ray who falls to the sword of the Faithful, there is
a Rajib Haider who has met the same fate, and for an Ananta Bijoy Das,
there is always a Washiqur Rahman Babu.

The bigots who Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina describes as the ‘defeated
forces of 1971′ still tend to surface virulently and subject the
secular forces to merciless attack.

The attack on secular bloggers drives home the point that Islamist
radicals fear the liberal thought more than anything else. Two days
before Dhaka fell to the Indian forces and Mukti Bahini, the
Pakistanis and their local cohorts massacred dozens of Bengali liberal
intellectuals, Hindus and Muslims alike.

Bangladesh remembers it as ‘Buddhijibi Hatyakhando’ (Intellectual
Massacre). The bigots carry forward that brutal fundamentalist
tradition which the seculars face with as much bravery as the men and
women in 1971, when millions died to create a new nation over a ‘river
of blood’ (Ek Sagar Rakter Binomoy).

Hasina’s administration has taken the bold move to try the ‘war
criminals of 1971’ — the brutal men who collaborated with Pakistan to
stifle the Bengali fight for independence.

Some have been hanged. Others are waiting for the gallows. Many others
are facing trial or have been given life imprisonment. She has cracked
down hard and tough on the Islamist radicals of a whole range, knowing
full well that she may be hit by an assassin’s bullet any unguarded
moment as her illustrious father.

In Bangladesh, India has a neighbour to befriend and a case to make by
extending the hands of friendship. For those who fly the flags of
Pakistan in Kashmir, Bangladesh is a quiet reminder of a failed state
that is Pakistan.

If Bengali Muslims who made up more than 60 percent of undivided
Pakistan’s population could not get justice and had to break away,
what can Kashmiris expect? Kashmiris who will remain a single digit
population group in Pakistan, even if the whole Srinagar valley goes
over? 1971 should remind the West, which sees Pakistan’s army as an
ally in the War against Terror, that it is an useless though vicious,
politically-pampered force, which can use terror but never fight it.

Talking of morale, what more can one say about an army which
surrenders a part of its own country with 93,000 soldiers still left
to fight? So much for Bhutto’s Thousand Year War!

***Bangladesh is the best example India can find to torpedo Jinnah’s
Two-nation theory that remains the edifice of a failed state called
Pakistan. Bangladesh does not have nuclear weapons like Pakistan, but
it has overtaken not only Pakistan, but even India in most indices of
human development.*** [Emphasis added.

Modi did the right thing by admitting it in his Dhaka University
speech — he had obviously done his homework. Bangladesh’s economy is
no longer the basket-case that Kissinger said it was.

Bangladesh has a current account surplus when India has a huge current
account deficit (forget about Pakistan). When Pakistan has to beg for
World Bank support to keep its economy afloat, Bangladesh can afford
to tell the World Bank to get lost and take up the challenge to fund
the Padma Bridge with its own resources.

The strength of Bengali nationalism that sustains Bangladesh is
nowhere more apparent than in the rising remittances, which now total
close to $25 billion a year. These are the poor workers who slog their
hearts out in foreign lands but save their money in their own ‘Sonar
Bangla’ unlike the tiny corrupt elite who siphon and money-launder to
buy houses in Canada and Malaysia.

Bangladesh is the anti-thesis of Pakistan. Though both are Muslim
nations, and Bangladeshis take their religion as seriously as
Pakistanis without overdoing it, the bedrock of its national identity
is liberal Bengali values and culture, inherited from the Bengal
renaissance but in a more profound way than by the 19th century
bhadralok.

***For those in Delhi who equate Bangladesh and Pakistan, a free
ticket to Dhaka to witness Shahbagh 2013 would be an eye-opener:
Demonstrations in support of secularism and the demand for a ban on
religion-driven politics.*** [Emphasis added.]

***Hasina’s government took the cue from the movement, where women
outnumbered men on any given day and where Lucky Akhtar raised
sloganeering to state-of-art, to enforce a ban on Jamaat-e-Islami. It
stands in stark contrast to what has happened in India in recent
months where some in Shiv Sena have gone to the extent of supporting
Jinnah’s Two-nation theory.*** [Emphasis added.]

There are bigots in Bangladesh and they attack minorities, much as
there are bigots in India who do the same. These are the people who
keep the ghost of Jinnah alive outside Pakistan.

Hasina’s battle against these forces is a stern reminder that her
nation’s revolution is still ‘unfinished’. She needs huge Indian
support to win that revolution — from aid to water-sharing to support
for building infrastructure.

Perhaps Modi is beginning to understand that more profoundly after his
visit to Dhaka. India needs a strong and economically thriving
Bangladesh to prove so many points to Pakistan (one being, friendship
with India will bring growth and development), and it needs Bangladesh
to secure India’s long troubled Northeast.

That is why Doval or the Sikris had the good sense to describe
Bangladesh as India’s most important neighbour — a far cry from
Bangladesh editor Mahfuz Anam’s complaint that India has two
neighbours and Bangladesh is not one of them.

Syed Bashir is a bdnews24.com columnist.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to