Bangladesh was supposed to be a model of democratic tolerance. But
that was before militants like Bangla Bhai began their reigns of
torture and the cry went up for a new Taliban.


NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE
January 23, 2005

The Next Islamist Revolution?
By ELIZA GRISWOLD

Before dawn one morning this past November in Bagmara, a village in
northwestern Bangladesh, six puffy-eyed men gathered beneath a
cracked-mud stairwell todescribe a man they consider their leader, a
former schoolteacher called Bangla Bhai. The quiet was broken now and
then by donkey carts clattering past, as village women, seated on the
backs of the carts, were taken to the market. The women wore
makeshift burkas -- black,white, canary yellow -- and kept their
heads down, and this, the men explained, was Bangla Bhai's doing.

Last spring, Bangla Bhai, whose followers probably number around
10,000, decided to try an Islamist revolution in several provinces of
Bangladesh that border on India. His name means ''Bangladeshi
brother.'' (At one point he said his real name was Azizur Rahman and
more recently claimed it was Siddiqul Islam.) He has said that he
acquired this nom de guerre while waging jihad in Afghanistan and
that he was now going to bring about the Talibanization of his part
of
Bangladesh. Men were to grow beards, women to wear burkas. This was
all rather new to the area, which was religiously diverse. But
Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh, as Bangla Bhai's group is called
(the name means Awakened Muslim Masses of Bangladesh), was determined
and violent and seemed to have enough lightly armed adherents to make
its rule stick.

Because he swore his main enemy was a somewhat derelict but still
dangerous group of leftist marauders known as the Purbo Banglar
Communist Party, Bangla Bhai gained the support of the local police
-- until the central government, worried that Bangla Bhai's band
might be getting out of control, ordered his arrest in late May.

''There used to be chaos and confusion here,'' Siddiq-ul-Rahman, one
of Bangla Bhai's senior lieutenants, said through an interpreter that
morning in Bagmara. The sun was coming up and a crowd was gathering.
Siddiq-ul-Rahman boasted that police officers attend Bangla Bhai's
meetings armed and in uniform. The Bangladeshi government's arrest
warrant doesn't seem to have made much difference, although for now
Bangla Bhai refrains from public appearances. The government is far
away in Dhaka, and is in any case divided on precisely this
question of how much Islam and politics should mix. Meanwhile, Bangla
Bhai and the type of religious violence he practices are filling the
power vacuum.

Bangladeshi politics have never strayed far from violence. During the
war for independence from Pakistan, in 1971, three million people
died in nine months. Thuggery has been a consistent feature of
political life since then and is increasingly so today. This has made
it difficult to get an accurate picture of phenomena like Bangla
Bhai. Under the current government, which has been in power since
2001 and includes two avowedly Islamist parties, journalists are
frequently imprisoned. Last year, three were killed while reporting
on
corruption and the rise of militant Islam. Moreover, 80 percent of
Bangladeshis live in villages that can be hard to reach and are under
the tight control of local politicians. Foreign journalists in
Bangladesh are followed by intelligence agents; people that reporters
interview are questioned afterward.

Nonetheless, it is possible to travel through Bangladesh and observe
the increased political and religious repression in everyday life,
and to verify the simple remark by one journalist there: ''We are
losing our freedom.'' The global war on terror is aimed at making the
rise of regimes like that of the Taliban impossible, but in
Bangladesh, the trend could be going the other way.

In Bangladesh, ''Islam is becoming the legitimizing political
discourse,'' according to C. Christine Fair, a South Asia specialist
at the United States Institute of Peace, a nonpartisan, federally
financed policy group in Washington. ''Once you don that religious
mantle, who can criticize you? We see this in Pakistan as well, where
very few people are brave enough to take the Islamists on. Now this
is happening in Bangladesh.'' The region, Fair added, has become a
haven where jihadis can move easily and have access to a friendly
infrastructure that allows them to regroup and train.

Another close observer of Bangladeshi politics, Ali Dayan Hasan of
Human Rights watch, told me recently: ''The practical effect of
politics along religious lines is that you start to accept a
religious identity and reject every other. It's absolutely crucial to
understand that this is happening in Bangladesh right now.''

This was not supposed to be the fate of Bangladesh, which fought its
way to independence 34 years ago. While its population of 141 million
is 83 percent Muslim, the nation was founded on the principle of
secularism, which in Bangladesh essentially means religious
tolerance. After the guiding figure of independence, Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman, was assassinated in 1975, military leaders, seeking
legitimacy, allowed a return of Islam to politics. With the return of
fair elections in 1991, power became precariously divided among four
parties:
the right-leaning Bangladesh National Party (B.N.P.), the mildly
leftist Awami League, the Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami and the
conservative Jatiya. The two leading parties are led by women: the
B.N.P. by the current prime minister, Khaleda Zia, widow of the
party's murdered founder; the Awami League by Zia's predecessor as
prime minister, Sheikh Hasina Wazed, herself the daughter of the
assassinated founding father, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.

Zia and Sheikh Hasina, as she is known, have a legendary antipathy
toward each other. Each of their parties regularly accuses the other
of illegal acts. When Sheikh Hasina very narrowly escaped
assassination last August, B.N.P. activists all but accused her of
staging the attack in order to acquire political advantage. Zia's
government has been unable to identify the assassins -- who
lobbed grenades into a party rally, killing at least 20 and wounding
hundreds -- and Sheikh Hasina has refused even to discuss the
investigation with the prime minister, saying: ''With whom should I
meet? With the killers?''

The political breach between those two parties is being filled
primarily by Jamaat-e-Islami, which agitated against independence in
1971 and remains close to Pakistan. The group was banned after
independence for its role in the war but has slowly worked its way
back to political legitimacy. The party itself has not changed much
-- it was always socially conservative and unafraid of violence.
The political context, however, has changed enough to give it greater
power. Since 2001, Jamaat-e-Islami has been a crucial part of a
governing coalition dominated by the B.N.P. The two parties have ties
dating to the late 1970's, but it is only since 2001 that a
politically aggressive form of Islam has found, for the first time
since independence, a strong place at the top of Bangladeshi
politics.

It has found a corresponding position at the bottom of Bangladeshi
politics as well, in the social scrum that produces figures like
Bangla Bhai. (Opposition politicians have linked Bangla Bhai to
Jamaat-e-Islami, a tie that Jamaat and Bangla Bhai have both denied.)
The border provinces have, since independence, harbored a
proliferation of armed groups that either Bangladesh, India, Myanmar
or Pakistan, or some region or faction in one of those countries, has
been willing to support for its own political reasons. By the early
1990's Islamist groups began appearing, mainly at the periphery of
the jihad centered on Afghanistan. The most important of these has
been the Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (Huji), which has been associated
with Fazlul Rahman, who signed Osama bin Laden's famous declaration
in 1998 endorsing international, coordinated jihad -- the document
that introduced Al Qaeda to the larger world. But Bangla Bhai's group
and others have since emerged and are making their bids for power.

''Bangladesh is becoming increasingly important to groups like Al
Qaeda because it's been off everyone's radar screen,'' says Zachary
Abuza, the author of ''Militant Islam in Southeast Asia'' and a
professor of political science at Simmons College in Boston. ''Al
Qaeda is going to have to figure out where they can regroup, where
they have the physical capability to assemble and train, and
Bangladesh is one of these key places.''

Six years ago, Huji chose its first prominent target: Shamsur Rahman,
who is Bangladesh's leading poet. Recently, at his home in Dhaka,
Rahman began telling me the story of the attack as he pulled a sheaf
of papers from a pigeonhole in his writing desk, on which sat a
bottle of black-currant soda and a copy of Dante's ''Inferno.'' Above
the desk hung an ink sketch of the Nobel Prize-winning Bengali poet,
Rabindranath Tagore, as well as a yellowing photograph of Rahman's
father.

Rahman, who is 75, is birdlike and wears his hair in a fluffy white
pageboy. Most of his poems are love poems, but some address the rise
of militant Islam in his country. ''I am not against religion,'' he
said, smiling wryly. ''I am against fanaticism.'' He reached for his
mug of hot water. It was the holy month of Ramadan, and Rahman's
family had just broken the day's fast.

Downstairs, four policemen were eating a meal prepared by Rahman's
daughter-in-law Tia. Rahman has lived under police protection since
Jan. 18, 1999, when three young men appeared at his house and asked
for a poem. Tia refused to let them in. The poet was resting, she
said. But the men begged for just a minute of his time, so Tia
obliged. Immediately one of the men ran upstairs and tried to chop
Rahman's neck with an ax. ''He tried to cut my head off, but my wife
took me in her arms and my daughter-in-law too,'' Rahman recounted.
The two women fended off the blows until the neighbors, hearing their
screams, rushed into the house and caught the attackers. Rahman
gestured toward the women standing in the doorway. Tia looked
exhausted. The hair around her face was damp from cooking. Rahman's
wife, Zahora, not more than four feet tall, held her diminutive hands
in front of her and smiled. (She understands English but cannot speak
it.) Rahman pointed out the shiny scar on her arm. Zahora patted her
husband and took his empty mug to the kitchen. ''They wanted my head,
not a poem,'' he said.

The attack led to the arrest of 44 members of Huji. Two men, a
Pakistani and a South African, claimed they had been sent to
Bangladesh by Osama bin Laden with more than $300,000, which they
distributed among 421 madrassas, or private religious schools.
According to Gowher Rizvi, director of the Ash Institute for
Democratic Governance and Innovation at Harvard and a lecturer in
public policy, bin Laden's reputed donation is ''a pittance''
compared with the millions that Saudi charities have contributed to
many of Bangladesh's estimated 64,000 madrassas, most of which serve
only a single village or two. Money of this kind is especially
important because Bangladesh is one of the poorest countries in
the world. Out of 177 countries on the United Nations' Human
Development Index, Bangladesh is ranked 138, just above Sudan. The
recent tsunami that devastated its neighbors hardly touched it -- a
rare bit of good luck for the country, as most catastrophes seem
somehow to claim their victims in Bangladesh.

In Bangla Bhai's patch of northwestern Bangladesh, poverty is so
pervasive that, for many children in the region, privately subsidized
madrassas are the only educational option. For the past several years
especially, money from Persian Gulf states has strengthened them even
more. Most follow a form of the Deobandi Islam taught in the 1950's
by the intellectual and activist Maulana Abul Ala Maududi, who was
born in India in 1903 and defined Muslim politics in opposition to
Indian nationalism. While Maududi's original agenda was reformist,
the
Deobandi model is now better known from the madrassas of Pakistan,
where it gave rise to the Taliban in Afghanistan. Whether Maududi
intended it or not, his teachings have become synonymous with radical
Islam.

In November, in a shop in the Bagmara bazaar not far from where
Bangla Bhai used to hold his meetings, two young men sat waiting to
tell their stories about the cruelty and repression of Bangla Bhai's
movement. Everyone here wanted to talk about this, they said, but
were afraid of the consequences. Several days earlier, Bangla Bhai's
cadres had beaten a university student caught smoking cigarettes,
another banned act.

''We weren't allowed to sell these,'' said one of the men, a
20-year-old shopkeeper, holding up a pack of Player's Gold Leaf he
kept on a low shelf.

His friend, a thickset man in a white kurta -- a long-sleeved shirt
extending below the waist -- sat on a carton next to the counter,
with a blue mobile phone in his hand. He played with the phone
distractedly as he described the announcements Bangla Bhai's men had
made, beginning last summer, over the loudspeaker, demanding that
people come watch public punishments. He told me that over the past
months he himself had seen more than 50 men hanged upside down by
their feet from bamboo scaffolding and beaten with hammers, iron rods
and the field-hockey sticks that are commonly used in Bangladesh as
weapons. He winced for a second recalling these tortures, and then
his fleshy face lost all expression.

''In this place people live in fear,'' the shopkeeper said. ''They
still punish people. If anyone is not keeping Ramadan, even if it's a
sick man and he's eating in a restaurant, they treat them badly.''

The thickset man scanned the street over his shoulder and added,
shaking his head, ''They wanted the regime of the Taliban here.''

Taskforce against Torture, a Bangladeshi human rights organization
founded three years ago, has recorded more than 500 cases of people
being intimidated and tortured by Bangla Bhai and his men. One of
them is Abdul Quddus Rajon, a postmaster from Shafiqpur, a village
near Bagmara. He is 42 and comes from a wealthy family of moderate
Muslims. Rajon was abducted early last May when two men in green
headbands showed up at the post office on a motorbike. They forced
him onto the bike and demanded his brother's phone number. Abdul
Kayyam Badshah, Rajon's brother and the leader of a banned Communist
Party, was wanted by the government and being pursued by Bangla
Bhai's men. Rajon refused to give them the number, so they took his
mobile phone and drove him to one of Bangla Bhai's camps.

Rajon told me when I met him that he was held with 15 other men in
two rooms. ''For four days they tortured me,'' he recounted. Every
morning, his captors, who Rajon said were not more than teenagers,
took him to a cell and beat him.

Bangla Bhai's men demanded 100,000 taka for his release, about
$1,600. Rajon eventually agreed to pay. Before his release, he said,
his captors tried to intimidate him into becoming more observant.
''They took me in front of a mosque and told me to promise I would
keep my beard and pray five times a day, and to never tell anything
about Bangla Bhai's camp,'' he said. ''They wore beards and long
kurtas like religious men, but that was the only way in which they
were
religious.'' He pulled up the cuffs of his khakis to reveal deep
black gashes in his shins.

''Eleven days later,'' he said, ''they caught my brother.'' At noon
on May 19, Rajon was awakened by a loudspeaker. Bangla Bhai's men
were announcing that his brother's trial would start the next day and
he would be sentenced to death. ''I tried to contact the state
minister and the superintendent of police by telephone,'' Rajon said.
''Because if Badshah was accused, he should be tried according to the
laws of the land. But they wouldn't talk to me.'' (According to The
Daily Star, Bangladesh's leading English-language newspaper, the
local
government has been accused of colluding with Bangla Bhai.)

The next morning, Badshah was found hanged by his feet from a tree
near a police station. He had been beaten to death. Rajon first heard
about it through whispering in the village. ''A policeman was
wandering around asking people if they were glad my brother was
dead,'' he said. In the village and the surrounding districts, Bangla
Bhai's spate of killings and torture continued for another month. One
man was dismembered. Another, according to local journalists
and villagers who told me they heard him, had a microphone held to
his mouth while he was tortured so that the entire village could
listen to his screams.

Communists are just one target of Islamic militants in Bangladesh.
Most attacks have been carried out against either members of
religious minorities -- Hindus, Christians and Buddhists -- or
moderate Muslims considered out of step with the doctrines espoused
at the militant madrassas. International groups like Human Rights
Watch cannot gather information freely enough to be certain of the
scope of the problem. Yet anecdotal evidence is abundant. In
Bangladesh, as part of
the militant Islamists' agenda, religious minorities are coming under
a new wave of attacks. One of the most vulnerable communities is that
of the Ahmadiyya, a sect of some 100,000 Muslims who believe that
Muhammad was not the last prophet. (The Ahmadiyya are the subject of
a Human Rights Watch report to be published next month.) In Pakistan,
the Ahmadiyya have been declared infidels and many have been killed.
In Bangladesh, religious hardliners have burned mosques and books and
pressured the government to declare the sect non-Muslim. Last year,
the government agreed to ban Ahmadiyya literature; earlier this
month,
however, Bangladesh's high court stayed the ban pending further
consideration by the court.

But those who oppose the Ahmadiyya are not giving up. At a recent
rally in Dhaka, 10,000 protesters gathered outside an Ahmadiyya
mosque as one Islamic leader intoned from a parade float,
''Bangladesh's Muslims cast their vote to elect the current
government, and the current government is not paying any heed.''
Police officers in riot gear tightened their formation protecting the
mosque. ''Beware, we will throw you out of office if you do not meet
our demands,'' he said. ''No one will be able to stop the forward
march of the soldiers of Islam in Bangladesh.''

The Ahmadiyya are hardly the only group at risk. ''For the Hindus,
the last couple of years have been disastrous,'' says Ali Dayan Hasan
of Human Rights Watch. ''There are substantial elements within the
society and government itself that are advancing the idea that Hindus
need to be expelled.'' On the ground, attacks against Hindus include
beatings and rapes.

''Minority communities in the country are feeling less safe,'' said
Govind Acharya, Amnesty International's country specialist for
Bangladesh. ''The Hindus, the Ahmadiyya and the tribals in the
Chittagong Hill Tracts are all leaving. This demographic shift is the
most problematic for the identity and the future of the country.''

The permissiveness of at least some within the Bangladeshi government
and the police in allowing violent groups like Bangla Bhai's to
pursue their agendas has only increased the political legitimacy of
such groups. Mohammad Selimullah, the leader of a militant Islamist
group based across Bangladesh's eastern border in Myanmar, was
arrested in Chittagong early in 2001, and he admitted in court that
more than 500 jihadis had been training under him in Bangladesh. On
his computer, intelligence sources found photographs to be sent to
donors showing
Islamic soldiers at rest and at attention, armed with AK-47's and
wearing shiny new boots. Selimullah said that his group received
weapons from supporters in Libya and Saudi Arabia, among others.

Last spring in Chittagong, 10 truckloads of weapons -- the largest
arms seizure in Bangladesh's history -- were captured by the police
as they were being unloaded from trawlers. The tip-off most likely
came from Indian intelligence, which monitors the arms being sent to
Islamist separatist groups in India's northeast. Haroon Habib, a
leading journalist in the region, has written that a leader of the
government's local Islamist coalition was helping to hide the
weapons.

Several months later, under increased pressure from the European
Union and the United States to crack down on terror, Bangladeshi
security forces raided two camps in the Ukhia area belonging to Huji.
Local journalists say that both camps, which were not far from
Chittagong, have now been destroyed, but no one can get close enough
to be sure. What is certain is that the attack didn't drive the
militants out of the region. Four months ago, five more members of
Huji were arrested in Chittagong.

In this environment, Bangladesh's radical leaders have ratcheted up
their ambitions. Responding to the American invasion of Afghanistan,
supporters of the Islamic Oikya Jote (I.O.J.), the most radical party
in the governing coalition and a junior partner to the
Jamaat-e-Islami, chanted in the streets of Chittagong and Dhaka,
''Amra sobai hobo Taliban, Bangla hobe Afghanistan,'' which roughly
translates to ''We will be the Taliban, and Bangladesh will be
Afghanistan.''

The I.O.J. is considered a legitimate voice within Bangladeshi
politics. The I.O.J.'s chairman, Mufti Fazlul Haque Amini, who has
served as a member of Parliament for the past three years, says he
believes that secular law has failed Bangladesh and that it's time to
implement Sharia, the legal code of Islam. During our two hourlong
meetings, the mufti -- a welcoming and relatively open man with a
salt-and-pepper beard and teeth dyed red from chewing betel --
asked if he could take photographs and pass them along to the local
press to show his constituents that he is so powerful the Western
press now comes to him.

The mufti presides over his father-in-law's mosque and madrassa,
Jamiat-Qurania-Arabia, in Dhaka, where the traffic caused by 600,000
bicycle rickshaws, more than in any other city in the world, is so
intense that it can take hours to travel fewer than 10 miles from
Louis Kahn's ethereal Parliament -- a relic of a more hopeful period
in Bangladesh's democracy -- to the warren of lanes in the
old part of town where the mufti is based. At the mosque, he almost
overfills the armchair in which he stations himself. He admits that
as an Islamic state, Bangladesh still has far to go.

''As we are Muslim, naturally we want Bangladesh to be an Islamic
state and under Islamic law,'' the mufti said. Amini is the author of
books in Arabic,Bangla and Urdu. (He learned Urdu while completing
graduate work in a madrassa in Karachi, Pakistan.) He recently
completed a multivolume set of laws and edicts, or fatwas. The mufti
is renowned for his fatwas, which, he said, he issues almost every
day when people come to him with questions about the application of
religious law. The mufti has also issued fatwas against the secular
press when they investigate the rise of militant Islam in Bangladesh.
When he advocates punishment for those who offend Islam, he said, he
does not intend to preach violence. The young men of Huji who
attacked the poet Shamsur Rahman were studying in one of his
madrassas in Chittagong.

The mufti said that the only reason he is not a government minister
is that the current regime snubbed him out of fear as to how his
appointment would look. The West would see both him and Bangladesh as
too extremist. The mufti has been named in Indian intelligence
documents as a member of the central committee of Huji (itself linked
to Al Qaeda), an association he would, of course, deny. He is also
rumored to have close friends among the Afghan Taliban, which he
denies, while adding that it's better not to discuss the Afghan
Taliban, as they are so frequently misunderstood. Besides, he says as
the corner of his mouth twitches into a smile, the Taliban are
running all over his madrassa, as the word ''talib'' means only
student.

Outside his office, the sound of boys' voices reciting the Koran
rises and falls. Fifteen hundred students study at the madrassa, and
the mufti's party, the I.O.J., sponsors madrassas all over the
nation; how many, he claimed not to know. Financing, the mufti said,
comes mostly from Bangladesh itself, but some money also arrives from
friends throughout the Arab world.

Of all his political influence, the mufti is most proud of his
fatwas, which, he said, give him a means to speak out against those
who violate Islam. ''Whoever speaks against Islam, I issue a fatwa
against them to the government,'' he said. ''But the government says
nothing.'' He shook his head, frustrated. That's next on his agenda:
to pressure the government to recognize his religious injunctions.
''It's possible,'' he said, ''now more than ever.''

Eliza Griswold is a writer based in New York.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/23/magazine/23BANG.html







                
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