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Bangladesh
Elected dictatorship
2015-01-06
FOR all practical purposes, Bangladesh is now an elected dictatorship. A year ago, Prime Minister Hasina Wajid stole the general election and then went on to consolidate her rule by crushing all dissent, wreaking vendetta on her foes and hanging opposition leaders through a judicial process condemned as flawed by world rights bodies.
And if you can't believe the world's rights bodies who can you trust?
On Sunday, the Bangladesh National Party’s head office was sealed and its leader, Khaleda Zia, confined to the party office for what the government called her own security. The real reason was to crush the countrywide strike called by Ms Zia to demand a fresh election, because Ms Wajid had abolished the constitutional clause providing for a caretaker, neutral government to hold the polls. This was a provocation to the opposition, because since 1991 general elections in Bangladesh had been held by caretaker governments. No wonder, the BNP and 17 other parties boycotted the polls in which Ms Wajid’s Awami League ‘won’ 153 of the National Assembly’s 300 seats because the opposition fielded no candidates.
If you don't show up you don't win.
The fraudulent majority in parliament has since then enabled the ruling AL to persecute the opposition.
They didn't show up at the polls but they ran daily riots, with the Jamaat's cadres leading the way.
The most blatant form of the government’s use of courts to destroy all dissent is to be seen in the flawed trials of many opposition leaders, especially those belonging to the Jamaat-i-Islami, which has for long been waging a campaign against the AL government.
Like from before the time the country came into existence.
Several JI leaders have been hanged for their alleged war crimes during the 1971 insurgency, and many more leaders, including those belonging to the BNP, are on trial.
Their "alleged" war crimes were proven in court despite all the attempts at witness intimidation and in some cases murder.
The BNP-led strike may not lead to a fresh election,
They weren't able to derail the last one.
but the violence seen on Monday could snowball and throw Bangladesh into anarchy.
Kind of like a replay of the days running up to last election.
Persecution of the opposition and judicial farce are not what Bangladesh needs.
... sez Pakistain...
The rivalry between the two leaders and periodic strikes have done enormous harm to Bangladesh’s fledgling democracy and have hurt its economy. What the country needs is national reconciliation and peace to consolidate democracy and speed up economic development.
What it needs is less hereditary political leadership and a lot less involvement of religious parties in a secular state.
Posted by:

#2  The original greek Tyrants were elected. Just cause your elected doesn't make you any less evil.
Posted by: Silentbrick   2015-01-06 21:53  

#1  Most dictatorships are elected these days. Even those that aren't feel the need to periodically stage elections for show. Saying that a particular leader or government has been 'democratically elected' answers nothing.
Posted by: Iblis   2015-01-06 11:07  

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