By P. K. Balachandran
India-Bangladesh relations have seen ups and downs in the past 50 years, though it has stabilized somewhat since Sheikh Hasina became Bangladesh Prime Minister in 2008.
New Delhi has taken in its stride, Dhaka’s growing economic relations with Beijing through the latter’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). On her part, Sheikh Hasina has curbed the activities of anti-India and anti-Hindu Islamic radicals and terrorists and has completely stopped sheltering Assamese separatists. Though, India’s failure to deliver on the Teesta river waters sharing issue continues to irk Dhaka, it appears to have put it on the backburner.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s two-day visit to Bangladesh, which concluded on Saturday (27), was a high water mark in bilateral ties in recent times. Modi graciously conferred the Gandhi Peace Prize on Bangladesh’s founder, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, paid homage at the latter’s grave in his native village Tongipura, and gifted 1.2 million doses of the India-made COVID-19 vaccine in addition to the 3.2 million doses already gifted. He also gifted 109 Life Support Ambulances.
Cooperation in the educational and connectivity fields is set to expand.
The Bangladeshi mainstream media, generally critical of India and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) over its anti-Muslim Citizenship Amendment Act and the National Register of Citizens, had no adverse remarks to make during the visit, though social media carried criticisms.
However, the emergence of religion-based communal politics in West Bengal and Bangladesh could turn out to be spoilers.
In Bangladesh, militant Islamic communalism had been dormant due to firm action taken by the Hasina government in the 2016 Holey Artisan Bakery massacre case. But now, there are signs of a re-emergence of Islamic groups, with members of Hefazat-e-Islam staging protest riots in Dhaka, Chittagong and Brahmanbaria against the presence of Modi in the Independence Day celebrations. The riots resulted in five deaths in police firing.
According to the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), many leaders and activists of different banned militant outfits like the Hizbut Tahrir, Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), Ansarullah Bangla Team and Harkatul Jihad have resurfaced. These outfits have put up posters in several areas on Dhaka urging the Muslim Ummah to establish an Islamic Caliphate and have said they are planning a month-long propaganda campaign for the establishment of a Caliphate.
The Hefazat-e-Islam has an on-going anti-Bangabandhu statue campaign which led to the burning of 80 Hindu houses in the Sunamganj in the Sylhet district in northern Bangladesh. Earlier, the Hefazat got Sheikh Hasina remove a statue of Justice in front of the Supreme Court, featuring a lady clad in a white sari holding the scale of justice. Hasina herself said the depiction was inappropriate. Hefazat was her ally then. The link broke after the death of its aged Supremo, Shah Ahmad Shafi.
Although some see a Pakistani hand in the revival of militant Islam, many commentators like Brig. Gen. Shahedul Anam Khan, say the real reason is the shrinking space for dissent in Hasina’s Bangladesh. Although Hasina is the driving force behind Bangladesh’s remarkable economic growth and a feeling of general wellbeing among the public, she and her party activists have been intolerant of dissent. Many critics have been made to disappear and many bashed up. The Digital Security Act, meant to stamp out cybercrime has been used to quell dissent.
Gen. Anam Khan points out that Bangladesh has slipped one position in the World Press Freedom Index to 146. “While it has climbed four notches in the democracy index, there is little to celebrate on that account because Bangladesh is still classified in the ‘hybrid regime’ category, which means that substantial irregularities often prevent the elections from being free and fair,” he is quoted as saying in The Daily Star citing a report by the research and analysis division of the Economist Group..
More than 1,000 cases have been filed in Bangladesh under the Digital Security Act since it was implemented in 2018. Bangladeshi human rights monitor Odhikar claims the Digital Security Act is mostly being used by businessmen and politicians for targeting critics. Around 550 people have disappeared in the country since the Awami League government was sworn in 11 years ago.
There is no legitimate political opposition in Bangladesh. The Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) is in tatters partly due to the prolonged incarceration of its leader Begum Khaled Zia on corruption charges and partly due to its boycott of the last parliamentary elections. Gen. Khan says the gap is being filled by religious groups which do not claim to be political organizations, but nonetheless command the support and influence of a large segment of the people in the country. They offer opinions and take positions on national issues that go down well with some sections of society.
He says that despite claims to the contrary, courting these groups by the political parties and hobnobbing with them to curry their support (since they command large vote banks) is a common political strategy. Compromising with these elements has become a part of the policy for ensuring political success.
The emergence of the Hindu right wing in West Bengal and Assam could be another spoiler. The BJP is set to come to power in Assam, where anti-Muslim feelings have already been whipped by the BJP and before that, by the Assam Movement against alleged illegal immigrants from Muslim Bangladesh. The BJP manifesto for the current elections in Assam, has promised laws against both ‘Love Jihad’ and ‘Land Jihad’ (alleged land grabbing by Muslim immigrants). Assam has been the epicentre of the anti-Muslim National Register of Citizens and the Citizenship Amendment Act.
If the BJP comes to power in West Bengal or even comes second in the on-going electoral race, the politics of the State will be marked by Hindutvic impulses which could impact on the Muslim minority in the State and Muslim-majority Bangladesh.
West Bengal has become communally sensitive, especially since the decline of the Left movement and the emergence of the Trinamool Congress as the ruling party in 2011. In 2013,under the stewardship of Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, there were 106 instances of communal violence in West Bengal compared to the previous years, which had an average of 15-20 each year.
In December 2016, Muslims in Dhulagarh in the Howrah district were not able to hold the Mawlid procession, and a riot had broken out causing destruction of Muslims’ property. In May 2020, the use of a public toilet by a suspected Muslim COVID patient in Telinipara, in the Hooghly district, led to a mob attack on all Muslims. As in Dhulagarh, no politician of any party, intervened to aid the Muslim victims.
Regrouping Islamic radicals in Bangladesh and rising communalism in West Bengal and Assam could prove to be an explosive mixture that could derail the current determined bid to improve India-Bangla relations. The need of the hour is to check this pernicious tendency quickly and firmly.
-ENCL