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Green Crescent over Sonar Bangladesh |
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BY ELIZA GRISWOLD |
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Why Americans
should care about the increasingly radical insurgency in
Bangladesh |
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When Bangladesh's first two suicide bombers blew
themselves up recently, the attacks marked a significant
escalation in the growing militant insurgency that threatens
an already wobbly state. Now, at long last, the world is
beginning to pay attention to the spate of bombings,
killings, and threats against judges, lawyers, journalists,
teachers, professors, politicians, and religious minorities
by the banned jihadist group Jama'atul Mujahideen
Bangladesh, among others, for the past five years.
Faced with increased pressure at home and abroad, the
Bangladeshi National Party, the leader in the four-party
coalition government, is finally rounding up the
terrorists—more than 600 so far—and scrutinizing its
alliance with two Islamist parties within the ruling
coalition that are suspected of having links to the
militants. But the government will have to end the
long-standing tradition of using young men to foment
violence for political ends if it wants to ensure that the
nation of 152 million—the world's third-most-populous Muslim
country—does not become another Afghanistan or, more aptly,
another Darfur, where the rebels whose presence the
government has long tolerated have seized virtual control.
One of the problems in routing Bangladesh's militants is
that sectarian violence is so deeply entrenched in the
nation's brief history, and religious division has been used
to justify violence since the country gained its
independence in 1971. Bangladesh's brand of Islam has always
been overwhelmingly moderate, and the constitution enshrines
religious tolerance, but as Tasleema Nasreen writes in her
1993 novel Shame (she had to flee the country after its
publication), rural governments outside Dhaka have relied on
the fury of young jobless men they call cadres to bully
locals into supporting them and to drive religious and
political minorities off valuable land. This bullying has
often taken the form of the targeted use of rape, and since
independence, many cadres have used violence between Hindus
and Muslims to mask and legitimize their bid for political
power. During the last nationwide election in 2001, in one
northern village, at least five Hindu women were gang-raped
in an explicit bid to control the town's votes, according to
one of the victims. (The victim who told me this story had
her eyes cut out by her attackers so that she could not
identify them after the rape.)
Although Bangladesh's GDP is currently on an uptick, much of
the country still lives on less than a dollar a day. This is
one reason thousands of Bangladeshis left the country in the
1980s. Some traveled to the Middle East and returned as
born-again Muslims. In the most remote villages, a stringent
new strain of devotion became increasingly evident. Other
young men traveled for schooling, primarily to Pakistan.
Because religious scholarships were the easiest to come by,
they ended up in many of the religious schools that
encouraged their students to take jobs as jihadists in
Afghanistan. There, a select handful created a militant
group, Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami, known as Huji, reportedly
at the behest of Osama Bin Laden himself.
Since their return in the early 1990s, those veterans of the
Afghan war have been calling for the implementation of
Islamic law in Bangladesh. Because the vast majority of
Bangladeshis are devout Muslims who support their civil
government and society, no one paid much attention to these
fanatics for a decade or so. Nor to the fact that in 1998,
when Bin Laden first issued his fatwa declaring war on the
West, one of its five signatories was Fazlul Rehman, a
still-shadowy figure linked to Huji and, according to Bin
Laden's fatwa, the head of global jihad in Bangladesh.
Neither the current government nor the opposition parties
paid adequate attention to the rise of religious militancy
or to the social problems underlying it. This year, for the
fifth time in a row, Bangladesh was named the most corrupt
country on earth by Transparency International, a
Berlin-based anti-corruption watchdog group. Almost once a
week, hartals, or strikes, most often led by the two
endlessly feuding main political parties, shut down the
country. During a hartal, leaving one's house is forbidden,
and anyone traveling on the roads runs the risk of being
killed. It is impossible to go to work, to school, or even
to the hospital.
As a result, the young thugs of the Jama'atul Mujahideen
Bangladesh and other militant groups virtually control
several remote districts. In Rajshahi, where the insurgency
is at its worst, a political thug who claimed to have fought
in Afghanistan attempted to install a Taliban regime. He
went into hiding last year after U.S. pressure finally
forced the government to issue a warrant for his arrest.
In the run-up to the 2006 national elections, political
violence masked by religious extremism and widespread
corruption will flourish unless the international community
pays greater attention. Bangladesh doesn't need a democratic
revolution; they've already had one. The vast majority of
Bangladeshis do not support the militants nor do they want
Islamic law.
"It used to be when the mullahs came asking for money, we'd
shoo them away. Now, I'd pay," one devout and moderate
Muslim professional told me. "It won't be long before I get
a letter telling me that my wife and daughter need to wear
burqas," he said. "What will I do? I'll have no choice;
they'll have to wear them."
What Bangladeshis want, he said, is continued international
pressure on the BNP to distance itself from the militancy.
What they want are monitors for next year's elections who
don't just sit in the polling places but go to the villages
to make sure that the patterns of political
intimidation—including the widespread use of rape—are
broken. What they want is a newfound international interest
that takes non- governmental organizations into the rural
areas where 90 percent of the country lives. All these steps
are possible and much more cost-effective for the United
States than simply quadrupling the size of the CIA station
in Dhaka.
To most of us, Bangladesh seems like a remote mess—poor and
devoid of natural resources. The country has been plagued by
sectarian violence since its independence, but the nature of
that violence is changing, and we ignore the rise of
militant Islam there at our own peril. The jihadists will
continue to do their best to make our civil intervention
look dangerous and impractical. Our disinterest is their
most effective weapon.
(Eliza Griswold reported from Bangladesh earlier this
year. Her article first appeared in The New Yorker and The Slate) |
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The views expressed herein are the writers' own and do not necessarily reflect
those of despardes.com |
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Eliza Griswold is a freelance jounalist and writer
based in New York. She is a regular contributor to
the New Yorker. In April 2005, she was
arrested and expelled from Pakistan for attempting
to visit North and South Waziristan.
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