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[🇧🇩] Monitoring the political activities of BNP
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BNP wants to reinstate caretaker govt system
Says Tarique

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File photo of Tarique Rahman

BNP acting chairman Tarique Rahman yesterday said their party is willing to bring back the caretaker government system for elections to ensure the restoration of the people's voting rights.

"We want to reinstate the caretaker government system in the constitution to restore the people's right to vote," he said while exchanging views with BNP grassroots leaders and activists of Khulna division.

Stating that Bangladesh belongs to its citizens, the BNP leader said it is the people's justified democratic right to elect their representatives through the independent exercise of their voting rights.

He said the BNP introduced the caretaker government system in the constitution in 1996, replacing a partisan government, to safeguard the people's right to vote and ensure free and fair elections in the country.

"But in order to hang onto power, autocratic [Sheikh] Hasina removed it from the constitution and deprived the people of voting rights in three national elections," Tarique mentioned.

The BNP leader outlined the main objectives of their party's politics as ensuring security of the people, upholding freedom of speech, protecting the right to do business and trade peacefully, providing employment for youth, safeguarding the dignity and security of women, guaranteeing equal rights for all citizens regardless of religion, caste, or creed, whether they live on plains or hills, and establishing the rule of law throughout the country.

Tarique said the BNP's priorities also include ensuring a balance of power between the judiciary and executive branches, providing universal healthcare facilities, ensuring fair prices for agricultural products, and, above all, protecting the country's independence and sovereignty.

The BNP leader warned that their party will not tolerate any imprudent actions by a few wayward individuals within the party, regardless of who they are.

Tarique asked his party leaders to identify and resist those who dent the image of the party by not only expelling them from the party but also taking legal action against them.​
 
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‘Cannot move forward with AL’s broken system’
Says Tarique stressing the need for elections soon

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Stressing the need for elections as soon as possible, BNP's acting chairman, Tarique Rahman, has said that the country cannot move forward with the "broken system" put in place by the Awami League regime.

"The more we delay democratic elections taking place in Bangladesh, the more the broken systems instilled by the Awami League for their own gains will be exacerbated," Tarique wrote on his verified Facebook page last night.

"We cannot move forward in building a better Bangladesh when society-wide issues in public healthcare, education, difficulties faced by farmers, challenges for businesses, political biases in the judiciary and civil service exist."

Tarique said that only an elected government, chosen by the people through free and fair voting, can begin rebuilding the nation.

"The public's choice of representatives will be respected, and the representatives in turn must serve the public. Both sides must be involved actively in governance so that Bangladesh can ensure equality, inclusivity, and development for all," he wrote.​
 
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Tarique Rahman, 32 others acquitted in explosives case
Tarique Rahman warns of conspiracy

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Photo: Collected/File

A Gazipur court today acquitted 32 people, including BNP acting chairman Tarique Rahman, in an explosives case filed by Joydebpur police.

Judge Bahauddin Kazi of the Special Tribunal-3 of the 2nd Court of the District and Sessions Judge of Gazipur gave the order after a long hearing, former president of the Gazipur Bar Association and senior lawyer Dr Shahiduzzaman confirmed to The Daily Star.

According to court sources, a parked bus was set on fire in the Khaspara area of Monipur in Gazipur Sadar upazila in January 2015.

Over the incident, Joydebpur Police Station Sub-Inspector (SI) Dilip Chandra Sarkar filed a case against 18 named and 40-45 unidentified accused.

In August that year, Sub-Inspector (SI) Emdadul Haque submitted a charge sheet to the court naming BNP acting chairman Tarique Rahman and Manjurul Karim Rony, son of former Gazipur City Corporation mayor and late professor MA Mannan.

After a long hearing, the court acquitted all the accused from the case on Sunday as the case was proven to be false.

No lawyer represented the state during the hearing.

However, many lawyers including Dr Shahiduzzaman, Mehedi Hasan Ellis, Anwar Hossain, Nasir Uddin, Shafiqul Alam Milu were present for the defendant.​
 
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Why is BNP so hard-pressed for the election?
Mohiuddin Ahmad
Updated: 24 Nov 2024, 19: 26

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I read in the news that chief advisor of the interim government Professor Muhammad Yunus has said that if the political parties do not want reforms, he will hold the election and step down. He may have said this in a miff or in anger.

My question here is, Professor Yunus is not the owner of this country, nor are the political parties. The people are the owners of this country. Each party has a different aim, objective and agenda. They speak in their political interests.

The toppled Awami League and its allies milked the liberation war to the extreme for their material benefits. That business is now gone and so they are deliberately twisting Dr. Yunus’ words

They voice their demands. There are many political parties in Bangladesh at present. There were 39 political parties registered during the last election. A few more gained registration after 5 August.

Anyway, while all the political parties may not sing in the same tune, there is a degree of similarity among some. BNP is the largest of these parties. A sort vacuum prevails in the political arena. Those who were with Awami League have fled, or have burrowed themselves into holes, gone into hiding. It is still not clear whether Awami League will campaign for the election. There are differences of opinion among the political parties as to whether Awami League will even be able to take part in the election. Certain parties, BNP in particular, want Awami League in the election fray. Why could they possibly be wanting that?

My feeling is that, what will Awami League's dedicated voters do if Awami League doesn't join the election? Will they refrain from voting? If they don't vote, then the majority of the remaining votes will fall into BNP's lot, it is expected.

If Awami League's blind supporters cast their votes, they will certainly not vote for BNP. If they vote for any other party opposed to BNP, then the election equation may turn around. So naturally BNP will want Awami League to contest in the election and that no other party clinches those votes. Perhaps that's the calculation that BNP is making.

If the election is held soon, then BNP stands to gain in the prevailing political vacuum. The later the election is held, the more slippery will it be for BNP. The signs are already visible. Awami League may not be there now, but the misdeeds that it would carry out remain in place. And many of those misdeeds are being carried out by BNP men.

The media reports that many BNP men at the local level are being arrested for extortion, forceful occupation and other misdeeds. Recently a member of BNP’s central committee was arrested on charges of murder. BNP has expelled him. There is no dearth of people to carry out misdeeds in Bangladesh. They do not belong to any one party, but are sheltered and condoned by various parties. Awami League would say infiltrators are responsible for such deeds. They would say this in order to shrug of liability. BNP may do the same. But people do not believe this.

Mugging, extortion and killing continue. This trend will increase. Along with that, BNP’s popularity will begin to gradually wane. BNP fears that the later the election is held, the political arena will grow more adverse for them.

In this country no one is in politics in the interests of the people to place a smile on the face of the people. Everyone has vested interests. They will proceed accordingly.

BNP is not directly talking about the election, but wants a roadmap. Roadmap means, fixing a schedule for the election in advance. An election roadmap wasn’t a priority on the interim government’s agenda. There are certain centres of power in the government. One of these comprises the coordinators of the Students against Discrimination Movement. They do not want elections at the moment. They want reforms. Their question is, did not many people lay down their lives, so many people get wounded, just to put one party in the place of another? The state system must be changed first.

At the outset Professor Yunus would also speak strongly about reforms. He had even said, “First we have to recognise what the students have said, that we have pushed the “reset” button. Everything is gone, the past has certainly gone. Now we have to build things anew.” The toppled Awami League misinterpreted this as a denial of the liberation war.

The toppled Awami League and its allies milked the liberation war to the extreme for their material benefits. That business is now gone and so they are deliberately twisting Dr. Yunus’ words. But to me, his words spoke of a complete change in the manner that the state had been run in the past, the manner in which politics has been run. In other, it meant a severance from the pre-5 August trend and building a new order.

What will the benefit be if politics continues in the manner as before? It will simply means a huge movement every few years, an uprising, more lives lost. Then back to square one.

The political parties that are eager for power are prone to say that reforms are not the mandate of this government. This government’s task is to hold the election. My point is, this government doesn’t even have the mandate to hold the election. The government and the political parties must be able to read what the people want. The political parties are failing to read what the people want. They are learning nothing. The political parties are not being able to keep pace with where the people’s aspirations have soared.

BNP is supposed to wait for the election. After all, they could not display the power to topple the government. We can look to two examples here. On the day that BNP’s chairperson Khaleda Zia was arrested in 2018, the police faced no obstruction in taking her to jail. When BNP held a grand rally on 28 October last year, the police and the intelligence agencies dispersed them with tear gas and sound grenades. The gathering at BNP’s rally had been huge.

The political parties are lucky that the students’ movement reached a certain outcome with the support of the people. A sense of fresh air blows across the country now. Everyone can speak out. They must realise that the July-August movement was not under the banner of any political party. Had it been under the banner of a political party, it would never have been successful.

We need to think extensively about the election. The commitment of the political parties will be required regarding the reforms that are being mulled over. The government says that once the reform commissions hand in their reports, these will be discussed with the political parties. The election road map will automatically emerge then. So, why all this hue and cry?

In this country no one is in politics in the interests of the people to place a smile on the face of the people. Everyone has vested interests. They will proceed accordingly. For the past 53 years we have heard that the political parties speak for the people. Actually they speak in the interests of the cronies, their party and their party leader.

Over here, the political parties are the middlemen between the people and the state. I am not using the term ‘middleman’ in a negative or positive sense. This is simply reality. Each and every political party is a syndicate. The bigger the party, the bigger the syndicate.

There needs to be public deliberations on where we want to see the Bangladesh state in five years, in ten years. This state is of 170 million people. We cannot yet again lease out this state to any vested group or political party.

* Mohiuddin Ahmad is a writer and researcher

* This column appeared in the print and online edition of Prothom Alo and has been rewritten for the English edition by Ayesha Kabir​
 
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Conspiracies still on: Tarique Rahman
BSS
Published :
Nov 26, 2024 21:45
Updated :
Nov 26, 2024 21:45

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Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) Acting Chairman Tarique Rahman said though the dictator has fled the country, her allies are still hatching a conspiracy.

“Though the dictator has fled, allies are still in the country. Conspiracies are still going on,” he said while addressing virtually a day-long 3rd divisional workshop 2024 on “31 points for repairing state structure and public engagement.”

BNP’s divisional training affairs committee organised the event at the District Shilpakala Academy Auditorium in the city.

Tarique Rahman urged the party men to remain vigilant against the conspiracies, saying if the BNP gets harmed, the country will get harmed.

“If we can continue the democratic process, we can take the country forward and keep the people safe,” he said.

Tarique Rahman said the path of democracy in Bangladesh has been affected in various ways. In the past 16 years, many people have been victims of enforced disappearance and murders; he said more than 1,500 people were martyred in the mass-uprising of July-August.

Tarique Rahman said 31-point state reform proposals were declared on behalf of all the parties involved in the struggle to restore democracy in the country.

These 31-point proposals include the maximum ones for repairing the state structure, and if any more logical proposals are placed, those will be added, he said.

After holding talks on the 31-point at the division level, it will have to be taken to district, upazila, and union levels to allow the peopleto know about it, he said.

“Many things are written beautifully in books, but people have to implement them. So if we have good intentions, we can do something good,” he said.

“If accountability can be ensured, these proposals can be implemented. If the continuity of democracy is maintained, accountability will be created. For this reason, we will continue the democratic process at any cost,” said Tarique Rahman.

A question-answer session was held during the workshop as the BNP acting chairman replied to questions from the party men and audiences on the 31-point.​
 
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It’s time to rebuild the nation
Says Tarique

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File photo: Collected

BNP acting chairman Tarique Rahman said yesterday that it is time to concentrate on rebuilding the nation as the country is no longer under dictatorship.

He made the remark while delivering his speech as the chief guest after the final match of the "Shaheed Zia Memorial Football Tournament-2024" at the Shaheed Abul Kashem College ground in Barobari, Lalmonirhat Sadar, in the afternoon.

Highlighting the importance of nurturing talent across various sectors, Tarique said, "There are many talented doctors and engineers in Bangladesh. However, developing skilled professionals should not be limited to these fields. We must also cultivate skilled sportspersons and artistes. A well-rounded society needs individuals excelling in their respective talents."

He stressed that individuals should be identified for their specific aptitudes and supported to reach national and international standards. "By focusing on their strengths, whether academic, professional, or artistic, we can develop a skilled generation."

Reflecting on the legacy of his father, Ziaur Rahman, Tarique pointed out initiatives such as "Notun Kuri", a programme designed to discover talent in various disciplines. "If the BNP forms a government in the future, we will reinstate programmes like Notun Kuri to identify and train talented individuals to meet national and international standards."

Ensuring that players excel in international competitions, Tarique proposed focusing on honing their skills in their chosen sport.

He also emphasised the importance of skill development for future generations. "Shaheed President Ziaur Rahman established the Shishu Academy to ensure a bright future for children. We must continue building on his vision to shape a skilled and capable generation that can contribute nationally and internationally."

The programme was presided over by former deputy minister and Organising Secretary of the BNP Executive Committee Asadul Habib Dulu. BNP Standing Committee Member Mirza Abbas and Joint Secretary General Shahid Uddin Chowdhury Annie attended as special guests.​
 
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