Showing posts with label Democracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Democracy. Show all posts

Dec 5, 2021

জন ক্ল্যানসি: হংকংয়ের অকুতোভয় গণতন্ত্রকামী ও মানবাধিকার প্রবক্তা

John J. Clancy (Photo: https://hotsewai.com.hk)

জানুয়ারি ৬, ২০২১। হংকংয়ের স্বনামধন্য আইনগত সহায়তা প্রতিষ্ঠান হো সে ওয়াই এন্ড পার্টনার্সের সামনে একদল সাংবাদিক অধীর আগ্রহে অপেক্ষমান। তাদের সামনে দিয়েই পুলিশ প্রখ্যাত আমেরিকান আইনজীবী জন জে. ক্ল্যানসিকে গ্রেফতার করে গাড়িতে তুলে নিয়ে চলে গেল। 

হংকংয়ের মানবাধিকার ও গণতন্ত্রের প্রবাদপুরুষ ৭৯ বছর বয়সী ক্ল্যানসি যখন ক্রাচে ভর করে পুলিশ প্রহরায় এগিয়ে যাচ্ছিলেন, তখন অপেক্ষমান সাংবাদিকদের মধ্য থেকে একজন প্রশ্ন ছুঁড়ে দিয়ে জানতে চাইলেন জনগণের উদ্দেশ্যে তার কোন কিছু বলার আছে কিনা। 

কিছুটা নিচু গলায় কিন্তু স্পষ্টস্বরে ক্ল্যানসি বললেন, “হংকংয়ের গণতন্ত্র ও মানবাধিকার সমুন্নত রাখতে আমাদের সবাইকে কাজ করে যেতে হবে।”

সারা বিশ্বের মানবাধিকার কর্মী ও গনতন্ত্রপন্থীগণ ৬ জানুয়ারিকে হংকংয়ের গণতান্ত্রিক ইতিহাসের “অন্ধকারতম দিন” হিসেবে আখ্যায়িত করেছেন। কেননা সেদিন ক্ল্যানসিসহ ৫৫ জন গণতন্ত্রপন্থী রাজনীতিবিদ ও কর্মীকে ক্যারি ল্যামের নেতৃত্বাধীন হংকং সরকার গ্রেফতার করে। এদেরকে সকলকে বেইজিংয়ের কমিউনিস্ট সরকারের মদদে গত বছরের জুনে প্রণীত কুখ্যাত জাতীয় নিরাপত্তা আইন ভঙ্গের অভিযোগে আটক করা হয়। চীনের অন্তর্ভুক্ত এ স্বায়ত্বশাসিত নগরীতে গণতান্ত্রিক আন্দোলনের উপর এত বৃহৎ পরিসরের দমন-পীড়ন এক নজিরবিহীন ঘটনা।

জন ক্ল্যানসি এশিয়ান হিউম্যান রাইটস কমিশনের চেয়ারম্যান এবং গণতন্ত্রপন্থী রাজনৈতিক সংগঠন পাওয়ার ফর ডেমোক্রেসির কোষাধ্যক্ষ। তার বিরুদ্ধে অভিযোগ তিনি “সরকারকে অস্থিতিশীল করা ও রাষ্ট্রীয় ক্ষমতা দখল” করার এক ষড়যন্ত্রের সঙ্গে লিপ্ত ছিলেন।

পাওয়ার ফর ডেমোক্রেসি সংগঠনটি হংকংয়ের স্থগিত নির্বাচনে বিরোধীদলীয় প্রার্থী মনোনয়নের লক্ষ্যে ২০২০ সালের জুলাই মাসে একটি অনানুষ্ঠানিক, স্বাধীন ভোটের আয়োজন করেছিল।

জন ক্ল্যানসি বেইজংপন্থী ক্যারি ল্যামের নেতৃত্বাধীন হংকং সরকারের আমলে গ্রেফতার হওয়া প্রথম বিদেশী নাগরিক। আটক হওয়ার একদিন পর তিনি জামিনে মুক্তি লাভ করেন।

এই গ্রেফতার ও আটক হওয়া ক্ল্যানসির জীবনে এক অভুতপূর্ব ঘটনা। ক্যাথলিক ধর্মযাজক থেকে মানবাধিকার আইনজীবী বনে যাওয়া ক্ল্যানসি তার জীবনের পাঁচ দশকেরও বেশি সময় এই সাবেক ব্রিটিশ উপনিবেশে কাটিয়ে দিয়েছেন। তাই তিনি নিজেকে হংকংয়ের বাসিন্দা হিসেবে পরিচয় দিতে বেশি পছন্দ করেন।

সাউথ চায়না মর্নিং পোস্টকে দেওয়া এক সাক্ষাৎকারে ক্ল্যানসি বলেন যে তিনি পুলিশের হাতে আটক হওয়ার ঘটনায় “ভয় পান নি, কিন্তু বিস্মিত হয়েছেন।”

তিনি বলেন, “আপনি যখন মানুষের প্রতি ভালোবাসা ও কল্যাণ কামনায় অনুপ্রাণিত হয়ে কোন কাজ করেন, তখন আপনার ভয় পাবার কিছু নেই। আমি ভুল কোন কিছু করি নি। আমি সব সময় মনে করে এসেছি গণতন্ত্র ও মানবাধিকারের জন্য কাজ করা অতি উত্তম। মানুষের প্রতি ভালোবাসা এবং সামাজিক, রাজনৈতিক এবং সাংস্কৃতিক কাঠামো যা মানুষের জীবনকে নানাভাবে প্রভাবিত করে, তার বিষয়ে যারা উদ্বিগ্ন তাদের প্রতি ভালোবাসা থেকে অনুপ্রাণিত হয়ে আমি কাজ করে গেছি।”

ক্ল্যানসির অকুতোভয় বাণী যেন তার সুদীর্ঘ, বর্ণাঢ্য ও কর্মময় জীবনের সংক্ষিপ্ত প্রতিবিম্ব। তিনি তার প্রায় গোটা জীবন নানা শ্রেণীর মানুষের প্রতি ভালোবাসা, বিশেষ করে হংকং ও অন্যান্য স্থানে যারা সুবিধাবঞ্চিত এবং দু:খ-কষ্ট জর্জরিত, তাদের তাদের সেবায় কাটিয়ে দিয়েছেন।

Jan 2, 2020

A dispassionate farewell to a solemn year in Bangladesh

Bangladesh's Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and her party, the Awami League, have become intolerant of criticism since winning their third straight election in 2018. (Photo by Prakash Singh/AFP)

Every time users log into Facebook they are prompted to post “what’s on your mind” or “what have you been up to.”
Christmas is only a few days away and the year is diminishing fast so it is a good time to reflect on what Bangladesh, and the Church in particular, have encountered in 2019 and what 2020 might have in store.

Feb 9, 2018

Bangladesh faces spring of discontent ahead of election

Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) leader Khaleda Zia speaks at a press conference in Dhaka on Feb. 7. She proclaimed her innocence of corruption ahead of a court verdict that authorities fear could spark violence. (Photo by Munir Uz Zaman/AFP)
February is one of the most pleasant months in Bangladesh. Besides enjoyable weather, it features a month-long book fair and a commemoration program dedicated to Language Movement heroes of Feb. 21, 1952. It also showcases the colorful spring festival, Valentine's Day and many other cultural feasts.    
But this year, February has come to make Bangladeshis visibly tense and scared.
After a few years of relative peace and stability, Bangladesh is bracing for a political storm poised to hit the entire Muslim-majority nation of 160 million.
A Dhaka court is due to deliver a verdict on Feb. 8 in a corruption case against Khaleda Zia, chief of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), the second largest political party. 

Dec 19, 2017

Dark clouds hang over Bangladesh judiciary and democracy

Surendra Kumar Sinha, former Chief Justice of Bangladesh Supreme Court (Photo: Dhaka Tribune)

A Bangladeshi photographer in late July took a shot of a crow flying into a dark storm cloud over the nation’s Supreme Court building.
The photograph, beautiful in itself, came to be seen as both prophetic and highly symbolic.
This was because Chief Justice Surendra Kumar Sinha, 66, was subsequently forced to resign, two months before his due retirement, after a government campaign of character assassination. 

Aug 23, 2017

Bullying Bangladesh govt clamping down on free speech



Bangladeshi activists shout slogans as they march in the street protesting the deaths of secular publishers and bloggers, in Dhaka, in this file photo. (Photo by Munir uz Zaman/AFP)
The Arab crisis surrounding Qatar and the demands by the Saudi Arabia-led campaign to shut down its influential Al-Jazeera news agency shines a light on the growing threats against freedom of speech in the region.
David Kaye, the United Nations special rapporteur on freedom of opinion and expression, described the demand as a "blow to media pluralism" in a recent statement.
As media freedom continues to plummet in the wake of populist, authoritarian leaders in Europe and America, such as Donald Trump, Digital Content Next, an influential media alliance that includes the BBC, The GuardianThe New York Times and Washington Post, has unequivocally leaped to the defense of Al-Jazeera.
Meanwhile, in Bangladesh, a war is raging, both covertly and publicly, against free speech despite the constitution ensuring its people freedom of expression.
Attacks on media and freethinking
Increasingly arbitrary restrictions have been placed on media and written works in Bangladesh by each regime since it gained independence from Pakistan in 1971. The current austere regulations imposed by the ruling Awami League, the party that led the struggles for independence and has been in power since 2008, has surpassed those of its predecessors.
The government, led by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina came to power after a controversial election on Jan. 5, 2014 boycotted by the major opposition parties. The absence of an effective political opposition has allowed the increasingly authoritarian rulers to adopt a policy of muzzling dissent.
The state apparatus has forced several newspapers and online sites to shut down or curtail their operations, pulled the plug on two television stations, while half a dozen prominent journalists are being hounded with criminal charges.
According to Ain-O-Salish Kendra, a Dhaka-based rights organization, 117 journalists experienced abuse and harassment in 2016, including nine at the hands of government forces and 20 who faced police charges.
The Committee to Protect Journalists, meanwhile, says 21 journalists have been killed since 1992, including 16 with impunity. Horrific murders of seven secular bloggers by Islamic militants since 2013 add to the tally of egregious acts.
The combined onslaught of restrictions and attacks on freedom of speech mean Bangladesh has scored very poorly in a 2017 report by Freedom House, a U.S.-based democracy and media freedom monitor, with the status "not free" attributed to the South Asian state.
Aside from infrequent and ineffective public protests by rights groups such as Amnesty International and the Committee to Protect Journalists and Reporters Without Borders, journalists and freethinkers in Bangladesh have no good friends to defend or protect them.
Muzzling dissent and intimidation
Last year, Mahfuz Anam, editor of leading Bangladeshi English newspaper the Daily Star, came under fire from the government after he conceded in a TV interview he had published unsubstantiated reports of corruption fed by the military intelligence agency during an army-backed state of emergency, 2007-2008.
Prime Minister Hasina called for Anam's resignation, while her son called for his prosecution for treason. This encouraged Awami League activists to file 62 criminal defamation and 17 sedition cases against Anam in 53 courts across the country. The lawsuits altogether totaled over US$8 billion.
Anam was forced to move across the country to secure bail orders before the High Court ruled against the court cases.
Matiur Rahman, editor of Prothom Alo (First Light), Bangladesh's highest-selling Bengali daily, and journalists associated with the paper are currently facing court charges for criminal defamation and "hurting religious sentiments."
Many believe the ire against the country's top two newspapers is payback for criticizing the government for failing to hold free and fair elections in 2014. The two papers have experienced significant financial setbacks thanks to the government wrath.
In August 2015, the military intelligence agency reportedly ordered some 20 large companies not to advertise in the Daily Star or Prothom Alo. The ban was allegedly triggered by their respective reports on the killings of five men in the restive Chittagong Hill Tracts. They labeled the slain as "indigenous peoples" rather than "terrorists," as the army officials would have preferred.
Overnight, the papers lost 30 percent of their advertising income, putting their very existence at stake. The government and military have denied allegations of the ban order, but it continues today.
The government's actions have clearly sent a chill down the spines of the media establishment. None of their peers have dared to report on the unwritten and unlawful ban. A senior correspondent at the Daily Star recently claimed in a private meeting that the paper's reporters are "unofficially banned" from attending events with Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.
Abuse of restrictive, ambiguous laws
Bangladesh has a British colonial-era 1898 code of criminal procedure in which articles 295-298 rule that anyone who offends the religious sentiment of its citizens be punished.
This law doesn't provide any clear-cut definition of religious sentiment, nor how religious sentiment can be hurt. Clearly however, it is widely abused by the state and non-state actors, including Islamic radicals, against journalists and so-called atheist bloggers to intimidate them and to force them from writing on radicalism and any cohesion between politics and religion.
Section 57 of the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Act 2013 has made it the most draconian law against freedom of speech in Bangladesh's modern history. The law makes it illegal to publish any material over the internet that would "deteriorate law and order," prejudice the image of the state or an individual or defame religion. It gives police the powers to make an arrest without a warrant, with a maximum sentencing of 14 years' jail time and a fine of 1 million taka (US$12,288).
This law has been used to harass journalists, bloggers, writers and publishers in recent years. In 2015, a disabled journalist was arrested for reporting on Hindu property-grabbing by a Muslim government minister, while four bloggers were arrested for "hurting religious sentiment."
Amid the criticism at home and abroad, the government recently decided to drop Section 57 of the ICT law. Now, activists and critics have been alarmed with the forthcoming Digital Security Act, where this repressive law is poised to make comeback in a reworded format.
Last year, the Foreign Donations (Voluntary Activities) Regulation Act 2016 was passed equivocally. It allows the NGO Bureau — a state body under the Prime Minister's Office — to suspend registration or to close an organization down if it makes any "derogatory" remarks about the constitution or "constitutional bodies," which includes the parliament, the election commission, the comptroller and auditor general, the attorney general's office, the public service commission and the judiciary.
Critics say the law is aimed at silencing outspoken non-government agencies that press government to check on corruption, to ensure good governance and human rights.
While Islamic militants targeted secular bloggers and writers for their criticisms of religious malpractices, especially of Islam, the government didn't stand beside them. Instead, the prime minister and police chief publicly admonished the writers for crossing a line.
Amidst a dark atmosphere and death threats, more than a dozen bloggers and freethinkers have fled the country and settled in Europe and America. Those who couldn't leave have employed self-censorship in their writings and continue to maintain a low profile.
A blow to democracy and development
Bangladesh had endured 15 years of military rule before 1990. Yet, the country made significant strides in socio-economic development over recent decades, including almost self-sufficient food production, poverty reduction, lowering maternal and infant mortality, and almost 100 percent primary school enrollment.
A big credit for these advancements goes to a vibrant media, the tireless activities of development groups and critical appraisal by civil society groups. Despite the dirty-rotten, blood-feuding politics between the two major political parties, the fledgling democracy has thrived thanks to public support for free speech and media freedom.
Thus, the growing threat to free speech, from both the state and non-state actors, undermines Bangladesh's democratization and development progress. Bangladesh needs to wake up and the international community must act on restoring free speech before it's too late.
END

Aug 22, 2017

In Bangladesh, murders of atheist bloggers show dangers of apathy








Hundreds of students and secular activists this week peacefully marched in Sylhet, a city in northeastern Bangladesh. They gathered to mourn and to protest the heinous killing of atheist blogger and writer Ananta Bijoy Das, allegedly by machete-wielding Islamic militants.
The protesters demanded justice for the killing and criticized the Awami League government for failing to protect free thinkers like Das from the fury of religious fanatics. They also condemned a culture of impunity amid a string of attacks on secular writers and bloggers in the country in recent years. “The government must crush this evil force now,” some chanted during the protest, “or this evil force will crush Bangladesh one day.”
But sadly, Das’ death is unlikely to cause any ripple effect in the waters of this nation’s 160 million people, despite garnering massive international media coverage.
For more than a decade, a war of words between secularists and Islamists has been a common topic on the country’s social media and blogosphere. And now the fanatics are vigorously carrying out their agenda by taking the war onto the streets.
Das, 33, was a banker, editor and blogger who promoted scientific ideas and rationalism through his writing. He became the third recent victim in what has been a one-sided war: Avijit Roy, a US-based Bangladeshi writer and blogger was murdered in February, while blogger Washiqur Rahman was killed a month later.
Now, more than four decades after gaining independence from Pakistan in 1971, Bangladesh is once again at a crossroads.
The nation’s victory during the war defined Bangladesh as a secular, democratic nation. But the cold-blooded killings of the bloggers in broad daylight show the ghosts of the past are back from the shadows.
It remains to be seen whether or not the perpetrators of these killings have been supported by Islamist parties or more radical groups. But it is clear they have an agenda: to wipe our rationalists and secularists.
No doubt their bases are strong. But there is an even greater force that helps them to thrive: a serious lack of sympathy and action from the public, civil society and the ruling and opposition parties amid growing religious intolerance.
“This was well-planned, choreographed — a global act of terrorism. But what almost bothers me more is that no one from the Bangladesh government has reached out to me,” Rafida Ahmed Bonya, widow of slain blogger Roy, told Reuters in a recent interview, criticizing the Bangladesh government for not responding more aggressively to her husband’s killing.
“It’s as if I don’t exist, and they are afraid of the extremists. Is Bangladesh going to be the next Pakistan or Afghanistan?”
In response, Sajeeb Wazed, the son of Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and an informal advisor to the ruling party, said his mother offered personal condolences to Roy's father. But his explanation of what he believes to be Bangladesh’s volatile political situation is telling.
“We are walking a fine line here. We don’t want to be seen as atheists. It doesn’t change our core beliefs. We believe in secularism,” he said. “But given that our opposition party plays that religion card against us relentlessly, we can’t come out strongly for him. It’s about perception, not about reality.”
Although police made arrests after the attacks, there is still a lack of genuine interest in punishing the killers, leaving the cases in limbo. There is also no clear-cut political commitment to tackle the rise of Islamic militancy.
The ruling Awami League, in power since 2008, led the nation during the independence struggle and calls itself a secular, center-left party. But it has done little to crack down on Islamists and punish those who attack bloggers. The party has refrained from publicly condemning the attacks on the bloggers and has done almost nothing to protect them.
In fear of losing votes during the last election, the government went on to appease Islamists by arresting several bloggers and erasing hundreds of blog posts.
The center-right Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), the second largest party, has maintained an utter silence on the matter, fearing backlash from longtime ally Jamaat-e-Islami, the country’s largest radical Islamist party.
In fact, BNP has a record of siding with Islamists since the founding of the party by military dictator Ziaur Rahman in 1978. After swarming into power in 1977, Ziaur Rahman allowed religion-based politics and Islamic parties that had been banned after the independence war. He amended the original constitution of 1972 and added “absolute trust and faith in Almighty Allah”, replacing the socialist religious-free commitment to “secularism” as one of the four key principles, in order to make the country more Islamic.
In the preamble of the constitution he asserted the Islamic phrase “Bismillahir-Rahmaanir-Rahim"("In the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful"). Power has altered between Awami League and BNP since the return to parliamentary democracy in the 1990s, but none of the parties dared to make the constitution truly secular and democratic. After a Supreme Court verdict in 2010 in favor of secular principles, the Awami League reasserted ‘secularism’ in the constitution, but didn’t change Bismillahir-Rahmaanir-Rahim or touch Islam as the state religion.
From 2001 to 2006, the BNP-Jamaat alliance ruled the country and their five-year rule saw a massive rise in Islamic militancy. Militant outfits carried out a series of bomb attacks on cultural programs, political rallies and courts deemed un-Islamic. At the height of the attacks, a militant group detonated some 500 bombs in 63 of the 64 districts of Bangladesh on August 17, 2005. At the time, many feared the country was plunging into a civil war like that waged by the Taliban in Afghanistan.
Amid a media outcry and international pressure, the government banned two militant groups — Harkat-ul-Jihad and Jamaat-ul-Mujahedin Bangladesh — and arrested and executed their top leaders. Although many members of these groups went into hiding, recent media reports suggest they are regrouping under different banners and recruiting university students. Ansarullah Bangla Team, one of those regrouped militant outfits, claimed responsibility for blogger Washiqur Rahman’s murder.
Experts say these groups are thriving amid the recent feuds and political violence between the Awami League and BNP. As the government and opposition keep busy hunting each other, fanatics are advancing their own agendas.
Nobody is doing enough to resist the rising tide of religious fundamentalism. The government is apathetic, civil society is indifferent, and the masses are simply silent.
History shows us that letting religious fanaticism thrive is dangerous and disastrous in the long run. The war waged by the Islamic State in the Middle East, or the Taliban in Pakistan and Afghanistan didn’t happen in a day.
Bangladesh used to be called one of the most moderate Muslim countries in the world, but that is no more.
When the nation as a whole feels no urge to act when a writer is killed in broad daylight, it is a troubling sign indeed.
Unless there is a change of mind in all quarters of the nation on the issue, there is no doubt that evil forces will one day swallow and control Bangladesh.
Bangladesh needs to rise to the challenge before it’s too late.
END
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দক্ষিণ এশিয়ায় ভোটের রাজনীতি এবং খ্রিস্টান সম্প্রদায়

Bangladeshi Christians who account for less than half percent of some 165 million inhabitants in the country pray during an Easter Mass in D...