http://www.thedailystar.net/2006/08/04/d6080401107.htm
 
'Bangladesh sees rising Islamic movement with al-Qaeda link'
The Washington Post on Wednesday carried a story headlined "A new hub for
terrorism?: In Bangladesh, an Islamic movement with al-Qaeda ties is on the
rise." Following is the full text of the article by Selig S Harrison: 
While the United States dithers, a growing Islamic fundamentalist movement
linked to al-Qaeda and Pakistani intelligence agencies is steadily
converting the strategically located nation of Bangladesh into a new
regional hub for terrorist operations that reach into India and Southeast
Asia. 
With 147 million people, largely Muslim Bangladesh has substantial Hindu and
Christian minorities and is nominally a secular democracy. But the ruling
Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) struck a Faustian bargain with the
fundamentalist party Jamaat-e-Islami five years ago in order to win power. 
In return for the votes in Parliament needed to form a coalition government,
Prime Minister Khaleda Zia has looked the other way as the Jamaat has
systematically filled sensitive civil service, police, intelligence and
military posts with its sympathizers, who have in turn looked the other way
as Jamaat-sponsored guerrilla squads patterned after the Taliban have
operated with increasing impunity in many rural and urban areas. 
To the dismay of her business supporters, the prime minister gave the
coveted post of industries minister to Matiur Rahman Nizami, a high-ranking
Jamaat official who has helped promote the growth of a Jamaat economic
empire that embraces banking, insurance, trucking, pharmaceutical
manufacturing, department stores, newspapers and TV stations. A study last
year by a leading Bangladeshi economist showed that the "fundamentalist
sector of the economy" earns annual profits of some $1.2 billion. 
Now the BNP-Jamaat alliance is rigging the next national elections,
scheduled for January, to prevent the return of the opposition Awami League
to power. Voter lists are being manipulated, and the supposedly neutral
caretaker government and the commission that will run the election are being
turned into puppets. 
The BNP argues that coalition rule helps moderates in the Jamaat to combat
Islamic extremist factions. But the reality is that Jamaat inroads in the
government security machinery at all levels, starting with Home Secretary
Muhammad Omar Farooq, widely regarded as close to the Jamaat, have opened
the way for suicide bombings, political assassinations, harassment of the
Hindu minority, and an unchecked influx of funds from Islamic charities in
Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf to Jamaat-oriented madrassas (religious
schools) that in some cases are fronts for terrorist activity. 
With some 15,000 hard-core fighters operating out of 19 known base camps,
guerrilla groups sponsored by the Jamaat and its allies were able to
paralyze the country last Aug. 17 by staging 459 closely synchronized
explosions in all but one of the country's administrative districts. When
the key leaders of these groups were captured, they were kept by the police
in a comfortable apartment, where they were free to receive visitors. A
cartoon in the Daily Star of Dhaka on July 24 showed them lounging on a rug,
conducting classes in bombmaking. Their fate and present place of
confinement is uncertain, and all of the major guerrilla groups are back to
business as usual. 
The bitterness of Bangladeshi politics is often attributed to a personal
vendetta between two strong women, Prime Minister Zia and the Awami League
leader, Sheikh Hasina Wajed. But the roots of the current struggle go back
to 1971, when Bengali East Pakistan, led by the Awami League, broke away
from Punjabi-dominated West Pakistan to form the nation of Bangladesh. The
Jamaat, which originated in the western wing, opposed the independence
movement and fought side by side with Pakistani forces against both fellow
Bengalis and the Indian troops who intervened in the decisive final phase of
the conflict. 
For Pakistan's intelligence agencies, especially Inter-Services Intelligence
(ISI), the legacy of the independence war has been a built-in network of
agents within the Jamaat and its affiliates who can be utilized to harass
India along its 2,500-mile border with Bangladesh. In addition to supporting
tribal separatist groups in northeast India, the ISI uses Bangladesh as a
base for helping Islamic extremists inside India. After the July 11 train
bombings in Bombay, a top Indian police official, K.P. Raghuvanshi, said
that his key suspects "have connections with groups in Nepal and Bangladesh,
which are directly or indirectly connected to Pakistan." 
A State Department report cited evidence that one of the Jamaat's main
allies, the Harakat ul-Jihad-i-Islami, also headquartered in Pakistan,
"maintains contact with Al Qaeda in Afghanistan." Bangladesh Harakat leader
Fazlul Rahman was one of the six signatories of Osama bin Laden's first
declaration of holy war against the United States, on Feb. 23, 1998. Since
the October 2002 Bali bombings led to repression of al-Qaeda, some of its
Indonesian and Malaysian cells have shifted their operations to Bangladesh. 
What makes future prospects in Bangladesh especially alarming is that the
Jamaat and its allies appear to be penetrating the higher ranks of the armed
forces. Among many examples, informed journalists in Dhaka attribute Jamaat
sympathies to the recently appointed military secretary to President
Iajuddin Ahmed, and to a trop brass of the Armed Forces Intelligence
anti-terrorism bureau. 
The respected journalists in question cannot write freely about the Jamaat
without facing death threats or assassination attempts. The U.S.-based
Committee to Protect Journalists has published extensive dossiers
documenting 68 death threats and dozens of bombing attacks that have injured
at least eight journalists. "We are alarmed by the growing pattern of
intimidation of journalists by Islamic groups in Bangladesh," the committee
said recently. "As a result of its alliance with the Jamaat-Islami, the
government appears to lack the ability or will to protect journalists from
this new and grave threat." 
The Bush administration has yet to speak with comparable candor. The latest
State Department annual report on terrorism mentioned only one of the three
Jamaat militias as a terrorist group and avoided direct criticism of the BNP
for its coalition with the Jamaat, referring only to the "serious political
constraints" that explain the government's "limited success" in countering
"escalating" terrorist violence. On July 13 the U.S. ambassador called
Bangladesh "an exceptional moderate Muslim state." 
The United States and other donors gave Bangladesh $1.4 billion in aid last
year. There is still time for the administration to use aid leverage and
trade concessions to promote a fair election by calling openly and
forcefully for nonpartisan control of the Election Commission and the
caretaker government. In addition to implicitly threatening an aid cutoff if
it is rebuffed, the administration should offer the powerful incentive of
duty-free textile imports from Bangladesh if Prime Minister Zia cooperates. 
In Pakistan, the United States has been gingerly pushing Gen. Pervez
Musharraf for democratic elections because it needs the limited but
significant support he is giving against al-Qaeda and fears what might come
after him. But what is the excuse for inaction in Bangladesh, where the
incumbent government coddles Islamic extremists? 
(The writer, a former South Asia bureau chief of The Post and the author of
five books on South Asia, has covered Bangladesh since 1951. He is the
director of the Asia program at the Center for International Policy and a
senior scholar of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.) 


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