Comparision between Pakistan and Bangladesh: Basket case - Pakistan or Bangladesh?

Ray

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Soon after the Partition, the people of East Pakistan were soon beginning to feel they had lost out in the new state. The bureaucracy that dominated in East Pakistan as in the rest of the country used not only a different language but also a different script to them so that the Bengali middle class was at a disadvantage to newcomers from Bihar in India when it came to getting governmental jobs. The centre of military influence was in Punjab in the West. And it soon became apparent that what little wealth there was in East Pakistan was being used to develop industry in the West. By the early 1950s there was widespread agitation against West Pakistani domination.

But it was the national question which broke the state. Resentment continued to grow among the Bengalis of East Pakistan at the concentration of economic and political power in the bureaucratic and military elite of West Pakistan. They joined in a general upsurge of opposition to military rule in both wings of the country in 1968-69 and voted overwhelmingly for the Awami League, with its demand for autonomy in elections in 1970, enabling it to take all but two seats in East Pakistan and a majority of seat nationally. The military were not prepared to concede autonomy, arrested the party's leaders and unleashed repression which caused a million or more deaths.

Bangladesh has moved on from those days and stirring to do better.
 
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ajtr

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Basket case: Pakistan or Bangladesh?

Basket case: Pakistan or Bangladesh?
—Dr Manzur Ejaz

No government in Pakistan can dare to undo the constitutional provisions that make the country a religious state. As a matter of fact, democratic and military governments compete with each other to make it more religious. Presently, no political force or institution exists that can usher in modernity and enlightenment in Pakistan

An article titled 'Bangladesh, "Basket case" no more: Pakistan could learn about economic growth and confronting terrorism from its former eastern province' appeared in the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) (September 29, 2010). During the same period, President Barack Obama specially congratulated Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed when she came to receive the prestigious United Nations (UN) award. Bangladesh was one of the six countries from Asia and Africa who were honoured for achieving the Millennium Development Goals. Why have the US media and President Obama started pampering Bangladesh? Has Bangladesh bypassed Pakistan in economic development or is it about to do so in the near future?

Many insiders believe that besides the ground economic reality, the US is pampering Bangladesh because it wants its army in Afghanistan. The US administration has requested the participation of the Bangladesh Army in Afghanistan to fight the Taliban. It is highly unlikely that Bangladesh will dispatch its army to Afghanistan because of the geopolitics and lack of fighting skills. Many observers believe that the Bangladesh Army is a police force rather than a war-making machine.

Besides the US motivation, the WSJ article provides some useful insights into the development of Pakistan and its former province East Pakistan, now Bangladesh. To start with, Bangladesh had more population than Pakistan but after breaking away, due to successful programmes, it has checked its population growth. Now Pakistan is more populous than Bangladesh. If the trend continues, as expected, Pakistan will be left behind even if its annual growth rates are a bit higher than Bangladesh — a doubtful presumption.

Bangladesh's garment industry is genuinely touted as a success story. Last year, the country exported $ 12.3 billion worth of garments and is considered fourth in the world behind China, the EU and Turkey. It is amazing how a non-cotton producing country can achieve such a status. However, the article acknowledges that other than the garment industry the Bangladeshi economy is shallow.

Most importantly, the ideological direction taken by the present Awami League government will help the country to industrialise fast. A few months back, the Bangladesh Supreme Court struck down a 31-year-old constitutional amendment and restored the country to its founding status as a secular republic. Furthermore, the government has banned Abul Ala Maududi's writings. A long-awaited war crimes tribunal will try senior Jamaat-e-Islami figures for mass murders during Bangladesh's war of independence.

The Awami League government could take these bold constitutional initiatives because of public support for such actions. No government in Pakistan can dare to undo the constitutional provisions that make the country a religious state. As a matter of fact, democratic and military governments compete with each other to make it more religious. It is hard to envision how long it will take to halt the theocratic onslaught on society. Presently, no political force or institution exists that can usher in modernity and enlightenment in Pakistan. Therefore, Pakistan will remain mired in the web of religious ideology while Bangladesh has a chance to modernise itself. Nonetheless, given the fickle politics of Bangladesh, its future direction is not assured.

Bangladesh can be optimistic about its future because of a multi-religious society and absence of feudalism as an economic order. Luckily or otherwise, Bangladeshi Muslims were mostly peasants while the Hindus constituted the landed aristocracy. The movement for creating Pakistan originated and strengthened in East Bengal because of the Hindu feudal domination. Ironically, the feudals of West Pakistan went along with the Muslim League due to an opposite reason: to save themselves from land reforms that the All India Congress had vowed to enforce. And the Nehru government fulfilled its promise of land reforms very early on.

In the united Pakistan, the eastern wing, led by middle class politicians, had a basic contradiction with the western part, which was largely dominated by the feudals. Punjabi and Sindhi feudals were always scared of Bengali Muslim rule because they could have abolished feudalism. Muslim League was routed in the first election held after independence and the liberal-progressive alliance called Jugto Front was expected to win the 1959 elections. One of the main reasons for Ayub Khan's martial law was to pre-empt the Jugto Front's possible government at the Centre. Ayub Khan just delayed the process, because in 1970 the Awami League, a middle class party, swept the elections that led to the independence of Bangladesh.

Like the movement of Pakistan, Bengali Muslims led most of the democratic movements in Pakistan. The separation of East Pakistan took away the most democratic and enlightened force from the country. This is one of the reasons that no significant democratic movement has penetrated in Pakistan after East Bengal broke away in 1971.

In this historical backdrop, one can comprehend how Bangladesh can become a modern, secular state, unencumbered by the landed aristocracy. At present, Pakistan's per capita of $ 2,600 is much higher than that of Bangladesh's $ 1,500. However, given the socio-historical trends, Bangladesh may have far better future prospects than Pakistan.
 

Tshering22

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The article is not kidding when it claims Bangladesh to have better prospects than Pakistan as a whole. While Awami League might have had significant success in industrializing the country, PPP of Pakistan has almost ruined Pakistan beyond repair, especially the successive dictators who wanted to bring a theocratic military order rather than a practical non-feudal democracy.

Jihadi terrorism, radicalization of the society, short-sightedness of leaders, narrow-minded public, unstable government structure shadowed by the Army, poor economic development, hopeless employment situation, deflation of currency value, etc are some of the many problems that are plaguing Pakistan. Not to mention international ones like NATO-Pakistan standoff recently, China's refusal to provide aid money exceeding $ 500 million that too as a soft loan, further soft loan from China and therefore additional burden to boost their local arms and military hardware production, seeking almost 100% investment from Chinese again in port development and other industrial projects, leaving the country at the mercy of one single foreign entity and finally having more than $54 billion of outstanding payable due debt to international organizations like IMF, World Bank etc.

Wonder what could make it worse for Pakistan beyond all this already. I doubt there's anything left for Pakistan to call "worse situation". Bangladesh on the other hand will start getting even more noticed next year onwards since it is hosting the ICC World Cup '11 as a part of 3 nations who won the bid and therefore it will attract more tourists and foreign business people to focus on Bangladesh and hence encourage growth.
 

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The Myth of the "International Basket Case"


A.B.M. NASIR

SOMETIMES MYTH lives on without any attempt of being rectified. One such myth lived and thrived over more than three and a half decades, concerns the infamous statement depicting an emerging country, Bangladesh, as the "International Basket Case." For more than three decades this myth has been erroneously attributed to Henry Kissinger having given birth to it.

This effort to debunking the myth is not to defend Henry Kissinger's shenanigans during late sixties through mid-seventies. Rather, the aim here is to present the facts. The question is if Mr. Kissinger did not then who made that statement?

This issue was brought up in a Washington Special Group Meeting held in Washington D.C. on December 6, 1971. As the minutes of that meeting indicate, ambassador U. Alexis Johnson initiated the statement when the issue of an impending famine was brought up by a participant of the meeting, Mr Maurice Williams. As conversation went on, Mr U. Alexis Johnson at one point quipped "They'll (referring to East Pakistan) be an international basket case." Mr Kissinger responded by saying "But, not necessarily our basket case." An excerpt of the conversion was also published in a Time magazine article on January 17, 1972.
Here goes a few excerpts from the minutes of the meeting:
Dr. Kissinger: (to Mr. Williams) Will there be a massive famine in East Pakistan?
Mr. Williams: They have a huge crop just coming in.
Dr. Kissinger: How about next spring?
Mr. Williams: Yes, there will be famine by next spring unless they can pull themselves together by the end of March.
Dr. Kissinger: And we will be asked to bail out the Bangla Desh from famine next spring?
Mr. Williams: Yes.
Dr. Kissinger: Then we had better start thinking about what our policy will be.
Mr. Williams: By March the Bangla Desh will need all kinds of help.
Mr. Johnson: They'll be an international basket case.
Dr. Kissinger: But not necessarily our basket case.
Mr. Sisco: Wait until you hear the humanitarian bleats in this country.
Kissinger's vitriol (at loosing East Pakistan) is reflected in his response to Ambassador Johnson's insensitive statement. As being the Chair of the meeting, instead of admonishing him, Mr. Kissinger, paranoid with the fear of communist takeover, seemed to take pleasure out of that insensitive statement about a country, which, at that time, was being subjected to one of the worst mass-murders, rapes, and human sufferings in the history of the world.


Labeling a country with such an epithet reflects the psyche of a disgruntled foreign policy expert, whose administration did everything from condoning the genocide of 1971, famine of 1974, overthrowing of an elected government to the brutal murder of the father of the nation along with his family members.

A recently published article titled "Bangladesh, 'Basket Case' No More Pakistan could learn about economic growth and confronting terrorism from its former eastern province" in the Wall Street Journal on September 29, 2010, brought up the issue in the fore. While the article praises many achievements of Bangladesh, the title, nonetheless, reflects the author's predisposition in the belief of something that never was true. The fact of the matter is that Bangladesh has never been an "international basket case." Thus, implying so is not only erroneous, but also insulting to the people of a nation born out of the sacrifice of millions.
Despite the wishful desires of Mr. Kissinger and alike, Bangladesh continues to thrive amid many obstacles. Successes in some areas have been so profound that they outshine many aspects of the development successes of India, dubbed as the 'Asian Tiger' for her phenomenal economic performance.

In the socio-economic front, Bangladesh has succeeded in lifting millions out of poverty, cutting fertility rate by more than half, lowering infant mortality rate by 75% and mortality of children under the age of 5 by 46%, all achieved only in less than three decades. It has also achieved gender parity in primary and secondary education enrolments and been able to raise primary enrollment rate to impressive 92% with completion rate standing at 72%. Real GDP growth has reached at an impressive 6.5% rate in 2007 with gradual improvement in inflation rate, high investment rates, high growth in export and remarkable macroeconomic stability.

In the political front, the citizens' and government's commitment to democracy, freedom and justice are reflected in various polls, data and actions of the government. For instance, during 1991-09 the Polity and the Freedom House indicators rank Bangladesh third in the status of freedom and fourth in the status of democracy among the Muslim majority countries in the world. Growing voter participation rates in the four successive parliamentary elections during 1991-08 reflect the rising electorates' confidence in the democratic process.[ii] A Gallup World poll conducted in May 2007 showed 93% of the respondents revealing their confidence on a democratically elected government.[iii] Most recently, the country's Supreme Court has outlawed the infamous 5th amendment, thus restoring the secular spirit on which the country's liberation war was fought. The country's commitment towards justice can be seen in the setting up of the long-sought War-Crime Tribunal to try the perpetrators of the Genocide in 1971.

True, political instability and many forms of institutional rigidities have been holding the country hostage to the whim of many special interest groups. Despite the influence of the special interest groups and against all odds of frequent strokes of natural disasters, unfavorable international support, frequent military intervention, and resource scarcity, the country has been able to pull through.

The evidence from socio-economic success, Gallup poll, Polity and Freedom House indicators, voters turn-out in elections, the Supreme Court verdict and the commencement of the War-Crime tribunal shows the freedom loving psyche of the citizens of the country, which seems to be unknown to many international media as reflected either in their patronizing tones and/or in the negative portrayal of the country.

Instead, with the records of the achievements, Bangladesh can be dubbed as the 'Basket of Hope.' #
________________________________________
Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969–1976 Volume XI, South Asia Crisis, 1971, Document 235 (Minutes of Washington Special Actions Group Meeting1) 1. Source: National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, NSC Institutional Files (H-Files), Box H–115, WSAG Minutes, Originals, 1971. Top Secret; Sensitive; Codeword. No drafting information appears on the minutes. The meeting was held in the White House Situation Room. A briefer record of the meeting, prepared by James Noyes (OASD/ISA), is in the Washington National Records Center, OSD Files, FRC 330 76 0197, Box 74, Pakistan 381 (Dec) 1971. See also the link Office of the Historian - Historical Documents - Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969–1976, Volume XI, South Asia Crisis, 1971 - Document 235. The link was visited on September 30, 2010.
[ii] Voter participation rates were 55.46%, 74.96%, and 75.59%, respectively, in 1991, 1996, and 2001 parliamentary elections (source: Bangladesh Election Commission website). In the most recent parliamentary election held in December 28, 2008, voter participation rate was 87%, showing strong enthusiasm among the citizens in the democratic process (Daily Star, January 1, 2009).
[iii] Lyons, Linda. Bangladeshis Positive, Despite Political Uncertainty: Citizens more likely to express confidence in their government and economy than a year ago. October 12, 2007. The document can be downloaded from the link Bangladeshis Positive Despite Political Uncertainty and was last viewed on February 27, 2010.


ABM Nasir, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor of Economics with School of Business, North Carolina Central University, USA
 

ajtr

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Bangladesh is no more a `basket case'

Thu, 30/09/2010 - 8:42pm | by priyo.news
Nearly four decades after US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger dubbed Bangladesh a bottomless basket, the largest circulated newspaper of his country the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) has said the South Asian nation was no more a `basket case'.

"For the outside world, much of the country's (Bangladesh) history can be summed up as a blur of political protests and natural disaster punctuated by outbursts of jihadis violence and occasional coup', said a nearly 1,000-word analysis of the world's most read newspaper, which is regarded for its in-depth coverage of international business and politics.

It further noted that "Nearly 40-year ago, only the most reckless optimist would have bet on flood-prone, war-ravaged Bangladesh over relatively stable and prosperous Pakistan".

"But with a higher growth rate, a lower birth rate and more internationally competitive economy, yesterday's basket case may have the last laugh," read the analysis written by WSJ columnist Sadanand Dhume in the current issue of the journal.

The WSJ comments came days after US President Barrack Obama congratulated Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina for the country's MDG (millennium development goal) achievements.

The achievements also earned the country the prestigious UN Award on the sidelines of the 65th UN General Assembly session, where the world leaders including UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon too highly appreciated Bangladesh's progress, particularly under Sheikh Hasina's leadership.

Bangladesh was one of the six countries in Asia and Africa feted for its progress towards achieving its MDGs, a set of targets that seek to eradicate extreme poverty and boost health, education and the status of women and children worldwide by 2015.

"Bangladesh has much to be proud of," said the WSJ noting that its economy grew at nearly six percent a year over the past several years, while it exported 12.3 billion US dollars worth of garments alone last year, making it fourth in the world behind China, the EU and Turkey.

Against all odds, the WSJ noted, Bangladesh curbed population growth with the average Bangladeshi woman today bearing fewer than three children in her lifetime, down from more than six in the 1970s.

"Perhaps most strikingly, Bangladesh-the world's third most populous Muslim-majority country after Indonesia and Pakistan-has shown a willingness to confront both terrorism and the radical Islamic ideology that underpins it," the analysis read.

Since taking office in 2009, it said, the Awami League-led government arrested local members of the Pakistani terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba, the al Qaeda affiliate Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami-Bangladesh, and Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen, a domestic outfit responsible for a wave of bombings in 2005.

In July this year, the Supreme Court struck down a 31-year-old constitutional amendment and restored Bangladesh to its founding status as a secular republic while a long-awaited war crimes tribunal will try senior Jamaat-e-Islami figures implicated in mass murder during Bangladesh's bloody secession from Pakistan, the analysis said.

The WSJ also noted with appreciation Bangladesh's foreign relations affairs, saying its crucial ties with India were "on a high" while in development sector the country's leading NGOs including the microcredit pioneer Grameen Bank earned a global reputation for their anti-poverty campaigns.

The analysis, however, said it would take more than a burst of entrepreneurial energy and political purpose before Bangladesh turns the corner for good as the "long-running feud" between major parties and the "war of ideas" against the country's plethora of Islamist groups required the kind of sustained pressure that Dhaka has been unable to apply in the past.

"Despite these caveats, Bangladesh ought to be held up as a role model, especially for the . . . other Muslim-majority states," read the analysis which particularly tended to make a comparative study taking into account of the contemporary history of Pakistan.

It said Pakistan could learn about economic growth and combating terrorism from its former eastern province.

"Perhaps most importantly, Bangladesh appears comfortable in its own skin: politically secular, religiously Muslim and culturally Bengali. Bangladeshis celebrate the poetry, film and literature of Hindus and Muslims equally," it read.

-BSS
 

ajtr

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Asia's Basket Case


Bangladesh has endured a turbulent past, and faces a far from settled future, argues Tanveer Ahmed.

Sitting in the shadows of its more prominent neighbours, Bangladesh is known largely as a basket case beset by natural disasters and, more recently, for being on the frontline of the effects of climate change.

The country was once known as East Pakistan, and the most recent mutiny by junior army officers suggests it shares much with its larger cousin-both are fledgling democracies where the army looms large and where there is a rising tide of Islamic extremism.

This mutiny has shined a light on underlying tensions in the impoverished nation, revealing fault lines that threaten to have international repercussions. And the picture was further complicated by the discovery in late March of a weapons cache being stored at an Islamic school, or madrasa, funded by a UK-based charity. The guns and ammunition were found following intensified government pressure on Islamic militants, with the country's leadership believing the militants may have played a role in the mutiny.

Bangladesh's current prime minister is Sheikh Hasina, a daughter of the country's first prime minister, who came to power after recent elections – the first after several years of a caretaker government. The military was essentially the power behind the caretaker civilian government that was in place from 2006, when the political system appeared on the brink of chaos, with strikes, demonstrations, a spate of killings and a stagnant economy.

Since coming to office, Hasina's deadliest enemies have been the Islamist militant groups that have put down roots here in recent years and who have been implicated in assassination attempts including a grenade attack during a political meeting in 2004. Indeed, Hasina lost some of her hearing as a result of that attack.

But even without the complication of extremists, the task of governing Bangladesh is arguably one of the toughest political challenges in the world. Its 150 million people are crammed into a tiny area of land, with 70 million of them living on less than US$1 a day. And as the world's biggest delta, Bangladesh is plagued by floods and cyclones, and the steady poisoning of tens of millions of its people from drinking water contaminated by naturally occurring arsenic. In fact the country's very existence is threatened if even the more moderate predictions of climate change and rising sea levels occur.

The country was born from the ruins of East Pakistan 35 years ago after a war of independence in which India-backed nationalists – unhappy at being ruled from what was then West Pakistan – fought Islamists loyal to Islamabad. Three million people were slaughtered in eight months before the Pakistanis conceded. Those were the days before international criminal tribunals, and the world left Bangladesh largely alone to heal and rebuild.

Its politics have been shrouded in blood ever since, with coup, counter-coup and brutal assassinations the norm. There was, for example, the cold-blooded murder of the first leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and most of his progeny in their sleep, with his daughter Hasina surviving only because she was overseas visiting her husband. Mujibur's death casts a shadow to the country's politics, with the perpetrators remaining unpunished.

In 1980, President Ziaur Rahman, the late husband of the country's opposition leader, Khaleda Zia, was also killed in a shooting spree, and even now attacks and deaths during political meetings are a regular occurrence. Against this blood-soaked backdrop, the recent mayhem that took place in the army headquarters should therefore be no surprise.

Rank-and-file members of the Bangladesh Rifles (BDR), which is primarily posted to patrol the border, had complained that senior officers were involved in rampant corruption and that they were given little chance to serve in the lucrative UN Peacekeeping Force (Bangladesh provides the most peacekeepers of any country in the world). They were also demanding higher pay, more subsidised food and holidays.

But the mutiny that supposedly ensued from these complaints appeared well-planned and executed, making it difficult to believe that it was a spontaneous outburst of pent-up feelings and suppressed grievances. The most frequently cited theory is that it was a well-calculated move to discredit the security forces of Bangladesh, particularly the army, and undermine the government of Sheikh Hasina, which came to power with massive popular support, allegedly with the help of the army.

The principal actors behind this conspiracy are said to be extremist religious forces, which have vastly enhanced their influence and power in Bangladesh during the previous regime under Khaleda Zia, of which they were participants in. Some political analysts, especially in India, also see the hands of external forces, particularly the international network of the al-Qaeda and Taliban. The ISI, the intelligence wing of the Pakistan armed forces known for stoking Islamist forces, is also implicated.

Much like in Pakistan, a traditional 'lite' version of Islam is giving way to a stark and assertive Wahhabist strain in Bangladesh. As the idea of Pakistan as an Islamic state in the subcontinent comes under strain, it also weakens the nature of a Bangladeshi identity.

But unlike Pakistan, language and not religion is the organising principle of the country. Bangladesh is an ethnically homogeneous country, with a national identity built on a shared history of violent struggle, from rising up against the British and against India to form East Pakistan to the 1971 liberation war against a West Pakistan hell-bent on imposing its Urdu language on the Bengalis.

But this history of linguistic nationalism is being threatened by growing Islamic extremism. As a poor country that can't say no to money, Bangladesh has become an ideal place for al-Qaeda affiliates, which, like Westernised NGOs, are filling needs unmet by a weak central government. Islamist orphanages, madrasas and cyclone shelters are mushrooming throughout the country, thanks in part to donations from Saudi Arabia and Bangladeshi workers returning home from the Gulf. The site where weapons were found most recently was both an orphanage and a madrasa funded by a British citizen of Bangladeshi origin.

This extremism is increasingly being blamed for a number of attacks within India, too, co-ordinated by Bangladeshi immigrants. The most recent such attacks were in May 2008, months before the Mumbai massacre. Indian authorities claim the attacks, which took place in the northern Indian city of Jaipur and resulted in 80 deaths, were masterminded by a Bangladeshi Islamist group. There are an estimated 20 million illegal migrants from Bangladesh residing in India and many of them gravitate towards Islamist outfits with undisguised terrorist intentions.

A 2007 publication, Military Inc., by a Pakistani academic based in the US documented the way the Pakistani's army's tentacles extend into every part of the population, through its grip on the national economy and corporate life, with generals managing everything from bakeries to banks without any real accountability.

The themes are identical in Bangladesh, whose army shares a colonial history with Pakistan and who fought together for close to a century prior to Bangladeshi independence. The army has ruled the country for 15 years of its existence in between elected governments and Hasina must ensure that the army continues to back the government in the aftermath of the mutiny.

Failure to do so could shove the country further towards radicalism, fuelled by a powerful combination of poverty and imminent environmental catastrophe.

Bangladesh demonstrates how confronting developing-world misery has acquired Рin the form of climate change Рa powerful new raison d'̻tre, tied to the more fundamental outcry for justice and dignity. But in the meantime, the global financial crises and resultant decline in remittance payments and garment exports Рwhich along with foreign aid power the Bangladesh economy Рwill strain this dignity to breaking point.

All of which suggests there is a chance this artificial block of territory on the Indian subcontinent could morph again, amid the forces of regional politics, religious extremism and nature itself. Such a transformation could destabilise India, add weight to Islamic extremism in Pakistan and give the world another geopolitical and humanitarian headache of monumental proportions
 

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'Basket Case' rises towards Sonar Bangla

Posted on 05 October 2010
NOT long ago, when you thought of a South Asian country ravaged by floods, governed by bumblers and apparently teetering on the brink of chaos, it wasn't Pakistan that came to mind. That distinction belonged to Bangladesh.
Henry Kissinger famously dubbed it a "basket case" at its birth in 1971, and Bangladesh appeared to work hard to live up to the appellation. For the outside world, much of the country's history can be summed up as a blur of political protests and natural disasters punctuated by outbursts of jihadist violence and the occasional military coup.
No longer. At a reception Friday for world leaders attending the United Nations General Assembly in New York, President Barack Obama congratulated Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wazed for receiving a prestigious U.N. award earlier in the week. Bangladesh was one of six countries in Asia and Africa feted for its progress toward achieving its Millennium Development Goals, a set of targets that seek to eradicate extreme poverty and boost health, education and the status of women worldwide by 2015.
Bangladesh has much to be proud of. Its economy has grown at nearly 6% a year over the past three years. The country exported $12.3 billion worth of garments last year, making it fourth in the world behind China, the EU and Turkey. Against the odds, Bangladesh has curbed population growth. Today the average Bangladeshi woman bears fewer than three children in her lifetime, down from more than six in the 1970s.
The country's leading NGOs — most famously the microcredit pioneer Grameen Bank –have earned a global reputation. Relations with India are on a high. In August, Indian Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee signed off on a $1 billion soft loan for Bangladeshi infrastructure development, the largest such loan in India's history.
Sheikh Hasina, prime minister of Bangladesh, addresses a summit on the Millennium Development Goals at United Nations headquarters in New York.
Perhaps most strikingly, Bangladesh — the world's third most populous Muslim-majority country after Indonesia and Pakistan — has shown a willingness to confront both terrorism and the radical Islamic ideology that underpins it. Since taking office in 2009, the Awami League-led government has arrested local members of the Pakistani terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba, the al Qaeda affiliate Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami-Bangladesh, and Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen, a domestic outfit responsible for a wave of bombings in 2005.
In July, the Supreme Court struck down a 31-year-old constitutional amendment and restored Bangladesh to its founding status as a secular republic. The government has banned the writings of the radical Islamic ideologue Abul Ala Maududi (1903-79), founder of Jamaat-e-Islami, the subcontinent's most influential Islamist organisation.
Of course, it will take more than a burst of entrepreneurial energy and political purpose before Bangladesh turns the corner for good. The long-running feud between Prime Minister Wazed and her main rival, Bangladesh Nationalist Party leader Khaleda Zia, makes that of the Hatfields and McCoys look benign by comparison. The war of ideas against the country's plethora of Islamist groups requires the kind of sustained pressure that Dhaka has been unable to apply in the past. And garment exports notwithstanding, the economy remains shallow.
 

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Lessons From Bangladesh


The poison of General Zia's bigotry has spread like a cancer in Pakistan's body politic. Had he not emerged on the scene, it is possible that Pakistan would have taken the regular course of a confessional state to a modern, inclusive and democratic state

Bravo. Bangladesh has done it. It has successfully reversed the cynical Islamisation of its local General Zia. Not only is one fortified by their action that a Muslim majority nation state is capable of rolling back the Islamist project but as a Pakistani I am glad that at least some part of the former original Pakistan is now firmly allied with the principles that Jinnah laid down in his famous August 11, 1947 speech.

Bengalis have never been any less proud as Muslims than Pakistanis. Say what they may, champions of the so-called ideology of Pakistan cannot deny that had it not been for peasant nationalism in Bengal, the Pakistan movement would have fallen flat on its face. While opportunistic landowners jumped onto the Pakistan bandwagon in what became West Pakistan, it was the common man in the then East Pakistan who waged the struggle for a new nation. It may also be remembered that Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, the founder of the Awami League, was also one of the founding fathers of Pakistan and that the Awami League was, at one point in its history, the Jinnah Awami Muslim League.

In 1965, when the Quaid-e-Azam's sister rose to take on a dictator, it was again East Pakistan that rallied to her cause. And how did we pay them back? I do not wish to go into the atrocities of 1971.

One of the many steps taken by this new confident and independent People's Republic of Bangladesh is the banning of Maulana Maududi's hate-filled literature. Maulana Maududi is widely disliked in Bangladesh for his role against the Bengalis. There are some who object to this decision on grounds of 'freedom of speech'. Well sirs, mind telling us where is the freedom of speech for non-Muslim minorities? It is quite like how some years ago many of our proud Pakistani Muslims defended Yousaf Youhanna's conversion to Islam on the grounds of freedom of religion. And then someone asked, "What if he converts back to Christianity?" Silence.

What is sad, however, is that Maududi's abuse against Pakistan and its founding father far outweighs his abuse against Bangladesh and yet Pakistan continues to tolerate Maududi's legacy. Much of his horrendous abuse against the Quaid-e-Azam has been documented in detail. What is more, Maududi and his party openly supported usurper General Zia's illegal military dictatorship.

The truth is that under the 1973 Constitution, a complete separation of church and the state may not be immediately possible, but if Pakistan can undo General Zia's legacy, it will become a much better place to live in. For us, it is an urgent undertaking. We have now learnt that the dead body of Prem Chand, who died in the Margalla plane crash, was marked 'Kafir'. Is there no end to such bigotry? Some might argue that this is because we asked for a Muslim majority state and a partitioned India. Be that as it may, it bears repeating that Jinnah tried very hard to keep Hindus safe and secure in Pakistan and his efforts paid off partially in Karachi. He also spoke of non-Muslim Pakistanis as being equal Pakistanis and having the closest association with the rest of Pakistan. Today, the minorities are marked separately as if they are less human, let alone less Pakistani.

To drive the message of equality and inclusiveness of Pakistani identity home, Jinnah appointed as his law minister Mr Jogindranath Mandal, a Bengali scheduled caste Hindu, and got Jagganath Azad, a Hindu Urdu poet, to write Pakistan's first national anthem. Mr Azad had to escape for his life soon afterwards when things became unbearable for the Hindus in Lahore and soon after Jinnah's death Mr Mandal was driven out. A transcript of Mandal's signed statement is readily available on the internet. It is nothing less than heartbreaking for a Pakistani who wants to see this flag flying high.

Perhaps the founding fathers should have been more militant in their secularism given that they had gotten the state by mobilising a religious identity, like Kemal Ataturk and Ismet Inonu did in Turkey. Their Turkish nationalism grew out of the group identity of Muslims of Anatolia and Thrace and they deployed Islam to mobilise the Turks, Kurds, Macedonians and even the Arabs living in Anatolia during the war of independence in a much more blatant fashion than the founding fathers of Pakistan. Yet, after the emergence of the modern Turkish Republic, Ataturk and Inonu began to redefine Turkish nationalism in completely secular terms. Consequently, even Turkish Jews are Turks before they are Jews.

In stark contrast to Turkey, especially after Jinnah, Pakistani secularism has met with one defeat after another. We are now at a point in our history that the highfalutin articles of the constitution protecting religious freedom in Pakistan have been defeated in the courts of law. Pakistan may have ratified the International Convention on Political and Civil Rights, but in reality the application of this is impossible unless of course Pakistan's leaders realise the urgency of the matter.

The poison of General Zia's bigotry has spread like a cancer in Pakistan's body politic. Had he not emerged on the scene, it is possible that Pakistan would have taken the regular course of a confessional state to a modern, inclusive and democratic state. While Islamisation was always a going concern in Pakistan since the Objectives Resolution, it was General Zia who ensured that it would always be negative and exclusionary, catering to the Maududian ideology. Pakistan must decisively roll back General Zia, taking a cue from Bangladesh, and declare all the changes inflicted on the legal and constitutional system of Pakistan from Zia's coup to that grand explosion in the sky, null and void. This would give Pakistan a fighting chance to slowly dig itself out of the hole it has dug itself into.

Remember the war against the Taliban is a generational undertaking. It will be fought in our schools, colleges and courts for the next 50 years. Let us prepare for the battle by learning from Bangladesh.
 

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You Can't Get There From Here

Bengali immigrants in Pakistan now wish they'd never left Bangladesh
By HANNAH BLOCH Islamabad

When Almas Bahar Begum came to Pakistan 22 years ago, she was looking for a better life than the one she left behind in Bangladesh. She eventually raised seven children in Pakistan, but now, sitting on the floor of her family's two-room, tin-roofed house in a Karachi slum, she says it would have been better if she had never come. Tragedy struck last year when Almas Bahar's son Jaffar Ali, a fisherman, died after being jailed when he refused to pay a bribe to the police. Since his death, she has looked after Jaffar Ali's five children. "There is no future for them here," says the gray-haired grandmother. "The only solution is that I return to Bangladesh."

But that may be impossible. In the years immediately following the 1971 civil war that created Bangladesh from what was formerly East Pakistan, hundreds of thousands of Bengalis, most of them illiterate laborers, migrated to Pakistan. Until several years ago, there was ample incentive: the Pakistani economy was doing relatively well while Bangladesh was an economic basket case. Now that Pakistan has fallen on hard times and Bangladesh is enjoying the fruits of liberalization and political stability, some refugees are trying to return. But overcrowded Bangladesh (pop. 130 million) is reluctant to take them. "The Bangladeshi government is not willing to accept people who say, 'I am Bangladeshi,'" complains Zia Ahmad Awan, a human rights lawyer in Karachi. "This is ridiculous. They want to deny this whole issue."

Perhaps 2 million Bengalis live in Pakistan illegally. At least 1 million reside in Karachi alone, spread out over 82 neighborhoods. They have become a vital part of the city's melting pot, working in the fishing and carpet-weaving industries and as domestic servants. But their illegal status means they face frequent police harassment, blackmail and sexual abuse—all without recourse, as they fear being arrested as aliens. "It is the hobby of police to arrest Bangladeshis," says Syed Muhammad Kazmi, a Karachi social worker. "When the fishermen come home, police know they have money and raid their houses. They take the women and children to extort money."

Female immigrants face the greatest dangers. Hundreds of Bengali women have been forced into prostitution in Pakistan, and some have even been sold into slavery. Since the early 1990s, agents have brought women to Pakistan either by force or with promises of marriage and work. Once in Pakistan, "they are like chattel being sold," says Awan. Although such trafficking has declined in recent years due to stricter border controls, many Bengali women remain in Pakistan against their will. Consider the case of Anwari Begum, who as a teenager in Dhaka was drugged and brought to Pakistan's Punjab province 10 years ago. After a six-month journey across India, the girl was put up for auction with 50 other Bengali women. All but four were sold. Her husband purchased Anwari for $1,800, and after an on-the-spot marriage ceremony and a payoff to the police, her new life began. She ran away a year ago, after her husband beat her. Now living in a Karachi women's shelter with her two children, Anwari, 28, wants to go home to Bangladesh. But she cannot afford the $210 for a one-way ticket to Dhaka. Even if she could, she has no passport, and obtaining a travel permit would require the help of a middleman who would charge an additional $150.

Dhaka says it will accept anyone who can prove Bangladeshi citizenship. But it considers many Bengalis who emigrated and made lives for themselves across the border to be Pakistani. "My family doesn't know where I am," Anwari says in strongly accented Urdu. "I'm stuck here, I can't go back."

A thousand kilometers away, another immigrant group is desperate to move the other way, to get out of Bangladesh and into Pakistan. The Biharis, Urdu-speaking Indians who migrated in 1947 to East Pakistan from the Indian state of Bihar, favored the wrong side during the the 1971 war. To protect them from retaliation after the fighting, authorities herded more than 300,000 into refugee camps. About 100,000 managed to make it to Pakistan illegally, but more than 200,000 remain in the camps today—a nuisance to Bangladesh and an embarrassment to Pakistan, which has repatriated only a few thousand, citing lack of funds. At a press conference in New York last week, Pakistan's military leader, General Pervez Musharraf, dismissed the idea of repatriating more: "I do not want to add to our difficulties. We have enough of them as it is." Islamabad fears the Biharis' presence would increase ethnic tensions, especially in troubled Sindh province, which already has a volatile ethnic mix. For now, the Biharis will stay put—just like most of the Bengalis stuck in Pakistan.
 

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Bangladesh outperforms Pakistan in FY 09




Mohiuddin Aazim

THE performance of Bangladesh economy was better than that of Pakistan in the last fiscal year ending in June 2009. Whereas Pakistan's gross domestic product (GDP) growth plunged to two per cent from 4.1 per cent a year before, Bangladesh's economy grew 5.9 per cent, only slightly lower than 6.2 per cent a year ago.

Pakistan's economic growth came to a near halt in fiscal year (FY) 09 not only as a result of the international financial crisis followed by overall contraction in global economy but also because of some domestic and structural problems. These included a war on terror launched by Pakistan's law enforcement agencies in North Western Frontier Province, bordering Afghanistan, and the resultant displacement of some three million people from their home towns. Both the war on terror as well as rehabilitation of internally displaced people or IDPs consumed a big chunk of the government's financial resources, thus widening the fiscal deficit. What else led to overshooting of the fiscal deficit from the targeted 4.3 per cent to 5.2 per cent of GDP included over-sized federal and provincial governments, reckless spending by the ruling class, less-than targeted revenue generation and a 20.8 per cent inflation that increased the cost of everything. The government made desperate borrowings from the State (central) Bank of Pakistan to plug in the gaps between its income and expenses and that further fuelled inflation. The central bank made no big efforts to force the government to keep its borrowings within the targeted limits by downsizing the government and by reducing the non-development expenses.

On the other hand, as Bangladesh's economy posted a handsome growth of 5.9 per cent it helped in keeping the fiscal deficit at 3.0 per cent of GDP-one percentage point below the target. Naturally then, the element of borrowing from the central bank as a key reason for higher inflation was missing in case of Bangladesh. But as tax revenues of Bangladesh slipped 20 basis points to 8.2 per cent of GDP the country was no better, rather worse, than Pakistan where tax revenue to GDP stood around 9.0 per cent. The tax-to-GDP ratios of both countries are much lower than what they should be to put the South Asian nations on a sustainable growth path and enable them to increase development spending, create enough jobs and contain poverty.

Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation in Pakistan accelerated 20.8 per cent in FY09-almost three times the CPI inflation of 6.66 per cent experienced in Bangladesh. Part of the explanation for a lower inflation in Bangladesh has been offered in the foregoing lines but a full explanation must also include the difference in the incidence of imported inflation in both countries. In most part of the FY09 food prices remained high in the international market and food importing countries like Pakistan and Bangladesh fell victims to imported inflation on this count.

But whereas in Pakistan imports of non-essential items continued albeit at a slower pace, Bangladesh's imports of such items did not constitute a big part of the country's overall import bill. And more importantly, since Pakistan ranked some notches below in governance, the inability of the government to ensure a fair inter-play of market forces also fuelled inflation at a pace faster than in Bangladesh. The Competition Commission of Pakistan-the country's watchdog on corporate inter-market behaviour-and a very vocal media and strong judiciary all played their part in checking malpractices of the business community but a weak political will and strong political links of business tycoons kept stoking inflation through cartel making and hoarding.

Finally, the monetary policy stance of the State Bank of Pakistan and Bangladesh Bank also differed with the former opting for a loose stance in most part of FY09 to spur economic growth and the later sticking to a tight monetary policy to check inflation.

In FY09 Bangladesh also witnessed a relative stability in exchange rates whereas in Pakistan exchange rates remained volatile in most part of the year. Whereas the taka depreciated less than one per cent in the whole of FY09 Pakistani rupee lost more than nineteen per cent of its value against the US dollar. This huge decline in the rupee value increased local currency cost of Pakistan's foreign debt and liabilities as well as the cost of foreign debt servicing. This further squeezed the already narrow base of domestic financial resources of the country forcing it to borrow heavily from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and other multilateral lending agencies as well as from some friendly nations like the USA, China and Saudi Arabia. Bangladesh had no such compulsion.

A massive decline in the rupee value also resulted in a greater share of imported inflation into overall CPI inflation in Pakistan whereas Bangladesh's inflation remained relatively low also because of the near-absence of imported inflation.

Going forward, Bangladesh's economy looks set to outperform Pakistan's also in the current fiscal year. Key indicators show Bangladesh's real sector as well as external sector would perform far better than those of Pakistan.

If the government and the central bank of Bangladesh undertake a study showing how Bangladesh's economy has performed in the last few years vis-à-vis Pakistan, it would reveal some strengths of Bangladesh and boost their confidence. At the same time, if the government of Pakistan and its central bank conduct a similar study it would expose some weaknesses of Pakistan economy, which if overcome immediately, would help Islamabad regain some of the lost grounds and prepare it for remaining ahead of Bangladesh in terms of economic progress.

But it seems whereas Bangladesh is still shy of comparing its economy with that of Pakistan, Pakistan is too complacent to compare its performance with a country like Bangladesh. This approach is removed from realities on ground. As a humble student of economics and as an economic journalist, I can say with a degree of certainty that the two countries need to compare their economic performance year after year for a healthy competition. That is in the interest of both.

Consider, for example, the phenomenal growth in workers' remittances of Bangladesh that has been higher than those of Pakistan for the last four years. And even during the current fiscal year, Bangladeshis living abroad have been sending larger amounts of remittances back home than overseas Pakistanis. Pakistan's media has not even highlighted this phenomenon so far let alone discuss in detail the reasons that have led to this situation. On the other hand, media in Bangladesh has also not been reporting comparative inflows of foreign exchange back home from overseas Bangladeshis and Pakistanis to boost the morale of Bangladeshis living abroad and increasing the confidence of Bangladeshi citizens in their own economy.

Similarly, the fact that Bangladeshi taka has become stronger than the Pakistani rupee finds no space in Pakistani media and I do not see enough discussions taking place on this subject even in Bangladeshi media. We, the south Asians, have been talking about integrating our economic activities for years but so far we have not even decided which country needs to compare its economic performance against which. India is an economic giant. The entire SAARC region minus India stands no match to it. But at least the economic managers of Pakistan and Bangladesh can initiate the process of comparing their performance to rebuild their confidence in their strengths and to overcome their structural weaknesses.

The writer is a freelance Pakistani journalist. He can be reached at [email protected]
 

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Through a Pakistani Lens


by Ahmed Bilal Mehboob

Nearly four decades after the secession of East Pakistan – now Bangladesh – most Pakistanis continue to see Bangladesh and its experiments with democracy through a three-faceted prism.

The initial feeling of acrimony over the dismemberment of their nation, or the hope that one day Pakistan and Bangladesh will either re-unite or form a confederation, are today merely part of a faded discourse that no longer enjoys currency in public or official sentiments.

The psyche of both the Pakistani people and the state over the wound caused by the secession of Bangladesh seems to have healed itself far quicker than has ostensibly happened in India over the separation of Pakistan where, apparently, a perspective clouded by resentment still resonates, even if it's not dominant. In fact, our own obsession with India and an India-centric approach remains the predominant lens through which we look at Bangladesh.

One major approach is based on our understanding of Bangladesh's relations with India. Clearly the fact that India is the largest exporter to Bangladesh creates substantial unease in Pakistan.

Many Pakistanis continue to characterize political parties in Bangladesh as being either 'soft' or 'tough' on India. The overwhelming victory of the Awami League and its allies, who won an impressive 263 seats in the 300 member Parliament in December 2008, continues to be a cause of anxiety in Pakistan given the pro-India image of the Awami League. The Awami League trounced its rival Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP)-Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) coalition, which managed only 32 seats.

Tensions between Bangladesh and India appear to please many in Pakistan and closer relations between the two countries are viewed with suspicion. Irrational or jingoistic but such is the sad reality which both media and intellectuals reflect in their occasional public, but generally private, discussions. Against this backdrop, the Awami League victory has not been perceived as a source of great satisfaction in Pakistan.

The sentiment among certain segments of the Bangladeshi political elite that the Bangladesh 'establishment' sided with the Awami League to present a 'liberal face' of Bangladesh to the world is echoed in Pakistan's discussion rooms.

Unfortunately, after a rather promising start, the current state of relations between Pakistan and India have once again become strained following the terrorist attack in Mumbai. One hopes that as relations between the two countries normalize, this habit of viewing Bangladesh's politics through an Indian angle will subside. A second prism through which we in Pakistan view Bangladesh revolves around the role of its military in politics. Expectedly, given our own troubled history with military intervention in politics, the role of the Bangladesh military in the country's politics generates substantial interest in Pakistan. Quite unlike the decade of the 1990s when, despite weaknesses in the political process, it appeared that Pakistan was gradually moving towards a democratic consolidation, the period between 1975 and 1991 in Bangladesh was dominated by its army, a development similar to what has usually happened in Pakistan. Yet, instead of welcoming the change, the democratic transfer of power to a civilian government in Bangladesh in 1991 created some consternation in Pakistan.

The dominant view, shared with leading Bangladeshi scholars, was that since the Bangladesh military was happily engaged in peacekeeping missions overseas, it would not risk the ire of the international community by intervening in the internal politics of the country. This understanding, however, had to be revised as the powerful Bangladesh military intervened in politics once again in 2007. Fortunately, however, it stopped short of turning the intervention into a full-scale coup and instead facilitated the appointment of a dozen businessmen, technocrats and former diplomats to manage the administration. A key reason why the Bangladesh Army preferred to stay behind the scenes was that it did not want to lose out on the opportunity to participate in UN peacekeeping missions, as it accounted for a considerable sum of money coming into Bangladesh, directly benefiting army personnel.

Many in Pakistan wonder whether such a reward system could similarly work in their own case. Yet while many in Pakistan give credit to the inventive model of the military coup in Bangladesh, they are less sanguine about its applicability in their own country, especially when the 18 month itch with a democratically elected government has already kicked in and stories of alleged corruption and incapacity for good governance are rather widespread. Nevertheless, having tried the Ayub Khan, Zia-ul-Haq and Musharraf models – all hands-on, very intrusive and boasting of 'unity of command' – the 'behind-the-scene', 'reform-oriented' role of the Bangladesh military in 2007-08, backed by the silent or not-so-silent cheers of international diplomats, looks just too tempting to the democracy-fickle millions in Pakistan.

Bangladesh's impressive electoral reforms, that I discuss ahead, are believed to have been achieved under the military's watchful eye, an accomplishment that eight years of the Musharraf regime could not boast of in Pakistan. Bangladesh witnessed a peaceful transition of power from a military-backed caretaker government to a democratically elected government in 2008. The successful handling of the ninth parliamentary election in December 2008 by the military, and the wide scale of political and electoral reforms preceding the election, has been viewed with admiration in Pakistan.

When it comes to electoral reforms, many feel that Pakistan's political leadership has a few lessons to learn from the country's former eastern wing that chose to go its separate way and became the People's Republic of Bangladesh in 1971. Although Bangladesh was a late starter on electoral reforms, it has made quick and impressive strides contributing to a smooth election and subsequent quick transfer of power. The Bangladesh Election Commission (BEC) became a truly independent body only during the past couple of years as a result of the intensive electoral reforms undertaken by the caretaker government.

These reforms became possible only after the government appointed a Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) who was not only considered reform-minded and dynamic, but had impeccable administrative experience. The extensive electoral reforms were the result of a comprehensive dialogue between the BEC and the political parties. As many as sixteen political parties were involved in three rounds of dialogue.

In addition, media and civil society were also consulted by the BEC on the reforms before they were introduced in the form of various laws. In contrast, dialogue between the Election Commission and political parties is rare in Pakistan. The last time the Elections Commission of Pakistan consulted political parties ahead of the general elections was in 2008 for merely a couple of hours and that too at the direction of the Supreme Court. Pakistani observers viewed the preparation of an accurate voters list in Bangladesh with considerable envy.

The Bangladesh Election Commission (BEC), with the active participation of the army, was able to prepare a voter list of about 81 million people which is digitised, carries each voter's photograph, includes close to 95% of all eligible voters and, above all, has won the confidence of all political parties, citizens' organizations and the international community. The list took just eleven months to prepare. A significant bye-product of the voter list is a National Identification Card for the adult (18 years and above) population of Bangladesh. Photographs of all adults, including women, were mandatory, for both the voter list and identification card. By integrating each voter's (including those of purdah-observing women) picture into the voters list, the commission has satisfactorily solved the problem of voter identification. Voter identification remains a major challenge, creating perpetual controversy as a potential source of bogus vote casting, especially at women's polling stations in Pakistan, Bangladesh and, to some extent, India.

Moreover, incorporating the voters' picture in the electoral rolls has precluded the need of carrying any additional identification document by voters. The Election Commission of Pakistan too had commissioned similar computerised electoral rolls way back in April 2006, and completed the exercise in about 20 months, just a few weeks before the 2008 general election. Unfortunately, the so-called computerised electoral rolls of Pakistan neither contain the individual's picture, nor are they complete or error free. Despite a door-to-door survey and an expense of over a billion rupees, the resulting voter list does not generate requisite confidence in either the political parties or citizens' groups. Our list is replete with errors, viz. multiple entries of voters, and thus a major source of dissatisfaction for various candidates in the 2008 election.

Further, despite the fact that Pakistan instituted a system of National Identification Cards as far back as 1974, and adopted computerised identification cards through the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) in 1998, even today nearly a quarter of the adult population (around 25%) remains without identification cards. The Bangladesh government, by contrast has performed the feat of providing identification cards to over 95% of its adult population in less than a year.

The process of voter registration and preparation of a National Identification Card is an integrated process in Bangladesh, eliminating time-consuming duplication of effort by citizens and state institutions. In addition to the success story of the compilation of electoral rolls, the recent elections in Bangladesh set an admirable example of fair and orderly election. As any politician with experience of electoral politics will testify, a major expense of candidates is incurred on mobilising transport for voters on polling day.

In order to minimize the influence of money in elections, the Bangladesh Election Commission prohibited the use of all motorised vehicles on election day, except for inter-city traffic and emergency use. No banners or hoardings were allowed by the BEC either. Candidates were allowed to print only black and white posters of a certain size, and attach them to strings that were hung across the streets.

Posters could not be pasted on any wall or structure. Painting on walls was not permitted. All these instructions were strictly followed and none of the international observers found any violations. The result was clean walls, resulting in huge savings on cleaning and re-painting. Another interesting electoral reform was the 30-page exhaustive disclosure and declaration form that each candidate was required to file along with nomination papers.

The disclosures and declarations were made public by the Bangladesh Election Commission and placed on its website for public scrutiny. Each candidate was required to state his/her educational qualification; details of any pending criminal cases; any outstanding amount payable to any state institution; details of any outstanding or written-off loans payable to any bank or financial institution, and so on.

Whether or not such public disclosures can be made mandatory in Pakistan, it is nevertheless clear that such disclosures help voters decide about the 'suitability' of candidates. Another innovative feature of the 2008 parliamentary election in Bangladesh was the inclusion of a 'no vote' provision for voters unhappy with all candidates.

In the 2008 election, some 380,000 voters cast a 'no vote', accounting for about 0.5% of the total votes cast. The election rules provide that if over 50% of the voters chose to cast a no vote in a particular constituency, it would automatically lead to re-election. Fortunately, no constituency faced this scenario in the 2008 election. News about the living conditions of stranded 'Bihari Pakistanis' in Bangladesh is prominently carried in Pakistan.

This time, however, a sizeable number of the Urdu speaking population, who had been living in camps for the last 38 years and consistently refusing to accept Bangladeshi citizenship by claiming to be Pakistanis, opted to register as voters in the 2008 election after becoming Bangladeshi nationals. Although their exact number is not available, it is widely accepted that most of the Urdu-speaking voters did vote in this election. Candidates in constituencies with a sizeable number of Urdu-speaking voters even published election posters in Urdu, a fact highlighted by Bangladeshi media.

Interestingly, as many as 87% of registered Bangladeshi voters turned out to vote in the 2008 election. Pakistan, by contrast, suffers from a chronic and embarrassingly low voter turnout, the lowest average turnout among countries of South Asia, and one of the lowest in the world. (Pakistan ranks 164 among 169 countries studied by International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance – IIDEA – since 1945.) After the seemingly successful intrusion of the military into politics and delivering a rather admirable election to the people of Bangladesh in December 2008, many in Pakistan forecast that the army chief, General Moeen U. Ahmed would assume the presidency of the country. They were proved wrong. The General retired and a political figure was elected as the new President of Bangladesh.

Many Pakistanis also expected that following a smooth and orderly election, politics in Bangladesh would become more stable and less fractious. However, this assumption appears to be somewhat premature. Bangladesh seems to be following in the footsteps of Pakistan's fast-fading environment of 'reconciliation' between Nawaz Sharif's PML-N and the Zardari led PPP.

Even though Sheikh Hasina has promised to set a new example in politics in line with her promised 'charter of change' by seeking opposition support in decision-making and even giving Khaleda Zia, the former prime minister, a position in the government, reconciliation and cooperation between the two parties remains somewhat distant. Nawaz Sharif's party and the ruling PPP had locked horns throughout the decade of the 1990s, much like the acrimonious relationship that exists between the two leading political parties in Bangladesh.

The signing of a Charter of Democracy in May 2006 between the late Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif did raise hopes that the two parties were willing to learn from the past. Yet, while the charter of democracy does seem to have guided the PPP and PML-N in forming a coalition government after the February 2008 elections in Pakistan, the 'conciliatory' atmosphere did not last long. Fortunately though, the PML-N, which occupies the opposition benches in the National Assembly today, has not let its opposition to the government reach acrimonious levels.

The government-opposition relationship in Bangladesh, in contrast, seems to be much more tense. Although the Sheikh Hasina government has yet to make major headway in rooting out corruption or containing militancy, she remains remarkably popular in the country with 78% people very satisfied or satisfied with her job performance.1

In contrast, the popularity rating of President Zardari of Pakistan stands at a low 32%, down from 64% a year ago.2 Another poll released by Gallup International in July 2009 records public confidence in the Bangladesh government at 87% while 88% approve the job performance of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.3 The performance rating of the Bangladesh leader of the opposition, Khaleda Zia, at 41% is quite a contrast from 79% popularity ratings of Nawaz Sharif in Pakistan, head of the leading opposition party, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N). Pakistan's PM Gilani, a stalwart of the PPP, hand-picked by President Zardari, incidentally enjoys 67% approval ratings. Economic progress is another point of reference for viewing Bangladesh from Pakistan. Prior to East Pakistan seceding and becoming Bangladesh, a small but influential section of the Pakistani establishment unjustifiably believed that East Pakistan was a drag on the national economy and that Pakistan would develop much faster after the break-up.

On the other hand, many people in the then eastern wing of the country believed that the western wing was exploiting their resources and that they had been deprived of their rightful share in national development allocations. Nearly four decades later, the people of Pakistan are naturally curious about how the estranged former eastern wing has fared on the economic front. Development professionals and economists in Pakistan are envious of Bangladesh's success at controlling its high rate of population growth.

At the time of independence, Bangladesh was more populous than its erstwhile western wing. This 'superiority' in numbers was not recognised by the western wing for most part of their journey together from 1947 to 1971, as the first Constitution of the country developed the principle of 'parity' between the two wings by allocating an equal number of parliamentary seats to both despite the numerical superiority of the eastern wing. The Bangladesh population, at around 140 million in 2006, is growing at an annual rate of about 1.4% compared to around 3% in the period up to 1990.

In contrast, the Pakistan population grew at around 2.6% per annum, a figure that has only now come down to 1.8% per annum. Its population, as of 2006, now stands at 157 million. Despite a higher population, Pakistan exports fewer workers to international markets as compared to Bangladesh. As of 2007, Bangladeshi workers around the world numbered 981,000 compared to around 300,000 Pakistani overseas workers.

As a result Bangladesh was able to earn close to US $8,000 million in remittances through its overseas workers in 2007-08 compared to about US $6,451 million by Pakistani migrant workers. Pakistan is envious of the growing competitiveness of Bangladeshi workers in the international market. Pakistanis also note that Bangladesh's GDP growth rate during the past decade or so has been impressive, at times higher than that of Pakistan. For example, the GDP growth rate in Bangladesh was 6.21% in 2007-08 compared to Pakistan's 4.1% in the same period. Although total Pakistani exports are still higher, Bangladeshi exports of cotton garments and finished cotton goods are a source of envy for Pakistan, especially as it is one of the largest growers of cotton whereas Bangladesh virtually has to import all its raw cotton for its finished cotton goods.

Bangladeshi exports of finished cotton goods worth over US $10,000 million compared to Pakistan's US $7,500 million during the year 2007-08, illustrates the point. Overall then, close to four decades since the coming into being of Bangladesh, Pakistanis continue to view the country's political and economic developments through the prism of their own mixed track record.

* The author is with PILDAT (PILDAT - Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency) an independent think tank working to strengthen democracy and democratic institutions. He was in Bangladesh during the December 2008 parliamentary election as a part of the Commonwealth Election Observer Group.
 

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Pakis should compare thier nation to Bangladesh!



Bangladesh economy has grown 5-6% per year since 1996 despite political instability, poor infrastructure, corruption, insufficient power supplies, and slow implementation of economic reforms - similar conditions prevailing in Pakistan whose economy has gone down to just 2%!


Garment exports (cotton defecient Bangladesh), totaling $15.3 billion in FY09 and remittances from overseas Bangladeshis totaling $9.7 billion in FY09 accounted for almost 30% of GDP - far exceeding that of Pakistan (cotton surplus nation).....


In contrast to Pakistan´s hefty 15% unemployment, Bangladesh has minimum unemployment of just 5% - same as Luxembourg!


Inflation wise Bangladesh scores over Pakistan which has about 19% inflation versus 6% that of Bangladesh!


Bangladeshi Taka is more stronger than Pakistani Rupee (which has been devalued due to IMF conditions).

Per capita debt wise, yet Bangladeshis are better of than Pakistan who is dole dependent.....Pakistan debt is 55% of its GDP vs Bangladesh whose GDP debt is just 38%...


PAKISTAN SHOULD BE COMPARED TO BANGLADESH AND NOT BIG ECONOMY AS INDIA WHICH IS BEING COMPARED VIS A VIS CHINA.........PAKISTAN IS STRUGGLING N STUMBLING!



Pakistan, an impoverished and underdeveloped country has suffered from decades of internal political disputes and low levels of foreign investment
 

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After partition: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh


In 1947, the jewel of the British Empire, India, was granted independence, divided along religious lines and two nations were born - India and Pakistan.

Partition left 10 million people uprooted and more than half a million Muslims, Sikhs and Hindus dead in riots and massacres.
PARTITION - THE BASICS
British India divided into two - Pakistan with Muslim majority and India secular but with Hindu majority
India's Mahatma Gandhi opposed the idea
Last Viceroy Lord Louis Mountbatten oversaw talks between India's Jawaharlal Nehru and Mohammed Ali Jinnah head of Muslim League
Led to largest mass migration in history
Sixty years on, the status of Kashmir remains unresolved despite a tenuous peace process between India and Pakistan, following three wars. Communal unrest continues to surface from time to time in both countries. The good news is that the economies are growing, especially in India.

Find out more about how India, Pakistan and, since 1971 Bangladesh, have developed since partition.


THE CHANGING FACE OF THE INDIAN SUBCONTINENT




1. Dominion of Pakistan created on 14 August 1947. Became world's first Islamic Republic in 1956. New city of Islamabad replaced Karachi as capital in the mid 1960s
2. British India was made up of provinces, princely states and state agencies. An independent Union of India was created on 15 August 1947 and renamed the Republic of India in 1950
3. Punjab was split in two. Majority Muslim western part became Pakistan's Punjab province; majority Sikh and Hindu eastern part became India's Punjab state
4. Bengal divided into Indian state of West Bengal and East Pakistan, which became East Bengal in 1956 and Bangladesh achieved independence after a civil war in 1971
ECONOMY AND WELFARE



India, Pakistan and Bangladesh have come a long way since the British left them. Of the three nations, India has seen by far the most dramatic growth.

In terms of economic resources, India did much better than Pakistan out of partition. It inherited 90% of the subcontinent's industry and the thriving cities of Delhi, Bombay (now Mumbai) and Calcutta.

It is now one of the world's fastest developing economies with average growth rates of 8% over the past three years. It is also emerging as a serious global player in information technology, telecommunications and pharmaceuticals.

By contrast, Pakistan's economy which was based on agriculture and controlled by feudal elites, was left with 17.5% of the British colonial government's financial reserves after partition.

Nevertheless, it has seen sustained growth since the early 1950s despite internal strife, conflict with India, US sanctions, global recession and, more recently, the 2005 earthquake.

The economy really took off in 2000 after reforms that saw public sector enterprises privatised, relaxation of regulations on external trade and reform of the banking sector.

Thanks to economic growth and foreign investment, all three states have seen expansion and improvement of health and education services. Life expectancy has increased, infant and maternal death rates have dropped, and literacy rates risen.

But poverty is still widespread in all three nations, which feature in the top 10 most populous in the world. Almost half the population in Bangladesh lives on less than $1 a day and Pakistan's social indicators still lag behind countries with comparable per capita incomes.

A substantial number of people living in India's villages remain illiterate and impoverished, raising concerns about the inclusivity of the economic boom.

Powerful regional and caste-based parties have empowered many poor people whose progress was hampered by the ancient Hindu caste system, but that system still impedes widespread social progress.

SOCIETY



After independence, India and Pakistan had to devise new
ways of running their countries and creating nation states.

Pakistan has been led largely by military rulers over the last 60 years. Bangladesh fell under military rule a few years after independence, democracy being restored in 1990, but the political scene there is unpredictable.

While Pakistan was created as a Muslim state after Jinnah's insistence that Muslims of the former colony needed a separate country of their own, Hindu-majority India was, and formally remains, secular, and also the world's largest democracy.

The violence between Muslims, Sikhs and Hindus in 1947 was never repeated on such a horrific scale, but the struggle to keep the peace between communal and religious groups is ongoing in both India and Pakistan.

After the death of India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, in 1964 and the rise to power of his daughter Indira Gandhi, tensions grew between the Hindu majority and Sikhs. In 1984, Gandhi was killed by her Sikh bodyguards after ordering troops to flush out Sikh militants from the Golden Temple in Amritsar. And in 1992, widespread Hindu-Muslim violence erupted after Hindu extremists demolished the Babri mosque at Ayodhya.

More recently, there have been several bombings, such as the attack on Mumbai's train network in July 2006 which police blamed on Pakistani militants and a banned Indian group. Pakistan, whose citizens are mostly Muslim, has seen Sunni and Shia factions killing each other in their thousands in three of the four Pakistani regions since the 1980s.

After 9/11, Pakistan's government became an ally of Washington by dropping its support for the Taleban regime in Afghanistan.

It took a tougher stance towards Islamic extremists, as highlighted in the bloody siege and suicide bombing at Islamabad's Red Mosque in July.

Bangladesh has also been affected by internal strife.

The country has suffered from bomb attacks on secular and cultural organisations and events for more than a decade.

The near simultaneous bombings across Bangladesh in 2005 were a dramatic pointer to religious extremism and two fringe Islamic organisations have been banned.

MILITARY

STRATEGIC BALANCE
DEFENCE BUDGETS
India: $22.10bn;
2.57% of GDP (2006)
Pakistan: $4.54bn;
3.14% of GDP (2007)
Bangladesh: $687m;
2.24% of GDP (2006 estimate)
ARMED FORCES (total strength)
India: 1,324,000
Pakistan: 570,000
Bangladesh: 115,500
TANKS
India: 3,978 main battle tanks including 1,133 in reserve
Pakistan: 2,461 main battle tanks including 1,100 in reserve
Bangladesh: 180 (claimed)
COMBAT AIRCRAFT
India: Air Force: 763, Navy: 34
Pakistan: Air Force: 352, Navy: 16
Bangladesh: 62
SUBMARINES
India: 16
Pakistan: 8
Bangladesh: none
COMBAT SHIPS
India: 58
Pakistan: 12
Bangladesh: 5 (frigates only - 3 of limited use)
Source: IISS 2007 Military Balance/ Jane's Country Risk

NUCLEAR WEAPONS (estimated total warheads)
India: 50 - 90
Pakistan: 30-60
Bangladesh: none
Sources: SIPRI Yearbook 2006/NRDC
The military balance between India and Pakistan is difficult to establish as it depends on many factors, such as quality of command, training, discipline and morale.

Most Indian-Pakistani conflicts have ended in stalemate except the Bangladesh War in 1971, when Pakistan's defeat was complete.

India backed, sheltered and trained Bangladeshi guerrillas which contributed to Pakistan's defeat.

Kashmir has been the main flashpoint ever since Partition.

The two neighbours, now nuclear powers, have twice waged war over the disputed region - in 1947-48 and 1965.

The region is now divided in two by a Line of Control and often breached by separatist militants.

In 1999, fighting between Indian and Pakistani-backed forces in Indian Kashmir led to a new conflict, known as the Kargil conflict, but not full-scale war.

In Depth: Read more about the Kashmir conflict
In their last confrontation in 2002, India deployed 700,000 troops; Pakistan, 300,000 - three-fourths of their regular forces - either side of the Line of Control in Kashmir and the internationally recognised India-Pakistan border.

Both readied their armoured, air and naval forces for war. India prepared for offensive operations to destroy militant camps.

Pakistan's objective was to defend key points against attack.

Intense Western diplomacy and, perhaps more significantly, mutual nuclear deterrence eventually defused tensions, but it was a close run thing.
 

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30 page pdf file

Economic growth in Bangladesh: experience and policy priorities


The Liberation War of 1971 destroyed about a fifth of Bangladesh's economy, and the
post-war dislocations left the country on a slow growth trajectory for better part of two
decades. Then the economy accelerated from 1990, driven by a remarkable turnaround in the
growth of multi-factor productivity. We identify factors that inhibit another growth spurt:
low levels of human capital; poor infrastructure; market failures specific to individual
industries; low levels of international trade; corruption; and cumbersome regulations.
Of these, we consider tackling infrastructure bottlenecks, promoting trade, and carrying out
regulatory reforms as top priorities for the policymakers.
 

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Is Pakistan falling apart?

It has suffered disaster after disaster. Its people have lived through crisis upon crisis. Its leaders are unwilling or unable to act. But is it really the failed state that many believe?

Is Pakistan disintegrating? Are the state and society coming apart under the impact of successive political and natural disasters? The country swirls with rumours about the fall of the civilian government or even a military coup. The great Indus flood has disappeared from the headlines at home and abroad, though millions of farmers are squatting in the ruins of their villages. The US is launching its heaviest-ever drone attacks on targets in the west of the country, and Pakistan closed the main US and Nato supply route through the Khyber Pass after US helicopters crossed the border and killed Pakistani soldiers.

Pakistan is undoubtedly in a bad way, but it is also a country with more than 170 million people, a population greater than Russia's, and is capable of absorbing a lot of punishment. It is a place of lop-sided development. It possesses nuclear weapons but children were suffering from malnutrition even before the floods. Electricity supply is intermittent so industrialists owning textile mills in Punjab complain that they have to use their own generators to stay in business. Highways linking cities are impressive, but the driver who turns off the road may soon find himself bumping along a farmer's track. The 617,000-strong army is one of the strongest in the world, but the government has failed to eliminate polio or malaria. Everybody agrees that higher education must be improved if Pakistan is to compete in the modern world, but the universities have been on strike because their budgets had been cut and they could not pay their staff.

The problem for Pakistan is not that the country is going to implode or sink into anarchy, but that successive crises do not produce revolutionary or radical change. A dysfunctional and corrupt state, part-controlled by the army, staggers on and continues to misgovern the country. The merry-go-round of open or veiled military rule alternates with feeble civilian governments. But power stays in the hands of an English-speaking élite that inherited from the British rulers of the Raj a sense of superiority over the rest of the population.

The present government might just squeak through the post-flood crisis because of its weakness rather than its strength. The military has no reason to replace it formally since the generals already control security policy at home and abroad, as well as foreign policy and anything else they deem important to their interests. The ambition of the Prime Minister, Yousuf Raza Gilani, in the next few weeks is to try to fight off the demand by the Chief Justice, Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, that the legal immunity of President Asif Ali Zardari should be lifted. Mr Zardari, who owes his position to having been the husband of Benazir Bhutto, assassinated in 2007, has a well-established (though unproven) reputation for corruption during his pre-presidential days. Whatever the outcome of the struggle with the Supreme Court, Mr Zardari is scarcely in a position to stand up to the military leaders who may find it convenient to have such a discredited civilian leader nominally in power.

The military have ruled Pakistan for more than half the time since independence in 1947, but their control has never been quite absolute. The soldiers have never managed to put the politicians and the political parties permanently out of business, so the balance between military and non-military still counts. But there is no doubt about which way the struggle is going. A decisive moment came on 24 July this year when General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, the army chief of staff, was reappointed for another three-year term. The US embassy in Islamabad is said by foreign diplomats and Pakistani officials to have protested vigorously but unavailingly to Washington. It said that keeping General Kayani in place would inflict a fatal wound on democracy and demonstrate that the civilian government could not get rid of its own army commander. In the event, Washington, always a crucial influence in Islamabad, decided that it would prefer to deal with a single powerful figure able to deliver in negotiations over Afghanistan. This was in keeping with US policy towards Pakistan since the 1950s. "We were put under intense pressure to keep Kayani," said an aide of President Zardari's. "We were left with no choice."

In one sense, the army never really left power after the fall of General Pervez Musharraf in 2008. It has continued to allocate to itself an extraordinarily high proportion of Pakistan's limited resources. Military bases all over the country look spruce and well cared-for, while just outside their razor-wire defences are broken roads and slum housing. At the entrance of a base just west of Islamabad last week was an elderly but effective-looking tank as a monument, the ground around it parade-ground clean. A few hundred yards away, a yellow bulldozer was driving through thick mud to make a flood-damaged road passable two months after the deluge, while a side street nearby was closed by a pool of stagnant grey-coloured water. At the other end of the country in northern Sindh, a local leader, who like many critics of the Pakistani military did not want his name published, pointed to a wide canal. He said: "This canal is not meant to be taking water from the Indus, but it is allowed to operate because it irrigates land owned by army officers."

The army projects a messianic image of itself in which it selflessly takes power to save the nation. It likes to contrast its soldierly virtues of incorruptibility and efficiency with the crookedness and ineptitude of civilians. "The army is very good at claiming to be the solution to problems which it has itself created," complained a local politician in Punjab. "It is also good at ascribing all failures to civilian governments, which cannot act because the army monopolises resources." He added caustically that in his area, the floods had arrived on 6 August and the first army assistance on 26 August.

Politicians and journalists criticising the army often employ code words where more is implied than stated. But last month, a government minister made a pungent attack on the army that astonished listening journalists. The minister for defence production, Abdul Qayyum Jatoi, directly accused the army of being behind the killing of the opposition leader, Benazir Bhutto, in 2007, and the revered Baluchi leader Nawab Bugti, a year earlier.

"We did not provide the army with uniforms and boots to kill their own countrymen," Mr Jatoi said bluntly, suggesting that the army leaders do their duty by going to defend Pakistan's frontiers and end rumours of a coup. He added: "Not only politicians should be blamed for corruption, rather [army] generals and judges should be held responsible."

Mr Jatoi's words reflect what Pakistanis say about the army in private, but seldom dare do so in public. He paid a price for his forthrightness, since Mr Gilani promptly sacked him and he is being accused of high treason in a petition before the courts. He says he does not miss his job very much because all the important decisions in his ministry were in any case taken by the military. Pakistanis are unhappy because every week seems to bring another piece of bad news. The country is highly politicised with millions of people observing with acute interest the struggles for power at the central and local level. Taxi drivers discuss the make-up of the Supreme Court and its future composition. When it comes to open and lively political disputes, Pakistan is more like Lebanon, with its tradition of weak government but free expression of opinion, than Russia or Egypt with their supine and intimidated populations. Political parties in Pakistan are powerful and, given an ineffectual and corrupt administrative apparatus, everybody believes he or she needs somebody of influence to protect their interests. The army likes to denigrate civilian politicians as "feudalists", but in practice, big landowners have limited political power. Politicians gain influence through helping "clients" who need their support and that of their parties. "All politics here is really about jobs," says National Assembly member Mir Dost Muhammad Mazari.

Pakistan may not be falling apart, but the floods and the economic crisis – the government is bankrupt and inflation is at 18-20 per cent – means that every Pakistani I meet, be they small farmers, generals, industrialists or tribal leaders, is gloomy about the future. Each negative incident is interpreted as a sign of Pakistan's decline and a menacing omen of worse to come. Two recent scandals, both filmed as they happened and shown on as many as 26 cable television news channels, appear to confirm that the country is saturated with corruption and violence. This explosion of news channels has happened only in the past few years and makes it far more difficult to censor information.

One scandal was the notorious allegation of match-fixing in return for bribes made against Pakistani cricketers touring England. Commentators noted acidly that it was typical of the political system that the highly unpopular head of the Pakistan Cricket Board, Ijaz Butt, could not be dismissed by the defence minister, Ahmad Mukhtar, because he is the latter's brother-in-law. The scandal was peculiarly damaging because it broke in August just as the government was trying to persuade the world to give it large sums of money for flood relief.

A second scandal, which may have horrified Pakistanis even more than the bribery case in England, took place a few days earlier. News out of Pakistan at the time was all about the devastating floods and it received little international attention, but the gory events were again played endlessly on television. They took place on 15 August in the city of Sialkot, north of Lahore, where two wholly innocent teenagers called Hafiz Sajjad, 18, and Mohammed Muneeb Sajjad, 15, were misidentified as robbers and lynched by a crowd in the middle of a city street. Uniformed police stood nonchalantly by as men with iron rods and sticks took turns over a period of hours to beat the boys to death. Their mangled bodies were finally hung upside down in the market and the case only became know because a courageous television reporter had accidentally witnessed and secretly filmed what happened.

The Sialkot lynching shows Pakistani society at its worst. It also illustrates what happens when there is a breakdown in the administration of justice. In this case, the local police are reported to have routinely killed alleged criminals or handed them over to lynch mobs. This breakdown in the administration of justice is general. I asked Pashtun tribal elders in a town near Lakki Marwat in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province what they most needed. They all said governance: some form of effective local government administration. In south Punjab I went to a tribal court where 100 tough-looking Baluchi tribesmen had submitted a land dispute to a respected leader of their tribe. It was a complicated case involving a grandfather's will written in 1985 that left 12 acres of land unequally to the sons of his two marriages. The will was not very precise but nobody cared at first because the land was in the desert. But then one member of the family started to irrigate it and made it productive, leading to a rancorous dispute about ownership. The claimants to the land had chosen binding arbitration by a respected local leader, because a decision would be swift and free. They said that if they went through the state courts, the case could take years and the judges and police could be bribed.

But incidents such as the Sialkot lynching do not mean that the country is slipping into primal anarchy like Somalia. The Western world looks at Pakistan primarily in relation to Afghanistan, the Taliban, extreme jihadi Islam and the "war on terror". In a country of 170 million people there are always episodes that can be used as evidence to illustrate any trend, such as the belief that Pakistan is filled with bloodthirsty Islamic militants bent on holy war. Earlier this year, Foreign Policy magazine in Washington, which compiles an annual list of failed states, placed Pakistan 10th on the list, claiming that it showed more signs of state failure than Haiti and Yemen, and is only slightly more stable than Somalia and Yemen.

The country's high ranking in the survey tells one more about the paranoid state of mind of Washington post-9/11 than what is actually happening. There is no incentive to play down the "Islamic threat to Pakistan" on the part of any journalist who wants his or her story to be published, think-tankers who need a grant, or diplomats who seek promotion. The influence and prospects for growth of small jihadi organisations are systematically exaggerated. Over-attentive reading of the Koran is seen as the first step on the road to Islamic terrorism. Overstated claims about their activities by fundamentalist Islamic groups are happily lapped up and repeated.

Stories acquire a life of their own, regardless of their factual basis. During the recent floods, the foreign media reported on how militant Islamic groups were prominent and energetic in distributing aid to victims, the suggestion being that they will use their enhanced status to recruit more young men for holy war. This is supposedly what they did during the Kashmir earthquake of 2005, which killed 75,000 people whom it was difficult to reach because they lived high in the mountains. Christine Fair, an expert on Pakistan at Georgetown University in Washington, eloquently demolishes this and other spurious stories about the growth of militant Islam in Pakistan. She cites a survey of 28,000 households in 126 villages in Kashmir in which one-quarter of the inhabitants said they had received aid from international agencies, 7 per cent from non-militant Islamic charities, and just 1 per cent from the Islamic militant groups. Of course, the militantly religious of all kinds are likely to be to the front in helping survivors of any disaster, because most faiths adjure their adherents to help others in a crisis. The only person I met during a visit to flooded areas who could in any way be described as a religious militant engaged in relief work was an amiable German Pentecostalist waiting for a flight in Lahore airport.

Another hardy-perennial story about Pakistan claims that because of the undoubted inadequacy of the Pakistani public education system, madrasahs, or religious schools, provide free education to the needy. Once enrolled, the children are supposedly brainwashed to turn them into the future foot soldiers of jihadi Islam. In reality, Pakistani educational specialists say that just 1.3 per cent of children in school go the madrasahs, 65 per cent to public schools, and 34 per cent to non-religious private schools. In recent years, it is the small and affordable private schools that have expanded fastest, mainly because jobs in them are open to educated women prepared to accept low pay. Most jihadis turn out to have been educated at public schools.

Extreme Islamists have seldom done well in elections in Pakistan. Widespread popular support for the Afghan Taliban stems primarily from the conviction that they are essentially a Pashtun national liberation movement fighting a foreign occupation. The Pakistani Taliban was once said to be "60 miles from Islamabad", but such scaremongering ignored the fact that there were three mountain ranges and one of the world's most powerful armies in between the Taliban's rag-tag fighters and the capital. The Pakistani state may not function very well but it is not failing, and – a pity – current crises may not even change it very much.
 

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Amazing success of Bangladesh's tax 'funfairs'


Two special fairs held this week in Bangladesh have proved hugely popular, but they are not for thrill-seekers.

The people who have voluntarily queued for hours at the events want to start paying income tax - in a country where hardly anyone ever does.

And the revenue-starved authorities are stunned by the idea's success, finds the BBC's Ethirajan Anbarasan in Dhaka.

It was a not-so-fun-sounding fair, but the response was overwhelming.

In a country where fewer than 2% of the people pay income tax, it was a pleasant surprise for the National Board of Revenue (NBR), which organised the events to encourage people to pay up voluntarily.

Thousands of people queued for hours to pay their taxes and to get Tax Identification Numbers (TIN) in Bangladesh's first ever income tax fairs, held in the cities of Dhaka and Chittagong.

This week's five-day event has attracted so many people that organisers had to open more service counters to meet the unexpected demand.

Balloons and ribbons
More than 7,000 people submitted their returns in the first three days alone in Dhaka.It was more like a funfair, with balloons and coloured ribbons adorning the walls, and there were uniformed volunteers guiding people to various desks.

There were stalls selling snacks and drinks. Many used the occasion to catch up with their friends.

"Nearly 70% of those who submitted their returns in the fair were first-time income tax payers," M A Quader Sarker, Commissioner of Taxes and chief organiser of the event, told the BBC.

"It was beyond our expectations."

Mr Sarker said his department had sought to persuade those at the fair to disclose their income and pay taxes voluntarily.

Many visitors said the fair's main attraction was its hassle-free one-stop service.

Enthusiastic payers
At the event, people could submit their returns, pay their taxes at a bank counter and also get their income tax number at the same premises.

Some said if it had not been for this one-stop service, they would not have been able to submit their returns before the 30 September deadline.


The regular procedure of handing in their returns at the income tax office, they said, was complicated and cumbersome.

The taxpayers sounded enthusiastic and did not seem to mind waiting for hours to submit their papers.

"If you are a good citizen then you should pay taxes. I think everyone should pay tax," said Tariq Islam, a first-time taxpayer from Dhaka.

"Only then will our government have enough resources to invest in infrastructure projects."

He said he had stood in the queue for more than three hours to submit his returns.

Only 1.3 million people out of a population of more than 150 million are regular income tax payers in Bangladesh.

The government has been desperately trying to widen its tax net to boost its revenue for years, but without much success.

Spend it judiciously
Officials say the situation only improved after the TIN number was made mandatory to do such things as registering a car, buying a flat or even opening a bank account.
The government collected about $2.6bn (£1.6bn) in tax revenues last year, which is nearly 2.25% of its GDP.

It hopes to increase its tax revenue threefold in the next five years.

The country has also witnessed a sustained economic growth over the past 10 years and the number of middle income earners has increased in the same period.

But some of the taxpayers said they wanted to see how the government would spend their money.

"Like a responsible citizen, I will continue to pay my taxes and it is up to the government to show us the result," said Sheikh Salma Sultana, a young professional, who was submitting her returns for the third consecutive year.

"I want to see how they are going to accommodate our expectations."

Like Sultana, many of the taxpayers said they expected the government to use their taxes judiciously.

They wanted the money to be used to improve the country's ailing infrastructure, healthcare and to create more job opportunities for the younger generation.

It remains to be seen whether the newfound rectitude of these first-time Bangladeshi taxpayers will last
 

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World Bank approves 75-million-dollar loan to Bangladesh


Dhaka - The World Bank has approved a 75-million-dollar loan to Bangladesh to support its efforts to repair the damage left behind by two cyclones in its southern region, the bank said Sunday.
Cyclone Sidr hit the area in November 2007, leaving some 3,000 people dead and 55,000 injured. An estimated 9 million people have been affected and the total cost of the damage has been put at 1.2 billion dollars.
A second cyclone, Aila, hit the region in 2009 causing a further 400 million dollars worth of damage.
The global lender had provided 109 million dollars of emergency support including a grant of 2.96 million dollars in the aftermath of cyclone Sidr.
'The World Bank felt it necessary to increase its financing to ensure a faster and more complete recovery of cyclone-affected areas, and most importantly, prepare them for future disasters,' the bank's country director for Bangladesh Ellen Goldstein said in a press statement.
Bangladesh was extremely vulnerable to climate change and natural disasters, she added, referring to recent natural disasters such as cyclones and floods in the southern part of the country.
The new loan was aimed at supporting efforts to restore infrastructure and the development of more resilient agricultural practices in the salinity and cyclone-prone southern coastal areas.
It would also be used to fund the rehabilitation of 80 kilometres of coastal embankments and 100 multipurpose cyclone shelters and the construction of 60 more.
 

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Top drug makers log 30pc sales growth

Jasim Uddin Khan
Top four local pharmaceutical companies posted over 30 percent growth in sales in the first eight months of 2010, said officials, pointing to growing health consciousness, advanced manufacturing processes and new investments in the sector.

Beximco, Eskayef, Renata and Incepta are the four among 250 small, medium and large local and multinational drug makers in Bangladesh. These companies manufacture more than 500 types of medicine.

"Although dozens of new companies started production and marketing their products, the top companies are continuing their success due to their high quality and standard," said AM Faruque, managing director of Eskayef Bangladesh.

Growing heath-consciousness among consumers is inspiring the companies to spend more on healthcare products, Faruque added.

The rise in local sales has also been supported by a report published by Intercontinental Marketing Services (IMS), a global intelligence agency for the pharmaceutical market.

The IMS showed a 38.2 percent rise in Renata sales, 35.4 percent for Incepta and 34.9 percent for Eskayef in the first six months of the year. The amount of total sales during January-July stood at Tk 2,018 crore, the report says.

However, Beximco joined the sales feast in the last couple of months when the company achieved over 60 percent growth.

"The company management has adequate liquidity, high level of confidence this year. Due to market demand, Beximco joined other performing players, of late," a top manager of the company said.

The other performers are Drug International Ltd with 27.2 percent growth, followed by Opsonin Pharma (25.6 percent) and Aristopharma (18.6 percent), the intelligence agency finds.

However, Square Pharmaceuticals Ltd recorded the highest sales at Tk 605 crore during the period, while Incepta sold Tk 297 crore worth of medicine, Beximco Tk 258 crore and ACME Tk 254 crore.

The top 10 performers, according to the IMS ranking, also include Square Pharmaceuticals Ltd, ACME Laboratories Ltd and Advanced Chemical Industries (ACI) Ltd. These top companies take up nearly 70 percent of the medicine market share.

The IMS report points to retail level sales of pharmaceutical products in different countries for a particular period. Such sales exclude exports, government and other organisational purchase.

Currently, the size of the local pharmaceutical industry is Tk 7,000 crore, say industry insiders.
 

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Software outsourcing could earn $1.0b in next five years


Bangladesh could earn US$ 1.0 billion within next five years from outsourcing ITES (Information Technology Enabled Services) and exporting software if it could establish itself as an emerging outsourcing destination.

Speakers expressed the hope for this lofty goal at the country-brand launching ceremony named "BangladeshNext" at Bangabandhu International Convention Centre in city Saturday.

Bangladesh Association of Software & Information Services (BASIS) has started this country branding initiative with a view to projecting Bangladesh as an important outsourcing destination.

Commerce Minister Mohammed Faruk Khan was present as the chief guest at the programme while Danish Ambassador in Dhaka Svend Olling spoke as the special guest. BASIS president Mahboob Zaman chaired the programme.

AT Capital managing partner Ifty Islam gave the keynote presentation at the ceremony.

"Bangladesh has been a surprisingly resilient economy in the face of all odds and proved itself as one of most stable economies", said Mr. Islam pointing out the strength of Bangladesh. He suggested focusing more on implementation than on policy formulation to be a global provider of outsourcing.

Danish Ambassador gave assurance of Bangladesh's commercial potential and called for repairing its poor brand image to the world. He has drawn the minister's attention to the country's energy crisis issue which alarms the foreign investors most.

The minister said the government will improve the energy situation within the next year. Besides, Bangladesh is undergoing a process of having a second submarine cable, he added.

The minister gave assurance of all possible government support to the IT industry needs. He asked for a proposal from BASIS comparing Bangladesh's bandwidth price with that of other countries in this region.

EPB Vice Chairman Jalal Ahmed emphasised the need for export diversification. ITES could be an alternative to RMG's share in export, he said.

The BASIS chief said America-Bangladesh Technology Summit to be held in the USA on October 13 next will be the largest business conference abroad arranged by Bangladesh. He sought media's cooperation in making BangladeshNext brand a success.

BASIS Senior Vice President A.K.M. Fahim Mashroor moderated the programme and Secretary General Forkan Bin Quasem gave the vote of thanks.

DCCI representative T.I.M. Nurul Kabir, American Chamber of Commerce president Aftab ul Islam and BASIS members were also present at the programme.
 

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