BNP,
AL stalwarts offer to toss criminals
out of party
Thugs
are liabilities, not assets, Bhuyian
and Jalil agree at the National
Policy Review
Staff Correspondent
06 June, 2003
The second-in-commands
of the ruling Bangladesh Nationalist
Party (BNP) and the main opposition
Awami League (AL) yesterday expressed
their willingness to rid their
parties of criminal godfathers.
Secretary General of BNP Abdul
Mannan Bhuiyan and General Secretary
of the AL Md Abdul Jalil offered
to discard criminals amidst huge
applause at the closing ceremony
of the three-day National Policy
Review Forum 2003 at Hotel Sheraton
yesterday.The two stalwarts also
declared that the godfathers would
not be allowed to get back in
the party fold once expelled.
The Forum, co-organised by the
Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD),
The Daily Star and the Prothom
Alo, was presided over by CPD
Chairman Prof. Rehman Sobhan.CPD
Executive Director Dr Debapriya
Bhattacharya, the Prothom Alo
Editor Motiur Rahman and The Daily
Star Editor Mahfuz Anam delivered
separate statements.
"Let us make a list of godfathers
and expel them from our parties.
If we want to maintain our parties
clean, there should be a mutual
commitment. If Awami League expels
one, BNP would not take him and
vice versa," Mannan Bhuiyan
said.He said criminals could not
be assets for any party, rather
they are liabilities. He claimed
that during the countrywide army-led
clampdown on criminals, majority
of the criminals belonging to
his party were caught. "We
didn't even press for their release
as we wanted the nation to get
rid of these elements." Speaking
on the same issue earlier, Jalil
said that both BNP and AL have
to reach a consensus that none
draft in godfathers thrown out
by the other party. "I'll
not deny the presence of godfathers
in our party but the government
should also acknowledge theirs."
Both the leaders were also concerned
at the criminalisation of politics.
Career politicians are being marginalised
with the entry of black money
holders and retired bureaucrats
into politics. Jalil made a specific
proposal that no party should
nominate a retired bureaucrat
to run member of parliament or
to become minister unless they
(bureaucrats) worked for party
for five years.
Both leaders also expressed similar
views on development policy formulation.
They disfavoured donor-prescribed
reforms and emphasised using local
policy-planning capabilities for
necessary reforms in various sectors. They
appreciated the tasks carried
out under the 'National Policy
Review Forum 2003' initiative
and assured that due importance
would be given to its recommendations
in their party forums.
Jalil alleged the government was
not giving the opposition enough
opportunities to speak in the
parliament and that microphone
of even the opposition leader
was put off. In response, Mannan
Bhuiyan assured of all cooperation
from the government in the coming
sessions of the parliament and
urged the Awami League to join
the budget session beginning from
June 10.
He said while in the opposition,
the BNP had boycotted the sessions
of the parliament although he
was against 'the culture of boycotting
parliament'.
In a lighter vein, he said while
a political party has to spend
about Tk 20 lakh to organise
a public meeting, it is a good
opportunity to speak in the
House against the government
without having to spend.
Turning to the role of the press,
Bhuiyan called for a more positive
projection of happenings in the
society and discarding a negative
portrayal of those. He hoped the
members of the civil society would
take a neutral stand on issues
of national development. The CPD
chairman said if politicians can
have meetings in a cordial atmosphere
in such forums, there should be
no bar for them to play their
due role in the parliament.
Referring to loan default culture,
Prof. Rehaman Sobhan said given
the magnitude of the problem,
a cosmetic surgery would not do.
"We need a deep surgery. "He
suggested that ministers and parliamentary
standing committees can have meetings,
time to time, with the taskforces
which prepared the policy recommendations
under the 'National Policy Review
Forum 2003' initiative.
Earlier, CPD Executive Director
Dr Debapriya Bhattacharya said
their organisation would go
for another round of policy
review to evaluate the progress
of implementation of the recommendations
prior to the next parliamentary
polls. The recommendations would
soon be handed over to Prime
Minister Khaleda Zia and Opposition
Leader Sheikh Hasina.
Debapriya said the taskforces
which worked on policy issues
under the CPD initiative would
have meetings with the parliamentary
standing committees concerned
when all the bodies are formed. Editor
of the Prothom Alo Motiur Rahman
emphasised putting an end to rivalry
and strife between the BNP and
the AL, which he thought, was
holding the country back from
achieving the desired development.
He said democracy would not be
consolidated if the parliament
remained ineffective. He reminded
the ruling alliance that it could
not do much on two major fronts
-- curbing criminal activities
and corruption. He also reminded
the main opposition that it failed
to live up to its promise of not
calling hartal anymore. Editor
of The Daily Star Mahfuz Anam
said people want to get rid of
a cycle of patterned behaviour
with the political parties disregarding
each others' rights. Both the
AL and the BNP tend to treat the
opposition in the same manner
while in power, he observed
He wondered why people have to
wait for the Armed Forces Day
to see their top two political
leaders (the prime minister and
the opposition leader) sit together
and smile at each other. He emphasised
mutual respect and amity in political
culture.With its overwhelming
majority in the parliament, the
BNP has got ample scope to show
magnanimity, Mahfuz Anam noted.
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