KOLKATA: Opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) lawmaker Harunur Rashid has pitched for an Islamist Bangladesh, opposing the secular polity that the ruling Awami League seeks to uphold. During his speech in the Bangladesh Parliament this week, Rashid said, "There is no place for secularism in Islam." His comment was opposed by the Awami League lawmakers, including Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.
But Rashid continued to strongly push for a Constitution based on "Islam as enshrined in the Holy Quran", negating the often-made claims by the BNP politicians that their party is for "equality before law" of all Bangladeshis.
The BNP had made its political preference clear when it formed the government in 2001 with pro-Pakistan Jamaat-e-Islami as its coalition partner.
For the next five years of the BNP-Jamaat reign, a surfeit of Islamist radical terror groups like HUJI, JMB and Ansarullah Bangla Team surfaced or consolidated their position in Bangladesh, unleashing horrible pogroms against minority Hindus, Buddhists and Christians.
Jamaat-e-Islami had opposed the break-up of Pakistan and the emergence of an independent Bangladesh, with its top politicians functioning as local collaborators of the Pakistan army in its genocidal campaign. The BNP was born in the military barracks, and its founder and military ruler General Ziaur Rahman had legitimised the pro-Pakistani collaborators by removing the ban on them. Its brand of Bangladeshi nationalism is religion-driven.
The BNP has also backed the Hefazat-e-Islam's violent street agitations on a wide variety of issues like installation of statues of the nation's founder Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, anti-jihadist crackdown in France and visit of Indian PM Narendra Modi as a special guest on the Golden Jubilee of Bangladesh's Independence earlier this year.
BNP Secretary General Fakhrul Islam Alamgir had strongly pitched for the immediate release of Hefazat leaders arrested and booked on charges of violence.
The BNP itself along with its radical allies had periodically unleashed a violent campaign of burning down public transports and bombing crowded locations to enforce their strikes after they lost three successive elections to the Awami League.
"Bangladesh is a secular nation and it will remain secular. Our nationalism is based on our rich language and distinct Bengali cultural identity and that will not change," Sheikh Hasina reminded Rashid, the BNP MP from Chapai Nawabganj, during the debate in the Parliament.
But Rashid continued to insist on the "innate discrepancy between Islam and Westernised secularism", and said: "For a country whose population is 90 per cent Muslims or more, it is inconsistent and unacceptable to have a secular polity."
The BNP leadership did not oppose Rashid's remarks in the Parliament.
Analysts say that BNP's fresh pitch for an Islamist state comes at a time when Pakistan-backed Taliban is pushing for power in Afghanistan after the US military withdrawal. (IANS)
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