Foreign Policy Blogs

Khaleda Zia Endorses Post-Election Protests, Promises to Bring Down Government

Whilst Khaleda Zia has been trying to gin up support for her country-wide protest movement to ring out against the sitting Awami League government, ostensibly for leading the country toward ruin, she has been chucked out of her house.  In her stead, the Prime Minister, Sheikh Hasina has used any availing opportunity to shame her near-life long opponent.

Ultimately however, it is not hard to see that these protests are attempts at stitching together a public rebuke for Begum Zia’s recent eviction.  This is baldly the personalistic politics on mutual vengeance– a source of deep national shame.  Or, rather it should be.  For their personal politics has been ruining Bangladesh for nearly a generation.

Begum Zia instigated the recent day long strike immediately preceding the Eid just gone past. That move shut down public transport and infrastructure so that many thousands of hard working Bangladeshis could not get back home to celebrate the holidays.  She has  put out a call to engage in nation-wide street protest movements on November 30th.  Further, she drew together an economic argument with which to batter the AL, though it lacks the salient beneficences of facts and the truth.

Mrs. Zia’s politics is that of fear and demagoguery.  She draws together a widely ranging narrative that cannot, plausibly, be true.  The Awami League best not give her any well-ground  excuses to bring the real dissatisfactions of the Bangladesh out on the street.  The best way to do that?  Work hard to deliver policy and politics that makes the majority of Bangladeshis better off during the Awami League’s current term in power.

 

Author

Faheem Haider

Faheem Haider is a political analyst, writer and artist. He holds advanced research degrees in political economy, political theory and the political economy of development from the London School of Economics and Political Science and New York University. He also studied political psychology at Columbia University. During long stints away from his beloved Washington Square Park, he studied peace and conflict resolution and French history and European politics at the American University in Washington DC and the University of Paris, respectively.

Faheem has research expertise in democratic theory and the political economy of democracy in South Asia. In whatever time he has to spare, Faheem paints, writes, and edits his own blog on the photographic image and its relationship to the political narrative of fascist, liberal and progressivist art.

That work and associated writing can be found at the following link: http://blackandwhiteandthings.wordpress.com