Bangladesh’s BNP opposition party in dire straits as leader’s health deteriorates

Khaleda Zia, Bangladesh’s first female Prime Minister and arch-rivalof current Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, was admitted to the critical care unit of a Dhaka hospital early this month after her health deteriorated.

The 76-year old former prime minister and leader of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) has been suffering from several chronic and life-threatening diseases.

“She has chronic liver disease, among other problems that can’t be treated in Bangladesh. She urgently needs treatment in a developed country like Germany,” Zia’s personal physician AZM Zahid Hossain told DW.

However, Zia is not allowed to leave Bangladesh after having been convicted and jailed on graft charges in 2018.

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At the time her supporters said the charges were a politically motivated attempt to keep her from seeking power. In March 2020, the government allowed Zia to be released from prison as her health began to worsen.

Now the BNP is trying to convince Hasina’s ruling Awami League government to allow Zia to go abroad immediately to receive treatment. However, Hasina has yet to agree. BNP supporters in Dhaka protested Zia’s travel ban this week.

The BNP’s future looks grim

The dire situation for Zia comes as her BNP’s political power continues to slip. The party has not led Bangladesh since 2006, and it lost 2008 elections in a landslide, which secured the Awami League an absolute majority in parliament.

The BNP and Zia were once praised as playing a crucial role in transitioning Bangladesh from military rule to democracy. However, since 2008, the BNP has been unable to regain its popularity, and the ruling Awami League has taken steps to cement its hold on power.

Rumeen Farhana, the BNP’s international affairs secretary, told DW that the Awami League government is pulling administrative and judicial strings to weaken her party.

“We live under constant threat by the police and the administration. We don’t know who the next victim of an abduction or extrajudicial killing will be,” she said.

“Each of our party members has been facing several politically motivated legal cases filed against them in recent years. Even I have faced legal proceedings on four to five cases filed against me,” she added.

Over the past decade, over 180,000 legal cases have been filed against nearly 4 million BNP members, according to statistics provided by the party’s communications team.

The data also shows over 600 party members have been abducted, and around 3,000 were victims of extrajudicial killings at the hands of authorities during this period.

Michael Kugelman, a South Asia expert at the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson Center for Scholars, told DW that Bangladesh’s ruling party has been carrying out a brutal crackdown on the opposition.

“The BNP’s future is grim, largely because the government has cracked down on dissent so harshly and extensively that it has little capacity to operate as a viable party,” he said.

BNP failing to mount opposition

Besides the crackdown, the BNP’s political capital has also dwindled following consecutive electoral defeats.

After Awami League victories in 2014, which was criticized for not being free and fair, the BNP as the largest opposition party by 2015 had failed to succeed in getting a new election called under a caretaker government.

Deadly protests erupted, and the BNP was accused by opponents of fomenting unrest.

In the 2018 national election, Hasina secured her third consecutive term, with the Awami League beating the BNP in a landslide.

“Since the 2014 election, the BNP has not been able to play a consistent role as an opposition,” Ali Riaz, a political science professor at Illinois State University, told DW.

“Because, on the one hand, it has faced severe persecution, while on the other hand, its leadership has not been able to lay out a clear pathway for movement against the incumbent Awami League party,” he said. “The failed movement in 2015 has weakened it significantly,” Riaz added.

And during the BNP’s last tenure in power between 2001 and 2006, several influential party members, including Zia, were implicated in corruption scandals. Both of Zia’s sons, Arafat Rahman and Tarique Rahman, fled the country to avoid prosecution on corruption charges.

Tarique Rahman assumed the role of party chairman from exile in London after his mother was put behind bars. Arafat Rahman died in Malaysia in 2015.

The BNP maintains that the corruption charges were all politically motivated.

What is next for the BNP?

Riaz said the BNP stands at a crossroads and the future of the party’s political viability depends on several factors, including the political environment in Bangladesh, the ability of the party leadership to maintain cohesion and whether an alternative opposition party emerges.

“The third factor is not an eminent issue as the BNP’s appeal and name recognition will not go away soon,” Riaz said.

“But further erosion of democracy will continue to push the party to a slow death as it will face further persecution, and its leaders are failing to devise a strategy to address the situation,” he added.

Analyst Kugelman said the BNP is caught between a rock and a hard place, and its chances of revival are very uncertain as the Awami League has built up its control over political opposition and dissent.

“If it somehow musters the capacity to mobilize its base on the streets, it risks fresh crackdowns. But if it sits quietly, the party will simply creep more toward irrelevance,” he said.

“This means we could see parts of the party break off and form new entities. But unless any of these new factions were to take a conciliatory position toward the ruling party, it’s hard to imagine them carving out space to operate,” he said.

Edited by: Wesley Rahn

SOURCE: DW News

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