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Bangladesh
Political parties
From 1947
through the end of 1971, East Pakistan—now Bangladesh—was governed as a single
province, one of the two wings of Pakistan. In all, there were more than 30
political parties operating in the east wing, most of the them small, fractious,
and with few elected members. The major parties at that time operated on the
all-Pakistan level as well, and included the moderate Pakistan Muslim League (PML),
a national movement that became the party of independence and the ruling party
of Pakistan; the moderate socialist Awami (Freedom) League (AL), a spin-off from
the Muslim League and the advocate of Bengali autonomy, with the bulk of its
support in the east wing; the ultraconservative Islamic Jamaat-e-Islami (JI),
grounded in Sunni Islamic orthodoxy (in Pakistan as in India) and initially
opposed to the 1947 partition; and the leftist peasants and workers party, the
Krishak Sramik Party (KSP) of Fazlul Haq. The Communist Party of Pakistan (CPP)
was banned in 1952 and remained illegal until its east wing component became the
Bangladesh Communist Party (BCP) after 1971.
The PML governed East Pakistan from 1947, but in elections in 1954, the Awami
League and the Krishak Sramik, supported in a United Front by the Jamaat, ousted
the Muslim League from office. After four years of political instability,
however, the two parties were displaced by the central government under
"Governor's Rule," and the emergency provisions of the 1935 Government of India
Act, then Pakistan's constitution. When the East Pakistan government was
restored in August 1955, the KSP ruled in its own right until displaced by an AL
government headed by Maulana Bhashani in 1956. Loss of Hindu support in 1958
cost the AL its majority in 1958, but "Governor's Rule" was again imposed, the
provision having been carried over into the 1956 Pakistan Constitution. Martial
law was imposed in Pakistan in 1965 and in elections held thereafter, under a
limited political franchise, the Muslim League, now a shadow of its former self
and the vehicle for General Ayub Khan's entry into elective politics, came to
power briefly. Imposition of martial law in 1969 suspended political activity
again until the scheduling of elections in 1970 restored political activity.
By 1970, the moderate-to-left populist Pakistan People's Party (PPP) of Zulfikar
Bhutto, and the Awami League of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, now advocating
far-reaching autonomy for East Bengal, had become the dominant political forces,
respectively, in West and East Pakistan. Elections confirmed this position, with
the AL winning 167 of East Pakistan's 169 seats in the National Assembly and
absolute control in East Pakistan. The AL was the only constituent in the Bangla
Government-in-Exile in 1971, with leftist parties in support and Islamic parties
in opposition. After independence, the Islamic party leaders were jailed, their
parties having been banned, and in 1973, Mujib's Awami League elected 293
members of the 300-elective seats in the Assembly.
In January 1975, with his power slipping, President Mujib amended the
constitution to create a one-party state, renaming his party the Bangladesh
Krishak Sramik Awami League (BKSAL). After the coup later in 1975, the BKSAL was
disbanded and disappeared. When Zia-ur Rahman lifted the ban on political
parties in 1978, his presidential bid was supported by a newly formed
Nationalist Front, dominated by his Bangladesh National Party (BNP), which won
207 of the assembly's 300 elective seats. All political activity was banned anew
in March 1982 when Gen. Ershad seized power, but as he settled into power,
Ershad supported the formation of the Jatiya (People's) Party, which became his
vehicle for ending martial law and transforming his regime into a parliamentary
government. In elections marked by violence and discredited by extensive fraud,
Ershad's Jatiya Party won more than 200 of the 300 elective seats at stake. The
Awami League, now under the leadership of Mujib's daughter, Sheikh Hasina Wajed,
took 76 seats as the leading opposition party. Begum Khaleda Zia's BNP, heading
an alliance of seven parties, boycotted the elections and gained considerable
respect by this action. The BNP, the AL, and all other parties boycotted
Ershad's 1988 election as well, discrediting the result that gave the Jatiya a
two-thirds majority and fueling the fires of discontent that led to Ershad's
resignation on 4 December 1990. Ershad was arrested on corruption charges eight
days later by the interim government, convicted, and imprisoned on corruption
charges.
A BNP plurality in the elections on 27 February 1991 enabled Begum Khaleda Zia
to form a government with the support of 28 of the appointive members of the
assembly and of the JI, which won 18 seats. The leader of the opposition is
Sheikh Hasina Wajed of the Awami League (AL), which won 88 seats to claim the
second ranking position in the assembly. However, Khaleda Zia resigned and
Parliament was dissolved in March 1996 amid vote-rigging charges and a two-year
government boycott by opposition parties. June 1996 elections brought Sheikh
Hasina and the AL to a majority role in the new Parliament. The AL won 140 seats
to the BNP's 116. New Prime Minister Hasina formed a cooperative government with
the Jatiya Party, which won 32 seats. Although the Jatiya Party withdrew from
the coalition in March 1997, the Awami League had by then acquired an absolute
majority in the legislature and continued as the party in power.
After October 2001 parliamentary elections swept Khaleda Zia's BNP to power,
ousting the Awami League of Hasina Wajed, concern was raised over the political
stance of one of Zia's coalition partners, the Jamaat-e-Islami party, which
voices support for Osama bin Laden. Zia's three coalition partners in the
government formed in 2001, Jamaat-e-Islami, Islami Oikya Jote, and the Naziur
faction of the Jatiya Party, are all Islamic parties advocating a return to
Islamic law, or Shari'ah. Zia, however, granted the US-led military coalition
the use of Bangladesh air space and other help for its attacks on bin Laden and
his al-Qaeda training camps in Afghanistan in 2001–2002, approving of the US-led
war on terrorism. Hasina's Awami League supports secularism. From 1997 to 2001,
the main opposition party, the BNP, hindered the work of the Jatiya Sangsad
(Parliament) by repeatedly boycotting its proceedings. One such boycott, over
issues ranging from restoration of a floating footbridge to Zia-ur Rahman's tomb
to the dropping of criminal charges against BNP MPs, lasted for six months
(August 1997–March 1998). Outside Parliament, the BNP continued to support
public antigovernment demonstrations, and organized a three-day general strike (hartal)
in November 1998 to protest alleged government repression. A month later, the
opposition strengthened its position when the BNP and the Jamaat-e-Islami
decided to accept Ershad and his Jatiya Party into the antigovernment movement.
In the spring of 2000, a four-party alliance of opposition parties (BNP, Jatiya
Party, Jamaat-e-Islami, and Islami Oikyo Jote) announced it was considering
plans to form an electoral coalition to oppose the Awami League in the next
general elections.
Parliamentary parties
Bangladesh
Islamic Assembly (Jamaat-e-Islami
Bangladesh)
Bangladesh Nationalist Party (Bangladesh
Jatiyatabadi Dal)
Bangladesh Awami League
Islamic Unity Front (Islami
Oikya Jote)
National Party (Jatiya Party)
Islamic National Unity Front (Islami
Jatiya Oikya Front)
National Party (Manju) (Jatiya Dal (Manju))
National Party (Naziur) (Jatiya Dal (Naziur))
Peasants' and Workers' People's League (Krishak
Sramik Janata League)
Bangladesh Khelafat Majlish
Jatiyo
Shomajtantrik Dal
Liberal Democratic Party
Other parties
Communist
Party of Bangladesh
Liberal Party Bangladesh
Communist Party of Bangladesh
Socialist Party of Bangladesh (SPB)
Gonoshanghhoti Andolon
Hizb ut-Tahrir
Bangladesh Chhatra League - Student wing of the Awami League
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