Bangladesh is truly a state of disgrace. Corruption, lawlessness, illiteracy has plagued this country for too long. The two Begums alternately loot the country. How would Bangladesh be if it would not have been partitioned?
State Of Disgrace
Bangladesh is reeling from violence, corruption and political turmoil. Inside Asia’s most dysfunctional country
BY ARAVIND ADIGA | DHAKA
http://www.time.com/time/asia/magazine/article/0,13673,501040412-607842,00.html
Monday, Apr. 05, 2004
The shopkeepers around him won’t talk about the extortionists, pleading that they will be murdered if their own identities are revealed, but Siraj ul-Islam, a seller of saris in Dhaka’s Kawran Bazaar, says he has nothing to lose by speaking to TIME. “Whether you publish our names or not, we are all dead men in this market,” says the 54-year-old as he squats on a white platform in his little store. Kawran Bazaar, a sprawling complex of wholesale markets and retail shops near the heart of the capital, is a hunting ground for gun-wielding extortionists who don’t hesitate to kill if they are refused their protection money. On Feb. 9 six suspected extortionists shot dead Mostafa Kamal, a travel agent who worked near Kawran Bazaar. Business has now dropped off sharply for Siraj and his neighbors, who are scared they could be next. “A man doesn’t know if he’ll make it home safely these days,” says a nearby shopkeeper. Siraj, who fought against the Pakistanis in the 1971 war of liberation that created Bangladesh, summarizes the situation with a touch of bitter irony: “In 1971, the Pakistanis were terrified of us. But now we’re the ones who are terrified inside our own country.”
Bangladeshis, who have to cope with frequent cyclones from the Indian Ocean and regular outbursts of violence on the streets of their own cities, are a tough, stoic lot who don’t frighten easily. But a wave of extortion, murder and kidnapping that is washing over the country of 140 million has many worried that the nation may be sliding into anarchy. The Bureau of Human Rights Bangladesh says 971 people have been killed since the start of the year. Says Badruddoza Chowdhury, former President of Bangladesh: “Never have crime and extortion taken place on such a big scale.”
Nor in such a widespread manner. Nearly every rung of society is being terrorized. Truck drivers are assaulted on the roads; leading businessmen have been kidnapped for ransom; journalists have been tortured and murdered; and one of the nation’s pre-eminent intellectuals, Humayun Azad, was almost killed in February by a gang of knife-wielding assailants. But the wake-up call for many Bangladeshis came last week, when the bodies of two cloth merchants were found beheaded and mutilated in a forest outside Dhaka. Stunned by the discovery, many traders in the city closed their shops or held rallies to highlight the deepening sense of insecurity in the country’s business community. “I’m just asking the government to allow me to die a natural death,” says Aftab ul-Islam, president of Bangladesh’s American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham).
Bangladesh’s drift toward mayhem threatens to undo several decades of solid progress made by one of the world’s poorest countries. Thanks to a slew of innovative ngos and a committed cadre of government social-welfare workers, the nation has achieved impressive gains in fighting poverty and slowing the growth of its population. A thriving textile-export industry fills American supermarkets with made-in-Bangladesh T shirts and sweaters, and many Bangladeshi millionaire textile exporters drive about the streets of Dhaka in new Mercedes-Benz. But for all its achievements, the country has also seemed like a political experiment designed to find out just how much corruption a modern nation can withstand before it ceases to function. “We are hurtling toward disaster,” warns Qazi Faruque Ahmed, president of Proshika, a prominent Bangladeshi ngo that runs schools and voter-education programs.
For three years in a row, Transparency International (TI), a Berlin-based watchdog, has ranked Bangladesh as the country perceived to be the world’s most venal. Corruption in Bangladesh operates with the sweep, intricacy and structured hierarchy of a medieval feudal system, replete with an English-language nomenclature in which “tolls,” “fees,” and “payments” extorted from the poorest Bangladeshis are funneled up daily through an elaborate web of “collectors,” “higher collectors” and intermediate barons into the ultimate hands of criminal “godfathers.” Corruption starts on the streets. Every evening a “lineman” visits Dhaka’s hawkers, making his way down a sidewalk (“a line”) where a hundred or more hawkers squat and wait to pay him 50¢-$1.75 each, which might be up to half their day’s profits. “It doesn’t matter if you have had a good day or a bad day, or if your wife died or your son got sick,” says one hawker. “You have to pay the lineman.” Simultaneously, other collectors are making their way through Dhaka’s bazaars. In a wholesale vegetable market inside Kawran Bazaar, thugs belonging to a local Mafia collect daily payments from shopkeepers, which are calculated with impressive precision. A shopkeeper squatting on the pavement has his shop space divided into plots of 3 ft. by 3 ft., and is levied $3.50 daily for each plot. Those whose shops are beside the road, and closer to the trucks that download and pick up wholesale produce, have to pay two-and-a-half times more.
If Bangladeshis live in an overwhelmingly corrupt feudal state, then the knights errant of the system are widely believed to be the nation’s policemen. According to a survey conducted by TI’s Bangladesh branch, 84% of all respondents who had interacted with the police said they encountered corruption when dealing with them. When asked about this finding, Dhaka police commissioner Ashraful Huda doesn’t deny that corruption exists in the force, but says, “We take severe punitive measures against any policeman found guilty of corruption.” Though ordinary Bangladeshis have little faith in their police, they also believe the cops are only lackeys in a system in which the chief criminal beneficiaries are a handful of powerful gang lords with important political connections. Former President Chowdhury says some politicians have cultivated gangs of armed youths in order to intimidate their opponents. These gun-toting gangs, most observers believe, also work as extortionists—sometimes to collect cash for their political patrons, sometimes simply to make money for themselves. “There is a nexus of corruption, politics and violence,” says Khan Sarwar Murshid, chairman of TI’s Bangladesh branch.
Yet, even though Bangladeshis have long grumbled about the daily bribes they have to pay, an etiquette of corruption, honored by extortionists and victims alike, has made life bearable for many years. Mahafuzur Rahaman Bahar, a member of the Bangladesh Truck Drivers’ Union, says drivers once operated according to a “token” scheme. By paying a fixed sum to the first extortionist they encountered, they received a colored-paper token imprinted with the sign of a tree or a cow, which guaranteed free passage to their destination. So long as corruption operated within the defined rules of a scheme, Bangladeshis got along with their lives.