Before Independence
The history of Bangladesh is
related to that of the larger area of Bengal, which became independent
of Delhi by 1341. After a succession of Muslim rulers, it was conquered
by Akbar, the great Mughal emperor in 1576. By the beginning of the 18th
cent., the governor of the province was virtually independent, but he
lost control to the British East India Company, which after 1775 was the
effective ruler of the vast area, which also included the Indian states
of West Bengal, Orissa, Jharkhand, and Bihar.
Bengal
was divided by the British in 1905 into West Bengal and East Bengal,
with East Bengal being more or less coterminous with modern Bangladesh.
Since the new province had a majority Muslim population, the partition
was welcomed by Muslims, but it was fiercely resented by Indian
nationalist leaders who saw it as an attempt to drive a wedge between
Muslims and Hindus. The partition was withdrawn in 1911, but it had
pointed the way to the events of 1947, when British India was
partitioned into the states of India and Pakistan.
Pakistan
consisted of two “wings,” one to the west of India, and the other to
the east. The eastern section was constituted from the eastern portion
of Bengal and the former Sylhet district of Assam
and was known until 1955 as East Bengal and then as East Pakistan.
Pakistan's two provinces, which differed considerably in natural
setting, economy, and historical background, were separated from each
other by more than 1,000 mi (1,610 km) of India. The East Pakistanis,
who comprised 56% of the total population of Pakistan, were discontented
under a government centered in West Pakistan; the disparity in
government investments and development funds given to each province also
added to the resentment. Efforts over the years to secure increased
economic benefits and political reforms proved unsuccessful, and serious
riots broke out in 1968 and 1969. In Nov., 1970, an extremely deadly
cyclone devastated Chittagong and many coastal villages and killed some
300,000 people.
Independence to the Present
The movement for greater autonomy gained momentum when, in the Dec., 1970, general elections, the Awami League under the leadership of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
(generally known as Sheikh Mujib) won practically all of East
Pakistan's seats and thus achieved a majority in the Pakistan National
Assembly. President Muhammad Agha Yahya Khan,
hoping to avert a political confrontation between East and West
Pakistan, twice postponed the opening session of the national assembly.
The
government's attempts to forestall the autonomy bid led to general
strikes and nonpayment of taxes in East Pakistan and finally to civil
war on Mar. 25, 1971. On the following day the Awami League's leaders
proclaimed the independence of Bangladesh. During the months of conflict
an estimated one million Bengalis were killed in East Pakistan and
another 10 million fled into exile in India. Fighting raged in Dhaka,
Chittagong, Comilla, Sylhet, Jessore, Barisal, Rangpur, and Khulna.
Finally India allied itself with Bangladesh, which it had recognized on
Dec. 6, and during a two-week war (Dec. 3–16) defeated the Pakistani
forces in the east. Sheikh Mujib, who had been chosen president while in
prison in West Pakistan, was released, and in Jan., 1972, he set up a
government and assumed the premiership; Abu Sayeed Choudhury became
president.
Rejecting Pakistan's call for a reunited
country, Sheikh Mujib began to rehabilitate an economy devastated by the
war. Relations with Pakistan were hostile; Pakistan withheld
recognition from Bangladesh, and Bangladesh and India refused to
repatriate more than 90,000 Pakistani prisoners of war who had
surrendered at the end of the conflict. Armed Bengali “freedom fighters”
fought Bihari civilians in Bangladesh, particularly after Indian troops
withdrew from Bangladesh in Mar., 1972.
Tensions were eased in July, 1972, when President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto of Pakistan (who assumed power after the fall of the Yahya Khan government) and Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
of India agreed to peacefully settle the differences between their
countries. Pakistan officially recognized Bangladesh in Feb., 1974.
Subsequently, India and Pakistan reached consensus on the release of
Pakistani prisoners of war and the exchange of hostage populations.
Bangladesh
was gradually recognized by most of the world's nations. It joined the
Commonwealth of Nations in 1972 and was admitted to the United Nations
in 1974. In 1972 the country's major industries, banks, and shipping and
insurance firms were nationalized. Despite Mujib's popularity as the
founder of independent Bangladesh, high rates of inflation and a severe
famine resulted in a governmental crisis. In 1975, after becoming
president under a new constitutional system, he was assassinated in a
military coup; after two additional coups later in the year, Maj. Gen.
Zia ur-Rahman emerged as ruler, beginning a period of military control
that lasted into the 1990s.
In 1981, Zia was himself
assassinated in a failed coup attempt; his successor was replaced (1982)
in a bloodless coup by Lt. Gen. Hussain Mohammad Ershad, who assumed
the presidency. In an effort to gain legitimacy, Ershad later resigned
his military office and won a disputed presidential election. He was
forced to resign in Dec., 1990, amid charges of corruption, for which he
was jailed (1990–96, 2000–2001); he was convicted on additional charges
in 2006 but sentenced to time already served.
Elections held in Feb., 1991, brought the Bangladesh Nationalist party (BNP) to power, and Khaleda Zia ur-Rahman,
the widow of Zia ur-Rahman, became prime minister. An extremely strong
cyclone in April, 1991, killed more than 138,000 and devastated coastal
areas, especially in the southeast. In 1994, nearly all opposition
members of parliament denounced Zia's government as corrupt and resigned
their seats. After a series of general strikes called by the
opposition, parliament was dissolved in Nov., 1995; major opposition
parties also boycotted the ensuing Feb., 1996, elections. Zia was
returned to power, but the opposition mounted protests; she resigned and
an interim government headed by Habibur Rahman was installed.
New
elections held in June, 1996, resulted in a victory for the opposition
Awami League, led by Hasina Wazed, daughter of Bangladesh's first prime
minister. As she struggled with the country's ongoing economic problems,
a series of opposition-led strikes, beginning in 1998, once again
paralyzed the country. In July, 2001, a caretaker government headed by
Latifur Rahman was appointed in advance of parliamentary elections in
October. Zia and the BNP won a landslide victory in the voting, and she
again became prime minister. In 2003 the Awami League began a series of
rallies and occasional strikes to mobilize opposition to the government.
Deadly attacks on rallies in Aug., 2004, and Jan., 2005, provoked a
series of nationwide and local strikes and protests by the League, which
accused the government of trying to assassinate Hasina Wazed.
Some
200 minor bomb attacks occurred in 60 cities and towns on Aug. 17,
2005. The attacks appeared to be the work of militants who favor the
establishment of Islamic rule in Bangladesh; two militant groups had
been banned in Feb., 2005. In the months following the attacks the
government moved to arrest members of the groups, and Islamic extremist
mounted additional attacks, including ones involving suicide bombers.
Awami League efforts to undermine the government in 2006 included a
“blockade” of Dhaka in June that resulted in clashes with the police,
and led to a 36-hour general strike. Meanwhile, in May and June, there
were protests and rioting by garment workers over working conditions; a
number of factories were burned, and hundreds were vandalized.
Zia's
government resigned in October in preparation for the Jan., 2007,
elections. The issue of who should head the caretaker government in the
intervening months became a contentious one in the weeks proceeding the
resignation, and the BNP, Awami League, and other parties failed to
reach an agreement, leading to violent clashes between the parties'
supporters. In the end, President Iajuddin Ahmed appointed himself chief
adviser to the interim administration. Continuing disagreements over
the handling of the elections led to sometimes violent demonstrations
and transportation blockades by the Awami League and its allies, and in
Jan., 2007, that 14-party alliance announced that it would boycott the
elections.
After the United Nations and European
Union withdrew their support for the election, the president declared a
state of emergency, resigned as chief adviser and appointed Fakhruddin
Ahmed, an economist and former central bank governor, to the post, and
postponed the elections. The Awami League and its allies halted their
protests as Fakhruddin Ahmed formed a cabinet. The new government, which
was backed by the military, subsequently moved to clean up the
electoral rolls and attack political corruption. A number of prominent
political and business figures were arrested on corruption charges, and
Hasina Wazed and other political leaders were charged with murder in
connection with political violence. The government subsequently moved to
exile Wazed and Khaleda Zia, but then reversed itself. Khaleda Zia was
charged with corruption in Sept., 2007. That month also marked the end
of the president's term, but Ahmed remained in office in the absence of a
functioning parliament. During July–September Bangladesh experienced
two spells of extensive and devastating flooding due to monsoon rains,
and in November a cyclone caused extensive damage in the southwest,
killing more than 3,000.
Source: www.factmonster.com
Source: www.factmonster.com
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