PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
People's Republic of Bangladesh
Geography
Area: 147, 570 sq. km. (55,813 sq. mi.); about
the size of Wisconsin.
Cities: Capital--Dhaka (pop. 10 million).
Other cities--Chittagong (2.8 million),
Khulna (1.8 million), Rajshahi (1 million).
Terrain: Mainly flat alluvial plain, with hills
in the northeast and southeast.
Climate: Semitropical, monsoonal.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Bangladeshi(s).
Population: 144 million.
Annual growth rate: 2.09%.
Ethnic groups: Bengali 98%, tribal groups,
non-Bengali Muslims.
Religions: Muslim 88.3%; Hindu 10.5%; Christian
0.3%, Buddhist 0.6%, others 0.3%.
Languages: Bangla (official, also known as
Bengali), English.
Education: Attendance--55.9%. Literacy--53.9%
for males; 31.8% for females; a total of 43.1%
literacy.
Health: Infant mortality rate--62.6/1,000.
Life expectancy--62.13 years (male),
62.02 years (female).
Work force (60.3 million): Agriculture--60%;
manufacturing and mining--7.8%; others--28.5%.
Government
Type: Parliamentary democracy.
Independence: 1971 (from Pakistan).
Constitution: 1972; amended 1974, 1979, 1986,
1988, 1991, 1996, 2004.
Branches: Executive--president (chief of
state), prime minister (head of government),
cabinet. Legislative--unicameral
parliament (300 members). Judicial--civil
court system based on British model.
Administrative subdivisions: Divisions,
districts, subdistricts, unions, villages.
Political parties: 30-40 active political
parties: largest ones include Bangladesh
Nationalist Party (BNP), the Awami League (AL),
the Jatiya Party, and the Jamaat-e-Islami Party.
Suffrage: Universal at age 18.
Economy
Fiscal year: July 1 to June 30.
Annual GDP growth rate (2004 est.): 6%.
Inflation (April 2004): 5.83%.
Per capita GDP (2003): $421.
Natural resources: Natural gas, fertile soil,
water.
Agriculture (25% of GDP): Products--rice,
jute, tea, sugar, wheat. Land--cultivable
area cropped at rate of 176% in 1997; 175% in
2000; largely subsistence farming dependent on
monsoon rainfall, but growing commercial farming
and increasing use of irrigation.
Industry (Manufacturing; 16% of GDP): Types--garments
and knitwear, jute goods, frozen fish and
seafood, textiles, fertilizer, sugar, tea,
leather, ship-breaking for scrap,
pharmaceuticals, ceramic tableware, newsprint.
Trade (2003): Merchandise exports--$6.5
billion: garments and knitwear, frozen fish,
jute and jute goods, leather and leather
products, tea, urea fertilizer, ceramic
tableware. Exports to U.S. (2003)--$2.074
billion. Merchandise imports (2003)--$9.7
billion: capital goods, food grains, petroleum,
textiles, chemicals, vegetable oils. Imports
from U.S. (2003)--$226 million.
GEOGRAPHY
Bangladesh is a low-lying, riverine country
located in South Asia with a largely marshy
jungle coastline of 710 kilometers (440 mi.) on
the northern littoral of the Bay of Bengal.
Formed by a deltaic plain at the confluence of
the Ganges (Padma), Brahmaputra (Jamuna), and
Meghna Rivers and their tributaries,
Bangladesh's alluvial soil is highly fertile but
vulnerable to flood and drought. Hills rise
above the plain only in the Chittagong Hill
Tracts in the far southeast and the Sylhet
division in the northeast. Straddling the Tropic
of Cancer, Bangladesh has a subtropical
monsoonal climate characterized by heavy
seasonal rainfall, moderately warm temperatures,
and high humidity. Natural calamities, such as
floods, tropical cyclones, tornadoes, and tidal
bores affect the country almost every year.
Bangladesh also is affected by major
cyclones--on average 16 times a decade.
Urbanization is proceeding rapidly, and it is
estimated that only 30% of the population
entering the labor force in the future will be
absorbed into agriculture, although many will
likely find other kinds of work in rural areas.
The areas around Dhaka and Comilla are the most
densely settled. The Sundarbans, an area of
coastal tropical jungle in the southwest and
last wild home of the Bengal Tiger, and the
Chittagong Hill Tracts on the southeastern
border with Burma and India, are the least
densely populated.
PEOPLE
The area that is now Bangladesh has a rich
historical and cultural past, combining
Dravidian, Indo-Aryan, Mongol/Mughul, Arab,
Persian, Turkic, and west European cultures.
Residents of Bangladesh, about 98% of whom are
ethnic Bengali and speak Bangla, are called
Bangladeshis. Urdu-speaking, non-Bengali Muslims
of Indian origin, and various tribal groups,
mostly in the Chittagong Hill Tracts, comprise
the remainder. Most Bangladeshis (about 88.3%)
are Muslims, but Hindus constitute a sizable
(10.5%) minority. There also are a small number
of Buddhists, Christians, and animists. English
is spoken in urban areas and among the educated.
Sufi religious teachers succeeded in
converting many Bengalis to Islam, even before
the arrival of Muslim armies from the west.
About 1200 AD, Muslim invaders established
political control over the Bengal region. This
political control also encouraged conversion to
Islam. Since then, Islam has played a crucial
role in the region's history and politics, with
a Muslim majority emerging, particularly in the
eastern region of Bengal.
HISTORY
Bengal was absorbed into the Mughul Empire in
the 16th century, and Dhaka, the seat of a nawab
(the representative of the emperor), gained some
importance as a provincial center. But it
remained remote and thus a difficult to govern
region--especially the section east of the
Brahmaputra River--outside the mainstream of
Mughul politics. Portuguese traders and
missionaries were the first Europeans to reach
Bengal in the latter part of the 15th century.
They were followed by representatives of the
Dutch, the French, and the British East India
Companies. By the end of the 17th century, the
British presence on the Indian subcontinent was
centered in Calcutta. During the 18th and 19th
centuries, the British gradually extended their
commercial contacts and administrative control
beyond Calcutta to Bengal. In 1859, the British
Crown replaced the East India Company, extending
British dominion from Bengal, which became a
region of India, in the east to the Indus River
in the west.
The rise of nationalism throughout
British-controlled India in the late 19th
century resulted in mounting animosity between
the Hindu and Muslim communities. In 1885, the
All-India National Congress was founded with
Indian and British membership. Muslims seeking
an organization of their own founded the
All-India Muslim League in 1906. Although both
the League and the Congress supported the goal
of Indian self-government within the British
Empire, the two parties were unable to agree on
a way to ensure the protection of Muslim
political, social, and economic rights. The
subsequent history of the nationalist movement
was characterized by periods of Hindu-Muslim
cooperation, as well as by communal antagonism.
The idea of a separate Muslim state gained
increasing popularity among Indian Muslims after
1936, when the Muslim League suffered a decisive
defeat in the first elections under India's 1935
constitution. In 1940, the Muslim League called
for an independent state in regions where
Muslims were in the majority. Campaigning on
that platform in provincial elections in 1946,
the League won the majority of the Muslim seats
contested in Bengal. Widespread communal
violence followed, especially in Calcutta.
When British India was partitioned and the
independent dominions of India and Pakistan were
created in 1947, the region of Bengal was
divided along religious lines. The predominantly
Muslim eastern half was designated East
Pakistan--and made part of the newly independent
Pakistan--while the predominantly Hindu western
part became the Indian state of West Bengal.
Pakistan's history from 1947 to 1971 was marked
by political instability and economic
difficulties. Dominion status was rejected in
1956 in favor of an "Islamic republic within the
Commonwealth." Attempts at civilian political
rule failed, and the government imposed martial
law between 1958 and 1962, and again between
1969 and 1972.
Almost from the advent of independent
Pakistan in 1947, frictions developed between
East and West Pakistan, which were separated by
more than 1,000 miles of Indian territory. East
Pakistanis felt exploited by the West
Pakistan-dominated central government.
Linguistic, cultural, and ethnic differences
also contributed to the estrangement of East
from West Pakistan. Bengalis strongly resisted
attempts to impose Urdu as the sole official
language of Pakistan. Responding to these
grievances, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in 1948 formed
a students' organization called the Chhatra
League. In 1949, Maulana Abdul Hamid Khan
Bhasani and some other Bengali leaders formed
the East Pakistan Awami Muslim League (AL), a
party designed mainly to promote Bengali
interests. This party dropped the word Muslim
from its name in 1955 and came to be known as
Awami League. Mujib became president of the
Awami League in 1966 and emerged as leader of
the Bengali autonomy movement. In 1966, he was
arrested for his political activities.
After the Awami League won almost all the
East Pakistan seats of the Pakistan national
assembly in 1970-71 elections, West Pakistan
opened talks with the East on constitutional
questions about the division of power between
the central government and the provinces, as
well as the formation of a national government
headed by the Awami League. The talks proved
unsuccessful, however, and on March 1, 1971,
Pakistani President Yahya Khan indefinitely
postponed the pending national assembly session,
precipitating massive civil disobedience in East
Pakistan. Mujib was arrested again; his party
was banned, and most of his aides fled to India
and organized a provisional government. On March
26, 1971, following a bloody crackdown by the
Pakistan Army, Bengali nationalists declared an
independent People's Republic of Bangladesh. As
fighting grew between the army and the Bengali
mukti bahini ("freedom fighters"), an estimated
10 million Bengalis, mainly Hindus, sought
refuge in the Indian states of Assam and West
Bengal.
The crisis in East Pakistan produced new
strains in Pakistan's troubled relations with
India. The two nations had fought a war in 1965,
mainly in the west, but the refugee pressure in
India in the fall of 1971 produced new tensions
in the east. Indian sympathies lay with East
Pakistan, and in November, India intervened on
the side of the Bangladeshis. On December 16,
1971, Pakistani forces surrendered, and
Bangladesh-- meaning "Bengal country"-- was
born; the new country became a parliamentary
democracy under a 1972 constitution.
The provisional government of the new nation
of Bangladesh was formed in Dhaka with Justice
Abu Sayeed Choudhury as President, and Sheikh
Mujibur Rahman ("Mujib")--who was released from
Pakistani prison in early 1972--as Prime
Minister.
Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, 1972-75
Mujib came to office with immense personal
popularity but had difficulty transforming this
popular support into the political strength
needed to function as head of government. The
new constitution, which came into force in
December 1972, created a strong executive prime
minister, a largely ceremonial presidency, an
independent judiciary, and a unicameral
legislature on a modified Westminster model. The
1972 constitution adopted as state policy the
Awami League's (AL) four basic principles of
nationalism, secularism, socialism, and
democracy.
The first parliamentary elections held under
the 1972 constitution were in March 1973, with
the Awami League winning a massive majority. No
other political party in Bangladesh's early
years was able to duplicate or challenge the
League's broad-based appeal, membership, or
organizational strength. Relying heavily on
experienced civil servants and members of the
Awami League, the new Bangladesh Government
focused on relief, rehabilitation, and
reconstruction of the economy and society.
Economic conditions remained precarious,
however. In December 1974, Mujib decided that
continuing economic deterioration and mounting
civil disorder required strong measures. After
proclaiming a state of emergency, Mujib used his
parliamentary majority to win a constitutional
amendment limiting the powers of the legislative
and judicial branches, establishing an executive
presidency, and instituting a one-party system,
the Bangladesh Krishak Sramik Awami League (BAKSAL),
which all members of Parliament (and senior
civil and military officials) were obliged to
join.
Despite some improvement in the economic
situation during the first half of 1975,
implementation of promised political reforms was
slow, and criticism of government policies
became increasingly centered on Mujib. In August
1975, Mujib, and most of his family, were
assassinated by mid-level army officers. His
daughter, Sheikh Hasina, was out of the country.
A new government, headed by former Mujib
associate Khandakar Moshtaque, was formed.
Ziaur Rahman, 1975-81
Successive military coups resulted in the
emergence of Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ziaur
Rahman ("Zia") as strongman. He pledged the
army's support to the civilian government headed
by President Chief Justice Sayem. Acting at
Zia's behest, Sayem dissolved Parliament,
promising fresh elections in 1977, and
instituted martial law.
Acting behind the scenes of the Martial Law
Administration (MLA), Zia sought to invigorate
government policy and administration. While
continuing the ban on political parties, he
sought to revitalize the demoralized
bureaucracy, to begin new economic development
programs, and to emphasize family planning. In
November 1976, Zia became Chief Martial Law
Administrator (CMLA) and assumed the presidency
upon Sayem's retirement 5 months later,
promising national elections in 1978.
As President, Zia announced a 19-point
program of economic reform and began dismantling
the MLA. Keeping his promise to hold elections,
Zia won a 5-year term in June 1978 elections,
with 76% of the vote. In November 1978, his
government removed the remaining restrictions on
political party activities in time for
parliamentary elections in February 1979. These
elections, which were contested by more than 30
parties, marked the culmination of Zia's
transformation of Bangladesh's Government from
the MLA to a democratically elected,
constitutional one. The AL and the Bangladesh
Nationalist Party (BNP), founded by Zia, emerged
as the two major parties.
In May 1981, Zia was assassinated in
Chittagong by dissident elements of the
military. The attempted coup never spread beyond
that city, and the major conspirators were
either taken into custody or killed. In
accordance with the constitution, Vice President
Justice Abdus Sattar was sworn in as acting
president. He declared a new national emergency
and called for election of a new president
within 6 months--an election Sattar won as the
BNP's candidate. President Sattar sought to
follow the policies of his predecessor and
retained essentially the same cabinet, but the
army stepped in once again.
Hussain Mohammed Ershad, 1982-90
Army Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. H.M. Ershad assumed
power in a bloodless coup in March 1982. Like
his predecessors, Ershad suspended the
constitution and--citing pervasive corruption,
ineffectual government, and economic
mismanagement--declared martial law. The
following year, Ershad assumed the presidency,
retaining his positions as army chief and CMLA.
During most of 1984, Ershad sought the
opposition parties' participation in local
elections under martial law. The opposition's
refusal to participate, however, forced Ershad
to abandon these plans. Ershad sought public
support for his regime in a national referendum
on his leadership in March 1985. He won
overwhelmingly, although turnout was small. Two
months later, Ershad held elections for local
council chairmen. Pro-government candidates won
a majority of the posts, setting in motion the
President's ambitious decentralization program.
Political life was further liberalized in early
1986, and additional political rights, including
the right to hold large public rallies, were
restored. At the same time, the Jatiya
(National) Party, designed as Ershad's political
vehicle for the transition from martial law, was
established.
Despite a boycott by the BNP, led by
President Zia's widow, Begum Khaleda Zia,
parliamentary elections were held on schedule in
May 1986. The Jatiya Party won a modest majority
of the 300 elected seats in the National
Assembly. The participation of the Awami
League--led by the late President Mujib's
daughter, Sheikh Hasina Wajed--lent the
elections some credibility, despite widespread
charges of voting irregularities.
Ershad resigned as Army Chief of Staff and
retired from military service in preparation for
the presidential elections, scheduled for
October. Protesting that martial law was still
in effect, both the BNP and the AL refused to
put up opposing candidates. Ershad easily
outdistanced the remaining candidates, taking
84% of the vote. Although Ershad's government
claimed a turnout of more than 50%, opposition
leaders, and much of the foreign press,
estimated a far lower percentage and alleged
voting irregularities.
Ershad continued his stated commitment to
lift martial law. In November 1986, his
government mustered the necessary two-thirds
majority in the National Assembly to amend the
constitution and confirm the previous actions of
the martial law regime. The President then
lifted martial law, and the opposition parties
took their elected seats in the National
Assembly.
In July 1987, however, after the government
hastily pushed through a controversial
legislative bill to include military
representation on local administrative councils,
the opposition walked out of Parliament. Passage
of the bill helped spark an opposition movement
that quickly gathered momentum, uniting
Bangladesh's opposition parties for the first
time. The government began to arrest scores of
opposition activists under the country's Special
Powers Act of 1974. Despite these arrests,
opposition parties continued to organize protest
marches and nationwide strikes. After declaring
a state of emergency, Ershad dissolved
Parliament and scheduled fresh elections for
March 1988.
All major opposition parties refused
government overtures to participate in these
polls, maintaining that the government was
incapable of holding free and fair elections.
Despite the opposition boycott, the government
proceeded. The ruling Jatiya Party won 251 of
the 300 seats. The Parliament, while still
regarded by the opposition as an illegitimate
body, held its sessions as scheduled, and passed
a large number of bills, including, in June
1988, a controversial constitutional amendment
making Islam Bangladesh's state religion and
provision for setting up High Court benches in
major cities outside of Dhaka. While Islam
remains the state religion, the provision for
decentralizing the High Court division has been
struck down by the Supreme Court.
By 1989, the domestic political situation in
the country seemed to have quieted. The local
council elections were generally considered by
international observers to have been less
violent and more free and fair than previous
elections. However, opposition to Ershad's rule
began to regain momentum, escalating by the end
of 1990 in frequent general strikes, increased
campus protests, public rallies, and a general
disintegration of law and order.
On December 6, 1990, Ershad offered his
resignation. On February 27, 1991, after 2
months of widespread civil unrest, an interim
government oversaw what most observers believed
to be the nation's most free and fair elections
to that date.
Khaleda Zia, 1991-96
The center-right BNP won a plurality of seats
and formed a government with support from the
Islamic fundamentalist party Jamaat-I-Islami,
with Khaleda Zia, widow of Ziaur Rahman,
obtaining the post of prime minister. Only four
parties had more than 10 members elected to the
1991 Parliament: The BNP, led by Prime Minister
Begum Khaleda Zia; the AL, led by Sheikh Hasina;
the Jamaat-I-Islami (JI), led by Golam Azam; and
the Jatiya Party (JP), led by acting chairman
Mizanur Rahman Choudhury while its founder,
former President Ershad, served out a prison
sentence on corruption charges. The electorate
approved still more changes to the constitution,
formally re-creating a parliamentary system and
returning governing power to the office of the
prime minister, as in Bangladesh's original 1972
constitution. In October 1991, members of
Parliament elected a new head of state,
President Abdur Rahman Biswas.
In March 1994, controversy over a
parliamentary by-election, which the opposition
claimed the government had rigged, led to an
indefinite boycott of Parliament by the entire
opposition. The opposition also began a program
of repeated general strikes to press its demand
that Khaleda Zia's government resign and a
caretaker government supervise a general
election. Efforts to mediate the dispute, under
the auspices of the Commonwealth Secretariat,
failed. After another attempt at a negotiated
settlement failed narrowly in late December
1994, the opposition resigned en masse from
Parliament. The opposition then continued a
campaign of marches, demonstrations, and strikes
in an effort to force the government to resign.
The opposition, including the Awami League's
Sheikh Hasina, pledged to boycott national
elections scheduled for February 15, 1996.
In February, Khaleda Zia was re-elected by a
landslide in voting boycotted and denounced as
unfair by the three main opposition parties. In
March 1996, following escalating political
turmoil, the sitting Parliament enacted a
constitutional amendment to allow a neutral
caretaker government to assume power and conduct
new parliamentary elections; former Chief
Justice Mohammed Habibur Rahman was named Chief
Adviser (a position equivalent to prime
minister) in the interim government. New
parliamentary elections were held in June 1996
and were won by the Awami League; party leader
Sheikh Hasina became Prime Minister.
Sheikh Hasina, 1996-2001
Sheikh Hasina formed what she called a
"Government of National Consensus" in June 1996,
which included one minister from the Jatiya
Party and another from the Jatiyo Samajtantric
Dal, a very small leftist party. The Jatiya
Party never entered into a formal coalition
arrangement, and party president H.M. Ershad
withdrew his support from the government in
September 1997. Only three parties had more than
10 members elected to the 1996 Parliament: The
Awami League, BNP, and Jatiya Party. Jatiya
Party president, Ershad, was released from
prison on bail in January 1997.
Although international and domestic election
observers found the June 1996 election free and
fair, the BNP protested alleged vote rigging by
the Awami League. Ultimately, however, the BNP
party decided to join the new Parliament. The
BNP soon charged that police and Awami League
activists were engaged in large-scale harassment
and jailing of opposition activists. At the end
of 1996, the BNP staged a parliamentary walkout
over this and other grievances but returned in
January 1997 under a four-point agreement with
the ruling party. The BNP asserted that this
agreement was never implemented and later staged
another walkout in August 1997. The BNP returned
to Parliament under another agreement in March
1998.
In June 1999, the BNP and other opposition
parties again began to abstain from attending
Parliament. Opposition parties staged an
increasing number of nationwide general strikes,
rising from 6 days of general strikes in 1997 to
27 days in 1999. A four-party opposition
alliance formed at the beginning of 1999
announced that it would boycott parliamentary
by-elections and local government elections
unless the government took steps demanded by the
opposition to ensure electoral fairness. The
government did not take these steps, and the
opposition subsequently boycotted all elections,
including municipal council elections in
February 1999, several parliamentary
by-elections, and the Chittagong city
corporation elections in January 2000.
In July 2001, the Awami League government
stepped down to allow a caretaker government to
preside over parliamentary elections. Political
violence that had increased during the Awami
League government's tenure continued to increase
through the summer in the run up to the
election. In August, Khaleda Zia and Sheikh
Hasina agreed during a visit of former President
Jimmy Carter to respect the results of the
election, join Parliament win or lose, foreswear
the use of hartals (violently enforced strikes)
as political tools, and if successful in forming
a government allow for a more meaningful role
for the opposition in Parliament. The caretaker
government was successful in containing the
violence, which allowed a parliamentary general
election to be successfully held on October 1,
2001.
Khaleda Zia, 2001-present
The four-party alliance led by the BNP won over
a two-thirds majority in Parliament. Begum
Khaleda Zia was sworn in on October 10, 2001,
as Prime Minister for the third time (first in
1991, second after the February 15, 1996
elections).
Despite her August 2001 pledge and all
election monitoring groups declaring the
election free and fair, Sheikh Hasina condemned
the election, rejected the results, and
boycotted Parliament. In 2002, however, she led
her party legislators back to Parliament, but
the AL again walked out in June 2003 to protest
derogatory remarks about Hasina by a State
Minister and the allegedly partisan role of the
Parliamentary Speaker. In June 2004, the AL
returned to Parliament without having any of
their demands met for an apology to Sheikh
Hasina and guarantees of a neutral Speaker.
Since then, they attended Parliament irregularly
before announcing a boycott of the entire June
2005 budget session. Sheikh Hasina and the AL
demand early elections and significant changes
in the electoral and caretaker government
systems to stop alleged moves by the ruling
coalition to rig the next election. The AL
blames the ruling party for several high-profile
attacks on opposition leaders, and asserts that
the ruling party is bent on eliminating Sheikh
Hasina and the AL as a viable force. The BNP and
its allies accuse the AL of maligning Bangladesh
at home and abroad out of jealousy over the
government’s performance on development and
economic issues.
GOVERNMENT
The president, while chief of state, holds a
largely ceremonial post; the real power is held
by the prime minister, who is head of
government. The president is elected by the
legislature (Parliament) every 5 years. The
president's circumscribed powers are
substantially expanded during the tenure of a
caretaker government. (Under the 13th Amendment,
which Parliament passed in March 1996, a
caretaker government assumes power temporarily
to oversee general elections after dissolution
of the Parliament.) In the caretaker government,
the president has control over the Ministry of
Defense, the authority to declare a state of
emergency, and the power to dismiss the Chief
Adviser and other members of the caretaker
government. Once elections have been held and a
new government and Parliament are in place, the
president's powers and position revert to their
largely ceremonial role.
The prime minister is appointed by the
president. The prime minister must be a Member
of Parliament (MP) whom the president feels
commands the confidence of the majority of other
MPs. The cabinet is composed of ministers
selected by the prime minister and appointed by
the president. At least 90% of the ministers
must be MPs. The other 10% may be non-MP experts
or "technocrats" who are not otherwise
disqualified from being elected MPs. According
to the constitution, the president can dissolve
Parliament upon the written request of the prime
minister.
The legislature is a unicameral, 300-seat
body. All of its members are elected by
universal suffrage at least every five years.
Parliament amended the constitution in May 2004,
making a provision for adding 45 seats reserved
for women and to be distributed among political
parties in proportion to their numerical
strength in Parliament. These 45 new seats have
yet to be filled. The next general election is
scheduled to take place no later than January
2007.
Bangladesh's judiciary is a civil court
system based on the British model; the highest
court of appeal is the appellate court of the
Supreme Court. At the local government level,
the country is divided into divisions,
districts, subdistricts, unions, and villages.
Local officials are elected at the union level
and selected at the village level. All larger
administrative units are run by members of the
civil service.
Principal Government Officials
President--Prof. Dr. Iajuddin Ahmed
Prime Minister--Begum Khaleda Zia
Foreign Minister--Manzur Morshed Khan
Ambassador to the United States--Shamsher M.
Chowdhury
Ambassador to the United Nations--Iftekhar Ahmed
Chowdhury
Bangladesh maintains an
embassy
in the United States at 3510 International Drive
NW, Washington, DC 20008 (tel: 202-244-0183;
fax: 202-244-5366).
POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Despite serious problems related to a
dysfunctional political system, weak governance,
and pervasive corruption, Bangladesh remains one
of the few democracies in the Muslim world.
Bangladeshis regard democracy as an important
legacy of their bloody war for independence, and
vote in large numbers. However, the practice and
understanding of democratic concepts is often
shallow. Bangladesh is generally a force for
moderation in international forums, and it is
also a long-time leader in international
peacekeeping operations. Its activities
in international organizations, with other
governments, and its regional partners to
promote human rights, democracy, and free
markets are coordinated and high profile.
Bangladesh lies at the strategic crossroads
of South and Southeast Asia. Potential terrorist
movements and activities in or through
Bangladesh pose a potentially serious threat to
India, Nepal, Bhutan, and Burma, as well as
Bangladesh itself. The Bangladesh Government
routinely denies Indian allegations that Indian
insurgents in northeast India operate out of
Bangladesh and that extremist Islamist forces
are overwhelming Bangladesh’s traditionally
moderate character. It also denies there is any
international terrorist presence in Bangladesh.
Given its size and location, a major crisis in
Bangladesh could have important consequences for
regional stability, particularly if significant
refugee movements ensue.
ECONOMY
Although one of the world's poorest and most
densely populated countries, Bangladesh has made
major strides to meet the food needs of its
increasing population, through increased
domestic production augmented by imports. The
land is devoted mainly to rice and jute
cultivation, although wheat production has
increased in recent years; the country is
largely self-sufficient in rice production.
Nonetheless, an estimated 10% to 15% of the
population faces serious nutritional risk.
Bangladesh's predominantly agricultural economy
depends heavily on an erratic monsoonal cycle,
with periodic flooding and drought. Although
improving, infrastructure to support
transportation, communications, and power supply
is poorly developed. Bangladesh is limited in
its reserves of coal and oil, and its industrial
base is weak. However, the country's main
endowments include its vast human resource base,
rich agricultural land, relatively abundant
water, and substantial reserves of natural gas.
Since independence in 1971, Bangladesh has
received more than $30 billion in grant aid and
loan commitments from foreign donors, about $15
billion of which has been disbursed. Major
donors include the World Bank, the Asian
Development Bank, the UN Development Program,
the United States, Japan, Saudi Arabia, and west
European countries. Bangladesh historically has
run a large trade deficit, financed largely
through aid receipts and remittances from
workers overseas. Foreign reserves dropped
markedly in 2001 but appear to have now
stabilized in the $2.2 to $2.5 billion range (or
about 2.0-2.2 monthly import cover). On May 5,
2005, reserves stood at $3.24 billion.
Moves Toward a Market Economy
Following the violent events of 1971 during the
fight for independence, Bangladesh--with the
help of large infusions of donor relief and
development aid--slowly began to turn its
attention to developing new industrial capacity
and rehabilitating its economy. The statist
economic model adopted by its early leadership,
however--including the nationalization of much
of the industrial sector--resulted in
inefficiency and economic stagnation. Beginning
in late 1975, the government gradually gave
greater scope to private sector participation in
the economy, a pattern that has continued. A few
state-owned enterprises have been privatized,
but many, including major portions of the
banking and jute sectors, remain under
government control. Population growth,
inefficiency in the public sector, a resistance
to developing the country's richest natural
resources, and limited capital have all
continued to restrict economic growth.
In the mid-1980s, there were encouraging, if
halting, signs of progress. Economic policies
aimed at encouraging private enterprise and
investment, denationalizing public industries,
reinstating budgetary discipline, and
liberalizing the import regime were accelerated.
From 1991 to 1993, the government successfully
followed an enhanced structural adjustment
facility (ESAF) with the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) but failed to follow through on
reforms in large part because of a preoccupation
with the government's domestic political
troubles. In the late 1990s the government's
economic policies became more entrenched, and
some of the early gains were lost, which was
highlighted by a precipitous drop in foreign
direct investment in 2000 and 2001. The current
government has promised a return to
liberalization. In June 2003 the IMF approved
3-year, $490-million plan as part of the Poverty
Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF) for
Bangladesh that aims to support the government's
economic reform program up to 2006. Seventy
million dollars was made available immediately.
In the same vein the World Bank approved $536
million in interest-free loans.
Efforts to achieve Bangladesh's macroeconomic
goals have been problematic. The privatization
of public sector industries has proceeded at a
slow pace--due in part to worker unrest in
affected industries--although on June 30, 2002,
the government took a bold step as it closed
down the Adamjee Jute Mill, the country’s
largest and most costly state-owned enterprise.
The government also has proven unable to resist
demands for wage hikes in government-owned
industries. Economic growth has been further
slowed by a largely dysfunctional banking
system. This has impeded access to capital.
State-owned banks, which control about
three-fourths of deposits and loans, carry
classified loan burdens of about 50%.
The IMF and World Bank predict GDP growth
over the next 5 years will be about 4.5%, well
short of the 7%-8% that they feel is needed to
lift Bangladesh out of its severe poverty. The
post-September 11, 2001 global economic downturn
hit especially hard Bangladesh's main export
industry--readymade garments. As a result,
exports, which were growing 18% annually, are
now growing 8%. The initial impact of the end of
quotas under the Multi-Fiber Arrangement has
been moderate and uneven with some sectors,
especially knitwear, experiencing gains while
other sectors report a 10-20% drop in orders.
Downward price pressure means Bangladesh must
cut final delivered costs considerably if it is
to remain competitive in the world market.
Foreign investors in a broad range of sectors
are increasingly frustrated with the politics of
confrontation, the level of corruption, and the
slow pace of reform. Bangladesh may well lose
not only potential investors but also those
already invested if governance does not improve.
Agriculture
Most Bangladeshis earn their living from
agriculture. Although rice and jute are the
primary crops, wheat and vegetables are assuming
greater importance. Tea is grown in the
northeast. Because of Bangladesh's fertile soil
and normally ample water supply, rice can be
grown and harvested three times a year in many
areas. Due to a number of factors, Bangladesh's
labor-intensive agriculture has achieved steady
increases in food grain production despite the
often unfavorable weather conditions. These
include better flood control and irrigation, a
generally more efficient use of fertilizers, and
the establishment of better distribution and
rural credit networks. With 26.19 million metric
tons produced in 2003-04 (July-June), rice is
Bangladesh's principal crop. By comparison,
wheat output in 2004 was 1.3 million metric
tons. Population pressure continues to place a
severe burden on productive capacity, creating a
food deficit, especially of wheat. Foreign
assistance and commercial imports fill the gap.
Underemployment remains a serious problem, and a
growing concern for Bangladesh's agricultural
sector will be its ability to absorb additional
manpower. Finding alternative sources of
employment will continue to be a daunting
problem for future governments, particularly
with the increasing numbers of landless peasants
who already account for about half the rural
labor force.
Industry and Investment
Fortunately for Bangladesh, many new jobs--1.8
million, mostly for women--have been created by
the country's dynamic private readymade garment
industry, which grew at double-digit rates
through most of the 1990s. The labor-intensive
process of shipbreaking for scrap has developed
to the point where it now meets most of
Bangladesh's domestic steel needs. Other
industries include sugar, tea, leather goods,
newsprint, pharmaceutical, and fertilizer
production. The country has done less well,
however, in expanding its export base--garments
account for more than three-fourths of all
exports, dwarfing the country's historic cash
crop, jute, along with leather, shrimp,
pharmaceuticals, and ceramics.
Despite the country's politically motivated
general strikes, poor infrastructure, and weak
financial system, Bangladeshi entrepreneurs have
shown themselves adept at competing in the
global garments marketplace. Bangladesh exports
significant amounts of garments and knitwear to
the U.S. and the European Union (EU) market. As
noted, the initial impact of the end of quotas
on Bangladesh's ready-made garment industry has
been moderate. Downward price pressures,
however, mean Bangladesh must cut final
delivered costs considerably if it is to remain
competitive in the world market. Bangladesh has
been a world leader in its efforts to end the
use of child labor in garment factories. On July
4, 1995, the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers
Export Association, International Labor
Organization, and UNICEF signed a memorandum of
understanding on the elimination of child labor
in the garment sector. Implementation of this
pioneering agreement began in fall 1995, and by
the end of 2001, child labor in the garment
trade virtually had been eliminated.
The Bangladesh Government continues to court
foreign investment, something it did fairly well
in the 1990s in private power generation and gas
exploration and production, as well as in other
sectors such as cellular telephony, textiles,
and pharmaceuticals. In 1989, the same year it
signed a bilateral investment treaty with the
United States, it established a board of
investment to simplify approval and start-up
procedures for foreign investors, although in
practice the board has done little to increase
investment. Bangladesh also has established
successful export processing zones in Chittagong
(1983), Dhaka (1994) and Comilla (2000), and has
given the private sector permission to build and
operate competing export promotion zones (EPZs).
The most important reforms Bangladesh should
make to be able to compete in a global economy
are to privatize the state-owned enterprises (SOEs),
deregulate and promote foreign investment in
high-potential industries like energy and
telecommunications, and take decisive steps
toward combating corruption and strengthening
rule of law.
DEFENSE
The Bangladesh Army, Navy, and Air Force are
composed of regular military members. Some of
the senior officers and noncommissioned officers
served in the Pakistan military before the 1971
independence war. Senior officers include
"repatriates" who were interned in Pakistan
during the war, and "freedom fighters" who
fought against Pakistan. The 110,000-member,
seven-division army is modeled and organized
along British lines, similar to other armies on
the Indian subcontinent. However, it has adopted
U.S. Army tactical planning procedures, training
management techniques, and noncommissioned
officer educational systems. It also is eager to
improve its peacekeeping operations capabilities
and is working with the U.S. military in that
area. The United States gave the Bangladesh Air
Force four U.S. C-130 B transport aircraft in
2001 under the excess defense article (EDA)
program. These aircraft will improve the
military's disaster response and peacekeeping
capabilities. The Bangladesh Navy is mostly
limited to coastal patrolling, but in 2001 it
paid to have an ULSAN-class frigate built in
South Korea.
In addition to traditional defense roles, the
military has been called on to provide support
to civil authorities for disaster relief and
internal security. The Bangladesh Air Force and
Navy, with about 7,000 personnel each, perform
traditional military missions. A Coast Guard has
been formed, under the home ministry, to play a
stronger role in the area of anti-smuggling,
anti-piracy, and protection of offshore
resources. Recognition of economic and fiscal
constraints has led to the establishment of
several paramilitary and auxiliary forces,
including the 40,000-member Bangladesh rifles;
the Ansars and village defense parties
organization, which claims 64 members in every
village in the country; and a 5,000-member
specialized police unit known as the armed
police. In 2004, a new police unit called the
Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) was constituted
with personnel drawn from the military and
different law enforcement agencies. RAB is
designed to fight hardcore criminal gangs.
Bangladesh Rifles, under the authority of the
home ministry, are commanded by army officers
who are seconded to the organization.
In addition to in-country military training,
some advanced and technical training is done
abroad, including grant aid training in the
United States. China, Pakistan, and eastern
Europe are the major defense suppliers to
Bangladesh, but military leaders are trying to
find affordable alternatives to Chinese
equipment.
A 2,300-member Bangladesh Army contingent
served with coalition forces during the 1991
Gulf war. In June 2003 Bangladesh was the
third-leading contributor to UN peacekeeping
operations with a total of 2,642 troops,
observers, and military police. As of April 30,
2005, Bangladesh’s 7,942 peacekeepers deployed
around the world made it the top troop
contributor to international peacekeeping
operations. At the completion of their
deployment to Sudan later in 2005, that figure
should reach 9,862.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Bangladesh pursues a moderate foreign policy
that places heavy reliance on multinational
diplomacy, especially at the United Nations.
Participation in Multilateral
Organizations
Bangladesh was admitted to the United Nations in
1974 and was elected to a Security Council term
in 1978 and again for a 2000-01 term. Then
Foreign Minister Choudhury served as president
of the 41st UN General Assembly in 1986. The
government has participated in numerous
international conferences, especially those
dealing with population, food, development, and
women's issues. In 1982-83, Bangladesh played a
constructive role as chairman of the "Group of
77," an informal association encompassing most
of the world's developing nations. It has taken
a leading role in the "Group of 48" developing
countries and the "Developing-8" group of
countries.
Since 1975, Bangladesh has sought close
relations with other Islamic states and a role
among moderate members of the Organization of
the Islamic Conference (OIC). In 1983,
Bangladesh hosted the foreign ministers meeting
of the OIC. The government also has pursued the
expansion of cooperation among the nations of
South Asia, bringing the process--an initiative
of former President Ziaur Rahman--through its
earliest, most tentative stages to the formal
inauguration of the South Asian Association for
Regional Cooperation (SAARC) at a summit
gathering of South Asian leaders in Dhaka in
December 1985. Bangladesh has served in the
chairmanship of SAARC and has participated in a
wide range of ongoing SAARC regional activities.
In recent years, Bangladesh has played a
significant role in international peacekeeping
activities. Several thousand Bangladeshi
military personnel are deployed overseas on
peacekeeping operations. Under UN auspices,
Bangladeshi troops have served or are serving in
Sierra Leone, Somalia, Rwanda, Mozambique,
Kuwait, Ethiopia-Eritrea, Kosovo, East Timor,
Georgia, Congo, Cote d’Ivoire and Western
Sahara, Bosnia, and Haiti. Bangladesh responded
quickly to President Clinton’s 1994 request for
troops and police for the multinational force
for Haiti and provided the largest non-U.S.
contingent.
Bilateral Relations With Other Nations
Bangladesh is bordered on the west, north, and
east by a 2,400-kilometer land frontier with
India, and on the southeast by a land and water
frontier (193 kilometers) with Burma.
India. India is Bangladesh's most
important neighbor. Geographic, cultural,
historic, and commercial ties are strong, and
both countries recognize the importance of good
relations. During and immediately after
Bangladesh's struggle for independence from
Pakistan in 1971, India assisted refugees from
East Pakistan, intervened militarily to help
bring about the independence of Bangladesh, and
furnished relief and reconstruction aid.
Indo-Bangladesh relations are often strained,
and many Bangladeshis feel India likes to play
"big brother" to smaller neighbors, including
Bangladesh. Bilateral relations warmed in 1996,
due to a softer Indian foreign policy and the
new Awami League government. A 30-year
water-sharing agreement for the Ganges River was
signed in December 1996, after an earlier
bilateral water-sharing agreement for the Ganges
River lapsed in 1988. The Bangladesh Government
and tribal insurgents signed a peace accord in
December 1997, which allowed for the return of
tribal refugees who had fled into India,
beginning in 1986, to escape violence caused by
an insurgency in their homeland in the
Chittagong Hill Tracts. The implementation of
most parts of this agreement have stalled, and
the army maintains a strong presence in the Hill
Tracts. Arms smuggling and reported opium poppy
cultivation are concerns in this area.
Occasional skirmishes between Bangladeshi and
Indian border forces sometimes escalate and
seriously disrupt bilateral relations.
Bangladesh remains extremely concerned about a
proposed Indian river linking project, which the
government says could turn large parts of
Bangladesh into a desert. The ruling party views
the Indian Government as a major benefactor of
the opposition Awami League, and blames negative
international media coverage of Bangladesh on
alleged Indian manipulation.
Pakistan. Bangladesh enjoys warm
relations with Pakistan, despite the strained
early days of their relationship. Landmarks in
their reconciliation are:
- An August 1973 agreement between
Bangladesh and Pakistan on the repatriation
of numerous individuals, including 90,000
Pakistani prisoners of war stranded in
Bangladesh as a result of the 1971 conflict;
- A February 1974 accord by Bangladesh and
Pakistan on mutual recognition followed more
than 2 years later by establishment of
formal diplomatic relations;
- The organization by the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) of an
airlift that moved almost 250,000 Bengalis
from Pakistan to Bangladesh, and
non-Bengalis from Bangladesh to Pakistan;
and
- Exchanges of high-level visits,
including a visit by Prime Minister Benazir
Bhutto to Bangladesh in 1989 and visits by
Prime Minister Zia to Pakistan in 1992 and
in 1995.
- President Pervez Musharraf visited
Bangladesh in 2002.
- Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz visited
Bangladesh in 2004.
Still to be resolved are the division of assets
from the pre-1971 period and the status of more
than 250,000 non-Bengali Muslims (known as
"Biharis") remaining in Bangladesh but seeking
resettlement in Pakistan.
Burma. Bilateral ties with Burma are
good, despite occasional border strains and an
influx of more than 270,000 Muslim refugees
(known as "Rohingya") from predominantly
Buddhist Burma. As a result of bilateral
discussions, and with the cooperation and
assistance of the UNHCR, most of the Rohingya
refugees have now returned to Burma. As of 2005,
about 20,000 refugees remain in camps in
southern Bangladesh.
Former Soviet Union. The former Soviet
Union supported India's actions during the 1971
Indo-Pakistan war and was among the first to
recognize Bangladesh. The U.S.S.R. initially
contributed considerable relief and
rehabilitation aid to the new nation. After
Sheikh Mujib was assassinated in 1975 and
replaced by military regimes, however,
Soviet-Bangladesh relations cooled.
In 1989, the U.S.S.R. ranked 14th among aid
donors to Bangladesh. The Soviets focused on the
development of electrical power, natural gas and
oil, and maintained active cultural relations
with Bangladesh. They financed the Ghorasal
thermal power station--the largest in
Bangladesh. Recently, Russia has conducted an
aggressive military sales effort in Dhaka and
has succeeded with a $124-million deal for eight
MIG-29 fighters. Bangladesh began to open
diplomatic relations with the newly independent
Central Asian states in 1992.
China. China traditionally has been
more important to Bangladesh than the former
U.S.S.R., even though China supported Pakistan
in 1971. As Bangladesh's relations with the
Soviet Union and India cooled in the mid-1970s,
and as Bangladesh and Pakistan became
reconciled, China's relations with Bangladesh
grew warmer. An exchange of diplomatic missions
in February 1976 followed an accord on
recognition in late 1975.
Since that time, relations have grown
stronger, centering on trade, cultural
activities, military and civilian aid, and
exchanges of high-level visits, beginning in
January 1977 with President Zia's trip to
Beijing. The largest and most visible symbol of
bilateral amity is the Bangladesh-China
"Friendship Bridge," completed in 1989 near
Dhaka, as well as the extensive military
hardware in the Bangladesh inventory and warm
military relations between the two countries. In
the 1990s, the Chinese also built two
210-megawatt power plants outside of Chittagong;
mechanical faults in the plants cause them to
frequently shut down for days at a time,
heightening the country's power shortage. In
April 2005, Bangladesh and China signed nine
memoranda of understanding on trade and other
issues during the visit to Dhaka of Prime
Minister Wen.
Other countries in South Asia.
Bangladesh maintains friendly relations with
Bhutan, Maldives, Nepal, and Sri Lanka and
strongly opposed the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan. Bangladesh and Nepal recently
agreed to facilitate land transit between the
two countries.
U.S.-BANGLADESH RELATIONS
Although the U.S. relationship with Bangladesh
was initially troubled because of strong U.S.
ties with Pakistan, U.S.-Bangladesh friendship
and support developed quickly following
Bangladesh's independence from Pakistan in 1971.
U.S.-Bangladesh relations are excellent.
These relations were boosted in March 2000 when
President Clinton visited Bangladesh, the first
visit ever by a sitting U.S. President, and when
Secretary of State Colin Powell visited in June
2003, as well as when Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld visited in June 2004. A
centerpiece of the bilateral relationship is a
large U.S. economic aid program, which totaled
about $100 million in 2001. U.S. economic and
food aid programs, which began as emergency
relief following the 1971 war for independence,
now concentrate on long-term development. U.S.
assistance objectives include stabilizing
population growth, protecting human health,
encouraging broad-based economic growth, and
building democracy. In total, the United States
has provided more than $4.3 billion in food and
development assistance to Bangladesh. Food aid
under Titles I, II, and III of PL-480
(congressional "food-for-peace" legislation) has
been designed to help Bangladesh meet minimum
food requirements, promote food production, and
moderate fluctuation in consumer prices. Other
U.S. development assistance emphasizes family
planning and health, agricultural development,
and rural employment. The United States works
with other donors and the Bangladesh Government
to avoid duplication and ensure that resources
are used to maximum benefit.
Since 1986, with the exception of 1988-89,
when an aircraft purchase made the trade balance
even, the U.S. trade balance with Bangladesh has
been negative, due largely to growing imports of
readymade garments. Jute carpetbacking is the
other major U.S. import from Bangladesh. Total
imports from Bangladesh were about $2 billion
(excluding services) in 2003, down from the $2.1
billion in 2002. U.S. exports to Bangladesh
(some $226 million, excluding services in 2003)
include wheat, fertilizer, cotton,
communications equipment, aircraft, and medical
supplies, a portion of which is financed by the
U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).
A bilateral investment treaty was signed in
1989.
Another trade related issue between the two
countries involves the export processing zones (EPZs)
The government provides several tax, foreign
exchange, customs and labor incentives to
investors in the EPZs. One such incentive
provided in recent years was an exemption from
certain labor laws, which had the practical
effect of prohibiting trade unions from the
zones. The U.S. Generalized System of
Preferences (GSP) law requires the beneficiary
country to satisfy certain conditions relating
to labor rights. On July 13, 2004, the
government passed a bill allowing limited trade
unionism in the EPZs effective November 1, 2006.
Relations between Bangladesh and the United
States were further strengthened by the
participation of Bangladesh troops in the 1991
Gulf war coalition, and alongside U.S. forces in
numerous UN peacekeeping operations, including
Haiti in 1994, as well as by the assistance of a
U.S. naval task force after a disastrous March
1991 cyclone in Bangladesh. The relief efforts
of U.S. troops are credited with having saved as
many as 200,000 lives. In response to
Bangladesh's worst flooding of the century in
1998, the United States donated 700,000 metric
tons of food grains, helping to mitigate
shortages.
Most recently, Bangladesh has become a
valuable United States ally in the Global War on
Terrorism. As part of the war effort, the
Government of Bangladesh has publicly addressed
problems of money laundering, weak border
controls, and other factors to ensure that
Bangladesh does not become a terrorist
safe-haven.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--vacant
Charge d'Affaires--Judith
Chammas
Political-Economic Counselor--Dundas McCullough
Commercial Officer--David Renz
Consular Officer--Elizabeth Gourlay
Management Officer--Vince Raimondi
Regional Security Officer--David Zebley
Public Affairs Officer--Jon Cebra
The
U.S. Embassy in Dhaka is located at
Madani Avenue, Baridhara, Dhaka 1212,
Bangladesh; tel: (880) (2) 885-5500, fax: (880)
(2) 8823744. Hours of Operation: Sunday to
Thursday (08:00 a.m.-16:30 p.m.), except
holidays.