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Repeal Bangladesh’s Racist Vested Property Act Now!
[Sat, 28 Jun 2008 00:57:52 -0500]
By Dr. Richard L. Benkin
Bangladesh’s
Vested Property Act (VPA) is a racist law. It provides the
government—which really means the corrupt politicians in the ruling
party—with the power to seize the homes and farms of innocent citizens
and distribute them as graft to their cronies. The VPA has its roots in
Pakistan’s Enemy Property Act. After another embarrassing defeat at
Indian hands in 1965, the Pakistani government passed a retaliatory law
that allowed it to declare citizens (read Hindu citizens) enemies and
confiscate their property. The Pakistani law was openly anti-Hindu,
which matched the national rhetoric at the time and national sentiment
most of the time.
When Bangladesh passed the VPA three years
after its independence, it had to be more circumspect in its
description, even though the law was worded to make it clear that the
VPA’s substance was no different from its Pakistani forebear. After
all, the Awami League politicians who passed the VPA then and now tries
to maintain a fiction that they care about Bangladesh’s non-Muslim
minorities. Good politics, you know. Moreover, most people still
appreciated the fact that Bangladeshi independence was possible about
only with the help of Indian arms. But the effect was the same. While
the act has been used against other religious and ethnic minorities,
Hindus have been the real targets. Professor Abul Barkat of Dhaka
University undertook the most authoritative study of the VPA and
concluded that by 1997, 40 percent of Hindu families in Bangladesh had
been affected by it and more than half of all Hindu-owned land already
had been confiscated under the act. Much more land and many more Hindus
have been affected in the eleven years since then. So, there is no
doubt that the VPA is a critical ingredient in ethnic cleansing. The
fact that the percent of Hindus in Bangladesh has been cut in half
concurrent with the act is evidence of those even more sinister, ethnic
cleansing, motives behind the law.
The VPA is so clearly racist
and immoral that the question of its being an outrage to every decent
human being should not even a legitimate topic for discussion among
civilized individuals. There is no justification for it, and every
Bangladeshi should be embarrassed by it. Trying to make a case for it
is like trying to justify Holocaust denial. Holocaust denial is the
racist attempt by people, including Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmedinejad—to say
that the Nazi slaughter of Europe’s Jews never happened. Some appeasers
in universities and elsewhere are now trying to say it is merely
another point of view that is a legitimate topic for study. Nonsense!
It is a racist lie; members of my family who survived the Holocaust can
testify to that. Other members of my family who did not survive it
would do the same if they could! Trying to justify the VPA is a racist
lie, too.
According to Barkat, only about 0.4 percent of the
Bangladeshi population shares in the spoils of the VPA, all of them
connected to one political party or another. During the period of his
original study, the time of Awami League control, Barkat found the
following breakdown of who got the seized property:
Awami League 44% BNP 32% Jatiya Party 6% Jamaat-e-Islami 5% Others 13%
Barkat’s breakdown during BNP control was:
BNP 45% Awami League 31% Jamaat-e-Islami 8% Jatiya Party 6% Others 10%
Bangladesh
has long been known for its massive corruption. These figures make it
clear that this is not even a principled bigotry but nothing more than
legalized plunder for dishonest politicians. The blood money seems the
real reason why Bangladeshis refuse to repeal this racist law. For what
other countries besides Bangladesh and Pakistan have such a law?
Imagine the reaction if any nation where Muslims are a minority had a
similar law directed at them! Various Bangladeshi officials like to
call Israel “apartheid” and take a political position in which the
government tries to pretend it is morally superior to the Jewish state.
It even deprives its citizens of the chance to travel to Israel through
its bigoted passport regulations. But Bangladesh’s politically
connected few grow fat by stealing ancestral Hindu lands and expelling
their Hindu citizens; yet, if the nation they so cynically and unjustly
condemn ever tried to pass a similar law aimed at Arabs, the Israeli
Supreme Court would strike it down before it ever had a chance to be
implemented.
Defending an indefensible law like the VPA also
makes Bangladeshi representatives look very foolish. Recently, one
Bangladeshi official actually tried to convince me that the VPA was in
force “to protect Hindus and other minorities.” I very genuinely
advised him not to try that on others as it is an insult to the
listener’s intelligence and only makes the Bangladeshi government
appear tragically ridiculous. Another Bangladeshi leader told me not
long ago that “the current government has no intention of addressing
the Vested Property Act during its tenure,” as, he said, the matter was
too complex. Complex? The Vested Property Act is undisguised racism and
brings nothing but international disrepute on Bangladesh. Oh, and by
the way, Awami League, no one—not even your toadies in the press—were
taken in by your disingenuous Vested Properties Return Act, which was
nothing more than a cheap stunt to win votes in an election year.
The
VPA is so beyond the pale of what decent nations subscribe to that its
continuation has other, serious consequences for the people of
Bangladesh—almost none of whom derive even a single Taka from the VPA.
For instance, Bangladesh has been struggling for years, and with no
success, to obtain tariff relief and other trade benefits from the
United States, its principle garment customer. To be sure, its failure
has been due more than anything else to Bangladesh’s continued false
persecution of journalist Salah Uddin Shoaib Choudhury, which the
entire US Congress has condemned on the record. Yet, it is also quite
possible that Bangladesh’s continued enforcement of the VPA could be at
odds with US law regarding such treaties and agreements. The VPA could
be a similar obstacle to agreements with Canada, the European Union,
and other countries, as well as the World Trade Organization.
For
over forty years, first as East Pakistan then as Bangladesh, the racist
and Nazi-like nature of the VPA has not moved politicians to act in
defense of human rights. One would think that if human decency cannot
move Bangladeshi leaders to do the right thing, perhaps self-interest
will. We do know that the current government has more flexibility to
act than the previous, corrupt regimes ever did and a clearer
perception of the realities facing Bangladesh. Whether they do act,
however, remains a matter of speculation. What is not speculative,
however, is that if they do not and the VPA remains, the losers will be
all Bangladeshis—Muslims as well as Hindus and other minorities. And
the world will remain silent no longer.
[Dr.
Richard L. Benkin, an American Jew and independent human rights
activist, secured the release of Salah Uddin Shoaib Choudhury from
imprisonment and torture and ahs continued to defend him against
attacks from both government functionaries and others. He also is
working with others in Bangladesh to stop anti-religious persecution.
Currently, Dr. Benkin is also leading an effort to defend Bangladeshi
Hindus both in Bangladesh and India. He is a correspondent for Weekly
Blitz and Amador Shomoy and writes for numerous journals
internationally.]
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