Politics

Opinion: City election and things we have lost

There is a sea of difference between the election that was and the election that could have been.

It could have been an election in which people could merrily walk to the polling centres and pick their mayors. It could have been a return to true democracy. We could have run pictures of the winners and the losers embracing each other.  The winners saying they want support of the losers and the losers promising their best for a better city.

Instead, what we saw is the crudest form of an ‘election’.

It seemed the government was afraid to test its popularity in an election that had actually no effect on power change. And it showed the government is in an ‘I could not care less’ mode to have an election in this fashion.

And through this farce we have lost quite a few things. Let’s count them.

First, we have lost the faith of our citizens specially the youngsters who were the first time voters in the democratic process that the government preaches.

There was this young nursing student who recounted her polling centre experience. She almost danced to the polling centre, the first time in her life, and then the polling officer gave her a smile and said, “Well, since you have come to vote, let me put ink on your finger. But you don’t need to cast vote.”   The flabbergasted student walked away without further exchange.

Secondly, we have lost a chance for political reconciliation. The way the election was brazenly bulldozed only shows how little the government could care about BNP or for that matter for any opposition.

Thirdly, we have lost credibility of the election commission, a vital pillar for any democracy. Although the news channels and social channels were flooded with numerous videos and pictures of vote rigging and intimidation, the CEC, Kazi Rakibuddin Ahmad, could not find anything wrong. He thought the nation was a bunch of fools when he thanked all for a ‘free and fair’ election. He did not bother to think how low his own standing fell, when he uttered those partisan words live on TV.

Fourthly, we have lost a chance of our law enforcing agency to be neutral in an election under a party government. The way police drove away BNP agents and blocked the media from covering the rigging, only showed how much immunity they enjoy from this government. In future, shy should they bother to care about political rights or human rights. Having a reckless law enforcing agency is a big threat to the society.

And finally it is democracy that has suffered a great loss. The winners could be Annisul Huq and Syed Khokon, but the losers are the people of Bangladesh.

Comments

Opinion: City election and things we have lost

There is a sea of difference between the election that was and the election that could have been.

It could have been an election in which people could merrily walk to the polling centres and pick their mayors. It could have been a return to true democracy. We could have run pictures of the winners and the losers embracing each other.  The winners saying they want support of the losers and the losers promising their best for a better city.

Instead, what we saw is the crudest form of an ‘election’.

It seemed the government was afraid to test its popularity in an election that had actually no effect on power change. And it showed the government is in an ‘I could not care less’ mode to have an election in this fashion.

And through this farce we have lost quite a few things. Let’s count them.

First, we have lost the faith of our citizens specially the youngsters who were the first time voters in the democratic process that the government preaches.

There was this young nursing student who recounted her polling centre experience. She almost danced to the polling centre, the first time in her life, and then the polling officer gave her a smile and said, “Well, since you have come to vote, let me put ink on your finger. But you don’t need to cast vote.”   The flabbergasted student walked away without further exchange.

Secondly, we have lost a chance for political reconciliation. The way the election was brazenly bulldozed only shows how little the government could care about BNP or for that matter for any opposition.

Thirdly, we have lost credibility of the election commission, a vital pillar for any democracy. Although the news channels and social channels were flooded with numerous videos and pictures of vote rigging and intimidation, the CEC, Kazi Rakibuddin Ahmad, could not find anything wrong. He thought the nation was a bunch of fools when he thanked all for a ‘free and fair’ election. He did not bother to think how low his own standing fell, when he uttered those partisan words live on TV.

Fourthly, we have lost a chance of our law enforcing agency to be neutral in an election under a party government. The way police drove away BNP agents and blocked the media from covering the rigging, only showed how much immunity they enjoy from this government. In future, shy should they bother to care about political rights or human rights. Having a reckless law enforcing agency is a big threat to the society.

And finally it is democracy that has suffered a great loss. The winners could be Annisul Huq and Syed Khokon, but the losers are the people of Bangladesh.

Comments