The Quagmire

Those who will not reason are bigots, those who cannot
are fools and those who dare not are slaves.
- Lord Byron

By Sabria Chowdhury Balland | February 2020


Recent political developments in India have opened a Pandora’s Box. The developments are overtly targeting the country’s largest minority, the Muslims. With an increase in hate crimes, particularly against the Muslims in recent years, there is fear that India, long known as the world’s largest democracy, has become dangerously intolerant and rather undemocratic, under the Bharatya Janata Party (BJP).

For the Awami League government in Bangladesh, which shares a border with India on three sides, India’s National Register of Citizens (NRC) and the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) were regarded as “internal matters”, or so it was declared to the people of Bangladesh. However, this nonchalant stance has become a denial that is too immense to ignore by the Awami League.

In October 2019, the Bangladesh Prime MInister Sheikh Hasina returned from India after having signed seven bilateral treaties with her counterpart, Narendra Modi, an act which proved to the vast majority of disappointed and infuriated Bangladeshis that they could not expect their leadership to look out for the interests of the country. Each treaty was seen as benefiting Bangladesh’s larger neighbour against its own interests and well being. Commenting on Facebook regarding this issue even resulted in the murder of engineering student Abrar Fahad by the Chattra League, the student wing of Sheikh Hasina’s Awami League. If there was ever any doubt that Bangladesh had lost its sovereignty due to the pro-Indian priorities of its ruling party, these treaties sealed the conviction in the minds of the Bangladeshis that sovereignty and independence were merely words in their Constitution.

At a time when anti-India sentiments are profoundly present amongst Bangladeshis, India has assured Bangladesh that the NRC and CAA will not affect it. However, there are genuine concerns and apprehensions in Bangladesh that the NRC and CAA might unleash an exodus of Bengali-speaking people from Assam and Muslims attempting to escape persecution in India. After taking in nearly one million Rohingya refugees fleeing persecution in Myanmar, Bangladesh cannot take in any more people. An influx of refugees from India would be just the tip of the iceberg.

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The writer is a teacher, political columnist and member of the US Democratic Party. She can be reached at
sabriacballand@gmail.com

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