Friday, December 12, 2008

BANGLADESH-ELECTIONS

ECONOMIST: NEARLY two years after the army stepped in to end the predatory rule of civilian politicians in Bangladesh, the most visible evidence of that corrupt era is strewn along the streets and dirt roads: unused electricity poles lying about in their thousands. The government of the former prime minister, Khaleda Zia, had bought the poles from a syndicate controlled by Mrs Zia’s elder son, Tarique Rahman. Yet the electricity generated during her rule from 2001-06 grew by not a single megawatt, even though the economy’s size increased by a quarter. Bangladeshis are, like the poles, still waiting for their electricity.

Under army-backed rule, each spent a year in detention on charges of corruption. Although these have not been dropped, Mrs Zia and Sheikh Hasina, along with their coteries, are in practice immune from prosecution. Western donors tacitly gave the soldiers two years to fix the mess in Bangladesh’s politics and bring the country back to the polls. In return for the interim government not pursuing charges, the parties have agreed to contest the election.

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