Bangladesh Government
The President is the head of
state, albeit mainly ceremonially in his/her elected post; however,
the President's powers are substantially expanded during the tenure of a caretaker government, which is responsible for
the conduct of elections and transfer of power. The officers of the caretaker
government must be non-partisan and are given three months to complete their
task. This transitional arrangement was pioneered by Bangladesh in its 1991 election and
then institutionalised in 1996 through its 13th constitutional amendment.
Major parties in
Bangladesh include the Awami League, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP),
theJatiya
Party and the Jamaat-e-Islami. Sheikh
Hasina's Awami League aligns with more leftist parties, whereas Khaleda Zia's
BNP has politically been allied with Islamist parties
like the Jamaat but practices secular politics. The former two have been
bitter, dominant political rivals for over 15 years; each is related to one of
the leaders of the independence movement. The Awami League-BNP rivalry has been
punctuated by protests, violence and murder. Student politics are particularly
strong in Bangladesh ,
a legacy from the liberation movement era, as almost all parties have highly
active student wings, and student leaders have been elected to the Jatiyo
Sangshad.
On 11 January 2007, following widespread political unrest,
emergency law was declared and a caretaker government was appointed to administer
the next general election. The 22 January 2007 election was postponed
indefinitely as the Army-backed caretaker government ofFakhruddin
Ahmed aimed to prepare a new voter list and crack down on corruption.
They also assisted the interim government of Bangladesh in a drive against
corruption, which resulted in Bangladesh's position in Transparency International's Corruption Perceptions Index changed
from the very bottom, where they had been for 3 years in a row, to 147th in
just 1 year.A large alliance led by the Bangladesh Awami League won in a 29
December 2008 landslide victory, gaining 230 seats among 300 seats in the
parliament.
Bangladeshi law is primarily in accordance with the English
legal system, although since 1947 the legal scenario of Bangladesh has
significantly drifted from the West owing to differences in socio-cultural
values and religious guidelines. Laws are loosely based on English common law,
but family laws such as marriage and inheritance are based on religious
scriptures, and therefore differ between religious communities. The
Constitution of Bangladesh was drafted in 1972 and has undergone 15
amendments.
The highest judicial body is the Supreme Court, with
justices appointed by the President. The judicial and law enforcement
institutions are comparatively weak. On 1 November 2007, Bangladesh
successfully separated the Judiciary Branch from the Executive, but several
black laws, including the Special Powers Act, still influence the rulers.[58] It
is expected that this separation will make the judiciary stronger and more
impartial.
Bangladesh has betrayed it's minorities, especially Hindus. 10% minorities, but 98% of rapes are against minority women. What a disgrace. And all in the name of Islam ("peace")
ReplyDeleteThis is Not right, 98% of rapes are against minority women.98% of rapes are against minority women. What a disgrace. And all in the name of Islam ("peace") because Islam do not support this and that's true.
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