
Accusing Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami of trying to fish in troubled waters, BNP senior joint secretary general Ruhul Kabir Rizvi on Saturday alleged that a party which had taken part in the 1986 election under an autocratic regime was now questioning the electoral atmosphere under the interim government.
‘Some people are now trying to fish in troubled waters and saying there is no proper environment for the election,’ he said while inaugurating a football tournament at the Dhanmondi Sports Club ground.
BNP’s Dhaka North City unit organised the event as part of the party’s month-long programme to mark the first anniversary of the July mass uprising.
Throughout world history, Rizvi said that people had gained their rights through movements and struggles.
The BNP leader said that an elected parliament with public representatives, who were accountable to people, was essential to speed up political progress.
‘But instead of supporting such elections, you are trying to delay them under the pretext of political rhetoric. You are questioning the election atmosphere, but we know your history. You had no hesitation in joining an election under an autocrat, following Sheikh Hasina’s footsteps,’ he said.
Earlier on Friday, Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami amir Shafiqur Rahman said that a neutral election was not possible in Bangladesh under the current circumstances.
‘Under the current circumstances, a neutral election is impossible. We must first create an environment for credible elections, and that requires fundamental reforms,’ said Shafiqur while addressing a rally in Rangpur.
Rizvi said that the Jamaat amir sounded like a green activist, raising concern about the election environment. ‘Suddenly, you have become an ‘environmentalist’! If you are so concerned about the environment, then work on the global environmental decline we are all witnessing.’
He said that the country now needed an elected government to restore people’s rightful political, democratic and human rights.
‘That is why, we are calling upon the interim government to arrange a free and fair election by completing the necessary reforms within a very reasonable timeframe,’ Rizvi said.