PART 1
Bangladesh convention offers revolutionary view of underdevelopment
By
Sara Flounders
Dhaka, Bangladesh
Published Feb 7, 2010 7:54 PM
More than 10,000 people gathered under a sea of red flags to open the First
Convention of the Socialist Party of Bangladesh, and then held a militant mass
march through Dhaka’s crowded streets. Hundreds of nationally elected
delegates and many thousands of participants attended the Dec. 30-31 Convention
of the SPB, which was formed in 1980. They presented a powerful challenge to
the Western corporate media’s view of Bangladesh.
WW photos: Sara Flounders
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Almost the only things we ever hear in connection with Bangladesh are that it
is hopelessly poor, densely populated and underdeveloped. But whenever
revolutionary forces are organizing in the thousands and tens of thousands with
anti-imperialist fervor and a clearly focused Marxist perspective of their own
problems, they make a contribution to the understanding of the world movement.
This can combat corporate media misinformation and imperialist stereotypes.
The Socialist Party of Bangladesh has 40,000 announced members nationally. The
party has also helped to develop a number of mass organizations such as a
Socialist Workers Front, a Socialist Agricultural and Peasant Front, a
Socialist Women’s Forum, a Progressive Teachers Forum and a very large
and active Socialist Student Front. These organizations involve tens of
thousands of additional activists.
Socialist Party of Bangladesh marches in Dhaka.
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The Socialist Student Front has announced a major event in mid-March to
celebrate the 25th anniversary of its founding. Tens of thousands of students
from all the universities and many high schools are expected to attend. It is
waging a giant campaign to protest cuts and deterioration of education.
In a country with 60 percent illiteracy, with millions of landless peasants and
millions of workers surviving in the most desperate slums, many of the students
come from a more privileged background. Students in Bangladesh have a
revolutionary tradition and have gone into the streets again and again. For
decades the most revolutionary-minded student activists have become determined
fighters for the working class.
Communism, socialism and revolutionary ideas are still a strong force
throughout the Indian subcontinent. Especially in Bengal, East and West,
communist ideas have a great support among the masses, among the intellectuals
and middle class. There are a number of left parties in Bangladesh, including
some reformist Marxist parties that hold elected office in parliamentary
coalition governments of the bourgeois state. The SPB has sought to be a
revolutionary challenge, not just a parliamentary opposition.
International guests included representatives from the United Communist Party
of Nepal-Maoist, the Sri Lankan New Democratic Party, the Socialist Unity
Center of India, the ambassador of the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea,
and Workers World Party and the International Action Center in the U.S.
The SPB encourages mutual respect, discussion and unified action or united
front actions among the many left parties in Bangladesh. The day after the
completion of their convention the Socialist Party sponsored a wide-ranging
discussion and question and answer session with the international guests who
attended their convention and the leadership of more than 10 left parties,
along with independent intellectuals, journalists, filmmakers, Marxist
economists, etc. — about 150 people in all.
Many guests remarked about how important it was to have these political
discussions. The questions to the delegates from the U.S. concerned the nature
of the global capitalist crisis and how intractable it is, the impact of ever
expanding U.S. militarism, and why President Barack Obama has continued
Bush’s imperialist wars.
In India and in Bangladesh as in Europe some socialist and communist parties
have entered bourgeois coalition governments to administer the capitalist
state. Always on the agenda is a discussion on the nature of the state in
underdeveloped and formerly colonized countries and the role of revolutionary
forces.
For the representative from Sri Lanka the participants asked about the debacle
just experienced by the Tamil Tigers and of the representative from Nepal about
the coming showdown with the government which, backed by India and the U.S, is
threatening them with a similar fate. State power is a burning and immediate
question on the Indian subcontinent.
Imperialist underdevelopment, socialist solutions
In two documents, the Conveners’ Report of the First Convention and the
Thesis on the International Situation, presented in preparation for the First
Convention, the SPB gave their view of the international situation politically
and the global capitalist crisis that is wreaking havoc on a global scale.
The Convention documents contained serious thinking on the problems facing
Bangladesh now. They took up the chaos, lack of planning and profiteering at
every level of the capitalist market and the intentional underdevelopment
imposed by U.S. imperialism through its banking system, the World Trade
Organization, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
As with so many other countries in Asia and Africa, Bangladesh is deliberately
kept underdeveloped, dependent and poor. It is used as just a source of cheap
labor by U.S. and British policy and increasingly now by Indian
capitalists.
The structural adjustments imposed on Bangladesh led to the forced closing of
many domestic industries in order to reorient the economy to cheap labor on
imported fabric that is exported as garments. These policies have made
Bangladesh much poorer. One leader of the SPB stressed again and again in every
conversation, “All Western ‘help’ is designed to make us
helpless.”
Poverty and unequal distribution in Bangladesh have grown far worse in recent
decades. Almost 80 percent of the population is still peasant. But landlessness
among the peasantry has grown drastically from 20 percent landless at the time
of independence in 1971 to 70 percent of the peasant population reduced to day
laborers and indebted sharecroppers without land today.
In a country of 150 million people, 90 million live on the edge of starvation.
Millions of workers are forced to go abroad to send home survival
remittances.
The SPB explains that the country is fabulously rich in fertile land and a
12-month growing season. Yet more than half the population is seriously
malnourished. Though Bangladesh has oil, gas, coal, iron and other minerals, it
is denied modern technology and efficient distribution. It is capitalist chaos
at its worst.
The SPB provided guests with a great deal of political information, along with
an analysis of the many problems facing the country. Each analysis was infused
with revolutionary optimism and determination to organize the most desperately
poor workers and millions of landless peasants to step into a historic role of
challenging capitalist chaos and imperialist domination.
Next, a first-hand view of the struggle in Bangladesh.
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