AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH
(FOR PUBLICATION ON SUNDAY THE 11TH FEBRUARY 2007 )
By Kazi Anwarul Masud (former
Secretary and ambassador)
Bangladeshis have generally
demonstrated an extremely high tolerance level regarding aberrant behavior of
politicians. Perhaps being doomed to a life long economic existence that
economist Manuel Castells would describe as “misery”, Bangladeshis usually turn
to God who in His inscrutable way often seemingly sends confusing signals not
easily understood by mere mortals or to the politicians who by and large are
engaged in conducting public affairs for private gains. While almost always the
people have been taking right decision at the polls at critical moments of our
history; the political leaders once elected to office often betrayed them .
Politics devoid of morality, driven by endless greed, imprisoned by
misinterpretation of the constitution by the people in power for furtherance of
their selfish aims and unreasonable ambition, and bent upon hijacking the will
of the people have brought the Bangladeshis to a situation that would encourage
many to embrace Henry David Thoreau’s reluctance to surrender all powers to
those elected because of merit one can
find in the observation of Edmund Burke that sometimes the majority of elected officials are capable of exercising
the most cruel oppression on the minority, and of the possibility of the
democratically elected people to
transform itself into Plato’s Plutocracy or the rule by the rich. In such a
situation the adoption of the principles embedded in the doctrine of preemption
and humanitarian intervention, not by foreign forces but through actions taken
by domestic popular forces, becomes urgently necessary. When those elected to
deliver political and social goods to the people became engaged in unbridled corruption and abuse of power they
had to be bounded for the sake of saving the people of Bangladesh from
an inevitable disaster that a fraudulent election would have brought about. In
the present case the legitimacy of the CTG is compared to, for example, the one
enjoyed by Malcolm Fraser’s interim government in Australia following the
dismissal of Gough Whitlam Labor government by the then Governor General in
1975 as the Whitlam government appeared to have lost trust of the majority of
the people.
In Marxian analysis poverty stricken great
majority of people have nothing to sell but themselves as opposed to the wealth
of the few that increases constantly. Inevitably the process of accumulation of
wealth is corruption-ridden. Yves Menay ascribed four invariant characteristics
of corruption; - (a) violation of social rules and norms; (b) secret exchange
among political, social and economic markets; (c) illegal access given to
individuals and groups to the process of political and administrative decision
making; and (d) resultant tangible benefits to the parties involved in the
transaction. By any definition corruption is illegal and in the first instance
results from collusion between political and money elites—the first party
abuses public position of trust for private gains of both parties.
One of the World Bank officials who had served
in Bangladesh was candid enough to publicly point out that the “system loss” in
power sector resulted from collusive theft by the employees of the sector and
the consumers; port inefficiencies cost over $ one billion a year; governance
problem and inefficiency in the banking sector slowed down GDP growth over one
percent per anum; and, Taka 30-40 crores of public procurement lost every year
due to corruption. Giving a detailed analysis the official had concluded that Bangladesh was
losing 2-3% GDP growth a year due to corruption. He added that countries with poor governance
that included corruption grew more slowly than countries with honest and
accountable government.
Unfortunately the return of democracy in Bangladesh in
the 1990s saw no effective steps taken to control corruption. It is well known
that Transparency International, Business International, Political Risk
Services and the World Economic Forum have consistently labeled Bangladesh as
one of the most corrupt countries in the world. The World Bank has found a
formula to describe corruption: C=M=D-A-S where C stands for corruption, M for
monopoly, D for discretion, A for accountability and S for salary. Thus
corruption tends to flourish where poorly paid public officials have a lot of
discretion to perform monopoly functions with very little accountability.
Aminur Rahman, Gregory Kishunko and Kapil Kapoor prepared a background paper
for a World Bank report on corruption in Bangladesh in which they agreed with
Gunar Myrdal that “speed Money”(money paid to speed up administrative
decisions) not only distorts the mechanism of efficient allocation of resources
through the establishment of perverse patron-client relationship between
bureaucracy and the private sector but also encourages corrupt officials to delay
the process of decision making in anticipation of more bribes thus effectively
practicing blackmail. They argue that corruption also diverts foreign
investment from sectors like health and education to infrastructure because the
scope of corruption in the latter area is more. In any case as successive World
Bank officials and donor representatives have pointed out time and again
pervasive corruption in Bangladesh
reduces the flow of foreign investment.
The GDP loss should be seen in the context of global interpersonal
inequality in which the rich is getting richer and the poor is getting
poorer. Bangladesh ha s failed to get the
benefit of the Millennium Challenge Account amounting to 100 crores of takas
due to pervasive corruption by the Alliance
government. Given the zero tolerance of
the donors regarding corruption corrupt governance in Bangladesh had
given the country an image of moral desolation and as an Antarctica
of freedom.
One hopes that the steps
currently being taken by the Care Taker Government by arresting the rich and
the powerful allegedly guilty of corruption and misuse of power would have
their days in the court and those found to have abused public trust would be
duly punished. Among many other countries South Korea has given the world
several examples where even the President of the Republic was brought to
justice. Let the steps taken not be a charade nor should they be an eyewash to
befool the people once again.
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