BLOOD OF BANGLA DESH
New Statesman on April 16 carried under the title
above in red type on its front page, the following comment:
"If blood is the price of a people's right to
independence, Bangla Desh has overpaid. Of all the recent struggles to bring down
governments and change frontiers in the name of national freedom, the war in East Bengal may prove the bloodiest and briefest. On this
level alone, the East Pakistanis have achieved a record of suffering. But even
if their movement is destroyed within a few days or weeks, it may only be a
temporary defeat in a war of liberation which will eventually be recognised as
just.
In all such cases, establishment opinion is heavily
weighted in favour of the status quo. The chances of any world power declaring
support for Bangla Desh are minimal. The Bengalis' case for statehood may be
hard to refute, but it is inconvenient to every one else. And yet, by an
unusual combination of circumstances, Bangla Desh has managed to obey all the
rules. So, this may be the moment to consider what we, and other countries,
mean by those splendid words which recur like a chorus in the United Nations
charter: `the right to self-determination of peoples'. Objectively or
subjectively, in Chinese or English, in capitalist or socialist jargon, it is
hard to fault the East Bengalis, or justify
their abandonment by all the major powers.
Piously required, as third-world countries always
are by the West, to make their demands known through the ballot box-they did
so. They won an absolute majority in the all-Pakistan Assembly. It was the
first general election the country had held, and the result came a considerable
shock. Given the long history of Bengali separatism, from the language and
anti-constitution movements of early Fifties until today, it should not have
been so surprising. Loyalty become more important than ideology. A Bengali
majority was the result.
Faced with this, the Islamabad Government of Yahya
Khan, whose strength is based on an army from which the Bengalis are excluded,
panicked; Islamabad
fidgeted. The result was carnage. We have glimpsed via television and the newspapers
what the West Pakistanis call restoring unity', the Easterners, genocide. The
truth may lie somewhere in between the two. But for the forseable future
pessimism is in order.
As with Biafra,
many emotional left-wingers in the West have averted their eyes from the
distasteful possibility that non-white people may be ill-treating each other,
and concentrated on the humanitarian side. But beyond the salvage operation, it
becomes more complicated. East Pakistan really
cannot be called a 'breakaway' state in quite the same way. And the
`exploitation' takes a different form. The East Bengalis claim that they have
been systematically used to subsidise West Pakistan
ever since partition. It began as long ago as 1948, when President Jinnah made
the first of several centralising moves by withdrawing the provinces' rights to
raise their own income and sales taxes, and keep the major part of their import
and export duties. East Pakistan was
particularly hard hit, since it subvention from the central government was
never correspondingly increased.
Over the last two decades, for instance, 70 per cent
of Pakistan's
investible funds went to the West and only 30 per cent to the East. 75 per cent
of revenue was spent in the West, and only 25 percent in the East. Foreign aid
is based on population: yet East Pakistan with
two-thirds of the country's people, received only 20 per cent of the cash. East
Pakistani economists estimate that since independence, the real transfer of
resources from East to West Pakistan has been
to the tune of some $ 3,000m. By this argument, Bangla Desh would certainly be
more economically viable on its own. Another qualification for statehood
fulfilled.
The question of aid leads to that of great-power
politics. East Bengal does not fit neatly into
the cold war pattern, and the position adopted towards it are particularly
complicated. The British are allied with the West Pakistan
government in CENTO and SEATO-mere planning organisations, to be Sure, but
through which weapons can be channelled. Yahya Khan's links with China though,
are closer and more significant. There are rumours that Peking will create
diversionary activity on the Indo-Chinese border if India
(backed by the Russians) intervene in Bengal. China has
cynically betrayed the West Bengali communists, who would have liked nothing
better than to help their brothers across the border, but could not do it
alone. (Perhaps this is final proof that the Chinese have achieved greatpower
status.) As for Britain,
what our government has to say is regarded, since Singapore, with cynical contempt on
all sides.
There are still, however, ritual motions to be gone
through and lessons to be learned. The ritual concerns the U.N. The 75 million
East Pakistanis feel they have at least as much ‘national’ call on the General
Assembly as the 45 million Westerners, and are demanding what people always
demand in such circumstances: that arms deliveries be stopped, aid cut off,
sanctions imposed and so forth. None of this will happen. As Conor Cruise
O'Brien put it, the United -Nations is like the Delphic Oracle, and always
gives the answer the strongest party to a dispute wants to hear. And there, for
the time being, it rests.
But not for ever. Pakistan is only the most recent of
the post-imperial federations to be torn apart. When he drew the lines across
the Indian sub-continent, Mountbatten listened too sympathetically to those who
took religion more seriously than Geography. It was, of course, a plain case of
failure to learn from our own parochial experience-as the whole unhappy history
of Ireland
has made only too clear. Since the original foundation of Pakistan, the
West Indian, Malaysian, Rhodesian and Arabian federations have all collapsed.
Significantly, each of them, like Pakistan, was a`state' created from
above for reasons of political expediency. So, the lesson is a simple, if a
hard, one: that such artificial structures cannot survive. How much human
misery must be endured before that tact is accepted?".
(NEW STATESMAN, London-April 16, 1971)
Source:
Bangladesh
Documents, p.397-399