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Love affair could cost Ershad his party
INTER PRESS SERVICE
DHAKA, May 1: The decision to flaunt a love affair has turned into a
political catastrophe for a deposed Bangladesh president, who last year,
walked out of prison after six years, his reputation unscathed by corruption
charges.
Hussain Mohammed Ershad, who is out on bail, is faced with a revolt by party
members and massive media pressure to end a 14-year relationship with a
married woman that caused his wife of 40 years to walk out last month.
His Jatiya Party (JP), the party he founded and the third largest in
Bangladesh, is on the verge of a split over his decision to go public in
early April about his intimacy with Zeenat Mosharraf, a member of
Parliament.
Powerful senior party members, Mizanur Rahman Chowdhury, Kazi Zafar Ahmed
and Shah Mozzem Hossain, insist Ershad must step down as party leader
following his disclosures of ``indecent intimacy and affair''. Both
Chowdhury and Ahmed served as premiers under Ershad, who had ruled
Bangladesh with an iron hand for nine years after seizing power in 1982 in a
bloodless coup.
Ershad had obviously not anticipated public disapproval of his plan to marry
Zeenat, the wife of a former party associate, now an Opposition member. That
the two are involved has been public knowledge, even if it was not official.
Following the uproar in the press and his party, Ershad sought to
back-track out of the political mess and said he has decided to stop seeing
Zeenat who would be dismissed from the party. He also said his wife,
Rawshan, has agreed to move back to their house in Gulshan, a posh
neighbourhood in the Bangladesh capital.
However, there was no pacifying party rebels, who nurture ambitions to
control the JP. The three who lost last year's general election, appear to
have been waiting for an opportunity to cut Ershad down to size.
The break-up of the JP is likely to be formalised at its council meeting
this month, and the party poised to gain is the Opposition Bangladesh
National Party (BNP), which is ideologically closest to Ershad's. He has
lost many supporters to the BNP, including Zeenat's husband Mosharraf
Hossain.
This is the first time that Ershad's leadership has been challenged. He
remained party chief even after he was deposed by a pro-democracy movement
in 1990, arrested and after a quickly-concluded investigation, put in prison
on charges of corruption and abuse of power. Winning elections to Parliament
that followed his ouster, ensured that his leadership was never in dispute.
Last June, he won all the five seats he contested in the general election.
Now the JP is part of the government, and its secretary general Anwar
Hossain Manju, an Ershad loyalist, was appointed a minister by Prime
Minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed. With a strength of 34 members in the 330-seat
Parliament, the JP is the king maker in Bangladesh politics, which is
dominated by two parties.
In return for their support to her ``consensus government'', Hasina allowed
the JP to nominate three women supporters as members of Parliament from a
quota of 30 seats set aside for women. One of the seats was given to Zeenat
by Ershad.
Interestingly, Ershad's wife is also a member of Parliament, elected from
her home district of Mymensingh last year. She was the de-facto leader of
her husband's party while he was in prison. Last week, newspapers reported
that Ershad had sorted out his marital problems.
The triumvirate though is not budging from a four-point demand for resolving
the present party crisis: Ershad's resignation as party chairman, immediate
convening of the JP council, resignation of secretary general Manju from the
Cabinet and an assurance from Ershad that he will not talk about his affairs.
Copyright © 1997 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.
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