AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

Periscope.(Bangladesh and its elections)(survey on employee replacement)(changing trends in television)(Survey)

Newsweek International

| February 05, 2007 | Beith, Malcolm; Hosenball, Mark; Bahari, Maziar; Chen, Joanna; Brownell, Ginanne; Nadeau, Barbie; Yabroff, Jennie; Emerson, Tony; Kolesnikov-Jessop, Sonia | COPYRIGHT 2007 Newsweek, Inc. All rights reserved. Any reuse, distribution or alteration without express written permission of Newsweek is prohibited. For permission: www.newsweek.com. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Byline: Malcolm Beith; Mark Hosenball, Maziar Bahari and Joanna Chen; Ginanne Brownell; Barbie Nadeau; Jennie Yabroff; Tony Emerson; Sonia Kolesnikov-Jessop

Bangladesh: Rhymes With Afghanistan ...

For 16 years, Bangladesh has stood out as a rare success story in the Muslim world, boasting fairly free elections and a mostly secular political culture. All that may now be changing. In the last month, the country has descended into chaos. Parliamentary elections scheduled for last week have been postponed, political activity has been banned and thousands have been arrested. But this South Asian nation of nearly 150 million is more than just another failed state in the making. As its political climate deteriorates, radical Islamists are stepping into the breach. If the military seizes power, warns Selig Harrison, director of the Asia program at the Center for International Policy, Islamists could come to occupy key posts in the government and turn Bangladesh into "a regional hub of terrorism."

What went wrong? Five years ago, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) formed an alliance with the fundamentalist Jamaat-i-Islami in order to win an election. In return, experts argue, the BNP--which was replaced by a caretaker government last October--allowed Jamaat sympathizers in the security services to ignore the rise of local radicals. "The BNP has been pussyfooting with the radical[s]," says Sumit Ganguly, a South Asia expert at Indiana University. Taliban-style madrassas, he argues, have also grown in popularity as the public-school system has broken down.

All this means Bangladesh could soon start to resemble prewar Afghanistan. By postponing the vote, the BNP and its Islamist allies hope to cling to power, says Harrison. "They can't win an election," he says, and Islamists in the Army "want to extend the state of emergency indefinitely." This, in effect, would amount to a coup. More and more Bangladeshis might then opt out of secular politics. Homegrown radicalism would mushroom and the country would start to harbor even more foreign terrorists. "If we get a grip on radicals in Afghanistan and Pakistan, then they'll land in Bangladesh," says Ganguly. "It's like squeezing a balloon."

-- Malcolm Beith

TERROR: Priority Target?

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
Free Maziar Bahari
Newspaper article from: International Herald Tribune September 10, 2009 700+ words
...Herald Tribune 09-10-2009 Free Maziar Bahari Type: News Since the Iranian presidential...detainees, including the journalist Maziar Bahari, should be freed. President Mahmoud...Among those unjustly detained is Maziar Bahari, a respected documentary filmmaker...
An Opportunity for Tehran.(The Editor's Desk)(Maziar Bahari's...
Magazine article from: Newsweek Meacham, Jon July 20, 2009 700+ words
Byline: Jon Meacham Maziar Bahari is a NEWSWEEK reporter, a documentary...judiciously, when he was arrested. Maziar Bahari is an agent only of the truth...released immediately. We say again: Maziar Bahari is a journalist whose fairness...
Freed at Last.(International)(Maziar Bahari)
Magazine article from: Newsweek Dickey, Christopher November 2, 2009 700+ words
...Byline: Christopher Dickey After 118 days in captivity, Maziar Bahari returns home. Day after day, month after month, following...June 21, documentary filmmaker and NEWSWEEK correspondent Maziar Bahari did not see the face of his interrogator. Maziar, 42...
Free Maziar Bahari.(International)
Magazine article from: Newsweek August 3, 2009 700+ words
...reporter, filmmaker, playwright, author, artist, and, since June 21, prisoner. For the past five weeks Maziar Bahari, 42, a Canadian-Iranian journalist and film director, has been held in Tehran's Evin Prison without access...
New Fears: The Return of a Superterrorist.(Imad Mughniyeh)
Magazine article from: Newsweek Hosenball, Mark Bahari, Maziar Chen, Joanna February 5, 2007 700+ words
Byline: Mark Hosenball, Maziar Bahari and Joanna Chen Before Osama bin Laden, there was Imad Mughniyeh. The Lebanese terrorist from Hizbullah was considered the most dangerous in...
The Wider War; From Iraq to Al Qaeda, the conflict between Israel and Hizbullah...
Magazine article from: Newsweek Dickey, Christopher Nordland, Rod August 7, 2006 700+ words
...and Richard Wolffe in Washington, Babak Dehganpisheh in Beirut, Kevin Peraino in Avivim, Joanna Chen in Jerusalem, Nisid Hajari and Maziar Bahari in Tehran, and Malcolm Beith and Scott Johnson in Baghdad) When Israel invaded Lebanon in...
Jailed Canadian touted for peace prize; Journalist charged with inciting...
Newspaper article from: The Toronto Star (Toronto, Ontario) September 9, 2009 700+ words
...Iranian jail, Canadian journalist Maziar Bahari, 42, is a top contender for one of...his immediate release. The case of Maziar Bahari is a priority issue for Canada in our...Star's news services CAPTION(S): Maziar Bahari, in jail since June, "has been ac...
Tehran's Opportunity; Rights for a Jailed Journalist
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post Jon Meacham July 13, 2009 700+ words
Maziar Bahari is a Newsweek reporter, a documentary...judiciously, when he was arrested. Maziar Bahari is an agent only of the truth as best...released immediately. We say again: Maziar Bahari is a journalist whose fairness is...
For more facts and information, see all results
©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA