A/55/280/Add.2
The Special Rapporteur obtained information about the
budget allocation for the welfare of religious
institutions in the fiscal year 1999-2000: Muslims
Tk 32,500,000; Hindus Tk 7,000,000; Buddhists
Tk 1,500,000; Christians, Tk 500,000. Statistics were
also provided regarding civil servants, showing the
participation of religious groups in the Government
(total workforce 4,286; Hindus, 410 or 9.6 per cent);
Buddhists, 24 or 0.65 per cent; Christians, 5 or 0.11 per
cent); and regarding government holidays to mark
religious occasions (government holidays in general
applicable to all: Muslim, 4; Hindu, 2; Buddhist, 1;
Christian, 1; optional holidays applicable to the
religious groups: concerned: Muslim, 7; Hindu, 10;
Buddhist, 4; Christian, 8.
36. The Minister of Foreign Affairs said that there
had been incidents in the past, such as certain tensions
among ethnic groups in the Chittagong Hill Tracts, and
the isolated reactions of fanatics against the Hindu
minority during the destruction of the Ayodhya Mosque
in India. A Ministry for Foreign Affairs representative
explained that the Government was doing its best to
promote harmony in the community, and especially,
like any other country, to combat any discrimination
resulting from the weight of certain traditions, whose
eradication would involve a lengthy process. He
recalled the historical context of Bangladesh’s
accession to independence, which occurred within the
context of enormous sacrifices and a struggle for
democracy and freedom, including religious freedom.
Stressing the difficult economic and social conditions
in Bangladesh, which are common to all developing
countries, he explained that the Government’s efforts
were aimed at demarginalizing poverty-stricken
populations (especially through women’s education
programmes), and that this approach would help
combat all forms of discrimination. He said that despite
its economic problems, Bangladeshi society was both
traditional and religious, and both tolerant and liberal.
He noted that there were incidents involving
minorities, but that the vast majority of incidents
involved Muslims. The Minister of Foreign Affairs
described the present situation as one of total harmony,
especially with regard to the country’s ethnic
communities. He said that this was due in particular to
the political solution provided by the Government to
the question of the Chittagong Hill Tracts (a solution
involving various measures, including promulgation of
laws in favour of ethnic communities, the creation of a
8
Ministry for the Chittagong Hill Tracts, and a process
aimed at restoring land to the ethnic communities).
37. The Minister of Justice stated that the conflict in
the Chittagong Hill Tracts (see also sect. IV.C) was not
based on religion. The Ministry and Secretary for the
Chittagong Hill Tracts explained that since the signing
of the 1997 Peace Accord, relations between Muslims
and tribes of different religious confessions —
Buddhist, Hindu, and Christian — were harmonious.
Furthermore, all confessions were able to practise their
religion under a secular regime. The Deputy
Commissioner for Rangamati made a similar
assessment. The Minister and Secretary for the
Chittagong Hill Tracts noted that the Peace Accord was
clearly being respected and applied, notably through
the allocation of credits for development activities and
for the restoration of temples destroyed during the
conflict; the return of 64,000 refugees, who were
provided with State assistance; the restoration of a civil
administration committed to human rights and
secularism; the withdrawal of over 70 military camps;
and the establishment of a Land Commission, which
was due to visit Chittagong shortly, in order to begin
working towards a solution to land-related issues.
Asked by the Special Rapporteur about allegations of
human rights violations in the Chittagong Hill Tracts
(see sect. IV.C), the Minister for the Chittagong Hill
Tracts replied that army factions hostile to the ethnic
communities had been rooted out, while the Secretary
replied that he had not received any reports of forced
conversions to Islam organized by Muslim extremists.
The Minister of Religious Affairs said that all
citizens — including Muslims — were free to change
their religion, that the State was not in any way
involved in the alleged cases of forced conversion, and
that anyway, people did have the option of appealing to
the courts. With respect to an alleged attack on a
church in Rangamati, the Ministry for Foreign Affairs
replied that according to the record of the Rangamati
Pourashava and the testimony of Mr. Sankar Prashad
Barua, a staff member of the Purashava Office, a
Christian hostel at Bhandhiu Jishu Tila, in Rangamati
Municipal Area, was partially damaged by a sudden
outbreak of fire on 2 September 1999. A representative
of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs stressed that the
question of the Chittagong Hill Tracts was complex,
but that the Government was sincere in its application
of the 1997 Peace Accord, a process that required time.
He considered that this was an ethnic problem, not a
religious one.