A/55/280/Add.2
extremism while being careful not to offend Muslims,
and this is an extremely hazardous process. According
to the experts, most of the population, afflicted by
poverty and illiteracy, is committed to religion without
truly understanding it. This makes is easier (especially
for extremists) to manipulate this Muslim population,
especially their religious orientation. Evidence of this
is provided by the absence of a popular reaction against
fatwas and by repeated instances in which extremists
have recklessly and violently mobilized crowds against
the Ahmadis and non-Muslim minorities (such
instances occur during certain international events,
such as the Gulf War, or during attempts to impose
certain constraints or restrictions on the activities of
minorities, to confiscate assets, etc.)
53. Despite the existence of institutions such as the
Islamic Foundation, which function as tools for State
education of Muslims, the Government’s room for
manoeuvre is limited, and sometimes reduced to zero,
when electoral considerations prevail. According to the
non-governmental experts, this explains the secondary
importance accorded to minorities, for example with
respect to their integration and advancement within
State circles, with respect to the provision of adequate
financial support for religious activities (religious
education, for example) and religious institutions, and
with respect to the protection of non-Muslims
(intervention by the forces of law and order during
attacks against minorities was said to be either halfhearted or non-existent, while action against those
responsible was said to be often non-existent or
ineffective). According to the non-governmental
representatives, the Government’s position, cited
above, helps to explain the delays in the
implementation of the Peace Accord concerning the
Chittagong Hill Tracts, as well as the absence of
measures designed to eradicate the remaining vestiges
of polygamy and end legislation affecting vulnerable
groups (minorities and women), or to provide a
definitive sanction against the illegal practice of
imposing fatwas. It also explains the half-hearted
nature of the struggle against extremists responsible for
attacks against the Ahmadis. Indeed, the fact that the
authorities have recognized the Ahmadi community,
despite its rejection as a community within Islam in
most Muslim countries, could lead to controversy,
fuelled by extremists, among the majority of
Bangladesh’s Muslim believers and religious officials,
who are often poorly educated and traditionalist in
their approach to Islam and its interpretations.
Development of this very sensitive question might
place the authorities in difficulty with respect to the
Muslim electorate.
54. Non-governmental sources also noted that these
problems could not, of course, be dissociated from
difficulties shared by most developing countries, such
as the weakness of public institutions and the very
difficult economic and social conditions.
C. Consultations with a representative of the
Jamat-e-Islami party
55. A senior representative of the Jamat-e-Islami
party in Dhaka presented his organization as an Islamic
movement similar to that of the “Muslim brothers,” in
the sense that it was not purely political and aimed to
changed society as a whole through democratic means
(due to the absence of constraints in Islam) and Islamic
means (through social and educational programmes
aimed at training Muslims in the principles of Islam for
use in both their public and private lives, based on the
idea that Islam is a way of life). He explained that
Jamat-e-Islami comprised 150,000 grass-roots militants
and 12,000 officials distributed among the centre, the
districts and the villages, as well as elected emirs and a
Shura Council. He noted that his organization was
historically linked to Pakistan, during the period when
Pakistan included present-day Bangladesh, but that
since independence there had been no further
organizational links with the Pakistani Jamat-e-Islami.
He recalled that his organization had, at the time,
opposed Bangladeshi independence, but he rejected
any suggestion that it had violated human rights during
that period. He stated that Jamat-e-Islami was not an
extremist organization, and stressed that it was opposed
to all forms of intolerance and violence directed, not
only at non-Muslims, but also at Muslims having a
different interpretation of Islam. He condemned the use
of religion for political purposes, but noted that Islam
was not restricted solely to the realm of religious
belief. He recalled that since 1976, when the
constitutional prohibition of religious parties was
lifted, Jamat-e-Islami had been able to resume its
activities. He believed that the defeat of his
organization in the recent parliamentary elections did
not indicate society’s rejection of an organization
regarded as extremist, and was instead a reflection of
the policies — and perhaps incompetence — of those
leading Jamat-e-Islami at the time. He said that his
organization was subject to political violence (which
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