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1971 and a bit of alternative history. What if Sheik Mujib became PM of Pakistan

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1971 and a bit of alternative history
Syed Badrul Ahsan
  • Published at 05:36 pm September 19th, 2018
unnamed-1537356753046.jpg

Imagining a different history / BIGSTOCK



What if Bangabandhu had taken charge as Pakistan’s prime minister?

History is consistently a matter of what is and what has been. It does not deal with what might or could have been.

Even so, there are all those moments when we sit back and reflect on the course history could have taken in our times as also in earlier stages of the collective human experience. Would such a course have made any difference for us?

One never knows, but we have just had the dubious pleasure of going through a “what if” write-up in Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper, where the writer speculates on the kind of Pakistan that would have shaped up if Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman had assumed office as Pakistan’s prime minister in 1971.

Hardly anything revealing emerges from the reflections of the writer. His conclusions boil down to a simplistic point: That the Pakistan army would yet call the shots, that Mujib would not be able to bring about any change, that indeed his government would not last.

That is a Pakistani point of view. And here, for readers, is the alternative history we might imagine here in Bangladesh, assuming of course that the military junta of Yahya Khan had not repudiated the results of the election of December 1970.

There is little argument that the Awami League, prior to taking office in Islamabad, would have carried its Six Points to a definitive conclusion through incorporating them in the constitution stipulated for formulation within a period of 120 days, as mandated by the Legal Framework Order of 1970.

The Pakistan People’s Party would have raised huge commotion in the National Assembly, but the Awami League would obtain the support of such West Pakistani political figures as Khan Abdul Wali Khan and Ghaus Bakhsh Bizenjo for the Six Points to be the underpinning of the new constitution.

From the outside, Abdus Samad Achakzai, GM Syed, Nawab Akbar Bugti, and Air Marshal Asghar Khan would have supported the move, for it would mean a remarkable degree of autonomy not only for East Pakistan but also for Baluchistan and the North-West Frontier Province (today’s Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa).

The Six Points would thus not only lead to a resurgent East Pakistan -- which the ruling AL would constitutionally rename as Bangladesh -- and Baluchistan and the NWFP, but would also lead to similar autonomy for Punjab and Sind, the two provinces dominated by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s PPP. In the decentralization of power consequent upon the adoption of the Six Points, these two provinces would not wish to be left out of the mainstream of national politics.

In a reconfigured Pakistan, the AL would take power in Islamabad, with Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman as the country’s first elected prime minister. The ruling party would likely invite Wali Khan’s National Awami Party to join it in a coalition, given that it had won no parliamentary seats at the election in the West but needed to project a nationwide image for itself.

The opposition, in the form of the PPP and certain right-wing elements as the Muslim League’s Khan Abdul Qayyum Khan, would make it hard for the government to carry important legislation through but would not be able to make much headway.

One would see much bluster from Bhutto and frequent walkouts from sessions of the National Assembly by his party.

Prime Minister Sheikh Mujibur Rahman would assert full authority over the Pakistan army, making certain that appropriate laws were enacted to block any move by it to undermine civilian rule in future. The headquarters of the Pakistan navy would move to Chittagong, and in line with the Six Points, a para-military force comprising Bengalis would be established in Bangladesh.

The government would take measures to stop the army from carrying on with its repressive policies in Baluchistan and would likely move to inquire into abuses by the military in the province and elsewhere in the country.

Under an AL government, flight of capital, and other resources from Bangladesh to West Pakistan would cease and the central government, in line with the Six Points, would meet its requirements through financial contributions from the five provinces.

Cabinets headed by chief ministers would administer the provinces, with governors appointed to symbolize the provinces. The governors would not necessarily be men or women from the provinces they would preside over.

An AL government would bring about fundamental changes in Pakistan’s foreign policy, with particular reference to India. Given the secular character of the party, the government would move to re-shape ties with Delhi through jettisoning the hostilities and sabre-rattling that had traditionally characterized relations between the two countries, and would not let the Kashmir problem come in the way of friendly ties.

The government would continue to uphold friendly ties with China, the Soviet Union, the West, and the Muslim world.

But that would be on the basis of an independent exercise of diplomacy.

It is tempting to think that an AL government at the centre in Islamabad would go for striking a balance in the country’s education system, specifically by introducing studies of Bengali in West Pakistani schools and Urdu in schools in Bangladesh.

The civil service would be recast to allow equal representation for educated young men and women from all over the country in the central administrative system on the basis of merit.

The most important aspect of a Pakistani government-led by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman would be a remarkable transformation of the state into a secular entity, away from the religious moorings it had been founded on in the late 1940s.

There would be serious resistance from religious extremists, who would be joined by the PPP and the Muslim League, but the change would be inexorable. In clear terms, Pakistan under an AL administration would be a loose federal structure where democratic politics, defined by healthy academic debate in parliament and outside, would be a defining factor.

But, of course, a more relaxed Pakistan underscored by the powers enjoyed by its federating units would in time lead to demands for enhanced political rights by these units -- as we have observed in Scotland, Quebec, and Catalonia -- opening the door to referenda on their future.

Bangladesh would likely vote to move out of the union, but Baluchistan, Sind, and the NWFP would extract more concessions from the centre to continue being part of the Pakistan state.

That is alternative history for you.

If Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman had taken charge as Pakistan’s prime minister, the Pakistan army would not launch its genocide in Bangladesh and shame itself before world opinion.

Zulfikar Ali Bhutto would not have gone to the gallows but just might have, through an exercise of politics characteristic of parliamentary government, become prime minister at some point and pushed the AL into opposition.

The legacy of bitterness which has defined relations between Pakistanis and Bengalis since 1971 would not be there.

All of these possibilities were put paid to on the night of March 25, 1971.

Syed Badrul Ahsan is a journalist.



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LEAVE A COMMENT
Please read our Comment Policy before posting

'Youths choose protest over traditional politics'
 
Personally I feel that, every thing happened for a reason. The whole merger of east and west Pakistan was a mistake, though I kind of understand the reason behind it. The purpose of it was to make Pakistan an approximately equal in power compared to India, interms of land, population, resources etc.

But the fact is, there were too many dissimilarities between east and west Pakistan(culture, language, even distance between us), on top of that India was in between us, that it could not have worked. May be if we were separated by some neutral state, then probably things would have been different. But with India in-between, the ship was surely going to sink.

Just look at India 70 + years of democracy, and they are still shit, blaming their incompetence on Pakistan. 22% of their population is under poverty line, which means 290 Million people. That alone is more than the population of Pakistan 210 Million or the population of Bangladesh 160 Million.

Sure current Pakistan is very diverse in terms of culture, we have Sindhi's, Balochi's, Punjabi's, Pathan. But Bangladesh wasn't like that, they didn't even spoke/understood Urdu. As I wrote before things might have been different if Bangladesh was directly connected with us, and we had a neutral neighbor instead of India. In an alternated universe it might have worked.
 
Well Denying SM to form government was a mistake by Pakistanis establishment and political parties and provided an opportunity to all those anti Pak elements in BD. His government wouldn’t have lasted more than 6 months, had he become the PM of united Pakistan as there were many different issues between the 2 wings which were impossible for Shiekh Mujeeb to overcome in that scenario.
 
It shouldn't have happened, but now that it has, we are happy with what we have got and no use imagining things which start with "WHAT IF".

Just enjoy your so called freedom and go serve your Indian masters.
 
1971 and a bit of alternative history
Syed Badrul Ahsan
  • Published at 05:36 pm September 19th, 2018
unnamed-1537356753046.jpg

Imagining a different history / BIGSTOCK



What if Bangabandhu had taken charge as Pakistan’s prime minister?

History is consistently a matter of what is and what has been. It does not deal with what might or could have been.

Even so, there are all those moments when we sit back and reflect on the course history could have taken in our times as also in earlier stages of the collective human experience. Would such a course have made any difference for us?

One never knows, but we have just had the dubious pleasure of going through a “what if” write-up in Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper, where the writer speculates on the kind of Pakistan that would have shaped up if Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman had assumed office as Pakistan’s prime minister in 1971.

Hardly anything revealing emerges from the reflections of the writer. His conclusions boil down to a simplistic point: That the Pakistan army would yet call the shots, that Mujib would not be able to bring about any change, that indeed his government would not last.

That is a Pakistani point of view. And here, for readers, is the alternative history we might imagine here in Bangladesh, assuming of course that the military junta of Yahya Khan had not repudiated the results of the election of December 1970.

There is little argument that the Awami League, prior to taking office in Islamabad, would have carried its Six Points to a definitive conclusion through incorporating them in the constitution stipulated for formulation within a period of 120 days, as mandated by the Legal Framework Order of 1970.

The Pakistan People’s Party would have raised huge commotion in the National Assembly, but the Awami League would obtain the support of such West Pakistani political figures as Khan Abdul Wali Khan and Ghaus Bakhsh Bizenjo for the Six Points to be the underpinning of the new constitution.

From the outside, Abdus Samad Achakzai, GM Syed, Nawab Akbar Bugti, and Air Marshal Asghar Khan would have supported the move, for it would mean a remarkable degree of autonomy not only for East Pakistan but also for Baluchistan and the North-West Frontier Province (today’s Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa).

The Six Points would thus not only lead to a resurgent East Pakistan -- which the ruling AL would constitutionally rename as Bangladesh -- and Baluchistan and the NWFP, but would also lead to similar autonomy for Punjab and Sind, the two provinces dominated by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s PPP. In the decentralization of power consequent upon the adoption of the Six Points, these two provinces would not wish to be left out of the mainstream of national politics.

In a reconfigured Pakistan, the AL would take power in Islamabad, with Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman as the country’s first elected prime minister. The ruling party would likely invite Wali Khan’s National Awami Party to join it in a coalition, given that it had won no parliamentary seats at the election in the West but needed to project a nationwide image for itself.

The opposition, in the form of the PPP and certain right-wing elements as the Muslim League’s Khan Abdul Qayyum Khan, would make it hard for the government to carry important legislation through but would not be able to make much headway.

One would see much bluster from Bhutto and frequent walkouts from sessions of the National Assembly by his party.

Prime Minister Sheikh Mujibur Rahman would assert full authority over the Pakistan army, making certain that appropriate laws were enacted to block any move by it to undermine civilian rule in future. The headquarters of the Pakistan navy would move to Chittagong, and in line with the Six Points, a para-military force comprising Bengalis would be established in Bangladesh.

The government would take measures to stop the army from carrying on with its repressive policies in Baluchistan and would likely move to inquire into abuses by the military in the province and elsewhere in the country.

Under an AL government, flight of capital, and other resources from Bangladesh to West Pakistan would cease and the central government, in line with the Six Points, would meet its requirements through financial contributions from the five provinces.

Cabinets headed by chief ministers would administer the provinces, with governors appointed to symbolize the provinces. The governors would not necessarily be men or women from the provinces they would preside over.

An AL government would bring about fundamental changes in Pakistan’s foreign policy, with particular reference to India. Given the secular character of the party, the government would move to re-shape ties with Delhi through jettisoning the hostilities and sabre-rattling that had traditionally characterized relations between the two countries, and would not let the Kashmir problem come in the way of friendly ties.

The government would continue to uphold friendly ties with China, the Soviet Union, the West, and the Muslim world.

But that would be on the basis of an independent exercise of diplomacy.

It is tempting to think that an AL government at the centre in Islamabad would go for striking a balance in the country’s education system, specifically by introducing studies of Bengali in West Pakistani schools and Urdu in schools in Bangladesh.

The civil service would be recast to allow equal representation for educated young men and women from all over the country in the central administrative system on the basis of merit.

The most important aspect of a Pakistani government-led by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman would be a remarkable transformation of the state into a secular entity, away from the religious moorings it had been founded on in the late 1940s.

There would be serious resistance from religious extremists, who would be joined by the PPP and the Muslim League, but the change would be inexorable. In clear terms, Pakistan under an AL administration would be a loose federal structure where democratic politics, defined by healthy academic debate in parliament and outside, would be a defining factor.

But, of course, a more relaxed Pakistan underscored by the powers enjoyed by its federating units would in time lead to demands for enhanced political rights by these units -- as we have observed in Scotland, Quebec, and Catalonia -- opening the door to referenda on their future.

Bangladesh would likely vote to move out of the union, but Baluchistan, Sind, and the NWFP would extract more concessions from the centre to continue being part of the Pakistan state.

That is alternative history for you.

If Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman had taken charge as Pakistan’s prime minister, the Pakistan army would not launch its genocide in Bangladesh and shame itself before world opinion.

Zulfikar Ali Bhutto would not have gone to the gallows but just might have, through an exercise of politics characteristic of parliamentary government, become prime minister at some point and pushed the AL into opposition.

The legacy of bitterness which has defined relations between Pakistanis and Bengalis since 1971 would not be there.

All of these possibilities were put paid to on the night of March 25, 1971.

Syed Badrul Ahsan is a journalist.



RELATED NEWS

Bangladesh military 57th most-powerful in the world


Power in 7: From December ‘70 to March ‘71


Pakistan elects first female Dalit senator


Football before the birth of Bangladesh


Pakistani lawmakers begin secret vote for senate elections


Diplomacy in a state of atrophy

LEAVE A COMMENT
Please read our Comment Policy before posting

'Youths choose protest over traditional politics'
Why the fu@k he didn't perform any of these actions into BD other then being pimp of India?
 
I have always said the Independence of Bangladesh was a blessing in disguise. The West Pakistan didn't have anything common in terms of culture and language with East Pakistan and the biggest issue was the huge chunk of the arch rival India in between making it all the more less practical to stay connected.

But the biggest takeaway from this whole scenario was that this was what prompted Dr Abdul Qadeer to contact Pakistan Government and for the Pakistan Government, Military and Intelligence to go into full berserk mode to attain the title of a Nuclear Power, many scientists were involved, a lot of networks were setup, a lot of people were deceived and a lot of effort was made into making it successful which makes it all the more worthy.
 
Why the fu@k he didn't perform any of these actions into BD other then being pimp of India?

Six point demand had nothing to do in independent Bangladesh as Bangladesh was a small country comprising homogeneous Bengali people so no worries about bad treatment or injustice. If

thanks to ALLAH almighty
images

I have always said the Independence of Bangladesh was a blessing in disguise. The West Pakistan didn't have anything common in terms of culture and language with East Pakistan and the biggest issue was the huge chunk of the arch rival India in between making it all the more less practical to stay connected.

But the biggest takeaway from this whole scenario was that this was what prompted Dr Abdul Qadeer to contact Pakistan Government and for the Pakistan Government, Military and Intelligence to go into full berserk mode to attain the title of a Nuclear Power, many scientists were involved, a lot of networks were setup, a lot of people were deceived and a lot of effort was made into making it successful which makes it all the more worthy.

It could safe Pakistanis from humiliation with a honorable disintegration from east Pakistan .
 
Six point demand had nothing to do in independent Bangladesh as Bangladesh was a small country comprising homogeneous Bengali people so no worries about bad treatment or injustice. If





It could safe Pakistanis from humiliation with a honorable disintegration from east Pakistan .
i am not agree with how its happen but i am fully agree that it must happen sir . its illogical a country apart in this shitty part of world some 2000km away .it was totally wrong idea which cost blood and tears to be fixed .trust me we are different people our thoughts are not same our food our culture our music even our dress and languages are totally different . we should separate with peacefully but this world did not work with logic
 
Personally I feel that, every thing happened for a reason. The whole merger of east and west Pakistan was a mistake
Spot on! Never in the geographical history such a state existed let alone survived. Below is the only crown jewel of a war achievement the Indians boast about every day.

C__Data_Users_DefApps_AppData_INTERNETEXPLORER_Temp_Saved Images_giphy(6).gif


Does this ^^^^ even qualify to be termed as a victory ?
 
Why not make Indira Gandhi as PM instead???? All problems solved!! All Pak folks would become "born-again" Hindus (lower than Dalit caste, like termites, of course) like what their ex-compatriots in BD are currently going through!!!

What were the Pak establishment doing when all became clear that Mujib and his cohorts had been the die-hard Hindu Indian agents by the later half of 60s???? Why weren't they put 6 feet under then and there???? The BD Muslims exactly did that only a couple of years later!!!!

Now, if Mujib, the ultimate traitor, wrere PM the following staffs would have occurred (based on what he exactly did to BD):
  • Would replace Ay-Yildiz (Hilal ve Sitara), the banner under which tens of millions have been drinking the Sherbet-i Shehadet in Jenk-i Jihat spread over the entire known world for the Din ve Ummet ve Vatan ve Devlet-i Islam, with that of the Sun, the symbol of Mitra, Somnath, Sun-God etc.
  • Would replace Saya-i Huda-i Zul Jelal (Pak national anthem) with the one written by Tagore to inspire the Hindu folks to rebel against the British to abrogate the Division of Bengal in 1905, which made East Bengal and Asam into one province and thereby benefited the Muslim folks against the extreme Hindu tyranny. Basically, he replaced a song commemorating the Muslim victory over the Hindus with a song celebrating the Hindu victory over the Muslims. In 1911, Division of Bengal was finally abrogated after the Hindu insurgents killed quite a number of the British officers, and the BD Muslims continued under the Hindu oppression till the creation of Pak.
  • Would take out every reference of Islam, including Bismillah, from the constitution.
  • Even the name of Jinnah and Alleme Ikbal would be taken out from the educational institutions named after him, and were replaced with those of the Hindu folks.
  • In the late 60s Pak started a project for a counter barrage on the Ganges/Padma in response to the starting of the construction of an Indian barrage, which would make a huge part of the East Pak into desert. The Pak counter-barrage would flood 6 districts of the West Bengal under 10 feet water, and seriously hamper the navigation of the Calcutta Port!!! The Indians stopped the construction and wanted to negotiate with Pak, who, however, went ahead with the floating of contract for the construction!!! No wonder Mujib and his cohorts were immediately activated!!! Needless to say, that barrage, known as Farakka, was completed during Mujib's rule!!! The rest is history...
  • Putting Mujib as Pak PM is the most successful RAW ops - B Raman, ex deputy chief of RAW in his book "KAOboys".
  • We have taken the revenge for the thousand years old Muslim rule - Indian PM Indira Gandhi after putting Mujib as Pak PM
  • Pak is like Sita, recaptured from Ravana by Ram - a BJP leader
May Allah-u Azimushshan destroy both the Dunya and Ahiret of Mujib and his cohorts!!! And, may HE keep them under the Mushrikin in this world and the next!!! May HE put them in the Seventh Jehennem, and never retrieve them or lessen their punishment!!! Allah Kahr etsin...
 
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Not mistake but a fatal misjudgement made in good faith - - - - - -.
he think religion will tie us both but it was arrange marriage :lol:some years and language power politics and ethnic took lead . it was horrible mistake

Why not make Indira Gandhi as PM instead???? All problems solved!! All Pak folks would become "born-again" Hindus!!!

What were the Pak establishment doing when all became clear that Mujib and his cohorts are die-hard Hindu Indian agents by the later half of 60s???? Why weren't they put 6 feet under then and there???? The BD Muslims exactly did that only a couple of years later!!!!

Now, if Mujib, the ultimate, traitor, wrere PM the following staffs would have occurred:
answer of this question of altinative history is in history of bangladesh it self

while Bangladeshis can not bear sheikh Mujib as prime minister of Bangladesh for 5 years and killed him before even he complete first term what they expect from west Pakistanis ?
 

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