Bangladesh needs new secular leadership: Taslima Nasrin
18 Jan, 2007
11Jan, 2007
IANS
            
            Saying that fundamentalism had destroyed the country, exiled 
            Bangladeshi writer Taslim Nasrin prayed for a new secular leadership 
            in Bangladesh to bring the country out of its present sorry state.
            
            'We can only hope that people, who are pushed to the brink, would 
            hit back with a revolt. There is a need for a new secular leadership 
            to take the country forward,' Nasrin told IANS in an exclusive 
            interview Thursday night soon after a state of emergency was 
            declared in Bangladesh in the run-up to a general elections on 
            January 22.
            
            'Fundamentalism has destroyed the country. And unfortunately you 
            cannot blame the fundamentalists alone. They are supported by the 
            political parties. There is now hardly any difference between the so 
            called secular and non-secular groups,' Taslima said.
            
            'Now even the Awami League has joined hands with the 
            fundamentalists. They are talking about bringing blasphemy laws, 
            they are talking about issuing fatwas (religious decrees). So where 
            do we stand?' asked Taslima, who had to flee her native country in 
            1994 after her book, 'Lajja'(or Shame), dealing with the plight of 
            Hindus in Bangladesh, angered Muslim hardliners who threatened to 
            kill her. 
            
            'The country is going to bonkers and nobody cares. There is a need 
            for revolution in Bangladesh. There is a need for a new leadership. 
            But how that will emerge I don't know because even intellectuals are 
            surviving under political umbrellas,' Nasrin said.
            
            'Bangladesh is one of the most corrupt countries and the disparity 
            between the rich and the poor is huge. But despite corruption and 
            the present state I hope that democratic process would return,' she 
            said. 
            
            'All I can bank upon now is only hope. It is a glimmer of hope that 
            people will hit back when they would be against the wall,' Taslima 
            said.
            
            Taslima went into hiding in 1994 and then fled Bangladesh with 
            support from international human rights organisations like PEN and 
            Amnesty International and was given asylum in Sweden. Since then she 
            has lived in Germany, France, the United States and Kolkata in West 
            Bengal.

 
	