TIME IS RUNNING OUT IN
A first small step to getting Bengali refugees back home has
been achieved in
This is not helped by the fact that the Pakistani army has had
nothing but praise from President Yahya, when it is
obvious to anyone who travels around
The province's main roads are lined with burnt-out huts, and
most areas around crossroads and bridges have been more or less cleared of
human habitation. The army's claim that only eight soldiers, none of them
officers, have been punished for excesses is hardly reassuring. There are
reports that at least one brigadier has been relieved of his command. It might
impress foreign aid donors and the refugees if the authorities made this sort
of disciplinary action public. But West Pakistanis are terribly touchy about
any criticism of the army, which has played a central part in their lives since
the creation of
Most of the refugees are Hindus-nearly 6 million out of a
total of nearly 7 million. The reassurances which the president has offered the
Hindus have been offset by his insistence that the new constitution will be
more Islamic than ever; and it is still unclear how for the army has stopped
the Hindu-bashing in which it clearly indulged earlier. On June 21st two days
after one of the president's speeches of reassurance,
Hindu refugees are still pouring out of
It is from these two groups that the new "peace
committees" have been formed. Until now these committees have been busy
providing the army with information about Awami
League members and Hindus. But now that so many people have fled then play an
important part in the forming of allotment committees that appoint
"caretakers" for abandoned property. Officially, half of the income
from this property should go into a relief fund and the property should be
handed back intact to any refugees who return. Since so few
have. returned it is impossible to establish
whether this will happen in practice. Returning refugees will probably have
difficulty in recovering their property from the hands of Biharis
and Moslem fanatics who are now high in the favour of
the military authorities.
Under the peace committees come the razakars, Home
Guard-type volunteers who are paid a small wage and armed to help the police in
preventing sabotage by the Mukti Fauj.
Many of them are simply local thugs. There are cases of criminal charges being
dropped if the accused men join the razakars, and one
case of a man who, although legally disqualified for life from ever carrying a
weapon, is low using a Lee Enfield.
It is the peace committees and razakars, a mixture of opportunist collaborators, bigots and toughs, whom
the Mukti Fauj guerrillas
have chosen as their prime target. They have killed a fair number of them. The
military authorities in
But time is not on the military government's side. The Mukti Fauj has shown that it can
operate even in
Nor is time on the president's side if the Mukti
Fauj continue to make the economy another of their
price targets Quite apart from their sabotaging of Bridges and communications,
which is largely aimed at hamstringing army movements they have started a
concerted campaign against East Pakistan main crops; jute and tea. Very little
jute-which is
But so far there seems to be little pressure on President Yahya from
(THE ECONOMIST, London-July 31, 1971)
Source: The