Mon 15 Sep 2008
[Daily Star printed this expanded version of a blog that originally appeared on DP.]
DAILY STAR, September 15, 2008
End The Grand Experiment
By Saher Zaidi
“It’s time — it’s time you were gone”
- Anton Chekhov [Agafya]
Sitting in traffic and calculating how long it would take my 10 minute ride to mutate into 2 hours, I thought about traffic as a metaphor for the country. Then I cracked open the newspaper and found I was not the only one. H Khondker calls it “Spaces of Despair” in The Daily Star, although his recommendations (headlights on rickshaws, teach rickshaw pullers the rules) smell like the same philosophy (danda mere thanda, and always blame the subaltern) that landed us in this national mess.
Putting hard facts to the exploding traffic crisis, Kailash Sarkar of Daily Star informs us that a 10 km ride (Bangla Motor-Bangla College) is now a 3.5 hour ‘odyssey’. People are using apocalyptic language: “Commuters say the entire city traffic system has collapsed”. But here is the key statistic that will make the metaphor even more solid: 1 lakh vehicles out of 6 lakh were withdrawn by CTG after 1/11, but all those vehicles have now returned. 175 community policemen were deployed by CTG, but they have no reporting to police and are now seen as totally ineffective. DCC has licensed 87,000 rickshaw, but there are 5 lakh rickshaws now in Dhaka with another 1 lakh expected before Eid.
As I ditched my transport and walked (something I do every morning now to get to work on time) I kept thinking of traffic. I thought of those vehicles that the CTG boldly banished, which are all now back. Actually, everything is back. Everyone is out. Everyone is well (or sick)? Everyone regrets! Everyone has learnt a lesson!
And while a natok plays out on the national stage, I look at gridlocked Dhaka city, and come to this realization: No one is running the country.

[Image: Driknews/Reza]
Weekly Shaptahik wrote after the latest round of bails to politicians: “Special Special Bail and 2 Years of System Loss”. System Loss. It sounds like a cruel joke. The CTG is in its last days and all that remains is a human-spirit/life-electricity siphoning system loss?
Some hoped against experience that something good would come of all this. Actually many did (more than will admit now). Even AL/BNP grassroots workers were heard saying, the rot at the top will be removed, and we the honest workers will rise in the ranks. But now?
All the things that we saw over the last twenty months are all starting revert. Jailing the bigwigs, reforming the parties, creating a Third Force, trying War Criminals, War on Corruption, ending black money, demolishing illegal Rangs Building, separation of judiciary, independence of TV and Radio. Promises made, process started, and back to square one.
Another Daily Star columnist called it “round trip ticket from status quo to status quo”. An architect friend said to me, “It’s as if we took off from an international airport, and now as we are coming back to land, the runway is overgrown with grass and some of the control tower lights have been stolen.” Faruk Wasif, one of the dynamic writers on the left, in discussing the community that initially had high hopes for CTG, writes a bitter coda in Prothom Alo: “I bathed in ambrosia/but it turned to poison”
An optimist said to me “Listen no one likes spending a year eating jail rice. I think all these people will think twice in the future.” Maybe, maybe. Several politicians have already said the last year in jail was a “fire test” and a “learning experience”. But what if some take the opposite lesson: that we are the only game in town. Some have achieved a glow after their time in jail, a heroic tint to their face.
A civil servant pointed out another dangerous side effect. He feels that in the future no government officer will take the risk of championing any project. If someone is efficient and pushes through a large infrastructure project involving a lot of procurement, they will fear that one day this will be dragged up in a national witch-hunt. But, says honest civil servant, I was an honest officer! The problem is the CTG years have given the distinct feeling that corruption cases can also be arbitrary and politically motivated. Even anti-corruption has become a dirty word.
I usually curse our dysfunctional democracy nonstop. But all trump cards have been played and failed. The country is a patient, sliced open on the operating table. But the medicine is killing him. And the longer it stays open, the more infections spread. The gangrene has reached all the way to the head.
And let’s not even indulge any more force-fit solutions like National Security Council. NSC would be another disastrous experiment. No more of this laboratory testing please. Let’s end this experiment and get back to the messy business of political governments. It seems this dysfunctional democracy is all we have, and we have to fix it through democracy. There are no short cuts left.
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August 14th, 2008 at 8:42 am
thank you for pointing out each and every mess this govt has made.this morning i was caught up in one of the worst trafic jam in dhanmondi on my way to office in gulshan, i drive myself and feel like i am doing the toughest job in this world, i feel sad for the professional drivers of this city.i never think of migrating to some other country but things are so hopeless in this country that i sometime feel to leave this country, even if it is in africa, i remember the hope and energy we felt right after 1\11 we thought finally we are going to see good things happening in this country, but reality after 2 years is what you have mentioned here, may be we have not seen the worst yet (i mean before
1\11), things may go worse than that (i mean before 1\11)in future and there would be something like 1\11 again and may be then some real good days will come, its like “if something goes so bad that there can not be anything worse that that and then it is obvious that some good things will appear (may be through a revolution, negotiation,riot or even war) i am waiting for that day
August 14th, 2008 at 4:31 pm
I was thinking perhaps army will show they can still play games and release Madam on her “birthday” in time to scupper unambiguous AL parade
August 16th, 2008 at 11:11 pm
“Oh and Ramadan is coming, so politics on hold. Again!”
I had the distinct impression that the military did things “on the double”?
Is this an excuse to be lazy?
August 30th, 2008 at 8:20 pm
[...] It’s time you were gone! - Unheard Voices [...]
September 15th, 2008 at 1:52 pm
The traffic situation has gone from bad to worse under this unconstitutional and unelected government. The chaotic mess has even been intensified by the army’s fascist attitude to keep public traffic off the road running through Dhaka cantonment.THE CANTONMENT ROAD FROM ZIA TO FARMGATE SHOULD IMMEDIATELY BE OPENED TO THE PUBLIC.PERIOD.
The army should not be a priviledged class in a problematic country like Bangladesh. Their involvement in politics and state management has crippled the nation to a standstill in the last 18 months. They have made a mess of the whole situation. They ought to go and let politicians do what hey are best at doing inspite of their limitations.
FAKRUDDIN & MOEEN U CO. PLEASE GO BEFORE THE STREETS BOIL AGAIN.
September 15th, 2008 at 4:29 pm
The finale to the Grand (Evil) Experiment can be summed up in the few words of the great Russian author and physician Anton Chekov: “It’s time — it’s time you were gone”
Saher Zaidi:
Thanks for exposing the fallacies of the Doomed Experiment!
September 15th, 2008 at 6:49 pm
At least 5 years ago, it took me hours to go from Rampura to Green Road (by car). There was NO CTG at that time. It was peak of BNP rule. Same at AL times, worse during Ramadan. This ridiculous traffic system has allowed to ROT by successive govts. Army and CTG cannot fix this in 2 years, no matter how much we blame them. When AL-BNP returns - things will not change overnight, if governance and corruption remains the same.
The quality of a nation’s governance is displayed by its traffic. Traffic is what we experience openly and suffer in a physical way, but fact is, EVERY SINGLE department in BD operates exactly the same way as Dhaka Traffic - only difference is we don’t experience those gridlock physically. Anyone who has worked directly with BD govt, (even during AL and BNP rule) knows what a desperate wilderness is BD governance! It’s the same as Dhaka traffic.
Why is it like this? In short because millions of DOLLARS allocated to improving our traffic and roadways ARE STOLEN by govt officials in Dept of Roads&Highways, and distributed among govt officers, politicians, MPs, PMs, etc etc. Result is that streets remain same old mess – and gridlock is what we suffer. Dhakas’s Dept of Roads&Highways should be re-named “DEPARTMENT OF CHORS & DACOITS” for all the money they stole from road projects. Projects like overpass, crossings and beautifaction are all bogus showcase to show how they spend Billions of dollars - when in fact they spend 5 million, while stealing 955 million.
Years ago I visited a Director of Roads&Highways at his Dhaka home, who just returned from 4 WEEKS of training in Dallas Texas USA. When I asked him how was the training he said “O it was so hectic I had no time to attend the class – I was too busy SHOPPING and sight-seeing”. When I burst out laughing he said “Well, I did see the roads of Dallas – that was nice to see !!!”. This was the Director responsible for city roads.
This is why corruption needs control– otherwise all these talk about democracy is bogus, until we can put an end to daylight robbery by our politicians and city officials, who are more intent on stealing public money, than on serving people, or on democracy or on fixing traffic!
September 16th, 2008 at 1:23 am
hmmm..Now all the blame goes to CTG, Army etc etc as if BD was a heaven before 1/11…Dear Private car driver vaijan, apni ki traffic rules follow korento thik moto!! Apnar message poreto mone holo apni car drive korar shomoy je lane maintain korte hoy, shetito bujhen bole mone hoy na. Shudhu shudhu CTG der upor apnar opripokko driving shikh-khar blame diye ki luv hobe vai.
During the BNP era JAIKA wanted to improve the traffic system of Dhaka City by implementing modern technology like setting the Camera, Autometic Zebra Crossing signal etc but the then political government rejected the proposal of the JAIKA. I myself wanted to start a long term project (The proposal of the project had three phases i.e cyclic traffic survey, teaching the traffic rules to the vehicle drivers and insist them to follow the traffic rules by introducing hefty charge) to improve the Dhaka’s traffic system but not a single shob-janta homra chomra of the government officials showed their interest on the project and they rejected it just by saying that this kind of project will not fit in BD. Unader modhdhe ekjon abar bole boshlen “jekhane JAIKAR moto protishthan parlona sheikhane tumi baba young manush kivabe eigulo pairba”. Vaijaan eibar bujhlento apnader ganer bohor.
September 16th, 2008 at 1:28 am
KGazi Vai
I think I know the person as well :).
September 16th, 2008 at 4:05 pm
It seems that there are a lot of sympathizers of the illegitimate so-called CTG government surfing the net trying to legitimize their illegitimacy.
Who on earth gave them two years to ruin Bangladesh`s democracy and economic progress. I am sure once they are gone we will hear a lot of stories about the corruption done by the caretakers and their fascist backers! They must be indicted and tried.
The DFI must be flooding the net with it`s ill-gotten wealth under this unconstitutional regime.
September 16th, 2008 at 7:12 pm
bd-watcher - your proposal is exactly what traffic systems need, but reasons they denied you are
a) for their job security. They wont do the job either, just prolong the desperation on the roads, to increase their importance!!
b) If they did give the project out, they would float a tender for YOUR project, but give it to their own lined-up chacha-bhatija to make 95% profit, while spending 5% on a few posters and billboards, with a fancy project name like “3rd urban traffic retransificational-posterization-development project 2008.”!!! End result would be more chaos on the roads, minus $100 million from public money, and richer govt officers.
This is how ALL govt depts work in BD. That other story may remind you of the same person, but it could also be somebody else in ANY other govt office in BD, because they all work the same way!!
——
Bahadur Shah,
Who said hartal, boycott, obororodh, and logi-boitha makes a govt legitimate? Who are responsible for the title “most corrupt nation”? Who said corruption and embezzlement of govt money are constitutional?
If those are the definition of “democracy and progress” which some people want to protect, then politicians have succeeded in misguiding them.
September 20th, 2008 at 5:22 pm
Just imagine the money these guys are wasting on trips abroad. Fakruddin and his b-n-law Ifthekhar have just been back from China for 4 days and today flew to New York on a ten day trip to the UN to brief their backers. The previous 90-day caretakers governments hardly had time to focus on matters like foreign policy which is beyond the powers vested on an unelected temporary government. But Fakruddin and Ifthekhar are acting as if they are in for a long haul. It’s fnny to see Ifthekar talking about international affairs as if he is an expert on ‘Cold War’ phenomenon.
These shameless people are using the national flag carrier as their personal transport for picnics abroad. Shame on these unconstitutional power grabbers!
September 22nd, 2008 at 7:11 pm
road-runner #12
Unlike, our ex-ministers who were seen making trips to Dubai and Malaysia carrying 75 suitcases each time, full of unchecked baggage (cash), while encouraging others to do the same - Fakruddin went to China and UN with a RECORD of putting those suitcase-politicians in jail.
For their excellent ATTEMPT at cutting corruption, Fakruddin &Co deserve more than a ‘picnic’ at the UN!
September 23rd, 2008 at 5:13 am
No, no, there were 750 suitcases for each trip. And some of them had unchecked baggage (cash), other unchecked property (diamonds), and the rest of the suitcases had pink candyfloss and chewing gum.
September 23rd, 2008 at 2:21 pm
tacit - so true its not even funny!