Information Minister Dr Hasan Mahmud on Wednesday said jailed ex-prime minister Khaleda Zia’s BNP has started losing its allies in the 20-party alliance due to its repeated wrong decisions. “Andalib Rahman Partha’s party (BJP) deserted BNP and several others will follow his footstep as because of a series of subsequent wrong decisions on its (BNP) part,” he told a discussion at an auditorium of Jatiya Press Club here. Moreover, he said, several BNP leaders by now quit the party as they were not willing to do politics under corrupt leadership while its acting party chief Tarique Rahman himself was a convict.
Bangladesh Swadhinata Parishad (BSP) organized the discussion marking the 109th birth anniversary of Bengali revolutionary nationalist from the Indian subcontinent Pritilata Waddedar.
Former State Minister for Home Shamsul Haque Tuku, Awami League (AL) Deputy Publicity and Publication Secretary Aminul Islam Amin and AL leaders Advocate Boloram Poddar and MA Karim, among others, addressed the discussion with BSP advisor Barrister Jakir Ahmed in the chair.
Hasan said the political degradation has become a common phenomenon after killing of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in 1975. “Ziaur Rahman formed BNP involving greedy leaders. Many top leaders of BNP, including Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, Moudud Ahmed and Rizvi Ahmed, were belonged to other parties. But, they joined BNP only for enjoying power,” he added.
He said BNP now turns into an isolated party for its continuous political mistakes. Now many leaders are leaving BNP, he added. Hasan, also the Publicity and Publication Secretary of the ruling AL, said BNP is a terrorist party, which is also proved at a foreign court. “BNP’s leader Tarique Rahman is a convicted criminal and he is now trying to create anarchy in the country from London. The government is trying to bring back Tarique from London to implement the court verdict,” he added. The minister urged the top BNP leaders to change the leadership for reestablishing the party as political one.
Hasan said Pritilata Waddedar was a Bengali revolutionary nationalist from the Indian subcontinent, who was an influential one in the Indian independence movement. “After completing her education in Chattogram and Dhaka, she attended Bethune College in Kolkata. Pritilata graduated in philosophy with distinction,” he added.
After a brief stint as a school teacher, he said, Pritilata joined a revolutionary group, headed by Surya Sen. She led a team of fifteen revolutionaries in 1932 attack on the Pahartali European Club, which had a sign board that read “Dogs and Indians not allowed”.