Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05DHAKA2407
2005-05-24 07:59:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Dhaka
Cable title:  

OUTGOING CHIEF ELECTION COMMISSIONER FRETS ABOUT

Tags:  PGOV PHUM KDEM BG BGD 
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 DHAKA 002407 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/24/2015
TAGS: PGOV PHUM KDEM BG BGD
SUBJECT: OUTGOING CHIEF ELECTION COMMISSIONER FRETS ABOUT
THE FUTURE


Classified By: P/E Counselor D.C. McCullough, reason 1.4 (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 DHAKA 002407

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/24/2015
TAGS: PGOV PHUM KDEM BG BGD
SUBJECT: OUTGOING CHIEF ELECTION COMMISSIONER FRETS ABOUT
THE FUTURE


Classified By: P/E Counselor D.C. McCullough, reason 1.4 (d).


1. (C) Summary. Just retired Chief Election Commissioner
Syed says reforms are critical for the next general election
because of the unprecedented bitterness in Bangladeshi
politics. His reform proposals focus on strengthening the
integrity of the Election Commission and the voting process,
as opposed to consensus caretaker appointments, but, he said,
the "underdog" Awami League's calls for consultations reflect
a broad Bangladeshi desire for change. Regarding the
Chittagong mayoral election, there were minor problems but no
last-minute BNP push to subvert the vote count as alleged by
the AL. End Summary.


2. (SBU) On May 21, his penultimate day as Chief Election
Commissioner, MA Syed presented to President Iajuddin Ahmed a
six-point electoral reform program: an independent,
financially autonomous secretariat for the Election
Commission (EC); the introduction of electronic voting
machines and an electronic voter roll; army deployment in
city corporation and municipal polls; and the creation of an
electoral inquiry committees for local government elections.
"The reforms in the election commission should be brought in
through a consensus of the political parties," he told
reporters.


3. (C) On May 24, Syed discussed with us his five-year tenure
as CEC and his outlook on the next election.

WHAT WERE YOUR MAIN ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS CEC?

Elections are nothing new in Bangladesh. The British left us
a pretty good system, but there's still a lot left to do. We
must strive and learn from countries like the U.S.
Bangladeshis love elections, but there is a group of powerful
people with a hidden agenda who want to win by hook or by
crook. In the 2001 election, I convinced the president that
he had to send out the army. That was very important. My
dream is better, more acceptable, free and fair elections.

WHAT WERE YOUR FRUSTRATIONS AS CEC?

Number one, it's what all people talk about, law and order.
Nobody can hide that. This used to be a peaceful country.
Terrorism is a new problem. I shouted myself hoarse calling
for army for the local parishad elections. If the government
had cooperated, those elections would have been much cleaner.


IT'S NO SECRET YOU HAD PROBLEMS WITH EC SECRETARY SM ZAKARIA.

I brought him in because he had good experience, even though
he was under a cloud at his old ministry. But I learned I
couldn't trust him. He altered corrections I made on a
document. You have to be able to trust your right hand man.
Twice I wrote to the PM asking her to remove him. She
refused, and he is now in their books.

ANYTHING YOU'D DO DIFFERENTLY IN HINDSIGHT?

Assert more independence. Election is a very sensitive
matter in Bangladesh. I tried to set an example for
correctness, to inspire confidence by action.

WHAT ABOUT THE MAY 9 MAYORAL ELECTION IN CHITTAGONG? IS IT
TRUE, AS THE AWAMI LEAGUE SAYS, THAT THE BNP TRIED TO HIJACK
THE VOTE COUNT AT THE ELEVENTH HOUR?

We had quite a lot of concerns, but we ensured law and order,
and generally everyone accepted the election. This should be
the model. It wasn't perfect, we have many deficiencies.
Some people said the vote count was slow, but that's why I
propose using electronic voting machines. The election was
widely watched. Both parties are strong, which is itself a
safeguard. There were media reports of attempted
manipulation, but these were only stray incidents.

WHAT HAPPENED AT LAST SUMMER'S DHAKA 10 BY-ELECTION? WAS IT
AS BLATANTLY RIGGED AS PEOPLE SAID? WHAT DOES IT SUGGEST FOR
THE GENERAL ELECTION?

It was a disgrace. I was in the U.S. at the time attending
the marriage of my son, but the party in power applied all
means, fair and foul, to win. There's an old saying: winning
or losing is the least part of the battle, it's how you fight
that counts. This was a prestige matter for the BNP. You
need a firm, determined government to be neutral to stop
things like this. The BNP will face one big obstacle at the
general election: a caretaker government, not them, will be
in the saddle.

WHAT ARE THE PROSPECTS FOR YOUR REFORM PROPOSALS? WHAT ABOUT
AL DEMANDS FOR CARETAKER/ELECTORAL CHANGES?

We hope for the best, prepare for the worst. The need for
change is general and felt by all Bangladeshis. I'm more
concerned with my proposals because good governance is key,
and a fully independent Election Commission should have the
authority to decide what is doable and acceptable. Measured
steps give people hope and confidence in the process.
CAN THE GENERAL ELECTION SUCCEED WITHOUT THESE REFORMS?

No. The reforms are very critical. The government has to
demonstrate goodwill by bringing in wholesome reforms. The
U.S. has a lot of influence and credibility. It would not be
interfering but helping our process if you ensured good
governance and credible elections. The U.S. is an old friend
of Bangladesh with no ax to grind here.

The constitutional amendment that added two years to the
Chief Justice's service was very frustrating and immoral.
Transparency is very important in today's world. Whoever the
authority is, it should sit down with the major parties and
accept proposals that are doable, like making the EC truly
independent of the Prime Minister's Office. Honest people
can do a lot if the structure is right. It's bothersome that
the two parties don't talk to each other. The adversarial
attitude is so deep, who will ensure a level playing field?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF YOUR SUCCESSOR AS CEC, JUSTICE MA AZIZ?

I don't know him. But why the hush hush in appointing him at
the last minute? Who is he? When the Awami League chose me,
the BNP complained, but then the BNP won the 2001 election
with a thumping majority. Does he have the integrity and
guts to do this job? The opposition wanted consultation, and
it would have been gracious of the government to do that
because of the current situation. The political situation
has never been so bitter and adversarial.


4. (C) Comment: Bangladesh badly needs a CEC maverick like
India's T.N. Seshan to instill verve and confidence in its
electoral management, but neither Syed nor his successor
(septel) fits that mold.

THOMAS