রবিবার, ১৯ এপ্রিল ২০২৬, ০৪:৫৪ পূর্বাহ্ন
1. The Call for an Alternative Path: A Blueprint for Jamaat-led National Unity and Power Struggle Without the BNP
July 19, 2025 — Suhrawardy Udyan. After years of political prohibition, isolation, and repeated suppression, Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami reappeared on the national stage through a massive rally. But this was not merely a return; it was a bold declaration of a new design for national unity — one that deliberately excludes the BNP. The seven-point charter presented at the rally was not just a list of demands; it was a political doctrine — a roadmap to power, a redefinition of future political alignment, and a proposal for democratic restructuring.
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2. The Practical Framework of the Seven-Point Demand and the Vision for a New Political Force
Jamaat’s seven-point demand focused on timely and structural reforms:
(1) A level playing field – Equal opportunity for all parties in electoral participation
(2) Justice for massacres, including those on and around August 5, 2024
(3) Fundamental reforms across the state apparatus
(4) Implementation of the ‘July Charter’ – Realization of the political and social consciousness born of the 2024 uprising
(5) Rehabilitation of the martyrs and the injured from the July movement
(6) Introduction of a Proportional Representation (PR) electoral system
(7) voting rights for 10 million expatriate Bangladeshis
These demands reflect Jamaat’s shift from traditional Islamist rhetoric toward a modern, reformist political relevance. This is not a return to the archaic — it is a refined, contemporary vision of political engagement.
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3. Why Exclude the BNP?
Perhaps the most significant aspect of the rally was the silent dismissal of the BNP. Jamaat seems to have come to several conclusions:
The BNP is without effective leadership
It lacks ideological clarity
Repeated failures in political movements have eroded public trust
With these realities in mind, Jamaat’s message was direct: “National unity must be built on principled foundations, not on the farce of leaderless inertia.”
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4. The Reality and Strategy Behind Building a New Political Force
Jamaat is no longer positioning itself merely as a party — it is attempting to evolve into a political platform uniting:
Other Islamic parties (e.g., Islami Andolon, Khelafat Majlish, Charmonai faction)
Leadership from religious institutions (such as Alia and Qawmi madrasa scholars)
Youth forces aligned with the “July Charter” and nationalist aspirations
Politically aware segments of the Bangladeshi diaspora
Together, these groups are working toward forming an alternative front — not just to contest elections, but to pursue state power.
Strategic Pillars of Their Power Ambition:
The PR electoral demand enables smaller parties to gain parliamentary power
Organizational expansion centered around the Muslim and religiously conscious vote bank
Leveraging anti-Indian sentiment and nationalist emotions
Appealing to the middle class and youth through principled leadership
Claiming moral legitimacy as heirs of the 2024 “July Uprising” martyrs
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5. The Political Future: What Possibilities Emerge?
Bangladesh’s political landscape is now starkly polarized between the ruling Awami League and a disoriented, fragmented opposition. Jamaat is trying to position itself within this vacuum as a strategically mature, value-driven, and organized alternative political force.
They now assert: “Opposition unity does not require the BNP. A forward-looking alliance must be founded on new ideas, leadership, and strategic planning.”
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6. Conclusion
The Suhrawardy rally on July 19 was more than a demonstration — it was a political signal. Seizing on the BNP’s inertia and leadership void, Jamaat has initiated a coherent, value-based, and strategic alternative. This emerging force is not just preparing for protest — it is preparing for governance. And that reality may soon place it at the center of national political discourse.