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Official Name:
Gano Projatontri Bangladesh
short form: Bangladesh
int'l long form: The People's Republic of Bangladesh
ISO Country Code: bd
Time:
Local Time = UTC +6h
Actual Time: Thu-Jan-5 12:37
Capital City: Dhaka (pop. 10 million)
Other Cities:
Chittagong (2.8 million), Khulna (1.8 million), Rajshahi (1
million), Mymensing, Comilla, Barisal, Sylhet.
Government:
Type: Parliamentary democracy.
Independence: 26 March 1971 (from Pakistan).
Constitution: 1972
Geography:
Location: Southern Asia, bordering the Bay of Bengal, between
India and Myanmar.
Area: 147 570 sq. km. (55 813 sq. mi.)
Terrain: Mainly flat alluvial plain, with hills in the northeast
and southeast.
Climate: Semitropical, monsoonal;
mild winter (October to March); hot, humid summer (March to
June); humid, warm rainy monsoon (June to October).
People:
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Bangladeshi(s).
Population: 130 million.
GNI per capita PPP: $ 1 998 (year)
Ethnic groups: Bengali 98%, tribal groups, non-Bengali Muslims.
Religions: Muslim 88.3%; Hindu 10.5%; Christian 0.3%, Buddhist
0.6%, others 0.3%.
Languages: Bangla (official, also known as Bengali), English
is widely used.
Literacy: 54% for males; 32% for females; a total of 43% literacy.
Natural resources: Natural
Gas, Lignite Coal, Limestones, Ceramic, Clay and Glass Sand,
arable land, timber.
Agriculture products: Rice,
Jackfruit, Jute, Tobacco, Sugarcane, Pulses, Oilseeds, Spices,
Potatoes, Vegetables, Bananas, Mangoes, Coconut, Tea and Wheat.
Industries: Garments, Jute,
Cotton, Textile, Tea, Paper, Newsprint, Cement, Fertilizer,
Sugar, Engineering, Electric cables , Leather, Fish.
Exports partners: USA 22.7%,
Germany 14.5%, UK 10.8%, France 6.7% (2004)
Imports partners: India 14.6%,
China 11.7%, Singapore 7.8%, Japan 5.8%, Hong Kong 4.8% (2004)
Currency: Taka (BDT)
Economy
Fiscal year: July 1 to June 30.
Annual GDP growth rate (2004 est.): 6%.
Inflation (April 2004): 5.83%.
Per capita GDP (2003): $421.
Natural resources: Natural gas, fertile soil, water.
Agriculture (25% of GDP): Products--rice, jute, tea, sugar,
wheat. Land--cultivable area cropped at rate of 176% in 1997;
175% in 2000; largely subsistence farming dependent on monsoon
rainfall, but growing commercial farming and increasing use
of irrigation.
Industry (Manufacturing; 16% of GDP): Types--garments and knitwear,
jute goods, frozen fish and seafood, textiles, fertilizer, sugar,
tea, leather, ship-breaking for scrap, pharmaceuticals, ceramic
tableware, newsprint.
Trade (2003): Merchandise
exports--$6.5 billion: garments and knitwear, frozen fish, jute
and jute goods, leather and leather products, tea, urea fertilizer,
ceramic tableware. Exports to U.S. (2003)--$2.074 billion. Merchandise
imports (2003)--$9.7 billion: capital goods, food grains, petroleum,
textiles, chemicals, vegetable oils. Imports from U.S. (2003)--$226
million
HISTORY
Bengal was absorbed into the Mughul Empire in the 16th century,
and Dhaka, the seat of a nawab (the representative of the emperor),
gained some importance as a provincial center. But it remained
remote and thus a difficult to govern region--especially the
section east of the Brahmaputra River--outside the mainstream
of Mughul politics. Portuguese traders and missionaries were
the first Europeans to reach Bengal in the latter part of the
15th century. They were followed by representatives of the Dutch,
the French, and the British East India Companies. By the end
of the 17th century, the British presence on the Indian subcontinent
was centered in Calcutta. During the 18th and 19th centuries,
the British gradually extended their commercial contacts and
administrative control beyond Calcutta to Bengal. In 1859, the
British Crown replaced the East India Company, extending British
dominion from Bengal, which became a region of India, in the
east to the Indus River in the west.
The rise of nationalism throughout British-controlled India
in the late 19th century resulted in mounting animosity between
the Hindu and Muslim communities. In 1885, the All-India National
Congress was founded with Indian and British membership. Muslims
seeking an organization of their own founded the All-India Muslim
League in 1906. Although both the League and the Congress supported
the goal of Indian self-government within the British Empire,
the two parties were unable to agree on a way to ensure the
protection of Muslim political, social, and economic rights.
The subsequent history of the nationalist movement was characterized
by periods of Hindu-Muslim cooperation, as well as by communal
antagonism. The idea of a separate Muslim state gained increasing
popularity among Indian Muslims after 1936, when the Muslim
League suffered a decisive defeat in the first elections under
India's 1935 constitution. In 1940, the Muslim League called
for an independent state in regions where Muslims were in the
majority. Campaigning on that platform in provincial elections
in 1946, the League won the majority of the Muslim seats contested
in Bengal. Widespread communal violence followed, especially
in Calcutta.
When British India was partitioned and the independent dominions
of India and Pakistan were created in 1947, the region of Bengal
was divided along religious lines. The predominantly Muslim
eastern half was designated East Pakistan--and made part of
the newly independent Pakistan--while the predominantly Hindu
western part became the Indian state of West Bengal. Pakistan's
history from 1947 to 1971 was marked by political instability
and economic difficulties. Dominion status was rejected in 1956
in favor of an "Islamic republic within the Commonwealth."
Attempts at civilian political rule failed, and the government
imposed martial law between 1958 and 1962, and again between
1969 and 1972.
Almost from the advent of independent Pakistan in 1947, frictions
developed between East and West Pakistan, which were separated
by more than 1,000 miles of Indian territory. East Pakistanis
felt exploited by the West Pakistan-dominated central government.
Linguistic, cultural, and ethnic differences also contributed
to the estrangement of East from West Pakistan. Bengalis strongly
resisted attempts to impose Urdu as the sole official language
of Pakistan. Responding to these grievances, Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman in 1948 formed a students' organization called the Chhatra
League. In 1949, Maulana Abdul Hamid Khan Bhasani and some other
Bengali leaders formed the East Pakistan Awami Muslim League
(AL), a party designed mainly to promote Bengali interests.
This party dropped the word Muslim from its name in 1955 and
came to be known as Awami League. Mujib became president of
the Awami League in 1966 and emerged as leader of the Bengali
autonomy movement. In 1966, he was arrested for his political
activities.
After the Awami League won almost all the East Pakistan seats
of the Pakistan national assembly in 1970-71 elections, West
Pakistan opened talks with the East on constitutional questions
about the division of power between the central government and
the provinces, as well as the formation of a national government
headed by the Awami League. The talks proved unsuccessful, however,
and on March 1, 1971, Pakistani President Yahya Khan indefinitely
postponed the pending national assembly session, precipitating
massive civil disobedience in East Pakistan. Mujib was arrested
again; his party was banned, and most of his aides fled to India
and organized a provisional government. On March 26, 1971, following
a bloody crackdown by the Pakistan Army, Bengali nationalists
declared an independent People's Republic of Bangladesh. As
fighting grew between the army and the Bengali mukti bahini
("freedom fighters"), an estimated
10 million Bengalis, mainly Hindus, sought refuge in the Indian
states of Assam and West Bengal.
The crisis in East Pakistan produced new strains in Pakistan's
troubled relations with India. The two nations had fought a
war in 1965, mainly in the west, but the refugee pressure in
India in the fall of 1971 produced new tensions in the east.
Indian sympathies lay with East Pakistan, and in November, India
intervened on the side of the Bangladeshis. On December 16,
1971, Pakistani forces surrendered, and Bangladesh-- meaning
"Bengal country"-- was born; the new country became
a parliamentary democracy under a 1972 constitution.
The provisional government of the new nation of Bangladesh was
formed in Dhaka with Justice Abu Sayeed Choudhury as President,
and Sheikh Mujibur Rahman ("Mujib")--who was released
from Pakistani prison in early 1972--as Prime Minister.
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