By
Kamran Reza Chowdhury
2020-09-21
Shah Ahmad Shafi
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Bangladesh’s
most powerful faith-based organization, the hardline Hefazat-e-Islam, may split
after the death of leader Ahmed Shafi last week, say analysts who expect
infighting between a faction allied with the prime minister and one that
supports the opposition.
Political
observers expect a war of succession over who will take the reins of the
organization that controls 25,000 madrassas, or religious boarding schools, in
the Islamic majority country.
People attend the funeral ceremony of Hefazat-e-Islam leader Ahmed Shafi
at the Hathazari madrassa in Chittagong, Bangladesh, Sept. 19, 2020. Focus
Bangla
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The two men
poised to vie for that role are Shafi’s son, Anas Madani, who supports Prime
Minister Sheikh Hasina, and Hefazat Secretary General Junaid Babunagari, who
backs the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and its ally,
Jamaat-e-Islami.
Shafi and
his son had been at odds with Babungari for months, with a turf war unfolding
at Hathazari – the group’s main madrassa and that serves as its headquarters in
Chittagong – since June.
Babunagari,
who’s been with Hefazat since its inception in 2010, covets the leadership of
the group, according to a noted Islamic scholar in Bangladesh.
“Babunagari
wants to become head of Hefazat-e-Islam following Shafi’s death. But the
pro-Shafi group won’t allow that,” Maulana Farid Uddin Masud told BenarNews.
“So, I
think Hefazat may split in two – one group led by Anas Madani and the other led
by Babunagari.”
Last
Thursday, on the eve of his death, Shafi was forced to remove his son from the
post of assistant director of the Hathazari madrassa following a massive
protest over his plans to make his son the head of Hefazat. On the same day,
Shafi, too, was forced to resign as director general of Hathazari.
Anticipating
just such a revolt, Shafi, in a pre-emptive strike in June, removed Babunagari
as assistant director of Hathazari. But Babunagari struck back last week,
mobilizing some 10,000 students to revolt against Shafi on Wednesday and
Thursday.
Dr. Nizam Uddin
Ahmed, a professor of political science at Chittagong University, said Shafi
was generally accepted as a leader by most Hefazat rank and file, but his son
Madani wasn’t.
“Possibly
Babunagari mobilized anti-Madani leaders within Hefazat and they staged a huge
protest inside the Hathazari madrasa. Shafi was forced to sack his son and also
resign as the director general of the madrassa,” Ahmed told BenarNews.
Shafi, who
was believed to be more than 100 years old, died of age-related complications
at a hospital in Dhaka late Friday.
Soon after
he was buried in a funeral the next day attended by tens of thousands of people
in Chittagong, the management of the Hathazari madrassa appointed Babunagari as
education secretary of the madrassa, said Salahuddin Nanupuri, one of the
members of the madrassa’s governing council.
“We will
hold a meeting within one month to elect a new leader of Hefazat-e-Islam,”
Nanupuri told BenarNews.
Awami
League’s Concessions
Few people
had heard of Ahmed Shafi when he formed Hefazat in 2010, said Dr. Shantanu
Majumder, a professor of political science at the University of Dhaka.
Shafi came
into the limelight three years later when he organized a massive rally in Dhaka
in May 2013, demanding the introduction of Sharia law, including a blasphemy
law with a proviso to execute secular bloggers and those who defame Islam.
The rally
followed the brutal slaying in February 2013 of secular blogger Ahmed Rajib
Haider, and preceded a string of machete-killings of other bloggers carried out
by Muslim zealots in 2015 and 2016.
Back in
2013, the Awami League government mobilized the police who then commenced
operations to end the rally. The huge crowds dispersed soon after, but it was a
violent end with officials saying 39 people, including policemen, were killed.
The Awami
League, a party with roots in secularism, didn’t implement Sharia law. But as
the 2018 elections loomed, the party decided to court the support of
faith-based groups, in a bid to counter the challenge from the opposition BNP,
which aligned with the controversial Jamaat-e-Islami, the largest Islamic
party.
The group
Hasina was eyeing for support was Shafi’s Hefazat-e-Islam, and she began making
concessions to the hardline organization.
In April
2017, she announced that her government would recognize degrees from thousands
of unregulated Qaumi madrassas – Islamic boarding schools. She also agreed to
changes in public school textbooks to make them more “Muslim-friendly,” as
demanded by Hefazat.
A little
more than a year later, in November 2018, less than two months before the
general election, Hefazat honored Hasina for recognizing these educational
degrees.
The
University of Dhaka’s Majumder said Hasina “maintained a carrot-stick policy
toward Hefazat,” which kept it on the government’s side for a while. Hefazat’s
position now isn’t as clear.
“Babunagari
is in a strong position within the organization. But the attendance of huge
number of people at the funeral of Shafi indicates that Shafi’s name won’t
wither away from Hefazat-e-Islam,” Majumder said.
“The
developments in the last several days indicate that the anti-government element
within Hefazat is stronger. It is difficult to predict how long this will drag
on.”
Majumder
predicts the fight for Hefazat’s leadership will get complicated in the days to
come.
“The
post-Shafi Hefazat’s future is uncertain. We should not be surprised if Hefazat
splits,” he said.
For its
part, the Awami League hopes Hefazat’s future leaders will remember that the
Hasina government recognized degrees from Qaumi madrassas, said Shajahan Khan,
a member of the party’s Central Working Committee.
“This is
very difficult to predict whether the pro-Shafi group or Babunagari group would
dominate Hefazat-e-Islam,” Khan said.
“The Awami
League government recognized the Qaumi degree. So, we hope that the future
leadership of Hefazat understands the contribution of the Awami League
government for Qaumi students.”
Original
Headline: After Leader’s Death, Bangladesh’s Most Powerful Islamic Group May
Fracture
Source: The Benar News
URL: https://www.newageislam.com/radical-islamism-jihad/after-shah-ahmad-shafi-bangladeshi/d/122919
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