The government in Bangladesh will retain Islam as country’s state religion despite pledges by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed to restore the state’s secular character, Law Minister Shafiq Ahmed said on Tuesday.
Bangladesh, a Muslim-majority nation of 150 million, was declared a secular republic in 1972 but a series of constitutional amendments by two military dictators abandoned the principle and made Islam the state religion in 1988. Since coming to power two years ago, Prime Minister Hasina has taken steps to restore secularism, but a package of constitutional amendments approved by her cabinet on Monday stopped short of full reform.
“Islam will remain the state religion,” the law minister told AFP, adding that Hindus, Buddhists and Christians in Bangladesh would be allowed to practice their religions freely. The decision has been condemned by some of the ruling Awami League’s left-wing coalition partners and an influential joint forum of Hindus, Buddhists and Christians, who say it is a breach of the trust.
According to the mass-circulation Kaler Kantha daily newspaper, two senior cabinet ministers also argued against the proposal, but were overruled. “It will create legal and political problems — it makes it hard to understand, ideologically, the Bangladeshi state,” said Ataur Rahman, a Dhaka-based politics professor who teaches at the US’s George Mason University.