Saifur
urges opposition to
join budget session
The
National Policy Review Forum 2003
begins
Staff
Correspondent
04 June, 2003
[Back]
Finance Minister M Saifur Rahman
yesterday urged the opposition
lawmakers to attend the upcoming
budget session and assured them
of adequate time for discussion.
"I want your opinions on
budget proposals," he said
in his address as the chief guest
to the inaugural session of the
National Policy Review Forum 2003
at a city hotel.
The budget session will be meaningless
without participation of the opposition
lawmakers, said Saifur. He admitted
to the tradition of the ruling
parties depriving the opposition
lawmakers of the floor in parliament. Many
areas of the government lack good
governance and only a good political
culture can ensure democracy,
transparency and the rule of law,
he went on. "Politics is
the foundation for good governance,"
he said.
The governments since 1991 have
no major policy differences. But
a few irritants surfaced in times
of implementation, he said. Saifur,
responding to a concern expressed
by a speaker at the event, argued
that the government alone should
not be blamed for the slide in
standards of education. He pointed
to the irregularities in the education
sector over the years and accused
politicians of not uniting on
national issues.
The National Policy Review Forum
2003, organised by the Centre
for Policy Dialogue (CPD), the
Prothom Alo and The Daily Star,
is the finale of eight regional
consultation meetings that discussed
draft review briefs. Seventeen
taskforces, involving more than
200 experts, business leaders
and civil society representatives,
took part in the regional consultations
in Chittagong, Sylhet, Khulna,
Mymensingh, Barisal, Narayanganj,
Rajshahi and Dhaka.
Politicians, lawmakers, chamber
leaders and bureaucrats attended
the event, chaired by CPD Chairman
Professor Rehman Sobhan. Deputy
Leader of the Opposition Abdul
Hamid, Editor of The Daily Star
Mahfuz Anam, Editor of the Prothom
Alo Motiur Rahman and CPD Executive
Director Dr Debapriya Bhattacharya
addressed the session.
As special guest, the deputy leader
of the opposition said democracy
lies only with the constitution,
not in practice. Countrymen are
frustrated by the roles of both
ruling and opposition parties,
he said. "Opposition members
of parliament have often been
deprived of the floor. They have
been left out of the development
work in their constituencies,"
said Hamid.
Hamid said he could not serve
the country better because of
the present political culture.
Without combined efforts of ruling
and opposition parties, people
cannot tap into the opportunities
yielded by freedom, he said. Mahfuz
Anam said the people are not happy
with development and political
outcome over the last 30 years,
as the political culture, parliamentary
practice and the relations between
the ruling and opposition parties
remained the same. "Success
in development has been far from
adequate."
The standards of education are
way short of expectations, and
Bangladesh will fail to catch
up with the global pace unless
it produces high-standard human
resources. Motiur Rahman said that
it is difficult to do any good
to common people without involving
them. Professor Rehman Sobhan urged
the finance minister to form a
special parliamentary committee
on the upcoming budget, which
will be headed by an opposition
lawmaker. The government should
form such a committee as a goodwill
gesture, he said. Dr Debapriya
Bhattacharya said the efforts
of the civil society in achieving
economic objectives would hit
snags without a strong political
will.
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