1971-12-13
By Henry S. Hayward
Page: 0
JESSORE, PAKISTAN.-Bangla Desh-the new Bengali nation in
what has been up to now East Pakistan-is beginning to
take shape as an operating entity.
The first steps of stirring this new nation into
existence are fascinating to watch.
Looking beyond the present joyous liberation, one sees
more serious aspects looming for India and Bangla Desh.
Some see a painful day of reckoning ahead for the two as
their motives begin to diverge.
As the new nation emerges, its common cause with India
may begin to fray, no matter how hard leaders on both
sides attempt to patch it.
The birth process is visible as Bangla Desh leaders
begin to pay their first official public visits to their
country, newly born out of the chaos and trouble that
has marked East Pakistan for so long, and out of the war
between India and Pakistan which is rapidly "liberating"
the world's youngest people's republic.
Slow, awkward, controversial the emergence may be. But
it also is being received with enthusiasm at the grass-
roots level. Popular enthusiasm seemed evident enough in
the shouts and intent faces of villagers at an impromptu
town meeting held Saturday at Jhinkargacha in conquered
territory, 10 miles west of Jessore. There, acting
Bangla Desh President Syed Nazrul Islam and Prime
Minister Tajuddin Ahmed paused at a little rotunda on
the far side of town to give speeches while en route to
their first official appearance at Jessore.
The emergence also can be seen in the more open
appearances of Mukti Bahini freedom fighters. A jeepload
of young armed Mukti guerrillas led an official caravan
of cars along the 25-mile drive to Jessore. Close behind
came an Indian Army military police jeep, perhaps as a
reminder to those along the wayside that Indian forces
also have had something to do with this liberation.
On every road and by-path one sees refugees trickling
back from outlying villages, where they have been
hiding, to larger towns and cities. Their appearance
seems an informal vote of confidence that at least some
stability will return to their disordered lives.
Whether that vote in the long run will prove to be for
the present generation of Bangla Desh leaders remains
unknown. It may even be only a tribute to the Indian
Army's present military victories in this area .
Some expect the new nation's birth pangs may include the
reopening of conflicts and rivalries between various
East Bengali racial, political, and religious groans or
even between Bangla Desh and its Indian mentor.
But meanwhile, shops are reopening along the main roads
with their carefully preserved hoards of basic living
essentials. And workers in fields of rice, jute, and
mustard once more are to be seen working far into the
dusk hours.