BANGLADESH, FORMERLY THE East Wing of Pakistan, emerged as an
independent nation in December 1971. The exclamation on the
occasion--"Joi Bangla! Joi Bangla!" (Victory to Bengal!
Victory to Bengal!) was a collective and plaintive cry following a
particularly bitter and bloody struggle for freedom. These words echoed
the cultural and ethnic disposition of the new state--in short, the
ethos of the people--that Bangladesh was to be a culturally and
linguistically cohesive unit. Pakistan itself had been created on August
15, 1947, largely the result of communal passions pitting Hindus against
Muslims. Pakistan was divided into two wings, separated by 1,600
kilometers of Indian territory, with Islam only a tenuous link between
the two wings. Of paramount importance to East Pakistanis was the Bangla
(before 1971 usually referred to as Bengali) language and culture, a
consideration not appreciated by the West Wing of Pakistan until it was
too late.
When Bangladesh joined the community of nations, it was at first
recognized by only India and Bhutan. With its fragile and underdeveloped
economic infrastructure under extreme duress, its law and order
situation challenged by numerous well-armed contingents of unemployed
former freedom fighters, its impoverished population agitated by the
unfulfilled promise of rising expectations, Bangladesh was, in
international circles, given the unfortunate label of
"international basket case."
Bangladeshis rejoiced at their attainment of independence and offered
their adulation to the first national leader of Bangladesh, Sheikh
Mujibur Rahman (Mujib), or the Bangabandhu, the "Beloved of
Bangladesh." Yet the future of Bangladesh, envisioned by the
Bangabandhu and enshrined in the 1972 Constitution as nationalism,
socialism, secularism, and democracy, was as uncertain and ephemeral as
the Bengal monsoon. In 1975 Mujib, by then discredited for presiding
over a bankrupt and corrupt regime, was assassinated along with most of
his family. In the ensuing years, a number of regimes rose and fell in
the violent legacy of Bangladeshi politics. Authoritarian and military
rule has dominated the short history of Bangladesh. But Bengali society
is known for its mercurial politics, and popular demands for a more open
government in Bangladesh, while under control in the late 1980s,
continued unabated.
Bangladesh - GEOGRAPHY
The Land
The physiography of Bangladesh is characterized by two distinctive
features: a broad deltaic plain subject to frequent flooding, and a
small hilly region crossed by swiftly flowing rivers. The country has an
area of 144,000 square kilometers and extends 820 kilometers north to
south and 600 kilometers east to west. Bangladesh is bordered on the
west, north, and east by a 2,400-kilometer land frontier with India and,
in the southeast, by a short land and water frontier (193 kilometers)
with Burma. On the south is a highly irregular deltaic coastline of
about 600 kilometers, fissured by many rivers and streams flowing into
the Bay of Bengal. The territorial waters of Bangladesh extend 12
nautical miles, and the exclusive economic zone of the country is 200
nautical miles.
Roughly 80 percent of the landmass is made up of fertile alluvial
lowland called the Bangladesh Plain. The plain is part of the larger
Plain of Bengal, which is sometimes called the Lower Gangetic Plain.
Although altitudes up to 105 meters above sea level occur in the
northern part of the plain, most elevations are less than 10 meters
above sea level; elevations decrease in the coastal south, where the
terrain is generally at sea level. With such low elevations and numerous
rivers, water--and concomitant flooding--is a predominant physical
feature. About 10,000 square kilometers of the total area of Bangladesh
is covered with water, and larger areas are routinely flooded during the
monsoon season.
The only exceptions to Bangladesh's low elevations are the Chittagong
Hills in the southeast, the Low Hills of Sylhet in the northeast, and
highlands in the north and northwest. The Chittagong Hills constitute the only significant hill system
in the country and, in effect, are the western fringe of the northsouth
mountain ranges of Burma and eastern India. The Chittagong Hills rise
steeply to narrow ridge lines, generally no wider than 36 meters, 600 to
900 meters above sea level. At 1,046 meters, the highest elevation in
Bangladesh is found at Keokradong, in the southeastern part of the
hills. Fertile valleys lie between the hill lines, which generally run
north-south. West of the Chittagong Hills is a broad plain, cut by
rivers draining into the Bay of Bengal, that rises to a final chain of
low coastal hills, mostly below 200 meters, that attain a maximum
elevation of 350 meters. West of these hills is a narrow, wet coastal
plain located between the cities of Chittagong in the north and Cox's
Bazar in the south.
About 67 percent of Bangladesh's nonurban land is arable. Permanent
crops cover only 2 percent, meadows and pastures cover 4 percent, and
forests and woodland cover about 16 percent. The country produces large
quantities of quality timber, bamboo, and sugarcane. Bamboo grows in
almost all areas, but high-quality timber grows mostly in the highland
valleys. Rubber planting in the hilly regions of the country was
undertaken in the 1980s, and rubber extraction had started by the end of
the decade. A variety of wild animals are found in the forest areas,
such as in the Sundarbans on the southwest coast, which is the home of
the worldfamous Royal Bengal Tiger. The alluvial soils in the Bangladesh
Plain are generally fertile and are enriched with heavy silt deposits
carried downstream during the rainy season.
<>Climate
Bangladesh has a subtropical monsoon climate characterized by wide
seasonal variations in rainfall, moderately warm temperatures, and high
humidity. Regional climatic differences in this flat country are minor.
Three seasons are generally recognized: a hot, humid summer from March
to June; a cool, rainy monsoon season from June to October; and a cool,
dry winter from October to March. In general, maximum summer
temperatures range between 32�C and 38�C. April is the warmest month
in most parts of the country. January is the coldest month, when the
average temperature for most of the country is 10�C.
Winds are mostly from the north and northwest in the winter, blowing
gently at one to three kilometers per hour in northern and central areas
and three to six kilometers per hour near the coast. From March to May,
violent thunderstorms, called northwesters by local English speakers,
produce winds of up to sixty kilometers per hour. During the intense
storms of the early summer and late monsoon season, southerly winds of
more than 160 kilometers per hour cause waves to crest as high as 6
meters in the Bay of Bengal, which brings disastrous flooding to coastal
areas.
Heavy rainfall is characteristic of Bangladesh. With the exception of
the relatively dry western region of Rajshahi, where the annual rainfall
is about 160 centimeters, most parts of the country receive at least 200
centimeters of rainfall per year. Because of its location just south of the foothills of the
Himalayas, where monsoon winds turn west and northwest, the region of
Sylhet in northeastern Bangladesh receives the greatest average
precipitation. From 1977 to 1986, annual rainfall in that region ranged
between 328 and 478 centimeters per year. Average daily humidity ranged
from March lows of between 45 and 71 percent to July highs of between 84
and 92 percent, based on readings taken at selected stations nationwide
in 1986.
About 80 percent of Bangladesh's rain falls during the monsoon
season. The monsoons result from the contrasts between low and high air
pressure areas that result from differential heating of land and water.
During the hot months of April and May hot air rises over the Indian
subcontinent, creating low-pressure areas into which rush cooler,
moisture-bearing winds from the Indian Ocean. This is the southwest
monsoon, commencing in June and usually lasting through September.
Dividing against the Indian landmass, the monsoon flows in two branches,
one of which strikes western India. The other travels up the Bay of
Bengal and over eastern India and Bangladesh, crossing the plain to the
north and northeast before being turned to the west and northwest by the
foothills of the Himalayas.
Natural calamities, such as floods, tropical cyclones, tornadoes, and
tidal bores--destructive waves or floods caused by flood tides rushing
up estuaries--ravage the country, particularly the coastal belt, almost
every year. Between 1947 and 1988, thirteen severe cyclones hit
Bangladesh, causing enormous loss of life and property. In May 1985, for
example, a severe cyclonic storm packing 154 kilometer-per-hour winds
and waves 4 meters high swept into southeastern and southern Bangladesh,
killing more than 11,000 persons, damaging more than 94,000 houses,
killing some 135,000 head of livestock, and damaging nearly 400
kilometers of critically needed embankments. Annual monsoon flooding
results in the loss of human life, damage to property and communication
systems, and a shortage of drinking water, which leads to the spread of
disease. For example, in 1988 two-thirds of Bangladesh's sixty-four
districts experienced extensive flood damage in the wake of unusually
heavy rains that flooded the river systems. Millions were left homeless
and without potable water. Half of Dhaka, including the runways at the
Zia International Airport--an important transit point for disaster
relief supplies--was flooded. About 2 million tons of crops were
reported destroyed, and relief work was rendered even more challenging
than usual because the flood made transportation of any kind exceedingly
difficult.
There are no precautions against cyclones and tidal bores except
giving advance warning and providing safe public buildings where people
may take shelter. Adequate infrastructure and air transport facilities
that would ease the sufferings of the affected people had not been
established by the late 1980s. Efforts by the government under the Third
Five-Year Plan (1985-90) were directed toward accurate and timely
forecast capability through agrometeorology, marine meteorology,
oceanography, hydrometeorology, and seismology. Necessary expert
services, equipment, and training facilities were expected to be
developed under the United Nations Development Programme.
Bangladesh - River Systems
The rivers of Bangladesh mark both the physiography of the nation and
the life of the people. About 700 in number, these rivers generally flow
south. The larger rivers serve as the main source of water for
cultivation and as the principal arteries of commercial transportation.
Rivers also provide fish, an important source of protein. Flooding of
the rivers during the monsoon season causes enormous hardship and
hinders development, but fresh deposits of rich silt replenish the
fertile but overworked soil. The rivers also drain excess monsoon
rainfall into the Bay of Bengal. Thus, the great river system is at the
same time the country's principal resource and its greatest hazard.
The profusion of rivers can be divided into five major networks. The Jamuna-Brahmaputra is 292 kilometers long and extends from
northern Bangladesh to its confluence with the Padma. Originating as the
Yarlung Zangbo Jiang in China's Xizang Autonomous Region (Tibet) and
flowing through India's state of Arunachal Pradesh, where it becomes
known as the Brahmaputra ("Son of Brahma"), it receives waters
from five major tributaries that total some 740 kilometers in length. At
the point where the Brahmaputra meets the Tista River in Bangladesh, it
becomes known as the Jamuna. The Jamuna is notorious for its shifting
subchannels and for the formation of fertile silt islands (chars).
No permanent settlements can exist along its banks.
The second system is the Padma-Ganges, which is divided into two
sections: a 258-kilometer segment, the Ganges, which extends from the
western border with India to its confluence with the Jamuna some 72
kilometers west of Dhaka, and a 126-kilometer segment, the Padma, which
runs from the Ganges-Jamuna confluence to where it joins the Meghna
River at Chandpur. The Padma-Ganges is the central part of a deltaic
river system with hundreds of rivers and streams--some 2,100 kilometers
in length--flowing generally east or west into the Padma.
The third network is the Surma-Meghna system, which courses from the
northeastern border with India to Chandpur, where it joins the Padma.
The Surma-Meghna, at 669 kilometers by itself the longest river in
Bangladesh, is formed by the union of six lesser rivers. Below the city
of Kalipur it is known as the Meghna. When the Padma and Meghna join
together, they form the fourth river system--the Padma-Meghna--which
flows 145 kilometers to the Bay of Bengal.
This mighty network of four river systems flowing through the
Bangladesh Plain drains an area of some 1.5 million square kilometers.
The numerous channels of the Padma-Meghna, its distributaries, and
smaller parallel rivers that flow into the Bay of Bengal are referred to
as the Mouths of the Ganges. Like the Jamuna, the Padma-Meghna and other
estuaries on the Bay of Bengal are also known for their many chars.
A fifth river system, unconnected to the other four, is the
Karnaphuli. Flowing through the region of Chittagong and the Chittagong
Hills, it cuts across the hills and runs rapidly downhill to the west
and southwest and then to the sea. The Feni, Karnaphuli, Sangu, and
Matamuhari--an aggregate of some 420 kilometers--are the main rivers in
the region. The port of Chittagong is situated on the banks of the
Karnaphuli. The Karnaphuli Reservoir and Karnaphuli Dam are located in
this area. The dam impounds the Karnaphuli River's waters in the
reservoir for the generation of hydroelectric power.
During the annual monsoon period, the rivers of Bangladesh flow at
about 140,000 cubic meters per second, but during the dry period they
diminish to 7,000 cubic meters per second. Because water is so vital to
agriculture, more than 60 percent of the net arable land, some 9.1
million hectares, is cultivated in the rainy season despite the
possibility of severe flooding, and nearly 40 percent of the land is
cultivated during the dry winter months. Water resources development has
responded to this "dual water regime" by providing flood
protection, drainage to prevent overflooding and waterlogging, and
irrigation facilities for the expansion of winter cultivation. Major
water control projects have been developed by the national government to
provide irrigation, flood control, drainage facilities, aids to river
navigation and road construction, and hydroelectric power. In addition,
thousands of tube wells and electric pumps are used for local
irrigation. Despite severe resource constraints, the government of
Bangladesh has made it a policy to try to bring additional areas under
irrigation without salinity intrusion.
Water resources management, including gravity flow irrigation, flood
control, and drainage, were largely the responsibility of the Bangladesh
Water Development Board. Other public sector institutions, such as the
Bangladesh Krishi Bank, the Bangladesh Rural Development Board, the
Bangladesh Bank, and the Bangladesh Agricultural Development Corporation
were also responsible for promotion and development of minor irrigation
works in the private sector through government credit mechanisms.