National Citizen Party (NCP) on Wednesday clarified the difference between the ‘July Charter’ and ‘July Proclamation’ to remove any confusion, saying that the two documents are distinct things.
“The ‘July Proclamation’ and the ‘July Charter’ are two separate documents. But many people are confusing these two documents, which is questioning the NCP’s position,” NCP Member Secretary Akhtar Hossain told reporters during a tea break in the 22nd session of the second-round dialogue between the National Consensus Commission and the political parties.
He explained that the July Declaration is a historic acknowledgment of the August 2024 mass uprising and the victory on August 5, 2024, which needs legal recognition.
“On the other hand, the July Charter is a practical roadmap based on the political reform proposals being discussed within the Commission,” he said.
Akhtar said NCP does not want an ineffective, incomplete July Charter that ends up as another symbolic document like the previous three-party agreement of the early 1990s.
“We want a Charter that is effective, legally grounded, reflected by basic reform aspirations and capable of being implemented immediately,” he added.
He said the NCP firmly rejected the two-year implementation timeline mentioned in the NCC’s initial draft of the July Charter. “Such a delayed implementation proposal allows room for betrayal and undermines public expectations,” said the NCP leader.
Regarding the July Declaration, Akhtar Hossain said, “We are not willing to compromise even slightly. If the government fails to issue the Declaration by July 36, NCP will issue it independently in alliance with all anti-fascist forces.”
Noting that the government has shared a draft of the ‘July Proclamation’, he said NCP has submitted a more mature version.