After toppling Hasina, young Bangladeshis turn back to old guard
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Under-30s, popularly known as Gen Z, drove the uprising and make up more than a quarter of Bangladesh’s 128 million voters.
PHOTO: REUTERS
DHAKA – Dhaka University student Sadman Mujtaba Rafid defied his parents and police to join protests that toppled former Bangladesh prime minister Sheikh Hasina
But ahead of the Feb 12 parliamentary election – the first since the upheaval – some of Mr Rafid’s optimism has faded.
“We dreamt of a country where all people regardless of gender, race, religion would have equal opportunity,” the 25-year-old said. “We expected policy changes and reforms, but it is far away from what we dreamt of.”
Tens of thousands of young Bangladeshis, frustrated by years of repression and a lack of jobs and economic opportunity under Hasina’s rule, poured into the streets in 2024, eager for radical change and a “New Bangladesh”.
But while the election will deliver a government without Ms Hasina
Opinion polls put the established, but tarnished, parties as front runners.
Reuters spoke to more than 80 students under 30, mostly in the capital Dhaka. Most expressed excitement about voting in a freer election but were disappointed with the choice of candidates.
‘Old guard v student-islamist alliance’
Under-30s, popularly known as Gen Z, drove the uprising and make up more than a quarter of Bangladesh’s 128 million voters.
“They are politically active and will in all likelihood go to vote and affect the electoral outcome,” said political analyst Asif Shahan, who teaches at Dhaka University.
Most were expected to back the newly formed National Citizen Party (NCP), spearheaded by some of the uprising’s leaders, but it has struggled for their support.
An alliance with the hardline Jamaat may have further undermined its appeal.
“They have lost the moral high ground,” said Mr Shudrul Amin, a 23-year-old archaeology student at Jahangirnagar University. “Voters who wanted a ‘New Bangladesh’ free from the baggage of the past now feel they are being forced to choose between the old guard and a student‑Islamist alliance.”
Ms Shama Debnath, a 24-year-old Hindu, said politics remained “trapped in an ‘either this or that’ framework” with no new vision or choices.
‘Spirit of revolution lost’
The interim government of Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus has also disappointed many Gen Zers after it failed to rein in mob violence targeting journalists and minorities.
“After a year, I feel the spirit of the July revolution is completely lost,” said Ms Hema Chakma, a 23-year-old Buddhist student. “I am not saying the previous situation was good, but I feel the violence has increased a lot and the interim government is not taking any steps.”
Interviews with young Bangladeshis also betrayed unhappiness with the economy, the spark for the revolt that led to Ms Hasina’s eventual exile in India.
NCP’s spokesman Asif Mahmud, 27, who rose to prominence during the protests and served in Dr Yunus’ government, said the party was constrained by being new and having mostly younger members. It also lacked resources, grassroots organisation and financial muscle, he added.
Mr Mahmud stressed that the alliance with Jamaat was strategic rather than ideological and there would be no move towards syariah law.
“We will work to fulfil expectations of the youth in the present and also in the future as promised,” he said.
People eager to vote
Despite their misgivings, most Gen Z Bangladeshis told Reuters they remained hopeful about the election itself, where 300 seats are being contested.
There will be a simultaneous referendum on reforms to state institutions, including term limits for prime ministers, stronger presidential powers and greater independence for the judiciary and election authorities.
Willingness to vote was as high as 97 per cent among those aged 18 to 35, with an almost even split between BNP and Jamaat, according to a recent poll by the Bangladesh Youth Leadership Center, a youth‑focused leadership platform.
“People are going to vote and that is enough,” said 26-year-old student activist Umama Fatema, a key figure in the 2024 uprising, adding that only a democratically elected “stable government” could steer Bangladesh.
For some, that means the BNP.
“Given that the new students’ party has shattered our hopes, I have decided to vote for BNP,” said 25-year-old Maisha Maliha, saying she believed the country needed a strong, united political party with enough people on the ground.
Others say the Islamists should have a chance. “We have seen BNP before, so Jamaat seems like a new option,” said 20-year-old Erisha Tabassum.
‘Not ready to give up’
Ms Tasnim Jara, a doctor who returned from Britain to join the NCP but quit because of the Islamist alliance, is now contesting as an independent, determined to help foster what she calls a “genuinely new political culture”.
The 31-year-old spent two frantic days going door to door to collect the 5,000 signatures required to validate her nomination.
“The July uprising created hope that people like us, who were never part of the old political guard, could finally enter politics and change how it is practised,” said Ms Jara.
“I do believe there is hope for a genuine political alternative in Bangladesh. But it will not emerge overnight,” she said.
Such efforts still resonate with some young voters.
English literature student H.M. Amirul Karim, 25, said: “I continue to dream that even if not now, the desire for a new political structure will become a reality. I am not ready to give up.” REUTERS


