Bangladesh to hold national election on Feb 12

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Bangladesh has been grappling with rising discontent over delays in promised reforms, fuelling fresh protests and political division.

Bangladesh has been grappling with rising discontent over delays in promised reforms, fuelling fresh protests and political division.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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DHAKA – Bangladesh will vote on Feb 12 to elect a new parliament, the country’s Election Commission said on Dec 11, its first national election since a deadly student-led uprising forced

then-prime ​minister Sheikh Hasina to flee to India

 in 2024. 

An interim administration ‍led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus has since governed the Muslim-majority South Asian country of 173 million ​people, ​but has been grappling with rising discontent over delays in promised reforms, fuelling fresh protests and political division.

A national referendum on implementing the so-called ‘July Charter’, a state reform ‍plan drafted in the aftermath of the unrest, will also be held on the same ​day, Chief Election Commissioner AMM Nasir ⁠Uddin said in a national broadcast. 

The charter proposes wide-ranging changes to state institutions, including curbing executive powers, strengthening the independence of the judiciary and election authorities, and preventing the misuse of law-enforcement agencies.

Former prime minister ​Khaleda Zia’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) is widely seen as the frontrunner in the upcoming polls, competing alongside the ‌Jamaat-e-Islami party, which has returned to ​electoral politics after the interim government eased restrictions. 

Jamaat, Bangladesh’s biggest Islamic party, could not contest elections after a 2013 court ruling that its registration as a political party conflicted with the country’s secular constitution.

The National Citizen Party

formed by student leaders

after the 2024 uprising is seen trailing behind BNP and Jamaat, as it struggles to convert street power into electoral ‍strength.

Hasina’s Awami League, which has been

barred from contesting the election

, has warned of ​unrest if the ban is not lifted.

Restoring democratic rule, reviving the economy after disruptions hurt the export-driven ​garment industry, repairing ties with giant neighbour India – strained by ‌New Delhi sheltering Hasina – tackling corruption, and ensuring media freedom are among the key issues for voters. REUTERS

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