Current:Home > reviewsBangladesh opposition party holds protest as it boycotts Jan. 7 national election amid violence -Secure Growth Solutions
Bangladesh opposition party holds protest as it boycotts Jan. 7 national election amid violence
View
Date:2025-04-12 15:45:58
DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) — Hundreds of opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party supporters protested Sunday to mark International Human Rights Day, as the country gears up for a general election on Jan. 7 that the opposition says should be held under a non-partisan, caretaker government.
The party, led by former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, is boycotting the election, leaving voters in the South Asian nation of 166 million with little choice but to re-elect Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s Awami League for a fourth consecutive term.
At Sunday’s protest in front of the National Press Club in downtown Dhaka, opposition activists said they do not think a fair and free election can take place under Hasina’s watch. The gathering took place weeks after a massive opposition rally on Oct. 28 turned violent.
The party’s decision to boycott the polls comes amid a monthslong crackdown that has reportedly seen hundreds of opposition politicians jailed and critics silenced, an allegation authorities have denied.
Demonstrators on Sunday carried banners that read “Human chain of family members of the victims of murder and enforced disappearances” and “We want the unconditional release of all prisoners.”
After the Oct. 28 rally, authorities arrested thousands of party leaders and activists including Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir. Many others have gone into hiding, and hundreds have been convicted by courts on charges of violence or subversive acts that the opposition says are politically motivated.
New York-based Human Rights Watch in a report last month put the number of arrested opposition activists at 10,000 since Oct. 28 and said that at least 16 people including two police officers died during the period of violence.
Ruhul Kabir Rizvi, joint secretary general of Zia’s party, told a video conference from hiding that the government has arrested or punished political leaders and activists under fictitious charges to ensure a lopsided election result.
He urged the people to boycott “the stage-managed election” that he said would deepen the country’s political crisis and push it toward danger.
“The upcoming one-sided election is not just a renewal of Sheikh Hasina’s power, but a license to destroy Bangladesh,” he said.
While critics have slammed the election as a farce, the government has rejected allegations of a crackdown on the opposition and says the polls will be democratically held and inclusive.
“Our stand is very clear. Those who are involved in acts of sabotage or arson attacks, those who attacked police and killed them, are being dealt with on specific charges. We clearly reject the claim that there has been any crackdown against the opposition party,” Mohammad A. Arafat, a ruling party lawmaker and member of the International Affairs Committee, told The Associated Press.
“It has no relation with the election. It’s a constitutional mandate to hold the election on time. It’s a matter of their choice to join the polls. But they are resorting to violence in the name of protests, rather than joining the race,” he said.
The election will be the country’s 12th after it gained independence from Pakistan in 1971.
In the 2008 election, the main challenger BNP and its allies won more than 40% of the vote, but lost to Awami League, which got an absolute majority. Subsequent elections took place in 2014 — which Zia’s party boycotted — and again in 2018 under Hasina’s administration, but the opposition rejected the results, saying the election was rigged. Hasina rejected the allegations.
This time again, while candidates from 29 out of 44 registered political parties have filed nominations, no one from Zia’s party is contesting the polls. After a review, the country’s Election Commission accepted 1,985 nominations and rejected 731 for a total of 300 constituencies.
Media reports say many independent candidates belong to the ruling Awami League party, which has encouraged them to contest the election to make it look competitive.
The events have drawn concern from observers at home and abroad over the health of democracy in Bangladesh, even as it transforms into an economic success story under Hasina.
Hasina’s administration has faced pressure from Western democracies, especially from the United States, while the United Nations and the European Union have also pressed for a free, fair and inclusive election.
“Specifically, we have emphasized that it is important to have free and fair elections that all stakeholders have the ability to participate peacefully. The holding of free and fair elections is the responsibility of everyone — all political parties, voters, the government, the security forces, and the media,” a U.S. State Department spokesperson said in an email to The Associated Press.
Analyst Iftekhar Zaman, the head of the anti-corruption group Transparency International Bangladesh, said the election may be held on time but it will be “non-inclusive” and “morally void.”
During the last election in 2018, Joydeb Sana, a private security guard working at a five-story apartment building in the capital, Dhaka, traveled to his ancestral village in southwestern Bangladesh to cast his vote.
But on election day, he found that someone else had already cast his vote.
“I don’t know who did it. In the end my candidate won the election and Sheikh Hasina became the prime minister. I was happy for that, but I could not vote for my candidate, and that was upsetting,” Sana told the AP.
He hopes he can cast his own vote this time.
“It’s my right to vote for my preferred candidate. Last time I was deprived of that,” he said.
veryGood! (414)
Related
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Paul Mescal Seemingly Confirms Romance With Gracie Abrams During London Outings
- A muscle car that time forgot? Revisiting the 1973 Pontiac GTO Colonnade
- ‘Hitting kids should never be allowed’: Illinois bans corporal punishment in all schools
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Tech Magnate Mike Lynch and Daughter Among 6 People Missing After Yacht Sinks Off Sicily Coast
- Matthew Perry's Doctors Lose Prescription Credentials Amid Ketamine Case
- Body cam video shows fatal Fort Lee police shooting unfolded in seconds
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Paul Mescal Seemingly Confirms Romance With Gracie Abrams During London Outings
Ranking
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- US settles with billionaire Carl Icahn for using company to secure personal loans worth billions
- A muscle car that time forgot? Revisiting the 1973 Pontiac GTO Colonnade
- Hurricane Ernesto is hundreds of miles from US. Here's why East Coast is still in peril.
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Texas jury deciding if student’s parents are liable in a deadly 2018 school shooting
- Raiders go with Gardner Minshew over Aidan O'Connell as starting quarterback
- Authors sue Claude AI chatbot creator Anthropic for copyright infringement
Recommendation
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
16-month-old dead, 2 boys injured after father abducts them, crashes vehicle in Maryland, police say
Friends' Creator Urges Fans to Remember Matthew Perry for His Legacy, Not His Death
3 are injured at a shooting outside a Kentucky courthouse; the suspect remains at large, police say
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Judge knocks down Hunter Biden’s bid to use Trump ruling to get his federal tax case dismissed
Got cold symptoms? Here’s when kids should take a sick day from school
Julianne Hough Reveals Which Dancing With the Stars Win She Disagreed With