Can Bangladesh’s new leader bring change after election landslide?

BBC:

Just over two years ago, when Sheikh Hasina won an election widely condemned as rigged in her favour, it was hard to imagine her 15-year grip on power being broken so suddenly, or that a rival party that had been virtually written off would make such a resounding comeback.

But in the cycle of Bangladeshi politics, this is one more flip-flop between Hasina’s Awami League and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), which have alternated holding power for decades.

Except this is the first time that new BNP leader Tarique Rahman is formally leading the party – and the first time he’s contested an election.

His mother Khaleda Zia, who died of an illness late last year, was the party’s head for four decades. She took over after his father, Ziaur Rahman, the BNP founder and a key leader of Bangladesh’s war for independence, was assassinated.

Accused of benefitting from nepotism when his mother was in power, Tarique Rahman has also faced allegations of corruption. Five days before his mother died he returned to Bangladesh after 17 years of self-imposed exile in London.

And while Rahman, 60, has on occasion been the de-facto chair of an emaciated BNP when his mother was jailed and more recently when she was ill, he’s largely seen as an untested leader.

“That he doesn’t have prior experience probably works for him, because people are willing to give change a chance,” says political scientist Navine Murshid. “They want to think that new, good things are actually possible. So there is a lot of hope.”

Getty Images Bangladesh's former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina inspects the guard of honour during a visit to Thailand in 2024
Bangladesh’s former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was ousted in a 2024 uprising

Who is Tarique Rahman, set to become Bangladesh’s next PM?

Bangladesh Nationalist Party sweeps to victory in first election since Gen Z uprising

The party says its first priority is to bring democracy back to Bangladesh.

“All the democratic institutions [and] financial institutions, which have been destroyed over the last decade, we have to first put those back in order,” senior BNP leader Amir Khasru Mahmud Chowdhury told the BBC shortly after the election was called.

Bangladesh has a long history of such promises being made and broken, with parties becoming increasingly authoritarian once they come to power.

But this time, the country’s young, who came out in the “July uprising” of 2024 that ousted Hasina, appear less tolerant of accepting more of the same.

“We don’t want to fight again,” says Tazin Ahmed, a 19-year-old who participated in the uprising.

“The stepping down of the previous prime minister was not the victory. When our country runs smoothly without any corruption, and the economy becomes good, that will be our main victory.”

Her cousin Tahmina Tasnim, 21, says: “The first thing we want is unity among the people. We have the right to a stable nation and a stable economy. We have been part of an uprising and we know how to fight back. So if the same things start again, we will have the right to do it again.”

Please follow and like us: