Berliner Boersenzeitung - Ban on ousted ex-ruling party divides Bangladesh voters

EUR -
AED 4.238176
AFN 80.574631
ALL 98.336545
AMD 442.331067
ANG 2.065797
AOA 1058.274258
ARS 1372.176153
AUD 1.775753
AWG 2.077311
AZN 1.943165
BAM 1.963467
BBD 2.332026
BDT 141.14359
BGN 1.959627
BHD 0.43541
BIF 3439.01823
BMD 1.154061
BND 1.483431
BOB 7.981374
BRL 6.412306
BSD 1.15504
BTN 99.38896
BWP 15.525026
BYN 3.779792
BYR 22619.604042
BZD 2.320059
CAD 1.568629
CDF 3320.235035
CHF 0.937606
CLF 0.028093
CLP 1078.043159
CNY 8.278774
CNH 8.292566
COP 4788.350904
CRC 582.173296
CUC 1.154061
CUP 30.582628
CVE 110.697256
CZK 24.812898
DJF 205.673122
DKK 7.457978
DOP 68.216968
DZD 150.318611
EGP 57.405293
ERN 17.310921
ETB 155.823417
FJD 2.592887
FKP 0.849378
GBP 0.850024
GEL 3.156334
GGP 0.849378
GHS 11.896765
GIP 0.849378
GMD 81.361334
GNF 10008.181945
GTQ 8.875735
GYD 241.643591
HKD 9.058834
HNL 30.144974
HRK 7.531638
HTG 151.472794
HUF 402.547516
IDR 18806.882062
ILS 4.155354
IMP 0.849378
INR 99.391454
IQD 1513.021377
IRR 48585.986115
ISK 143.945982
JEP 0.849378
JMD 184.92215
JOD 0.818255
JPY 166.336603
KES 149.202965
KGS 100.922275
KHR 4631.199512
KMF 494.515373
KPW 1038.744433
KRW 1579.63956
KWD 0.353431
KYD 0.962484
KZT 592.417908
LAK 24920.24123
LBP 103473.147708
LKR 345.833359
LRD 231.004039
LSL 20.600599
LTL 3.407643
LVL 0.69808
LYD 6.310642
MAD 10.560428
MDL 19.731032
MGA 5215.383338
MKD 61.54081
MMK 2422.97149
MNT 4131.781637
MOP 9.337662
MRU 45.853448
MUR 52.267441
MVR 17.778256
MWK 2002.727708
MXN 21.864721
MYR 4.898935
MZN 73.80223
NAD 20.600956
NGN 1789.106392
NIO 42.506716
NOK 11.451226
NPR 158.260329
NZD 1.914009
OMR 0.44373
PAB 1.154061
PEN 4.168952
PGK 4.824883
PHP 64.818725
PKR 326.195126
PLN 4.27053
PYG 9216.174728
QAR 4.213289
RON 5.028935
RSD 117.161195
RUB 92.12258
RWF 1667.855492
SAR 4.332067
SBD 9.633402
SCR 16.742461
SDG 693.016764
SEK 10.967011
SGD 1.479096
SHP 0.906911
SLE 25.446916
SLL 24200.085705
SOS 660.095118
SRD 43.159262
STD 23886.741574
SVC 10.106464
SYP 15005.205693
SZL 20.587221
THB 37.389571
TJS 11.665352
TMT 4.039215
TND 3.417605
TOP 2.778703
TRY 45.50219
TTD 7.832585
TWD 34.143483
TZS 2994.789763
UAH 47.908875
UGX 4162.279483
USD 1.154061
UYU 47.430903
UZS 14675.382603
VES 116.487943
VND 30092.899249
VUV 138.44536
WST 3.172315
XAF 655.730954
XAG 0.03192
XAU 0.000337
XCD 3.118908
XDR 0.814464
XOF 655.730954
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.8119
ZAR 20.626257
ZMK 10387.942435
ZMW 28.44333
ZWL 371.60731
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Ban on ousted ex-ruling party divides Bangladesh voters
Ban on ousted ex-ruling party divides Bangladesh voters / Photo: Indranil MUKHERJEE - AFP/File

Ban on ousted ex-ruling party divides Bangladesh voters

The banning of fugitive ex-leader Sheikh Hasina's party offers a sliver of justice for Bangladeshis demanding she face trial for crimes against humanity but also raises concerns about the inclusivity of elections.

Text size:

"The government has taken the right decision," said Jahangir Alam, whose 19-year-old son was killed during the mass uprising that forced Hasina into exile in August 2024, ending the 15 years of iron-fisted control by her once all-powerful Awami League party.

"Because of her, the Awami League is now ruined," Alam said, demanding Hasina return from India to comply with the arrest warrant on charges related to the crackdown that killed at least 1,400 protesters.

"Who gave Sheikh Hasina the authority to kill my son?" said Alam, the father of Ibrahim Hossain Zahid, accusing 77-year-old Hasina of being a "mass murderer".

Bangladesh's oldest political party played a key role in the country's liberation war from Pakistan in 1971 and was once led by Hasina's late father, the nation's founding figure, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.

"People used to hang Mujib's photo over their heads," he said. "Because of Sheikh Hasina's wrongdoing, that photo is now under our feet."

- 'Democratic space may shrink' -

Political fortunes rise and fall quickly in Bangladesh.

Hasina's government was blamed for extensive human rights abuses and protesters demanded that the interim government led by Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus take action.

The South Asian nation of some 170 million people last held elections in January 2024, when Hasina won a fourth term in the absence of genuine opposition parties.

Yunus promises that inclusive elections will be held by June 2026 at the latest.

Among those demanding the Awami League ban was the National Citizen's Party made up of many of the students who spearheaded last year's uprising.

Others were supporters of the Hefazat-e-Islam group and Jamaat-e-Islami, the largest Islamist political party.

Jamaat-e-Islami was banned during Hasina's time in power and several of its leaders were tried and hanged. Unsurprisingly, its members were vocal supporters of the ban.

The government banned the Awami League on May 12 after protests outside Yunus's home, pending the trial of Hasina.

"The oppressed have begun becoming oppressors," said Latif Siddiqui, a veteran Awami League member and former minister, adding that the party was wider than Hasina alone.

"She is not the whole Awami League," he said. "Many loved the party."

Human Rights Watch issued stinging criticism on Thursday, warning that "imposing a ban on any speech or activity deemed supportive of a political party is an excessive restriction on fundamental freedoms that mirrors the previous government's abusive clampdown".

However, political analyst Farhad Mazhar, an ideological guru for many student protesters, said the ban was required.

"The democratic space may shrink, but the Awami League has shown no remorse," Mazhar said.

- 'Stripping the voting rights' -

However, Jatiya Party chairman GM Quader said that banning any party stifled democracy.

"We believe in multi-party democracy," he said.

His party had been close with the Awami League under Hasina, Quader said, but it had also opposed the ban on Jamaat-e-Islami.

"We don't support banning any political party that... follows the rules," Quader said.

Jamaat-e-Islami supported Islamabad during Bangladesh's independence war from Pakistan in 1971. Rivals now question if it, too, should be restricted for its historical role.

"If the Awami League is banned for mass murder, then the question arises -- what will happen to those parties that were involved in genocide, directly or indirectly?" Quader said.

"In the history of Bangladesh, the most people were killed during the Liberation War."

The Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), widely tipped to win the elections when they happen, has taken a more pragmatic approach.

Key leader Amir Khasru Mahmud Chowdhury has said there is no bar on former Awami League loyalists joining his party, so long as they had not previously worked to "suppress" the BNP.

Regardless, the upcoming vote will now take place without what was one of Bangladesh's most popular parties.

Mamun Al Mostofa, professor of political science at Dhaka University, pointed out the party had been "banned before and went through severe crises... but it made a comeback".

Shahdeen Malik, a Supreme Court lawyer and constitutional expert, said a strong opposition helped support democracy.

"AL had a vote bank of around 30 percent of the total electorate," Malik said, noting that Hasina escalated her grip on power after crushing opponents in the 2008 election.

"Due to their atrocities, they may have lost some of that support -- but it is still unlikely to drop below 20 percent," he said.

"Stripping the voting rights of this 20 percent won't benefit anyone."

(O.Joost--BBZ)