Bangladesh Election: Skepticism and Concerns Over Manipulation

Bangladesh Election: Skepticism and Concerns Over Manipulation.webp


Dhaka, February 11 Leading political analysts expressed skepticism on Wednesday as Bangladesh is set to hold general elections on Thursday under an interim regime, with some expressing concerns about "uncertainties" and "manipulation" during the polling process.

The 13th parliamentary elections in Bangladesh will take place on Thursday, the first since the ouster of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's Awami League in massive student protests in August 2024.

The center-right Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) is competing against its longtime ally, the far-right Jamaat-e-Islami, in the absence of the now disbanded Awami League. Interim government chief Muhammad Yunus described the election as the best and most historic one in his last nationwide address overnight.

"However, there are still uncertainties," said economist and political analyst Debapriya Bhattacharya, who headed a major committee of the outgoing interim administration on the corruption of the ousted Awami League regime.

Asked about Yunus' promise of a "new settlement for a new Bangladesh," Bhattacharya said, "but the gap is being seen" in the candidate selection process, doubts about voter participation, and the return of old practices – money, muscle, and influence – dominating.

Yunus might have an aspiration, but there is a gap in "aspiration and capability, and we are feeling that gap every day," said Bhattacharya, the founding executive director and currently a distinguished fellow of the Centre for Policy Dialogue.

"There are still many uncertainties: Will everyone be able to vote freely? If they do, will their votes be properly counted? So, we cannot judge until the entire process is over," he told PTI.

Bhattacharya said the interim government knew that the concentration of power within the ruling party and "family-based politics" had crippled the state, yet they did not address this structurally.

Zillur Rahman, a leading TV talk show host and executive director of the Centre for Governance Studies (CGS), echoed this sentiment, stating that most people expected the election to see the end of the interim government, which could not deliver its promised reforms.

"My concern centers around the scenario on election day and after," he said.

Rahman said, despite its stigmas since 1971, Jamaat has been able to create a space, largely, "visibly with interim government backing and western support for geopolitical reasons, using its regimented party structure." "But if voter turnout is high, BNP could win, but if it is low, Jamaat could benefit," Rahman told PTI.

Explaining the BNP weakness, a former BNP lawmaker preferring anonymity said, Tarique Rahman, the new chairman of BNP, is seen as a disadvantage for the party as his physician wife and lawyer daughter are portrayed as important figures giving Jamaat an edge.

"However, I think, the people of Bangladesh have not turned so crazy to vote for a party (Jamaat) which was opposed to the very foundation of the country," said Sabir Mostafa, political affairs writer and former chief of Bangla service of BBC and Voice of Bangla services.

But, he said, the issue of "election manipulation" remained as a real fear factor. Most analysts, however, said the disbanded Awami League, despite its current political wilderness, commands a huge support, and their role will largely influence the voting.

Hasina, who is in exile in India since her ouster, encouraged her party supporters and activists to boycott voting, but most analysts said a significant segment from her lot would cast their ballots because of ground level realities, including security concerns. According to newspaper reports, local Awami leaders, who were exposed to persecution for the past 18 months, appeared on BNP election campaign stages chanting their party’s "Joy Bangla, Joy Bangabandhu" slogans and extending support for BNP candidates at places.

In some other areas, they were trying to woo Jamaat while in both cases they sought to ensure security of their life and livelihood in the post August 5, 2024 period, the media report said.

The analysts, however, said a large number of Awami League supporters would boycott the voting being led by a sense of disfranchisement.

Jon Danilowicz, former deputy head of the US mission in Dhaka, called the election as a "real test" of the country’s political class.

"The real test of Bangladesh’s political class will take place on February 13. Will they be able to accept the verdict of Bangladesh’s voters and play their respective roles in helping to build a new Bangladesh? If not, then the odds of history repeating itself will rise," Danilcowicz, who still keenly follows and comments on Bangladesh’s political affairs, said in a post on X over the weekend.
 
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awami league bangladesh elections bangladesh nationalist party debapriya bhattacharya election manipulation interim government jamaat-e-islami muhammad yunus political analysis sheikh hasina tarique rahman zillur rahman
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