Bangladesh's Yunus announces elections in April 2026

Bangladesh's Muhammad Yunus announces elections in April 2026(HT_PRINT)
Bangladesh will hold elections in early April 2026 for the
first time since a mass uprising overthrew the government last year, interim
leader Muhammad Yunus said Friday.
The South Asian nation of around 170 million people has been
in political turmoil since former prime minister Sheikh Hasina was ousted by a
student-led revolt in August 2024, ending her iron-fisted rule of 15 years.
"I am announcing to the citizens of the country that
the election will be held on any day in the first half of April 2026,"
said Yunus, the 84-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner who leads the caretaker
government.
Political parties jostling for power have been repeatedly
demanding that Yunus fix an election timetable, while he has said time is needed as
the country requires an overhaul of its democratic institutions after Hasina's
tenure.
"The government has been doing everything necessary to
create an environment conducive to holding the election," he added in the
television broadcast, while repeating his warning that reforms were needed.
"It should be remembered that Bangladesh has plunged
into deep crisis every time it has held a flawed election," he said, in a
speech given on the eve of the Eid al-Adha holiday in the Muslim-majority
nation.
"A political party usurped power through such elections
in the past, and became a barbaric fascist force."
Hasina's rule saw widespread human rights abuses, and her
government was accused of politicising courts and the civil service, as well as
staging lopsided elections.
The interim government had already repeatedly vowed to hold
elections before June 2026, but said the more time it had to enact reforms, the
better.
The key Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), seen as the
election frontrunner, has in recent weeks been pushing hard for polls to be
held by December.
Army chief General Waker-Uz-Zaman, in a speech to officers
in May, also said that elections should be held by December, according to both
Bangladeshi media and military sources.
Days after that speech, the government warned that political
power struggles risked jeopardising gains that have been made.
"Those who organise such elections are later viewed as
culprits, and those who assume office through them become targets of public
hatred," Yunus said on Friday.
"One of the biggest responsibilities of this government
is to ensure a transparent... and widely participatory election so that the
country does not fall into a new phase of crisis," he added.
"That is why institutional reform is of utmost
importance."
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