The Bangladesh Nationalist Party have demanded polls expected early next year are overseen by a neutral caretaker government.
Dhaka, Bangladesh – Thousands of opposition supporters rallied in the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka on Friday, demanding Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina step down and make way for a neutral caretaker administration to oversee a general election expected early next year.
Leaders and activists of the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) gathered at the protest site in Dhaka’s Naya Paltan area amid stringent security measures, with about 8,000 security personnel deployed.
About a kilometre (0.62 miles) from the protest site, supporters of the ruling Awami League (AL) party held what they called a “peace rally”. The protests ended peacefully.
Addressing the opposition rally, BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir said the opposition movement has become a “sea of people”, adding that people “don’t want this government anymore”.
Alamgir reiterated his party’s demand for a caretaker government to oversee the elections, adding that there was no scope of “having any fair election under this government”.
The senior BNP leader, who has been leading the party after its founding leader and former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia was jailed in a corruption case, accused the ruling party of authoritarianism, failing to tackle inflation and subverting democratic institutions. The BNP says Zia’s conviction in 2018 was politically motivated.
“Every important institution of the country has been destroyed and people’s rights have been taken away. Price hikes of every essential have made people’s lives miserable,” he told the crowd of supporters.
The BNP has honed in on the cost of living crisis to galvanise supporters, drawing thousands of people to its rallies in the past few months.
Prime Minister Hasina has refused to resign and her Awami League party has said the demand for a caretaker government was unconstitutional. In 2011, the South Asian nation’s Supreme Court struck down the 15-year-old constitutional provision that allowed an incumbent government to transfer power to an unelected non-partisan caretaker administration to oversee a new parliamentary election.
Previous parliamentary elections in 1996, 2001 and 2008 took place under a caretaker government, which were considered free and fair by both local and foreign observers.
Reports of detentions
Several local media outlets reported that police detained dozens of people connected with the BNP in Aminbazar – an entrance point for the capital. Police rejected the allegations.
Uzzal Ahmed, a BNP activist from Gazipur district told Al Jazeera that he was lucky to have reached the rally. “I saw police detained some of our activists in Aminbazar after checking their mobile phones,” he told Al Jazeera.
Shahidul Islam, Additional Police Super of the Aminbazar area, said police were manning routine checkpoints.