Jamaat Warns of Strong Movement Over Alleged Bangladesh Poll Manipulation

Bangladesh's Jamaat-e-Islami has issued a strong warning, threatening a tougher movement if it believes citizens' voting rights were manipulated through conspiracy. The party expressed deep dissatisfaction with the election results process, criticizing the Election Commission for bias and failing to publish voter turnout figures. Unofficial results indicate a decisive victory for the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP)-led alliance, which has reportedly won 210 seats. This sets the stage for BNP Chairman Tarique Rahman, son of the late former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, to lead the new government.

Key Points: Bangladesh Jamaat Warns of Movement Over Election Manipulation

  • Jamaat warns of strong movement
  • Alleges election result manipulation
  • Criticizes Election Commission bias
  • BNP alliance wins parliamentary majority
3 min read

Bangladesh: Jamaat warns of stronger movement over alleged poll manipulation

Jamaat-e-Islami alleges election result manipulation, criticizes Election Commission, as BNP alliance wins, setting stage for Tarique Rahman to become PM.

"if anyone conspires or plots using the people's opinions, we will not accept it. - Ehsanul Mahbub Jubayer"

Dhaka, Feb 13

Bangladesh's radical Islamist party Jamaat-e-Islami on Friday warned that it would launch a strong movement if citizens' opinions and voting rights were "manipulated" through any form of conspiracy, local media reported.

Addressing reporters at the Election Commission premises in Dhaka, Jamaat's Assistant Secretary General Ehsanul Mahbub Jubayer stated that any attempt to undermine the people's mandate and voting rights through conspiracies would prompt Jamaat to announce programmes and, if needed, pursue a tougher movement.

Jubayer stated that Jamaat respects all opinions expressed by people in a dignified manner, "but if anyone conspires or plots using the people's opinions, we will not accept it."

Meanwhile, in its social media platform on Friday, Jamaat expressed dissatisfaction with the election results process, while extending gratitude to voters for casting their ballots in such large numbers.

Jamaat also criticised the Election Commission for failing to publish voter turnout figures and accused a section of the administration of showing bias in favour of a major political party.

"We are not satisfied with the process surrounding the election results. From candidates of the 11-party alliance narrowly and suspiciously losing in various constituencies, to repeated inconsistencies and fabrications in unofficial result announcements, the Election Commission's reluctance to publish voter turnout percentages, and indications that a section of the administration leaned towards a major party- all of this undoubtedly raises serious questions about the integrity of the results process," the post stated.

The remarks came after local media, citing unofficial results, reported that the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and its alliance emerged victorious in the 13th parliamentary elections.

The announced results showed that the BNP-led alliance has won 210 seats, setting the stage for the formation of a new government led by BNP.

Citing party sources, Bangladeshi Bengali daily, Jugantor, reported that party chairman Tarique is set to lead the government, marking the return of a male Prime Minister in Bangladesh after almost 35 years.

Following the vote count on Thursday night, the unofficial results from various constituencies were announced.

According to unofficial results from the Dhaka-17 constituency, Tarique secured 72,699 votes, defeating his closest rival, Jamaat-e-Islami candidate S.M. Khaliduzzaman, who received 68,300 votes, Bangladeshi Bengali daily Prothom Alo reported.

Additionally, BNP Chairman Tarique was unofficially elected from Bogra-6 constituency, receiving 216,284 votes from 150 centres. His nearest rival, Jamaat candidate Abidur Rahman Sohel, secured 97,626 votes under the party's scale symbol.

Tarique is the son of former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, who governed Bangladesh during two separate tenures from 1991 to 1996 and from 2001 to 2006.

Following Khaleda Zia's death in December last year, Tarique assumed leadership of the BNP and is now set to lead the nation.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Watching from abroad, it's hard to know the full picture. But any party threatening a "stronger movement" right after elections sounds like a recipe for instability. The focus should be on legal challenges and audit processes, not street protests.
V
Vikram M
The return of a male PM after 35 years is a big story! But Jamaat's warnings are serious. Not publishing voter turnout figures is a major red flag 🚩. The EC must clarify this immediately to maintain public trust.
P
Priya S
Respectfully, I think Jamaat is being a sore loser. They lost by significant margins in the constituencies mentioned. Sometimes you just lose an election. Constant cries of conspiracy without overwhelming evidence weaken democracy.
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Rohit P
Bangladesh's political drama always has ripple effects here. A BNP government led by Tarique Zia will mean recalibrating our foreign policy. Hope the transition is peaceful. 🇮🇳🤝🇧🇩
K
Kavya N
The allegations are specific - inconsistent unofficial results, no turnout figures, administrative bias. These aren't vague complaints. The EC should provide a point-by-point rebuttal or order re-counts where needed. The integrity of the process is everything.

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