Bangladesh Supreme Court restores caretaker government system, referendum provision
Dhaka, July 9
The Appellate Division of the Bangladesh Supreme Court upheld a High Court verdict that scrapped part of the 15th Amendment to the Constitution, which had abolished the caretaker government system, and restored provisions for holding referendums on constitutional amendments.
On Wednesday, a four-member bench of the Appellate Division, headed by Chief Justice Zubayer Rahman Chowdhury, dismissed the appeals challenging the High Court judgment and seeking the cancellation of the entire 15th Amendment.
Attorney General Md Ruhul Quddus Kazal told reporters following the verdict that the amendment had also introduced several significant changes to the Constitution.
The historic ruling officially reverses a contentious 2011 decision by the Sheikh Hasina government that dismantled the caretaker framework.
Parliament passed the 15th Constitutional Amendment on June 30, 2011, scrapping the 13th Amendment, which had introduced the caretaker government system in 1996.
The bill received presidential assent on July 3 that year.
Apart from abolishing the caretaker government system, it gave constitutional recognition to Sheikh Mujibur Rahman as the Father of the Nation, increased the number of reserved parliamentary seats for women from 45 to 50, restored secularism and freedom of religion, and reaffirmed nationalism, socialism, democracy, and secularism as the state's fundamental principles.
Decades later, on December 17, 2024, the High Court scrapped part of the 15th Amendment that had abolished the caretaker government system and restored provisions for holding referendums on constitutional amendments, a decision now validated by the apex court.
Although the Supreme Court has reinstated this system to guarantee impartial supervision during democratic transitions, it clarified that the caretaker arrangement will not govern the present transitional interim administration.
Instead, the mechanism is set to be implemented for the 14th parliamentary elections and all future electoral cycles.
— ANI
Reader Comments
Interesting timing though - why not apply it to the current interim government? Feels like a half-measure. But I suppose setting it for future elections is still better than nothing. Let's see how this plays out, especially for the 14th polls.
Good to see democratic institutions asserting themselves in Bangladesh. The 15th Amendment had too many unilateral changes. Restoring the caretaker system and referendum provisions is a check on executive overreach. Something we can appreciate as neighbours. 🙏
I don't fully understand why Sheikh Hasina's government scrapped it in 2011. The caretaker system was working fine, no? Anyway, happy for Bangladesh - this should reduce political tension during elections. Also interesting that they kept the other 15th Amendment changes like secularism and women's seats.
As someone who follows South Asian politics closely, this is a watershed moment. The 2011 amendment was a power grab, plain and simple. Now the judiciary has corrected course. But I'm skeptical - will the main parties actually agree on a caretaker head? That's always the tricky part. 🤔
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