The Borneo Post

Bangladesh probes vote rigging claims

Scores dead in clashes, ruling party expected to win historic but controvers­ial third term

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DHAKA: Bangladesh’s Election Commission is investigat­ing allegation­s of vote rigging coming from across the country yesterday as polling for a general election marred by violence drew to a close.

Clashes between supporters of the ruling Awami League and its opponents have killed at least 12 and wounded more than 20, police said.

The main opposition Bangladesh Nationalis­t Party ( BNP) said one of its candidates from Dhaka was stabbed while he was moving around in his constituen­cy.

Police said the circumstan­ces of the attack on Salahuddin Ahmed were not yet clear.

The Election Commission said it would act if rigging was confirmed in the first fully competitiv­e general election in a decade.

“Allegation­s are coming from across the country and those are under investigat­ion,” commission spokesman S. M. Asaduzzama­n said. “If we get any confirmati­on from our own channels then measures will be taken as per rules”.

Reuters reporters across the country of 165 million people saw sparse turnout at polling booths during the election, widely expected to be won by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, giving her a third straight term in office.

Mobile internet was blocked and the streets of the capital were largely deserted as many had left to vote in their home towns. In nine polling centres Reuters reporters visited in Dhaka, posters bearing the Awami League’s “boat” symbol far outnumbere­d those of the opposition.

Mahbub Talukdar, one of the five election commission­ers who stirred a controvers­y last week by saying there was no level- playing field for the parties, said he did not see any opposition polling agents near the Dhaka booth where he voted, suggesting they had been kept away. “I am receiving similar complaints from across the country on phone, but what can I do alone?” he said.

The clashes broke out between workers of the Awami League and its opponents, led by the BNP of former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia.

At least one of the victims was attacked by a machete- carrying group, police said, adding a man from a paramilita­ry auxiliary force also died.

Alleging vote manipulati­on, at least six candidates fighting against the Awami League withdrew from the contest in Khulna, a divisional headquarte­rs 300km southwest of Dhaka.

Rasel, a 34-year- old voter in the southeaste­rn district of Chittagong, said he saw police and some Awami League workers he knew stopping people from entering one polling centre.

“They told me that ‘ voting is going on nicely, you don’t need to go inside’. If you try to enter, you will be in trouble’,” Rasel, who declined to give his second name fearing reprisals, told Reuters by phone.

The local electoral officer said he had investigat­ed the incident and “found long queue in these centres and people were casting votes with a festive mood”.

The Awami League said opposition supporters were wrongly accusing the party.

“Bangladesh TV channels showing peaceful elections, few isolated incidents,” Hasina’s son and Awami League member Sajeeb Wazed said on Twitter.

“Yet opposition increase false allegation­s of irregulari­ties. Trying controvers­y as opinion polls show landslide for governing party.” The BNP boycotted the last election in 2014 claiming it wouldn’t be free and fair.

The party has been hobbled by the absence of Khaleda, 74, who has been in jail since February on corruption charges which she says are politicall­y motivated.

Hasina and Khaleda have alternated in power for most of the last three decades and this is the first election the BNP has contested without its leader.

It stitched together the National Unity Front alliance with smaller parties, but has alleged its supporters and candidates faced attacks and intimidati­on, including shootings and arrests, at the hands of ruling party activists during campaignin­g. – Reuters

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 ??  ?? Voters wait in line outside a polling station while security police officials watch over them in Dhaka. — AFP photo
Voters wait in line outside a polling station while security police officials watch over them in Dhaka. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Hasina (centre) speaks to the media after casting her vote at a polling station in Dhaka. — AFP photo
Hasina (centre) speaks to the media after casting her vote at a polling station in Dhaka. — AFP photo

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