The Star Malaysia

Another term for Hasina

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Bangladesh’s prime minister is sworn in for a record fourth term after a crushing election victory marred by deadly violence.

Dhaka: Sheikh Hasina was sworn in as Bangladesh’s prime minister for a record fourth term after a crushing election victory marred by deadly violence and claims of widespread rigging.

Hasina, 71, has presided over record economic growth in the South Asian country of 165 million people, but critics have accused her of creeping authoritar­ianism.

Her ruling Awami League party and its allies won the Dec 30 elections by a landslide, securing a total of 288 seats in the 300-seat parliament compared to just seven for the main opposition.

The campaign saw mass arrests of opposition activists and candidates and allegation­s of widespread rigging including ballot stuffing and voter intimidati­on.

Seventeen people were killed on election day.

The European Union has called for a probe into allegation­s of irregulari­ties, saying “significan­t obstacles to a level playing field ... tainted the electoral campaign and the vote”.

The United States expressed concern about “credible reports of harassment, intimidati­on and violence”.

The United Nations on Friday said there were indication­s that “reprisals” had targeted the opposition since the election, including physical attacks, arbitrary arrests, harassment, disappeara­nces and filing of criminal cases.

The opposition, which last week boycotted the oath taking ceremony of the newly elected MPs, has demanded fresh polls under a neutral caretaker government – something Hasina and the election commission have rejected outright.

President Abdul Hamid administer­ed Hassina’a oath in a ceremony yesterday at the presidenti­al palace, Bangabhaba­n. A 47-member Cabinet with many new faces was also sworn in.

To her supporters, Hasina is known as Bangladesh’s “mother of humanity” for allowing in hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees fleeing a military crackdown in neighbouri­ng Myanmar in 2017.

Opponents accuse her of jailing arch foe Khaleda Zia on politicall­y motivated charges, of orchestrat­ing mass arrests, enforced disappeara­nces and passing draconian antipress freedom laws. — AFP

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