The Star Malaysia

Hasina celebrates ‘absolute victory’

PM’S fifth term win raises doubts over legitimacy

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the nation’s Prime Minister sheikh hasina has won a fifth term in power with her party taking three-quarters of seats in parliament, election officials said after polls boycotted by the opposition as a “sham”.

hasina has presided over breakneck economic growth in a country once beset by grinding poverty, but her government has been accused of rampant human rights abuses and a ruthless crackdown on dissent.

“the Awami league has won the election,” Moniruzzam­an talukder, joint secretary of the election Commission, said yesterday, a day after a vote that initial reports suggested drew a meagre turnout of around 40%.

talukder said hasina’s party had won 223 seats.

But the support of other lawmakers, including from allied parties, means her actual control over the 300-seat parliament is even higher, analysts said.

“this is a one-party parliament,” Ali Riaz of illinois state University said, adding that “only the allies of the Awami league had the opportunit­y to participat­e”.

the Jatiya Party, which won 11 seats, is a long-time ally of hasina’s Awami league, as are many of the 61 independen­t candidates, said Mubashar hasan, a political scientist at the University of Oslo.

“this election has legitimise­d one-party rule in the country with no credible and effective opposition in the parliament,” hasan said.

“Almost all the independen­t candidates who won the parliament­ary seats are also part of the Awami league.”

Among the victors was Bangladesh cricket team captain shakib Al hasan, who won a seat for the ruling party.

Opposition activists staged a protest yesterday in Dhaka, wearing black gags over their mouths to condemn the election.

hasina’s party faced almost no effective rivals in the seats it contested, but it avoided fielding candidates in a few constituen­cies, in an apparent effort to avoid the legislatur­e being branded a one-party institutio­n.

the opposition Bangladesh Nationalis­t Party (BNP), which has seen its ranks diminished by mass arrests, called a general strike and, along with dozens of others, refused to participat­e in what they dubbed a “sham election”.

hasina, 76, called for citizens to show faith in the democratic process and branded the BNP “a terrorist organisati­on” after she voted on sunday.

BNP head tarique Rahman, speaking from Britain where he lives in exile, called the result “a disgrace to the democratic aspiration­s of Bangladesh”, in a social media post, alleging he had seen “disturbing pictures and videos” backing his claims.

Meenakshi ganguly, from human Rights Watch, said sunday that the government had failed to reassure opposition supporters that the polls would be fair, warning that “many fear a further crackdown”. —

 ?? AFP ?? Up in arms: Members of the Bangladesh Gono Odhikar Parishad party taking part in a protest to condemn the general election in dhaka. —
AFP Up in arms: Members of the Bangladesh Gono Odhikar Parishad party taking part in a protest to condemn the general election in dhaka. —

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