High hopes for a return to democracypublished at 02:35 GMT 12 February
Yogita Limaye
Reporting from Dhaka
This is the most crucial election for Bangladesh in more than a decade. It’s the first since a mass student uprising ousted the country’s longest serving prime minister Sheikh Hasina in 2024.
There is palpable hope in Bangladesh that this election could see a return to a democratic path for a country that faced years of authoritarian rule under Hasina.
Now convicted and sentenced to death for ordering a brutal crackdown against protesters – as many as 1,400 were killed in just 46 days, according to the UN – Hasina is in exile in neighbouring India. She has rejected the charges against her and has questioned the legitimacy of this election. Her party, the Awami League, is banned from participating in the polls.
While that casts a shadow over authorities' claims that this is a free and fair election, it is the first in a long while where the outcome cannot be predicted with certainty even before voters head to the ballot box.
This election, people feel they do have a choice.






