Bangladesh's national election February 2026
Tasnim Jara’s Dhaka-9 nomination scrapped, plans to appeal
The nomination paper of Tasnim Jara, an independent candidate and former leader of the National Citizen Party (NCP), for the Dhaka-9 constituency was cancelled on Saturday (January 03, 2026).
Dhaka’s Deputy Commissioner and Returning Officer Md Rezaul Karim announced the decision around 11:30am.
Read more: Tasnim Jara quits NCP; to contest as independent candidate
Talking to reporters, Jara said she would file an appeal with the Election Commission (EC) challenging the cancellation.
“The nomination paper I submitted as an independent candidate for Dhaka-9 has not been accepted at this stage. However, we will appeal. I have already started the appeal process,” Jara told journalists at the Divisional Commissioner’s office in city's Segunbagicha.
Explaining the grounds for the cancellation, Jara said her nomination was rejected due to discrepancies involving the voter information of two signatories among the required one percent of voters’ signatures for independent candidates.
“One voter lives in Khilgaon. Since Khilgaon falls under both Dhaka-9 and Dhaka-11, he was unaware that he was not a voter of Dhaka-9, and there was no way for him to know. He checked the website but could not find his voter number. Based on his NID, he believed he was a Dhaka-9 voter and signed accordingly,” she said
Tasnim Jara declares assets worth Tk 19 lakh, annual income Tk 7 lakh
In the second case, she said, the address mentioned on the voter’s NID hard copy indicated Dhaka-9, leading the person to believe he was a voter of the constituency. “However, according to Election Commission records, he is not a Dhaka-9 voter, which again was beyond his knowledge,” she said.
Describing the cancellation as a challenge in her electoral journey, Jara said she is prepared to face it through the legal process.
3 days ago
UN chief urges calm, restraint ahead of Bangladesh elections
UN Secretary-General António Guterres has called for calm and urged all concerned in Bangladesh to refrain from violence, reduce tensions and exercise maximum restraint in order to preserve a peaceful electoral environment as the country heads to elections in February.
The UN Secretary-General condemned the killing of Sharif Osman Bin Hadi and extended his condolences to his family.
The UN Chief called on the authorities to conduct a prompt, impartial investigation, in line with international human rights standards.
Amnesty urges accountability over Hadi murder, mob violence
"I have been asked about the current situation in Bangladesh, and I can tell you that the Secretary-General condemns the killing of a youth protest leader, Sharif Osman Bin Hadi, and extends his condolences to his family," said Stéphane Dujarric, Spokesman for the Secretary-General, during a regular briefing at the UN Headquarters on December 19.
17 days ago
Seat-Sharing Puzzle: BNP faces uphill task to reach amicable deal with allies
BNP is facing an uphill task to reach an amicable understanding with its political allies and calm their anger over seat sharing after announcing its own candidates in 272 constituencies in two phases ahead of the 13th parliamentary election.
Talking to UNB, some BNP and alliance leaders said several allied parties became upset as they expected more seats than BNP offered them, while some others became angry after getting only promises of future evaluation without any seat.
BNP leaders, however, said they have continued talks to reach a compromise on seat-sharing and keep the alliance united.
On Wednesday, BNP held separate meetings in Dhaka with two alliance platforms involved in the anti-fascist joint movement – Jatiyatabadi Samamona Jote and the 12-Party Alliance.
Read more: BNP weighing review of ‘controversial’ nominations amid grassroots unrest
A BNP Standing Committee member, wishing anonymity, said they told allies that seats could be reviewed in favour of strong candidates from partner parties.
He said some seats where BNP has already announced its candidates may be reconsidered for allies.
The BNP leader, however, said they made it clear that due to strategy it will not be possible to leave all demanded seats for partners.
In that case, he said, they assured allies that if the party forms the next government, their leaders will be given important posts in the Upper House of Parliament or in different state institutions.
BNP leaders said they are determined to keep the alliance united logically and responsibly. “We are trying to reach an understanding with the allies by providing them with a logical number of seats.”
Read more: Concerns grow over ‘administrative preparations’ for Bangladesh election
So far, BNP has declared candidates in 272 seats, leaving 28 seats vacant, and the party has said the remaining seats are mainly for its allies.
But alliance leaders claimed that they submitted their candidate lists as BNP requested, yet BNP announced its nominees without discussion.
Top leaders from several small alliance parties who were seeking nominations in at least six constituencies were not considered, as BNP announced its own candidates there.
On 10 December, 29 allied parties, including Ganatantra Mancha, the 12-Party Alliance, the Jatiyatabadi Samamona Jote, Gono Odhikar Parishad and Gonoforum, met at Shishu Kallyan Parishad to decide their next steps and demanded that BNP clarify its seat-sharing policy.
Following that pressure, BNP on Wednesday met the two allies separately to calm frustrations.
The first meeting took place between 12pm and 1pm with the Jatiyatabadi Samamona Jote at the BNP Chairperson’s Gulshan office.
Read more: BNP nomination hopefuls frustrated as party delays green signal
BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, Standing Committee Members Nazrul Islam Khan and Iqbal Hasan Mahmud Tuku represented BNP.
Alliance convener Dr Fariduzzaman Farhad and several leaders attended the meeting and raised various demands and voiced frustration that BNP announced its candidates without discussion, said a leader of the platform.
He said they told BNP that they had stayed with the party in the joint movement and would continue to support the party to ensure victory for the ‘sheaf of paddy’, BNP’s election symbol.
The alliance leader said they requested BNP to reconsider the Narail-2 constituency for their chief Dr Farhad, who contested the seat in the 2018 election.
He said Mirza Fakhrul told the meeting that BNP was seriously considering reviewing the Narail-2 seat.
“It would not be possible to give seats to all alliance partners due to strategic reasons, but those who do not receive seats will be honoured later based on merit if BNP forms the government,” he quoted Fakhrul as saying.
After the meeting, Dr Farhad told UNB that the talks were “positive” and expressed confidence in BNP’s leadership.
Read more: Bangladesh must avoid return to fascism: Moyeen Khan
Later, from 4pm to 5pm, BNP held another meeting with the 12-Party Alliance, where alliance leaders placed highest importance on three seats – Kushtia-2, Kishoreganj-5 and Pirojpur-1.
Two of the seats already have BNP candidates, while Pirojpur-1 remains vacant.
A leader of the 12-Party Alliance said BNP leaders assured them that their demands would be given serious consideration.
Contacted, BNP Standing Committee member Iqbal Hasan Mahmud Tuku said they are in talks with alliance partners to reach an understanding over the seat-sharing issue.
He, however, said it may not be possible to satisfy every partner by giving them seats, as winning the election must remain the priority. “So, we consider sharing seats only with those who have the potential to win.”
Tuku said BNP has finalised its candidates after careful assessment of many factors. “We have still kept 28 seats vacant and many of those will be shared with our alliance partners. Everyone needs to be patient.”
Read more: BNP forms reception committee ahead of Tarique’s return
20 days ago
EC to send SMS urging govt officials to register for postal voting
The Election Commission (EC) has instructed the relevant authorities to send SMS alerts to all government officials and employees, encouraging them to register for voting through postal ballots ahead of the upcoming parliamentary election and the referendum on the July Charter.
The instruction was given in a letter signed on Wednesday (December 17) by KM Ali Newaz, Additional Secretary of the Election Commission and Project Director of the OCV–SDI project.
According to the letter, government officials and employees working inside the country, as well as officers and employees of the armed forces who receive salaries through the iBAS++ system, will be able to cast their votes through an IT-supported postal ballot after completing registration via the “Postal Vote BD” app.
The registration process will remain open until December 25, 2025, the letter said.
Read more: EU deploys election observation mission to Bangladesh
The 13th parliamentary election and the referendum will be held simultaneously on February 12, 2026.
The EC has instructed the authorities concerned to send SMS messages to all military and civilian government officials and employees who are drawing salaries through the iBAS++ system, requesting them to complete their registration through the app by the stipulated deadline.
The SMS text will be “All government officials and employees (military and civilian) are requested to complete registration through the ‘Postal Vote BD’ app by December 25, 2025, to cast votes through IT-supported postal ballots.”
The Commission said postal ballots will be sent by mail to the registered voters’ addresses. After casting their votes, voters will have to return the ballots in the provided return envelopes to the respective returning officers.
Though the postal balloting system has been in the laws for a long time, it was never practised in the previous elections.
Read more: ‘In-Country Postal Vote’ registration to continue till Dec 25: EC
This is the first time the Election Commission has introduced an IT-supported hybrid postal balloting system, enabling expatriates, government staff, polling personnel, and the persons who will be in the legal custody to exercise their franchise through a combination of digital registration and manual voting.
Among them, the probable polling personnel who are not in the government services, and the prisoners will be able to register after December 17 to 25 for voting through the postal ballots in the upcoming election.
So far 46,701 government officials and employees registered through the app to vote in the February-12 election after the announcement of the election schedule announced on December 11.
The Election Commission said postal ballots will be sent by mail to the registered voters’ addresses. After casting their votes, voters will have to return the ballots in the provided return envelopes to the respective returning officers.
The EC also said that instructions in this regard have already been sent to the Secretary of the Finance Division.
According to the election schedule, the deadline for the submission of nomination paper is December 29, while the scrutiny of nomination paper is on December 30-January 4 and the last date for the withdrawal of candidature is January 20. The election campaign will start on January 22 and continue till 48 hours before the balloting period (7:30am on February 10).
Read more: February election to lay strong foundation for democracy: Rizwana
20 days ago