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Bangladesh set for yet another shutdown in election row

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Members of the elite force Rapid Action Battalion stand guard in the streets during the the first day of the 60-hour countrywide shutdown called by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party in Dhaka. Photo: EPA

The opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) on Saturday announced another 84-hour nationwide strike, starting on Sunday, after police arrested BNP leaders, triggering violent protests across the country.

The aim of the strike is to force the ruling Awami League to hold elections, due by January at the latest, under a non-partisan caretaker government.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has repeatedly refused. Instead, she has offered the formation of an all-party government to see through the elections with her staying in charge.

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The deadlock, nothing new in Bangladesh, has led to the deaths of at least 18 people during several violent protests and shutdowns.

The mounting tension is a fresh threat to Bangladesh’s US$22 billion (HK$171 billion) garment export industry, the economic lifeblood of the impoverished country of 160 million, which has already been rocked by a string of deadly factory accidents this year.

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“To protest the arrests of our senior leaders, we were forced to extend the shutdown by another 12 hours to 84 hours”, said Ruhul Kabir Rizvi, Joint Secretary General of the BNP.

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