The Bangladesh Nationalist Party won a landmark parliamentary election, a local TV station showed, as ballots were counted in a pivotal vote that is expected to restore political stability in the troubled South Asian country.
BNP won 151 seats in the 300-member ‘Jatiya Sangsad’, or House of the Nation, Ekattor TV showed, crossing the halfway mark for a simple majority.
Its main rival, the Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami, had 42 seats. Jamaat chief Shafiqur Rahman indicated the party was conceding even before BNP touched the halfway number.
Votes were cast yesterday and tens of millions of Bangladeshis turned up for what was the first election since the 2024 Gen Z-driven uprising that toppled long-time Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.
Turnout appeared on track to exceed the 42 per cent recorded in the last election in 2024. Local media reported that more than 60pc of registered voters were expected to have cast ballots.
More than 2,000 candidates – including many independents – were on the ballot, and at least 50 parties contested, a national record. Voting in one constituency was postponed after a candidate died.
Opinion polls had indicated that the BNP-led alliance held an edge. The BNP contested 292 of the 300 seats, leaving the remaining to its coalition partners, which include more than half a dozen smaller parties.