Bangladesh PM front-runner rejects unity government offer, says his party set to win

Bangladesh’s leading prime ministerial contender, Tarique Rahman, returned home in December after nearly two decades in exile in London. (Reuters)
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Updated 09 February 2026
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Bangladesh PM front-runner rejects unity government offer, says his party set to win

  • Bangladesh to vote on February 12 after youth-led uprising
  • Tarique Rahman expects partner-turned-rival Jamaat to be opposition

DHAKA: Bangladesh’s leading prime ministerial contender, Tarique Rahman, on Friday rejected a proposal from his main rival for a unity government after elections next week, saying his party was confident of winning on its own.
Rahman, 60, who heads the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), returned home in December after nearly two decades in exile in London following a youth-led uprising that toppled long-time leader Sheikh Hasina, a bitter rival of his mother, the country’s first woman Prime Minister Khaleda Zia.
The BNP’s main rival in the February 12 election is the Islamist group Jamaat-e-Islami, once banned but now resurgent.
The two parties governed together between 2001 and 2006, and Jamaat has said it is open to renewing the partnership for a unity government to help stabilize the country, whose giant garments industry was badly disrupted by months of turmoil in 2024.
Bangladesh has been run by an interim government ‌since August 2024 when ‌Hasina fled to long-time ally India, where she remains.
“How can I form a government ‌with ⁠my political opponents, and ‌then who would be in the opposition?” Rahman said in an interview at his party office, sitting beneath portraits of his mother and his father, a former president.
“I don’t know what will be their seat number, but if they are in the opposition, I hope to have them as a good opposition.”
His aides said the BNP was confident of winning more than two thirds of the 300 parliamentary seats up for grabs. The party is contesting 292 of them, with allies vying for the rest.
Rahman declined to give a number but said “we are confident that we’ll have enough to form a government.”
All opinion polls have forecast a BNP victory but also a stiff challenge from ⁠the Jamaat alliance, which includes a Gen Z party that emerged from the anti-Hasina protests.
Good relations globally
New Delhi’s decision to shelter Hasina, whom a Dhaka court last year ‌sentenced to death for her role in a deadly crackdown on the protests, ‍has badly strained Bangladesh-India relations while giving China an opening to ‍expand its investments and political outreach.
Asked whether he would pivot away from India toward China should he win, Rahman said Bangladesh ‍needed partners capable of boosting economic growth for its nearly 175 million people.
“If we are in the government, we need to provide jobs for young people. We need to bring businesses into the country so that jobs can be created and people can have a better life,” he said.
“So whoever, while protecting the interests and sovereignty of Bangladesh, offers what is suitable for my people and my country, we will have friendship with them, not with any particular country.”
On Hasina’s presence in India, Rahman said: “She did commit a crime in the eyes of the law in Bangladesh in 2024. A judgment has been passed, so she must be ⁠brought to justice.”
Asked whether Hasina’s children were free to return from abroad and engage in politics, he said: “Whoever is involved in any kind of crime must face the consequences. (But) if someone is accepted by the people, if people welcome them, then anyone has the right to do politics.”
Hasina’s Awami League is banned from contesting the election. Many senior leaders and members of her family were already abroad before her fall or fled around that time.
Rohingya welcome to stay until safe to return
Bangladesh, one of the world’s most densely populated countries with high rates of extreme poverty, hosts nearly 1.2 million Rohingya Muslim refugees, many of whom fled multiple crackdowns in neighboring Buddhist-majority Myanmar, where they are treated as outsiders.
The interim government said last year it had no capacity to allocate additional resources for the refugees “given our numerous challenges” and called on the international community to help repatriate them.
Rahman said he too wanted them to return home but only when conditions were safe.
“We will try to work on the issue so that these people can go back to their own land,” he said. “The situation ‌has to be safe for them to go back there. As long as it is not safe, they are very welcome to stay here.”


Pull him off TV: Steve Bannon shuts down Sen. Lindsey Graham

Updated 43 min 8 sec ago
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Pull him off TV: Steve Bannon shuts down Sen. Lindsey Graham

  • Trump’s former chief strategist called for the senator to be registered as a foreign agent

DUBAI: Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon called on Tuesday for US Senator Lindsey Graham to be registered as a foreign agent of the Israeli government, escalating a growing conservative backlash against the senator’s vocal support for Israel.

Speaking on his podcast “War Room,” Bannon said Graham should be “pulled off of television,” adding: "This is dangerous… because you have guys like Lindsey Graham and dozens more that are doing the wrong thing.”

In a Fox News interview on Monday, Graham said: “To all the antisemites, to all the isolationists… I’m not with you, I’m with Israel, I will be with Israel to our dying day.”
Graham also urged Gulf Arab states to join military action against Iran. “What I want you to do in the Middle East, to our friends in Saudi Arabia and other places, [is] step forward and say, ‘this is my fight too, I join America, I’m publicly involved in bringing this regime down,’” he said.

In a post on X, Graham questioned the value of a US defense agreement with Saudi Arabia following the evacuation of the American embassy in Riyadh, writing: “Why should America do a defense agreement with a country like the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia that is unwilling to join a fight of mutual interest?”

Faisal Abbas, editor-in-chief of Arab News, responded to Graham’s comments in a Sky News interview, saying: “He flip flops so much, it’s actually entertaining.”

“On one hand, he says he will never set foot in Saudi Arabia. The next day, he’s here signing multimillion-dollar deals.”

“I don’t think anyone here takes him seriously,” Abbas added.

He warned Graham to be careful what he wished for: “Do you really want Saudi Arabia involved in this war putting our oil facilities at risk or do you want us stabilizing the energy markets?”

Graham pressed further, warning that inaction would carry a price. “Hopefully Gulf Cooperation Council countries will get more involved as this fight is in their backyard. If you are not willing to use your military now, when are you willing to use it?”

“Hopefully this changes soon. If not, consequences will follow.”

 

 

Graham's remarks drew sharp criticism from Bannon and others including podcast host Megyn Kelly.

She questioned on X whether Graham was overstepping his authority as a senator, writing: “When did Lindsay Graham become our president?”

Kelly also said Graham had threatened Lebanon, Cuba, Saudi Arabia, the wider Arab region, and Spain within a 24-hour period.

 

 

The problem with Graham “isn’t (just) that he’s a homicidal maniac, it’s that Trump likes and is listening to him,” she said in another post.