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Dozens of polling stations set on fire in Bangladesh on eve of vote

The country’s opposition began enforcing a 48-hour general strike on the eve of elections they call farcical

People look at burnt textbooks after a primary school which was supposed to be used as a polling booth was set on fire, in Feni, Bangladesh on Saturday.
Stringer/Reuters

Nearly 60 polling stations in Bangladesh were set on fire and three people were killed on the eve of Sunday's election in which the ruling Awami League looks certain to prevail in a walkover as the main opposition party boycotts the poll.

The Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) called a 48-hour strike from Saturday morning and urged voters to stay away from the "farcical" election. Traffic in Dhaka was lighter than normal for a Saturday, although some shops were open.

Without the BNP's participation, fewer than half of 300 parliamentary constituencies are being contested.

"I call upon countrymen to fully boycott the disgraceful farce in the name of election of January 5," BNP chief Begum Khaleda Zia, who has been under what she calls virtual house arrest, said in a statement on Friday. The government has denied that she is confined or under house arrest.

The BNP is protesting Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's scrapping of the practice of having a caretaker government oversee elections, and many of its leaders are in jail or in hiding. The impasse undermines the poll's legitimacy and is fuelling worries of economic gridlock and further violence in the impoverished South Asian nation of 160 million.

The prime minister's office has been held by Hasina or Khaleda for all but two of the past 22 years, and the rivalry between them is bitter.

The election commission said nearly 60 polling stations had been set ablaze since Friday, while police said three people were killed early on Saturday in clashes in rural Bangladesh as violence flared after several days of relative calm.

At least 10 people were injured when BNP activists hurled bombs at a railway station and set on fire a train compartment in the northern town of Natore. Two buses in the port city of Chittagong also were set on fire, police said.

With more than 100 people killed in the run-up to the election, mainly in rural districts, fears of violence at polling stations were expected to keep many voters away.

The election commission sent a text message to voters saying their security was ensured and urging them to turn out. "Please go to cast your vote without any fear and hassle," it said.

Army troops have been deployed since December 26 to maintain order during the election.

Garment industry disrupted

A member of the police stands guard in front of ballot boxes at a distribution center ahead of parliamentary elections in Dhaka on Saturday.
Khurshed Rinku/Reuters

Bangladesh's $22 billion garment industry, which accounts for 80 percent of exports, has been disrupted by transportation blockades ahead of the election.

The European Union, a duty free market for nearly 60 percent of Bangladesh's garment exports, has refused to send election observers, as have the United States and the Commonwealth, a grouping of 53 mainly former British colonies.

"The Bangladesh government should end its crackdown on the political opposition leaders and activists, and create conditions for free and fair elections," U.S.-based Human Rights Watch said in a statement. "Opposition parties should condemn and end violence by their supporters."

The Awami League argues that the interim government system has failed in the past.

While black-and-white campaign posters -- color is not allowed -- hung in parts of the capital, the main opposition's absence means the election has lacked the pomp and suspense of a fully competitive poll.

Hasina has spoken of holding talks with the opposition following the election on the conduct of future polls. If successful, that could lead to another election.

The BNP demands a halt to the current electoral process.

In the event of a breakdown of law and order, the military could step in to take power, as it did in 2007, but is seen as reluctant to do so.

Reuters

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