
Bangladesh is caught in a political storm. The tussle between interim Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus and former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia has become the country’s latest drama. The key issue? When should Bangladesh hold its next general election.
Yunus, appointed to lead the interim government after protests toppled Sheikh Hasina’s government, wants to push for reforms first. He says elections should happen by June 2026 at the latest. But Khaleda Zia and her party, the BNP, disagree strongly. They demand the election take place by December 2025 — and no later.

This clash matters for everyday Bangladeshis. People want stability and a clear plan for democracy to move forward. But with Yunus and Zia pulling in opposite directions, uncertainty grows.
Khaleda Zia Raises the Stakes
Fresh off treatment in London, Khaleda Zia made her first public speech this month. She spoke at a rally marking the 44th death anniversary of BNP founder Ziaur Rahman, calling on her party and citizens to fight for democracy. “We will see democracy reestablished very soon,” she declared.
Her son, Tarique Rahman, acting party chairman living in exile, echoed the demand. From afar, he urged the crowd in Dhaka to push for elections in December. The BNP youth rally drew tens of thousands, showing strong support for their timeline.
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Yunus’s Dig at BNP
Meanwhile, Yunus has not been quiet. After meeting several political parties, including BNP, he hinted that only one party wants the elections fast — a pointed jab at Khaleda Zia’s BNP.
Speaking at the Future of Asia Conference in Japan, Yunus said reforms must come first. He admitted politicians are impatient for power, but the country needs time to fix its problems. “Elections can happen in December 2025 or June 2026, depending on reforms,” he explained.
He made it clear the pace of change will decide the election date, not just party pressure.
The Real Story
The fight between Yunus and Khaleda Zia is more than political sparring. It reveals a deeper problem — how Bangladesh struggles with democracy when political leaders care more about timing than unity.
For ordinary people, it means living in political uncertainty and waiting longer for stable government. Meanwhile, politicians seem stuck in a power tug-of-war, delaying the very elections they claim to want.
If Yunus’s reforms stall, Bangladesh might wait even longer for polls. But rushing elections could risk chaos without proper preparation. The country’s future depends on finding a middle ground — if its leaders can.
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