Is Bangladesh’s Interim Government State Building by Stealth?

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Source: Wikimedia Commons

 

By Sanjay Pulipaka and Mohit Musaddi

October 14, 2024

Bangladesh is currently governed by an interim government. A cursory examination of its functioning indicates that there is nothing “interim” about its governance. While this is not the first time that such transitory arrangements have been made in Bangladesh’s politics, the exercise of power by the current interim government is unprecedented.

 

Since gaining independence in 1971, Bangladesh has witnessed multiple forms of government, including one-party dominance, a brief period of a single-party system, over 15 years of military rule, and a parliamentary representative democratic republic model of governance. After the ouster of General Ershad and the end of military rule in 1990, a Non-Party Caretaker Government (NPCG) was constituted to facilitate elections. The NPCG was headed by a chief adviser, with an objective to smoothen the election process in the country. However, the neutrality of the NPCG was always under intense scrutiny until it was finally abolished in 2011, ahead of the 2014 general elections.

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