Sheikh Hasina’s Awami League turns to flash protests ahead of polls

DHAKA: Once Bangladesh’s largest political party, the Awami League has been outlawed since its leader, Sheikh Hasina, was overthrown in a mass uprising last year.

Now, its supporters encouraged by Hasina’s social media calls to “resist” are staging flash mob protests defying the ban as the country prepares for elections from which the party is barred.

In the capital, Dhaka, 45-year-old cleaner Mohammad Kashem described witnessing around 25 Awami League loyalists being chased, beaten, and detained by police at one such rally. “It’s happening all over Dhaka,” Kashem told, saying videos of such spontaneous demonstrations appear constantly on social media.

The elections, expected in February 2026, will be the first since Hasina fled into exile in India as crowds stormed her palace, ending her 15-year rule.

She has since defied court orders to attend her ongoing trial on charges amounting to crimes against humanity for allegedly ordering a deadly crackdown during the revolt. Her party and its supporters have since been pushed underground.

More than 800 have been arrested in connection with the flash mobs, say officials, which have rattled the interim government of Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus as he oversees the South Asian nation of 170 million until the polls. Still, they protest. Some rallies consist of only a handful of young men. Others draw more than 100, chanting slogans.

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