AL wants EVM use for polls manipulation in new way: BNP
Thursday, 30 June 2022
BNP senior leader Iqbal Hasan Mahmud Tuku said on Wednesday Awami League (AL) is keen to use Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs) in the next general election to implement its new manipulation plan, reports UNB.
"We believed them (AL) once earlier and joined the election (under them). But they completed the day's voting at night," he said.
The BNP leader said the ruling party is now seeking the use of EVMs in the polls so that they needn't steal votes at night again. "They'll do it this time by pressing the EVM buttons sitting in the polling stations."
Talking to reporters on the grave premises of BNP founder Ziaur Rahman at Chandrima Udyan in the city, Tuku said his party will no longer participate in mockery in the name of election.
Earlier, he along with the leaders of Jatiyatabadi Jubo Dal placed a wreath at Zia's grave, marking the formation of an eight-member partial committee of the BNP's youth wing.
Tuku, a BNP standing committee member, said his party will not go to the polls until a neutral government is established.
As a democratic party, he said BNP wants the election to be held in a democratic atmosphere.
The BNP leader recalled that the then prime minister Khaleda Zia accepted defeat after she had resigned by forming a caretaker government in 1996. "That's called democracy."
He urged the Awami League government to arrange the next election under a non-party neutral administration if it has that courage like Khaleda Zia.
"If we lose in such an election, we will accept it. We want to see fair play," the BNP leader said.
On the Election Commission (EC)'s proposal on holding the national election in four days, Tuku said it will not be acceptable in Bangladesh.
"Since the birth of Bangladesh, the election has been held in one day. I don't know whether or not the (Chief Election Commissioner) is a hybrid one. I don't know why he wants to do it in four days," Tuku said.
If the election is held in four days, he said the election results will be kept at the offices of the deputy commissioners (DCs) whom people do not trust. "So, it won't happen in Bangladesh."