Bangladesh Election Commission's Phone Ban Sparks Political Uproar

Bangladesh's Election Commission has banned mobile phones within 400 yards of polling centers on election day, provoking right-wing protests. They threaten to besiege the EC office unless the decision is repealed. Bangladesh's first parliamentary election post-Hasina ousting is set for February 12, with political tensions high.


Devdiscourse News Desk | Dhaka | Updated: 09-02-2026 18:31 IST | Created: 09-02-2026 18:31 IST
Bangladesh Election Commission's Phone Ban Sparks Political Uproar
This image is AI-generated and does not depict any real-life event or location. It is a fictional representation created for illustrative purposes only.
  • Country:
  • Bangladesh

Bangladesh's upcoming parliamentary elections have been rocked by controversy as the Election Commission (EC) announced a ban on mobile phones within a 400-yard radius of polling centers, effective on election day.

The decision has ignited protest from right-wing groups, including the Jamaat-e-Islami and its allies, who demand the directive's withdrawal and threaten to besiege the EC office. The elections, set for February 12, come after massive student-led protests unseated Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.

Key political figures, including BNP's Tarique Rahman, are actively campaigning as the political climate intensifies ahead of election day.

TRENDING

DevShots

Latest News

OPINION / BLOG / INTERVIEW

Artificial Intelligence in Health Care Needs Governance, Not Hype, to Truly Deliver Benefits

Imported Inflation: How Food Prices Shape the Cost of Living in Timor-Leste

How Inflation Reshaped Wealth and Widened Gaps Across European Households

Escaping Poverty Is Not Enough: Inside East Asia’s Fragile Middle-Class Expansion

Connect us on

LinkedIn Quora Youtube RSS
Give Feedback