Originally posted in The Daily Star on 30 January 2026 By Mohammad Jamil Khan and Tousif Kaium
- 19 clashes recorded since campaigning began on Jan 22
- BNP- and Jamaat-led alliances involved in most reported clashes
- Police say arrests alone cannot curb poll-time violence
- Experts blame weak enforcement of electoral code
Violence has flared since campaigning began for the 13th national election on January 22, and police say arrests and cases alone will not be enough unless rival groups show restraint.
In the eight days from the start of official campaigning until yesterday, at least 19 incidents of clashes were reported across the country, according to media reports and data received from police.
A Jamaat upazila unit secretary was killed in clashes in Sherpur on Wednesday.
The incidents were triggered by local disputes, “offensive” comments on social media, and even quarrels over sitting on a chair, according to the information.
Human Rights Support Society (HRSS) said in a statement yesterday that, based on information it collected from October until yesterday, at least 981 people were injured and five were killed in 113 incidents of violence across the country linked to the upcoming national elections.
HRSS said that during the campaign period, candidates’ aggressive attitudes, the spread of hatred against opposition parties and other candidates, threats and intimidation, smear campaigns, falsehoods and hostile remarks are fuelling hostility and violence among party leaders, activists and supporters, which is not desirable in any way.
Khondoker Rafiqul Islam, additional inspector general (crime and operations) at Police Headquarters, told The Daily Star that election-time violence is not new and urged people not to treat it as something unusual.
“It is unfortunate,” he said, adding that Bangladesh has often failed to move beyond a culture of confrontation during elections.
Rafiqul said police, other law enforcement agencies and returning officers are trying to bring rival sides to the table and ensure that the electoral code of conduct is followed.