Politics
Bangladesh’s BNP secures wins two-thirds majority in landmark election

The Bangladesh National Party (BNP) won a decisive two-thirds majority on Friday in general elections, a result expected to bring stability after months of tumult following the ouster of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in a Gen Z-led uprising.
Latest counts in an election seen as the South Asian nation’s first truly competitive in years gave the BNP and its allies at least 212 of the 299 seats up for grabs, domestic TV channels said.
The opposition Jamaat-e-Islami and its allies won 70 seats in the Jatiya Sangsad, or House of the Nation.
The BNP, which returns to power after 20 years, thanked the people soon after winning a majority in the overnight vote count and called for special prayers on Friday for the nation and its people.
“Despite winning … by a large margin of votes, no celebratory procession or rally shall be organised,” the party said in a statement calling for prayers nationwide.
A clear outcome had been seen as key for stability in the Muslim-majority nation of 175 million after months of deadly anti-Hasina unrest disrupted everyday life and industries such as garments, in the export of which Bangladesh is No.2 globally.
BNP leader Tarique Rahman is widely expected to be sworn in as prime minister.
The son of the party’s founder, former president Ziaur Rahman, he returned in December to the capital, Dhaka, from 18 years abroad.
Nobel peace laureate Muhammad Yunus, 85, held office as interim head after Hasina fled to neighbouring India in August 2024.
Now in exile in New Delhi, Hasina long dominated Bangladesh politics along with Rahman’s mother, Khaleda Zia, while his father was a leading independence figure who ruled from 1977 to 1981 before he was assassinated.
Manual counting of paper ballots will run until at least noon on Friday, officials said, since starting on Thursday immediately after polls closed.
The BNP win with more than 200 seats is one of its biggest, surpassing its 2001 victory with 193, although Hasina’s Awami League, which ruled for 15 years and was barred from contesting this time, secured a bigger tally of 230 in 2008.
But bigger tallies for both parties in elections of other years were widely seen as one-sided, boycotted or contentious.
Jamaat promises positive opposition
Nightime throngs of supporters cheered and shouted slogans at the BNP headquarters in Dhaka as the scale of the party’s landslide became clear.
The head of its main rival, the Jamaat-e-Islami, conceded defeat and vowed that his party would not engage in the “politics of opposition” just for the sake of doing so.
“We will do positive politics,” Shafiqur Rahman told reporters.
However, the National Citizen Party (NCP), led by youth activists who played a key role in toppling Hasina and was a part of the Jamaat-led alliance, won just five of the 30 seats it contested.
Turnout appeared on track to exceed the 42% of the last election in 2024, with media saying more than 60% of registered voters were expected to have participated.
More than 2,000 candidates, many independents among them, were on the ballot, which featured a record number of at least 50 parties. Voting in one constituency was postponed after a candidate died.
Broadcaster Jamuna TV said more than 2 million voters chose “Yes”, while more than 850,000 said “No” in a referendum on constitutional reforms held alongside the election, but there was no official word on the outcome.
The changes include two-term limits for prime ministers and stronger judicial independence and women’s representation while providing for neutral interim governments during election periods, and setting up a second house of the 300-seat parliament.
Politics
Iran’s Army pounds Israeli petrochemical plants near Dimona, US bases in UAE, Kuwait

Iran’s Army launched large-scale drone operation early Tuesday on Israeli petrochemical infrastructure near Dimona, a US naval maintenance hub in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and American radar and housing facilities in Kuwait.
“In response to the aggressions of the American-Zionist enemy against the Iranian petrochemical industries and other infrastructure, the power generation unit and fuel storage source of the petrochemical industry in the south of the occupied territories near Dimona, the US Navy maintenance center in Jebel Ali port in the UAE, and radar systems and housing buildings of American forces at the Ahmed Al Jaber Air Base in Kuwait have been targeted by heavy drone attacks,” the Army said in a statement.
The Dimona industrial zone is of high sensitivity to Israeli economy and security. It hosts the regime’s largest chemical complex in the Negev desert.
The power generation unit and fuel storage facility are located there, and the chemicals produced are used for certain military purposes, the Army said.
The US Navy maintenance center at Jebel Ali port in the UAE is one of the largest docking ports for American naval vessels in the region. It provides critical support and repair services to the US fleet.
The Ahmed Al Jaber Air Base in Kuwait hosts American military personnel. It houses radar systems and hangars capable of accommodating various military aircraft. The US Air Force’s 332nd unit is stationed there.
Iran’s Army dedicated the Tuesday operation to “anonymous soldiers, creative engineers, diligent workers, and all those involved in the Iranian oil, petrochemical and energy industries.”
“Pioneers who, during the war, with their steadfastness, expertise and exemplary sacrifice, prevented the halt of the production cycle, light and hope in this land”.
The United States and Israel imposed their illegal, unprovoked war on Iran on February 28. They assassinated Leader of Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei and targeted nuclear sites, schools and hospitals.
Nearly 100 waves of missile and drone strikes under Operation True Promise 4 have been pounding the Israeli-occupied territories and the United States’ assets in the region on a daily basis.
Politics
Gunman killed, 2 wounded in shootout outside Israel’s Istanbul consulate

- Two police officers suffer light injuries during 10-minute shootout.
- Assailants arrive from Izmit; one linked to terrorist group: officials.
- Erdogan condemns attack, vows to maintain security environment.
A gunman was killed and two others wounded in a shootout on Tuesday with police outside the Israeli consulate in Istanbul, Turkish officials said, adding that two officers were lightly wounded.
Governor Davut Gul confirmed the killing of one of the assailants during the attack that took place around 12:15pm (0915 GMT).
It was not immediately clear if the intended target was the Israeli consulate. No Israeli diplomats “are currently on Turkish soil”, a source familiar with the matter told AFP.
Israeli diplomatic missions had been evacuated “not only in Turkiye but throughout the region for security reasons” shortly after the October 7, 2023, attacks by the Palestinian resistance group Hamas on Israeli soil, according to the same source.
Israel said it would not be cowed down while Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned the “treacherous attack” and vowed to fight “all kinds of terrorism”.
“We will not allow … provocations to harm Turkiye’s climate of security,” Erdogan said in a televised speech.

“We appreciate the Turkish security forces’ swift action in thwarting this attack. Israeli missions around the world have been subjected to countless threats and terrorist attacks. Terror will not deter us,” the Israeli foreign ministry posted on X.
Turkiye’s Interior Minister Mustafa Ciftci said the assailants came in a rented vehicle from Izmit, a city about 86 kilometres (50 miles) away and that one of them was linked to an “organisation that exploits the region”.
The ministry later clarified that the dead gunman “had connections with a terrorist group” and said two policemen were “slightly injured”.
The remaining two assailants were brothers and one has a drug record, it added.
Footage showed one attacker armed with an automatic rifle, dressed in beige cargo pants and black top and carrying a backpack.
“I saw gunfire suddenly break out … It went on for quite a while,” a witness who wished to remain anonymous told AFP.
‘People panicked’
“I saw a police officer collapse. People panicked,” he said.
Turkish officials would not immediately reveal the group but local media said it could be Daesh, whose members clashed with police in Yalova — which lies on the Sea of Marmara about 90 kilometres (55 miles) southeast of Istanbul.
Daesh militants opened fire on police in Yalova in December, killing three officers and wounding nine.
Turkish police have stepped up nationwide raids against Daesh militants, rounding up 125 suspects after that attack.
Television images on Tuesday showed police officers opening fire near a busy thoroughfare and an injured person being carried away on a stretcher.
Turkish media reported that the shootout lasted for about 10 minutes.
A large police presence was deployed in front of the consulate, located in the Levent business district on the European side of Istanbul, AFP journalists witnessed.
They also saw bloodstains on the ground in an adjacent parking lot.
The immediate vicinity of the consulate sees heightened security measures even under normal circumstances, as the area is cordoned off by police barriers.
Istanbul public prosecutor’s office has launched an investigation while the state-run TRT television reported that three suspects were detained.
“The United States condemns in the strongest terms today’s attack on the Israeli Consulate in Istanbul,” US Ambassador to Turkey Tom Barrack said on X.
“Attacks on diplomatic missions are attacks on the international order — and an assault on the principles that bind nations together,” he added, while commending Turkiye and Turkish security forces for “their swift and decisive response”.
Daesh has carried out deadly attacks in Turkey including one at a nightclub in Istanbul that killed 39 people in 2017.
Politics
Middle East tensions hit Dubai imports, drive up computer prices

Tensions in the Middle East have disrupted the delivery of imported goods from Dubai, leading to an increase in prices of computers, laptops and related spare parts in local markets.
Supply delays have pushed up costs for consumers, while repair work has also become more expensive, affecting citizens relying on electronic devices.
Traders cited shipment disruptions as a key factor behind the rising prices.
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