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[🇧🇩] Khaleda Zia no more
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End of an Era: A look back at former prime minister Khaleda Zia’s life and legacy

M Azizur Rahman
Published :
Dec 30, 2025 14:41
Updated :
Dec 30, 2025 14:41

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Begum Khaleda Zia, the country’s first elected female Prime Minister and one of the nation’s most enduring political figures, passed away on Tuesday morning at 6 am in Evercare Hospital.

The death of the Chairperson of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) at the age of 80, marks the end of a remarkable era in South Asian politics, closing a life defined by resilience, uncompromising struggle, and a steadfast commitment to democracy.

She had been receiving treatment for multiple complex health issues, including liver and kidney complications, heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes, arthritis, and infection-related problems since her release from confinement following a fabricated case.

Despite the best efforts of medics, her condition deteriorated rapidly, and she was placed on life support and undergoing regular dialysis over the past several months.

For more than four decades, Khaleda Zia stood at the center of Bangladesh’s turbulent political landscape, embodying both the hopes and the hardships of a nation in transition.

From Homemaker to National Leader

Born into a traditional household, Khaleda Zia began her life as a homemaker. Her entry into politics was neither planned nor conventional.

She joined into politics following requests from BNP leaders and supporters in January 1982, seven months after the assassination of her beloved husband, Shaheed President Ziaur Rahman by renegade army officers in May 1981.

At the time, she was not yet forty. Initially appointed Senior Vice Chairperson, she later became Acting Chairperson and eventually Chairperson of the party. Her rise was swift, but it was also fraught with challenges. Many doubted whether a woman with no prior political experience could lead a major party in a male‑dominated society. Yet Khaleda Zia defied expectations, gradually transforming herself into a determined, courageous leader.

The Anti‑Ershad Movement and the “Uncompromising Leader”

Her political identity was forged in the crucible of struggle against military dictatorship in 1983 when she led the formation of a seven‑party alliance to topple General Hussain Muhammad Ershad’s regime.

For nine years, she spearheaded relentless protests, boycotts, and demonstrations. Arrested three times during this period, she earned the reputation of being an “uncompromising leader.”

The mass uprising of 1990 finally toppled Ershad. In the general election of February 1991, BNP won overwhelming public support. Khaleda Zia contested five constituencies — Bogura‑7, Dhaka‑5, Dhaka‑9, Feni‑1, and Chattogram‑8 — and won all of them by large margins. With BNP’s victory, she became Bangladesh’s first female Prime Minister, and only the second woman in any Muslim‑majority country to hold that office.

Electoral Record Without Defeat

Khaleda Zia’s electoral record remains unmatched in Bangladesh’s history. Across five general elections, she contested 23 constituencies and won every single one. Even in elections where BNP failed to form government, she remained undefeated in her constituencies.

In 1996, she contested five seats — Bogura‑6, Bogura‑7, Feni‑1, Lakshmipur‑2, and Chattogram‑1 — and won them all, though the Awami League formed government. In 2001, she again contested five constituencies, including Bogura and Khulna, and won each by overwhelming margins, returning as Prime Minister for a third term.

In 2008, when the Election Commission limited candidates to three constituencies, she contested Bogura‑6, Bogura‑7, and Feni‑1 — and won all three.

Trials and Personal Sacrifices

In her political career, Begum Khaleda Zia was arrested a total of five times—three during the anti-Ershad movement, once under the army-backed caretaker government in 2007, and once during the rule of the Awami League government.

After joining active politics on 3 January 1982, she was arrested three times during the anti-Ershad movement: on 28 November 1983, 3 May 1984, and 11 November 1987. However, in those instances she was not imprisoned for long periods.

In 2007, amid a political crisis when the army-backed caretaker government assumed power, Khaleda Zia was arrested. On 3 September 2007, police detained her from her residence on Moinul Haque Road in the cantonment area. When her bail petition was rejected, she was confined in a special sub-jail set up within the National Parliament complex.

During this imprisonment, she observed both Eid-ul-Fitr and Eid-ul-Azha inside prison, meeting family members on the festival days. At that time, her two sons—Tarique Rahman and the late Arafat Rahman Koko—were also incarcerated.

In January 2008, following her mother’s death, she was released on parole for six hours to see her mother’s body. After nearly 372 days in custody, she was freed on bail on 11 September 2008.

Her resilience was tested again in 2010, when she was evicted from her cantonment residence where she had lived for 28 years.

She moved to a rented house in Gulshan named “Firoza.” In 2013, during intense protests, barricades were placed outside her home to confine her.

She was sentenced to a total of 17 years in prison in the fabricated Zia Orphanage Trust and Zia Charitable Trust corruption cases during the Awami League government in 2018.

On 8 February 2018, she was sent to jail—first to the Nazimuddin Road prison, and later, due to health reasons, to Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University (BSMMU) Hospital.

While she was confined, her younger son Koko died in Malaysia in June 2018. Her elder son BNP’s Acting Chairman Tarique Rahman lived abroad due to ill health.

Reflecting on her losses, she then said: “I lost my husband at a young age. I lost my mother while in prison. I lost a son while confined in my office. Another son remains disabled abroad due to torture. In this life without family, the people of Bangladesh are my family.”

She remained effectively incarcerated for more than two years.

On 25 March 2020, the government suspended her sentence conditionally, allowing her to receive treatment at home, which was effectively equivalent to house arrest. She remained politically confined until the student–people’s mass uprising of 2024.

Subsequently, following the July Revolution, her sentence was annulled by an executive order of the President. On 27 November of the same year, she was acquitted of the corruption cases.

Through her long years of imprisonment and political struggle, Begum Khaleda Zia left behind a unique and significant chapter in the political history of Bangladesh.

Legacy and Final Years

In her later years, Khaleda Zia came to be respected by all sections of people across party lines as a symbol of unity.

On August 5, 2024, following a mass uprising that toppled Sheikh Hasina’s government, she was released from confinement.

Two days later, at a BNP rally, she delivered a brief video message, urging the nation, “Let us build a society based not on destruction, revenge, or vengeance, but on love, peace, and knowledge.”

Her words reflected the maturity of a leader who had endured decades of struggle, persecution, and sacrifice, yet still envisioned a future rooted in reconciliation.

With her demise, Bangladesh has lost its true guardian, a unifying symbol of sovereignty, independence, and democracy.​
 
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Nepalese FM to attend state funeral of ex-PM Khaleda, pay last respects

UNB
Published :
Dec 30, 2025 22:59
Updated :
Dec 30, 2025 22:59

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Nepalese Foreign Affairs Minister Bala Nanda Sharma will attend the state funeral of former Prime Minister and Chairperson of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party Begum Khaleda Zia and pay last respects on behalf of the government and the people of Nepal.

The Foreign Minister’s visit reflects Nepal’s deep respect for the late leader’s contributions to strengthening Nepal–Bangladesh relations during her three tenures as Prime Minister, said the Nepalese Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

During the visit, Minister Sharma will be accompanied by senior officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The Foreign Minister is scheduled to arrive at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport on Tuesday night (11:25pm) by a Biman Bangladesh Airlines flight and to return to Kathmandu on January 1.​
 
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Pakistan’s Speaker to attend Khaleda Zia’s funeral

UNB
Published :
Dec 30, 2025 23:35
Updated :
Dec 30, 2025 23:35

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Sardar Ayaz Sadiq, Speaker of Pakistan’s National Assembly, will represent Pakistan at the funeral of former Prime Minister and BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia on Wednesday.

The announcement was confirmed by Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar through his verified X account.

Begum Khaleda Zia passed away on Tuesday morning at Evercare Hospital in Dhaka after battling illness for 37 days. Her funeral will take place at her ancestral home in Majumdar Bari, South Sripur, Fulgazi, Feni.​
 
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Pakistan deputy PM to attend Khaleda Zia’s funeral prayer

FE ONLINE REPORT
Published :
Dec 30, 2025 20:25
Updated :
Dec 30, 2025 20:25

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Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Mohammad Ishaq Dar is scheduled to attend the funeral prayer (namaj-e-janaza) of former prime minister and BNP chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia.

Ishaq Dar is scheduled to arrive in Dhaka on a special flight on Wednesday morning, the Pakistan High Commission in Dhaka said on Wednesday.

“We have the confirmation that our Deputy Prime Minister will come here (Dhaka) and join the Janaza,“ Pakistan High Commission’s Press Counsellor in Dhaka, Fasih Ullah Khan, said on Tuesday evening.

Earlier, Pakistan’s Prime Minister and President expressed deep sorrow at the death of Begum Zia, extending condolences to her family and the people of Bangladesh.​
 
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Khaleda Zia never lost an election

Staff Correspondent Dhaka
Published: 30 Dec 2025, 15: 13

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BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia takes oath as prime minister after winning the 5th parliamentary election in 1991 File photo

Khaleda Zia was Bangladesh’s first elected prime minister. Whether contesting elections in Feni, Bogura, Dhaka, Chattogram, Lakshmipur or Khulna, she emerged victorious every time.

In the country’s electoral history, Khaleda Zia remains a unique figure: she contested 23 parliamentary constituencies across five general elections and won in every single one of them.

There is no account of electoral defeat in Khaleda Zia’s political career. Even in elections in which the BNP failed to form the government, she won all the seats from which she contested.

Following the fall of autocrat Hussain Muhammad Ershad in the mass uprising of 1990, the 5th Jatiya Sangsad (national parliament) election was held on 27 February 1991.

Khaleda Zia contested five constituencies: Bogura-7, Dhaka-5, Dhaka-9, Feni-1 and Chattogram-8. She won in all five seats by large margins.

After the BNP formed the government following the 1991 election, Khaleda Zia became Bangladesh’s first woman prime minister. She also became only the second woman in the history of a Muslim-majority country to hold the office of prime minister.

The 7th Jatiya Sangsad election was held in June 1996, in which the Awami League formed the government. Yet even in that election, no one could defeat Khaleda Zia. She contested and won all five seats: Bogura-6, Bogura-7, Feni-1, Lakshmipur-2 and Chattogram-1.

The 8th parliamentary election took place on 1 October 2001. Once again, Khaleda Zia contested five constituencies—Bogura-6, Bogura-7, Khulna-2, Feni-1 and Lakshmipur-2—and won all of them by decisive margins. Following the BNP’s victory in that election, she became prime minister for the third time.

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BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia takes oath as prime minister after winning the 8th parliamentary election in 2001 File photo

Earlier, in the 6th Jatiya Sangsad election held on 15 February 1996, the BNP had formed the government. In that election, Khaleda Zia contested and won from Feni-1 and Feni-2, Bogura-7, Sirajganj-2 and Rajshahi-2.

She thus became prime minister for a second consecutive term. However, that one-sided election sparked widespread controversy. Although the bill introducing a non-party caretaker government was passed in that parliament, Khaleda Zia resigned just 11 days after taking the oath of office, and the parliament was subsequently dissolved.

In 2008, after the election commission limited candidates to contesting a maximum of three constituencies, Khaleda Zia ran from Bogura-6, Bogura-7 and Feni-1. She won all three seats.

Political scientist Dil Rowshan Jinnat Ara Nazneen, professor at the University of Dhaka and pro-vice-chancellor (academic) of Bangladesh Open University, told Prothom Alo that Khaleda Zia was an immensely popular figure.

“Because of her uncompromising stance, she was admired across party lines,” she said. “In the 1991 election, almost everyone assumed that the Awami League would come to power. But a televised address by Khaleda Zia at that time overturned all political calculations.”

She added that Khaleda Zia contested multiple constituencies in subsequent national elections and, owing to her overwhelming popularity, won every seat each time.

According to Dil Rowshan Jinnat Ara Nazneen, Khaleda Zia never spoke intemperately; through her dignified conduct and measured words, she exerted a strong influence on electoral politics.​
 
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