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Tarique Rahman applies for 'travel pass' to return home

Diplomatic Correspondent Dhaka
Updated: 18 Dec 2025, 22: 06


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BNPโ€™s acting chairman, Tarique Rahman, at the City Pavilion Hall in London.GR Sohel

BNPโ€™s acting chairman, Tarique Rahman, has applied for a โ€œtravel passโ€ to return to the country on 25 December.

He submitted the application to the Bangladesh High Commission in London.

A source in the United Kingdom confirmed the information to Prothom Alo on Thursday evening, saying that Tarique Rahmanโ€™s application for a travel pass has already been submitted to the Bangladesh High Commission.

Exiled in London for political reasons, Tarique Rahman did not receive a Bangladeshi passport after its validity expired.

Although there was an opportunity to apply for passport renewal following the fall of the Awami League government in last yearโ€™s uprising, he did not do so. Under the current circumstances, he will therefore need to travel on a travel pass to return to Bangladesh as a Bangladeshi citizen.

Last month in Dhaka, responding to journalistsโ€™ questions at an event, foreign adviser Touhid Hossain said there were no restrictions on Tarique Rahmanโ€™s return to the country and that a travel pass could be issued within a day. In this regard, he said, โ€œThe rule is that if someone does not have a passport or if it has expired and they wish to return, we issue a one-time pass for a single entry into the country. It takes one day. So, if he says today that he wants to return, we could issue it tomorrow, and he could board a plane the day after. There is no problem. We can issue it.โ€

Tarique Rahman was arrested in 2007 following the political changes of 11 January. After being released from prison in 2008, he travelled to the United Kingdom with his family for medical treatment and has remained there since.

After more than 17 years, Tarique Rahman is returning to Bangladesh from the United Kingdom on 25 December. He will arrive at Dhakaโ€™s Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport at 11:55am that day on a Biman Bangladesh Airlines flight.

BNP is making special arrangements to mark Tarique Rahmanโ€™s return as a memorable event. The partyโ€™s Standing Committee member Salahuddin Ahmed said on Thursday, โ€œWe want his historic return to surpass all precedents set in the past 55 years and to be so memorable that no similar historic event occurs in the next 55 years. All our arrangements are aimed at making it truly unforgettable.โ€

Tarique Rahmanโ€™s mother and BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia has been undergoing treatment at Evercare Hospital in Dhaka since 23 November. After returning to the country, Tarique Rahman may go directly to the hospital to see his mother. Therefore, according to Salahuddin Ahmed, a suitable venue near the airport and Evercare Hospital is being sought to receive him.​
 

Some are trying to create anarchy in the country: Tarique Rahman
Staff Correspondent Bogura
Published: 21 Dec 2025, 20: 53

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BNP acting chairperson Tarique Rahman speaks at the inauguration ceremony of a digital memorial in remembrance of the July martyrs at the Shaheed Titu Auditorium in Edward Park, Bogura municipality on 21 December 2025. Prothom Alo

Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) acting chairman Tarique Rahman has warned party leaders and activists to remain vigilant, saying the days ahead will not be easy. Anarchy has begun in different parts of the country, and some are trying to create disorder. Everyone must stay alert, he said.

Tarique Rahman made these remarks today, Sunday afternoon while speaking online as the chief guest at the inauguration of a digital memorial for the July martyrs at the Shaheed Titu Auditorium in Edward Park, Bogura municipality.

The BNP acting chairperson said, โ€œShaheed Osman Hadi was on the path of democracy. He was a candidate who believed in democratic and electoral politics. If we are to honour Shaheed Hadi, the July martyrs and fighters, and the martyrs and fighters of 1971, then we must have one clear goal, to establish peace for the people of this country, to work for the country, and to move the nation forward. Our aim and purpose must be one, work to build the country, Bangladesh comes first.โ€

Referring to the successes of two BNP leaders in running the state in the past, Tarique Rahman said BNP founder martyred president Ziaur Rahman rescued the country from the brink of destruction. BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia, he said, saved the country from autocracy in 1991 and gradually steered it from the edge of ruin towards development.

โ€œWe have once again been given an opportunity,โ€ he added. โ€œWe must build a healthcare system for nearly 200 million (20 crore) people, create a quality education system for future generations, ensure employment for young people, and ensure that women do not fall behind. We must work so that women are educated and able to stand on a strong economic footing. The countryโ€™s economic condition is not good. We must work hard to bring the country back from the brink of destruction.โ€

Calling for unity among all, Tarique Rahman said, โ€œThere is much work ahead. Those who believe in democracy, whether they are BNP leaders and activists or those of other parties must all remain united.โ€

Among others, BNP chairpersonโ€™s advisers AKM Mahbubur Rahman and Helaluzzaman Talukder, former district BNP president Saiful Islam, former district BNP convener and BNP candidate for Bogura-5 Golam Md Siraj, BNP candidate for Bogura-1 and central committee member Kazi Rafiqul Islam, and BNP candidate for Bogura-4 and district BNP acting secretary Mosharraf Hossain also addressed the programme chaired by Bogura district BNP president Rezaul Karim.​
 

How BNP wants to build the country

Salahuddin Ahmed Raihan
Published: 22 Dec 2025, 16: 41

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Perhaps for the first time in Bangladeshโ€™s history, a political party has arranged training for its own leaders and activists to ensure that its specific programmes reach everyone, from urban citizens to marginalised communities. From 7 to 13 December, BNP provided training on eight topics to leaders and activists from its affiliated organisations as well as the main party.

The โ€œNation-Building Programmeโ€ functioned not only as a set of training workshops, but also, through these workshops, outlined in broad terms what the BNP, as a party, intends to do for the people in the public sphere. Through nine leaflets, the party has presented its future plans on issues such as health, education, women, farmers, employment, sports, imams and muezzins as well as leaders of other religions, climate and agriculture, corruption, and more.

Essentially, in every election held since Bangladeshโ€™s independence, political parties have published manifestos outlining what they would do if elected. The BNP will likely publish its manifesto in due course as well. However, a manifesto is a fairly large booklet that usually contains detailed programmes. It is difficult to convey future plans to ordinary people through such a bulky publication. I believe that is why the BNP has undertaken this kind of innovative initiative, which I hope will prove quite effective.

Women: BNP has outlined a key framework for its core plan for women in the country and the kinds of initiatives it intends to take to improve their socio-economic conditions. This is the โ€œFamily Card.โ€ By issuing this Family Card to the female head of a household, the party aims to empower women and make them self-reliant. It appears this will make a significant contribution for marginalised women, as the Family Card will provide monthly financial assistance or food support ranging from Tk 2,000 to Tk 2,500.

Health: The health-related leaflet seeks to provide guidelines to ensure that people receive primary healthcare and corruption-free medical services. Alongside a target of recruiting 100,000 new health workers, it proposes measures to improve service quality at union-, upazila-, and district-level health centres. A completely new initiative BNP plans to introduce is publicโ€“private partnerships to ensure that ordinary people can quickly access treatment for life-threatening and critical illnesses.

BNP founder and martyred President Ziaur Rahman once took a groundbreaking initiative through canal excavation programmes. The BNP has pledged to revive this canal excavation initiative.

It is often seen that cancer patients face long delays in getting chemotherapy or radiotherapy appointments at government hospitals, while in many cases equipment remains out of order. To ensure swift healthcare for such patients, the government would partner with private hospitals to provide services. Necessary policies would be adopted if BNP forms a government. The same approach would apply to other complex diseases. Arrangements would also be made to provide free medicines for primary healthcare, low-cost medicines for deadly diseases such as cancer, stroke, and diabetes, and, above all, to carry out science-based mosquito control and treatment programmes.

Agriculture: Special incentives for farmers have been offered, to varying degrees, by almost every government. However, this would be the first initiative to introduce a fully digitalised โ€œFarmer Card.โ€ This card would contain information on various government benefits, ensuring farmers are not exploited by middlemen. Through the card, farmers would be guaranteed fair prices for fertiliser, seeds, and pesticides; fair returns for agricultural produce; access to agricultural loans on easy terms; and agricultural insurance facilities. In addition, arrangements would be made to provide updated weather and market information through mobile apps. Crop healthcare services would also be digitalised. Fish farmers and livestock farmers would also be brought under this card system.

Employment: A vast segment of Bangladeshโ€™s population, especially educated youth, remains outside employment. The BNP has placed major emphasis on employment in its plans. Through initiatives such as introducing international payment gateways including PayPal for freelancers; organising nationwide and campus-based innovation idea competitions for young people, with startup funds, training, and technical support for winners; adopting investment policies to make job creation easier and reducing bureaucratic hurdles for domestic and foreign investors; launching targeted employment programmes for the uneducated rural population, homemakers, the elderly, and the long-term unemployed; and ensuring merit-based government recruitmentโ€”the BNP plans to take immediate and effective steps to create 10 million jobs.

Education: With the slogan โ€œJoyful education, skilled manpower, and a modern Bangladesh,โ€ the plan outlines initiatives to modernise the education system. These include โ€œone teacher, one tabletโ€ at the primary and secondary levels; compulsory third-language education; establishment of multimedia classrooms; technical education for all; prioritising good health and nutrition; and ensuring improved economic and social status for both cadre and non-cadre teachersโ€”aiming to make the education system student-friendly and teacher-friendly.

Climate and Environment: BNP founder and martyred President Ziaur Rahman once took a groundbreaking initiative through canal excavation programmes. The BNP has pledged to revive this canal excavation initiative. According to its priorities, 20,000 kilometres of canals and rivers would be re-excavated to ensure water flow. The party has also proposed the Teesta Barrage Development and Padma Barrage projects. To ensure pollution-free air, it plans to plant 250 million trees over five years. Through integrated waste management, initiatives would be taken to produce energy and organic fertiliser, and waste recycling would be promoted to keep the environment pollution-free.

Sports: Initiatives would be taken to make sports compulsory from Class Four. BNP previously launched talent hunts in music through the โ€œNotun Kuriโ€ programme. This time, through a โ€œNotun Kuri Sportsโ€ programme, it plans to provide scholarships to talented student athletes aged 12 to 14. Other initiatives include plans to build sports villages with indoor facilities in all 64 districts; establish BKSP branches in every divisional city; ensure adequate playgrounds in all metropolitan areas and rural regions; provide sporting opportunities at national and international levels for people with special needs and the underprivileged; and appoint sports officers and physical education teachers in all upazilasโ€”efforts aimed at taking the countryโ€™s sports sector to new heights.

Khatibs, Imams, Muezzins, and leaders of other religions: For the first time, arrangements would be made to provide monthly honorariums to khatibs, imams, and muezzins. Special allowances during religious festivals, skills-development training to create alternative employment opportunities, and initiatives to enhance their state recognition have been proposed. Monthly honorariums and festival allowances would also be provided to places of worship of other religions (Hindu, Buddhist, Christian, and others), ensuring equal benefits for all.

Through these eight leaflets, the BNP aims to present some of its flagship programmes to the public in a way that is easy to understand and communicate. A political partyโ€™s future largely depends on how effectively it can promote its people-oriented programmes in the public sphere, and electoral victory also depends significantly on public-friendly initiatives. The Family Card, Farmer Card, and publicโ€“private partnership-based healthcare system are all new additions in the context of Bangladesh.

I believe that proper implementation and success of these programmes would significantly transform the countryโ€™s socio-economic conditions.

This new form of electoral campaigning by the BNP will not remain confined to rhetoric alone. There is an expectation that, if elected, the party will implement these commitments to the people with the highest priority in a corruption-free environment and will continue people-oriented programmes.

* Salahuddin Ahmed Raihan is an engineer, columnist, and political analyst​
 

Rumeen Farhana to run as independent candidate in Brahmanbaria-2 despite BNPโ€™s alliance decision

Former BNP lawmaker says she will resign from party posts before filing papers

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Photo: Wikipedia/ Collected

Former BNP lawmaker Barrister Rumeen Farhana today said she will contest the upcoming national election from Brahmanbaria-2 as an independent candidate after failing to secure party nomination.

The constituency comprises Sarail, Ashuganj and parts of Bijoynagar upazilas.

At a press conference in Dhaka's Gulshan today, BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir said the party had left four constituencies to its alliance partner and would not nominate candidates in those seats.

He also warned of organisational action against anyone contesting independently against party decisions.

Under the agreement, Jamiat-e-Ulama-e-Islam's central Vice-President Maulana Junayed Al Habib is contesting from Brahmanbaria-2.

Despite the party's decision not to field a candidate there, Rumeen has made it clear that she will stay in the race.

Talking to this correspondent over phone, Rumeen said she will contest the election as an independent candidate.

Asked whether contesting in a seat left for an alliance partner could subject her to strict disciplinary action by the party, Rumeen said she would resign from her party posts with dignity before purchasing the nomination paper. She plans to collect the forms within the next couple of days, she said.

"I hope the love and support of the people of this area are still with me," she said.

Besides, SN Tarun Dey, secretary general of the Bangladesh Hindu Buddhist Christian Welfare Front and a member of the district BNP, and Akhtar Hossain, also a district BNP member, have confirmed to this correspondent that they will also contest the election as independent candidates.

On November 3, BNP announced a preliminary list of candidates for 237 constituencies, leaving Brahmanbaria-2 without a nominee. Since then, local party leaders assumed the nomination would go to the alliance partner. However, Rumeen Farhana continued her campaign activities.​
 

All set for Tariqueโ€™s homecoming

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BNP acting chairman Tarique Rahman is set to return to Bangladesh tomorrow with his wife and daughter after 17 years in exile.

The family will depart from London's Heathrow Airport at 6:15pm Bangladesh time on a Biman Bangladesh Airlines flight. They are expected to arrive at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport in Dhaka around noon tomorrow via Sylhet.

After landing, he will be received by BNP Standing Committee members. He will then proceed by road to a reception programme at the 300 Feet area in Purbachal. Party leaders and activists will line both sides of the road to greet him.

Following his speech from the stage, Tarique will travel by road to Evercare Hospital to visit his ailing mother, former prime minister Khaleda Zia, who has been undergoing treatment there for over a month.

After meeting his mother, he will go to Firoza in Gulshan, where he will stay.

The BNP has taken extensive preparations for Tarique's homecoming.

The party expects around 50 lakh people to gather in Dhaka on the day, according to Ruhul Kabir Rizvi, senior joint secretary general of BNP. Supporters will stand along both sides of the road from the airport to the 300 Feet area to welcome him.

Security is being seen as a major challenge, particularly in managing the crowd around Tarique's motorcade. A BNP team held a meeting last night with senior officials of various law enforcement agencies to discuss security arrangements.

The overall responsibility for Tarique's security from the airport to Gulshan has been assigned to AKM Shamsul Islam. Under his leadership, multiple teams, including the chairperson's security force, will be deployed. Members of Chhatra Dal, Jubo Dal and Swechchhasebak Dal will also assist in maintaining discipline.

Meanwhile, entry to the Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport area will remain restricted to passengers from 6:00pm today until 6:00pm tomorrow for his arrival, the authorities said.

A stage is being prepared at the 300 Feet area to welcome Tarique.

BNP standing committee members, leaders of political parties that joined the simultaneous movement and prominent figures will be present. Only Tarique will speak from the stage.

To broadcast his speech, around 1,000 microphones are being installed across the airport area, Purbachal, Kanchan Bridge, Abdullahpur, Banani, Mohakhali and surrounding locations.

Thousands of billboards and posters have been set up along the 300 Feet road from the airport to Gulshan. BNP has also arranged monitors for live telecast.

Leaders and activists from Dhaka and outside the capital will begin taking positions in the area from today, the party said.

BNP leaders and activists have already held celebratory processions in Dhaka and across the country. Leaders from districts are arriving in Dhaka from today, using buses, cars and launches arranged by the party.

Bangladesh Railway will operate 10 special trains to bring BNP supporters to the capital, earning around Tk 36 lakh in fares.

The trains will run on routes including Cox's Bazarโ€“Dhaka, Jamalpurโ€“Mymensinghโ€“Dhaka, Tangailโ€“Dhaka, Bhairab Bazarโ€“Narsingdiโ€“Dhaka, Joydebpurโ€“Dhaka Cantonment, Panchagarhโ€“Dhaka, Khulnaโ€“Dhaka, Chatmohorโ€“Dhaka Cantonment, Rajshahiโ€“Dhaka and Jashoreโ€“Dhaka.

Tarique may visit his father's grave on December 26 subject to security conditions and later travel to Bogura to submit his nomination papers for the 13th parliamentary election. He will contest from Bogura-6.

Meanwhile, in a Facebook post yesterday, Tarique's daughter Zaima Rahman said she hopes to contribute to rebuilding Bangladesh and connect directly with people upon her return.

"Seventeen years away from Bangladesh have been transformative, but I never forgot to tend to and cultivate my roots," she wrote, recalling childhood memories with her grandmother Khaleda.

She said she would be involved in her father's election campaign.​
 

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