New Bangladesh PM sworn in

Hasina vows to put an end to confrontational politics.

Sheikh Hasina Wajed
Sheikh Hasina's Awami League front won a landslide victory in general elections last week [AFP]

General Moeen U. Ahmed, the army chief and Muhammad Yunus, the Nobel Peace Prize winner, joined some 1,000 foreign diplomats, government officials and members of parliament at the ceremony.

Campaigning and voting for the elections was generally peaceful,  in marked contrast to the unrest that caused polls to be cancelled  in 2007, when at least 35 people died in violence over allegations  of vote rigging.

Collective work

The Awami League front won 230 seats out of a possible 300, giving her a clear majority to govern without forming a coalition.

However the new prime minister, who also ruled between 1996 and 2001, has indicated she wants to end the confrontational politics that has paralysed Bangladeshi politics for decades.

“I feel in the parliamentary system we can work together. I am ready to work with everyone,” she said following her victory.

Both Hasina and her bitter rival Khaleda Zia, who is also an  ex-premier and leads the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), were  jailed for a year by the outgoing army-backed government on  corruption charges.

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After initially rejecting the election results, Zia said she  would work with Sheikh Hasina — though she stood by allegations of  voter fraud and snubbed Tuesday’s ceremony.

Source: News Agencies

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