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Labrish
Nyuuz
Bangladesh reform talks stall as parties clash over caretaker government and reserved seats
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[QUOTE="Munyaradzi Mafaro, post: 54707, member: 636"] Bangladesh's National Consensus Commission faces significant challenges reaching an agreement on constitutional reforms. Political parties remain divided over caretaker government appointments during elections, upper house establishment, and electoral procedures for women's reserved parliamentary seats. The Bangladesh Nationalist Party and Jamaat-e-Islami submitted comparable proposals regarding Chief Advisor selection processes. Other parties express conflicting viewpoints that prevent final decisions on these matters. The Commission works toward consensus on nineteen major constitutional issues before the July 31 deadline. Disputes continue over whether single individuals should hold multiple government positions simultaneously. The BNP supports combining the Prime Minister, Leader of the House, and party leadership roles under one person. The National Citizens Party opposes this concentration of power and advocates position restrictions. Jamaat-e-Islami accepts dual roles but rejects triple authority arrangements. These disagreements delay the second round of dialogue sessions. Political tensions escalate as parties pursue different priorities regarding elections versus reforms. The BNP pushes for immediate elections while Jamaat, Islamic Movement, and NCP demand comprehensive reforms first. Recent violence sparked additional conflicts when BNP leaders faced accusations regarding a trader's murder in Old Dhaka. Former allies from the movement that removed the Awami League government engage in public disputes across rallies and social media platforms. [/QUOTE]
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Nyuuz
Bangladesh reform talks stall as parties clash over caretaker government and reserved seats
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