The Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) has claimed victory in the country’s first election since a student-led uprising that ousted longtime leader Sheikh Hasina in 2024.
Unofficial results confirmed by election officials to Al Jazeera on Friday showed the BNP winning 209 seats, easily crossing the 151-seat threshold needed for a majority in parliament.
Its leader, Tarique Rahman, the son of former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, is now set to become the country’s next prime minister. BNP officials said the party expected to form a government by Sunday.
The BNP was followed by Jamaat-e-Islami, which secured 68 seats in Thursday’s polls – its highest-ever tally.
The party, which is led by Shafiqur Rahman and contested for the first time since a 2013 ban that was lifted after Hasina’s ouster, said it is not “satisfied” with the vote count and raised “serious questions about the integrity of the results process”.
The National Citizen Party (NCP), led by youth activists instrumental in toppling Hasina and part of a Jamaat-led alliance, won just six of the 30 seats that it contested.
The Election Commission has yet to formally announce the final tally, which is expected either later on Friday or on Saturday.
Turnout stood at almost 60 percent of registered voters, according to the Election Commission, well over the nearly 42 percent in the last election in 2024.
The election featured a record number of parties, more than 50, and at least 2,000 candidates, many of them independents. The parliament comprises 350 lawmakers, with 50 seats reserved for women.
More than 127 million people were eligible to cast their votes, with many expressing enthusiasm for what was widely seen as Bangladesh’s first competitive vote in years.
An interim government led by Nobel peace laureate Muhammad Yunus, 85, has been in office since Hasina fled to India in 2024 after widespread protests led largely by young people, who were killed in their hundreds by security forces.
Tarique Rahman, who has never held government office, returned to Bangladesh in December after 17 years of self-imposed exile in the United Kingdom. The 60-year-old has yet to comment on the unofficial results but on Friday, he waved from his car as he left his house in the capital, Dhaka, for a mosque.
In a statement, the BNP asked people to refrain from large celebrations and offer special prayers instead.
“Despite winning … by a large margin of votes, no celebratory procession or rally shall be organised,” the party said in a statement.
‘Litmus test’
The 78-year-old former leader, Hasina, was sentenced to death in absentia for crimes against humanity for the bloody crackdown on protesters during her final months in power, and remains in hiding in India. Her Awami League party was barred from the election.
BNP members have said the party would formally request Hasina’s extradition from India. In its manifesto, the BNP promised to prioritise job creation, protect low-income and marginal households and ensure fair prices to farmers. Tarique Rahman has also promised to revive a stagnant economy, reset ties with countries in the region and crack down on corruption.
Abbas Faiz, an independent South Asia researcher, said the election was a test of how Bangladesh was “ready for democracy”.
“Also, a test of the political parties which have been able to take part in the elections. They have actually understood the aspirations and the wishes of the people of their country for the removal of corrupt practices in the administration and parliament,” Faiz told Al Jazeera.
He added the election is the “litmus test” which puts responsibility on the “shoulders of the new government”.
But Faiz explained that the election would have been “fairer” if all parties, including the Awami League, were allowed to participate.
“But in a way, the problem lies with the Awami League itself, because it did not reimage itself as a party that could be trusted by the general populace in Bangladesh,” he said.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and the US ambassador to Bangladesh, Brent T Christensen, were among the first to congratulate Rahman on his party’s victory. China’s embassy in Dhaka also congratulated the BNP over its election showing.
The election commission also said some 48 million voters chose “Yes” while about 23 million said “No” in a referendum on constitutional reforms held alongside the election, though 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.
Fahmida Khatun, an economist and executive director of the Dhaka-based Centre for Policy Dialogue, told Al Jazeera that early signals support the perception of a credible election.
Although heavy security was reported across polling stations, “broadly, the voting was peaceful”, Khatun said, pointing to the voter turnout figure as an indicator of healthy participation.
“This indicates citizens wanted to exercise their voting rights and they wanted to choose their own people,” she added.
Aryansh Sharma hit an unbeaten 74 as United Arab Emirates bolstered their remote hopes of qualifying for the T20 World Cup Super 8s with a tense five-wicket win over Canada.
Canada looked well placed to defend their total of 150-7 with four overs remaining, only for Sohaib Khan to reignite UAE’s chase when he took 17 off Dillon Heyliger.
UAE needed eight runs off the final over and Sharma settled any nerves after he clobbered Jaskaran Singh’s first ball for six over mid-wicket.
Khan was then caught – after a blistering 51 off 29 balls, including four sixes – with the scores level.
But new batter Muhammad Arfan nonchalantly biffed Singh for four to seal the victory with two balls to spare as Sharma top-scored with his knock off 53 balls.
UAE are now third in Group D on two points but the associate nation must pull off shock wins over full members South Africa and Afghanistan next week to reach the next phase.
They have never beaten a full member at a World Cup of any format but will take some confidence from the manner in which they chased down this total.
Earlier, Junaid Siddique had picked up the best figures by a UAE player at a T20 World Cup with 5-35 at the Arun Jaitley Stadium in Delhi.
Harsh Thaker, who struck three sixes and two fours in a 41-ball half-century, had provided the backbone of Canada’s total.
He shared a 58-run partnership with Navneet Dhaliwal to help the Canadians recover from 38-3 before the latter was run out on 34.
Thaker fell victim to Siddique’s slower ball with 14 balls left and Canada struggled to find the boundary against some tight bowling by the UAE.
Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola says we will “have a better society” by embracing other cultures.
Guardiola was asked for his response to comments made by Manchester United co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe when he said the UK had been “colonised by immigrants”.
Ratcliffe later apologised for “offending some people” but maintained “open debate” on the matter was still needed.
Speaking at a news conference before Saturday’s FA Cup fourth round tie against Salford (15:00 GMT), Spaniard Guardiola said: “Everybody wants to have a better life. Every person wants to have a perspective to have a better future for themselves, for their families or their friends. Sometimes opportunities come in the place that you were born and the place that you go.
“That is why the place you were born doesn’t make a difference.
“Most people run away from their countries for the problems that are in their country, not because they want to leave.
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Guardiola was born in Santpedor, in the Catalan region of Spain, and spent time in his homeland as well as Italy, Qatar and Mexico as a player.
As a manager, the 55-year-old has had spells in Spain, Germany and England – taking charge of Manchester City in 2016.
“It is a problem all around the world,” Guardiola said.
“We treat immigrants or people that come from other countries like they are the ones causing problems for our country. It’s a big problem because the fact I am Catalan and you are British? What influence did we have on where we were born?
“Everyone wants to have a better life, everyone wants to have a better future for themselves and their families. Sometimes the opportunities are where you are born and sometimes it is in the place where you go.
Former assistant manager Tony Docherty has rejoined Aberdeen to strengthen Peter Leven’s interim management team until the summer as the Scottish Premiership club prepare to wait until then for a new head coach.
Sporting director Lutz Pfannenstiel has promised an announcement about a permanent appointment “imminently”.
But Docherty’s surprise return means whoever is chosen will not arrive at Pittodrie until the end of the season.
It comes a week after it was revealed that former Rosenborg, Brann and Saint-Etienne head coach Eirik Horneland had emerged as a leading candidate to succeed Jimmy Thelin, who was sacked on 4 January.
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The 55-year-old first joined the Scottish Premiership club in 2013 as part of Derek McInnes’ management team and went on to spend eight years at Pittodrie.
He was also McInnes’ number two with Kilmarnock before spells as manager with Dundee and Ross County but was sacked by the latter in December with his side bottom of the Championship.
“Tony has a wealth of experience and knows the club inside out,” Pfannenstiel told his club website.
“He has excellent knowledge of the Scottish Premiership, both as a coach and a manager, and that will be invaluable for us in the short term.
“Our managerial search is now reaching its conclusion and we hope to be in a position to announce our new head coach imminently.”
Leven, who is in his third spell as caretaker and whose side sit seventh in Scotland’s top flight, welcomed Docherty’s appointment.
“It’s great to have someone of Tony’s experience back in the Aberdeen dugout for the upcoming games,” Leven added.
“He was very enthusiastic about coming in when I spoke with him and his presence and knowledge at both training and matches will be a big boost to me and the squad.”
Horneland left Saint-Etienne at the start of February with his side sitting fourth in France’s second tier.
Johannesburg, South Africa – From deadly Cyclone Gezani in Madagascar and surging waterborne disease risks across flood-affected Mozambique, to parched land and herds of dead livestock along the Kenya-Somalia border, the continent is starting 2026 under siege from water‑linked climate shocks – just as African leaders gather for a summit that puts the precious resource at the centre of its agenda.
On paper, the African Union’s choice of water as its 2026 summit theme – with a focus on water as a vital resource for life, development and sustainability – appears apolitical. But experts say it is anything but.
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“Water is life,” said Sanusha Naidu, a foreign policy analyst at the South African think tank, the Institute for Global Dialogue.
“But it’s not just that water is life – water is becoming a commodity of corporatisation and access. It is a humanitarian conflict. It is a climate change conflict.
“It’s a peace and security issue.”
Water and conflict
Although worsening climate change and the strain it puts on resources is a main pressure point, analysts point to other flashpoints where water and conflict intersect – including upstream-downstream tensions over shared natural resources, water being used as a weapon of war, and big industry claiming water resources at the cost of human beings.
In Africa, water cuts across interstate disputes like Egypt and Ethiopia’s fight over the Nile, deadly tensions between farmers and herders in Nigeria over access to the same arable land, antigovernment protests over failed service delivery in Madagascar, and the outbreak of health epidemics in the wake of major floods and droughts.
It’s really a “multitude” of competing or interlinked factors that are creating a “vicious circle” of challenges people have to deal with, Naidu says, especially in Africa, which is particularly vulnerable to climate change.
With temperature increases in Africa slightly above the global average, the continent faces a disproportionate burden from the climate crisis, according to the World Meteorological Organization and climate experts.
For Dhesigen Naidoo, a senior water and climate researcher with African policy think tank, the Institute for Security Studies (ISS), climate change is now experienced first and foremost as a water crisis.
“We’re talking about floods and droughts and very high energy storms that have been experienced around the world and in Africa with absolutely devastating impact,” he said, noting that “our ability to manage that has really diminished over time as the challenge gets bigger and bigger.”
From desertification to huge flooding, “too much and too little water have the same impact” as they both diminish people’s access to the resource, he said.
This lack of access leads to water scarcity as well as increased food shortages, growing numbers of climate refugees, and the higher prospect of conflict, according to Naidoo.
“If you look at the Sahel and [across Africa], the correlation between the activities of al-Shabab on the east side and Boko Haram on the west side, and the desertification creep, there’s an almost direct correlation [between strained resources and conflict],” he said.
In areas where there is a scarcity of basic resources like water, people are often forced to do whatever they can to survive, Naidoo explains. “And sometimes it leads to very, very bad security outcomes.”
This is evident in northern Nigeria, where an array of armed groups are recruiting among vulnerable local populations, while in the middle belt region, intercommunal conflict between farmers and herders over shared pastoral land resources has turned deadly.
Even away from front-line battles, water scarcity is heightening geopolitical security concerns. Observers point to electricity and water cuts that prompted angry antigovernment protests in Madagascar last year; and this week in South Africa, the country’s Human Rights Commission called for the water crisis to be declared a national disaster, amid protests from many Johannesburg residents who have gone without water for 20 days.
Water flows from Lesotho’s Katse Dam, down some 80km (50 miles) of tunnels hewn through solid rock, into South African rivers heading north to Johannesburg in Gauteng province [File: Reuters]
Upstream-downstream Nile tensions
Some water tensions were drawn into the very borders that delineate the continent.
When European powers carved up Africa before, and at the Berlin Conference more than a century ago, they crudely drew lines between tribes, territories, and key water sources.
Across Africa, 90 percent of surface water is in transboundary basins and requires transboundary cooperation or treaties to manage, according to the World Bank.
These include the Senegal and Niger River Basins in West Africa that cover Guinea, Mali, Senegal, Niger and Nigeria; the Limpopo and Orange River Basins in Southern Africa, which cover South Africa, Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique and Namibia; and the Nile River Basin in the east and north, spanning Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt.
While the treaties that govern water sharing are operating well in most regions, recent tensions around the Nile have revealed the potential for future upstream-downstream conflict, experts say.
Last year, Ethiopia inaugurated the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), its most ambitious infrastructure venture on the Blue Nile, amid tensions with downstream neighbours Egypt and Sudan, which rely heavily on the Nile and fear the Ethiopian dam will threaten their water security.
“The level of tension is relatively high at the moment” between Ethiopia and the downstream countries, particularly Egypt, who were unable to block the dam’s construction, notes Magnus Taylor, the deputy director of the Horn of Africa project at conflict prevention think tank, International Crisis Group.
Beyond the technical operational concerns of the dam, there are also broader tensions, Taylor says, as the GERD marks a historic shift in Nile power relations.
“Egypt fears [the GERD] will challenge both its practical control over the Nile waters but also its broader political hegemony over the Nile basin,” he said.
That tension is then dispersed and “translated through other political and security situations which have been influenced by the GERD issue,” the analyst noted.
He points to the advantage that Egypt’s backing of the Sudanese Armed Forces in Sudan’s ongoing war has created for Cairo in ensuring Sudan supports its view on the GERD.
Separately, Cairo has also diplomatically courted Eritrea, Ethiopia’s northern neighbour with which it has contentious relations, he said, while Egypt has also offered security support to Somalia when Ethiopia pursued a sea access deal with the breakaway rival region of Somaliland.
Water as root, site, weapon of war
Taylor says that while the world is not yet seeing outright “water wars”, water disputes are nevertheless shaping and intensifying other conflicts across the Horn of Africa.
For ISS water expert Naidoo, “the notion of an inter-country conflict based on water is a very real thing,” and upstream-downstream tensions escalating into conflict are “a possibility in several parts of the world and certainly in several parts of Africa”.
The Egypt-Ethiopia tensions are currently the clearest example of a historically hegemonic downstream country now having to play by the rules of an upstream country that has asserted itself, he said. But “many very big economies in Africa”, like Nigeria, South Africa and Senegal, are also downstream countries, he points out.
“On the Niger River, Nigeria is a downstream country and currently has very poor relations with its northern neighbours, Mali and Niger. And that is a very serious issue about an upstream-downstream dynamic that might mimic what is currently happening between Ethiopia and Egypt,” Naidoo said.
Water has historically been a source of conflict, he argues.
“The art of war around water is well honed into the psyche of human beings,” said Naidoo, who remarks that the first-ever resource wars in prehistoric times were fought over water and food – even long before oil.
But more than just the root and reason, experts say water is sometimes used as the weapon itself.
Naidoo pointed to the wars in Sudan and Gaza as current examples “where there is a very high level of the weaponisation of water currently under way”. In both places, civilians suffer deprivation as supplies are blocked and water sources are targeted in armed attacks.
“We have, for a very long time, organised ourselves to have an informal agreement that all parties in any conflict would not weaponise water. But events are teaching us that people are quite happy to go back on that,” the water expert noted.
At the same time, technology is another factor putting strain on people’s access to water. Communications infrastructure and AI data centres all require industrial-scale amounts of water for cooling, putting more strain on the supplies that people rely on.
This means the prospect of water conflicts “will probably get a lot worse”, Naidoo said.
“We have organised ourselves to develop economies that are very highly dependent on regular water supplies. And so small perturbations in the system – being without water for three days – is cause for conflict,” he remarked.
“You can’t tolerate it because you actually can’t do without it. Not just personally on your own consumption, but because everything that works around you has a water dependency.”
Girls hold up handwritten banners during the arrival of an AU-UN delegation in Forog, Sudan, in 2012 [Albert Gonzalez Farran/UNAMID via Reuters]
Who is responsible?
The scale of challenges is concerning for experts and observers, and many feel those in leadership positions have not done enough to mitigate the crisis.
The AU’s decision to put water at the centre of its 2026 summit this weekend is important, yet overdue, Naidu says.
She says the continental bloc and national governments have known about the emerging water crisis for years, but have largely failed to act at the necessary scale.
She also argues that the responsibility lies not only with governments, but also with local officials, corporations that exploit and pollute, and consumers and civil society, who must change their behaviour and demand accountability.
Crisis Group’s Taylor says the AU may issue a communique at the summit, but because of the limited remit of the AU, this is unlikely to translate into any binding continent‑wide water agreements that can be enforced.
Al Jazeera reached out to the AU with questions about this year’s summit, but received no response.
For ISS’s Naidoo, treaties and agreements have a place, but power also lies with national governments, who can work to support and scale up real solutions already being produced at ground level.
He sees a silver lining in African innovation projects, including non‑sewered sanitation systems, which treat waste on-site through biological, chemical, or mechanical processes that rely less on water, or projects like the “overhead aqueduct” system in Kenya’s Kibera, which offers a way for areas without traditional underground piping to get clean water to residents of the Nairobi slum.
These examples show that Africa is not only a victim of the water crisis, he said, but also a source of potential solutions and a space where the continent can exercise Global South‑led leadership.
Getting water right is a non-negotiable, “social, humanitarian, economic, and security” issue, Naidoo said.
“The conundrum is that Africa has a very high level of tolerance to certain things, like the lack of services or lack of decent sanitation. Part of the reason why we don’t make progress in this domain is because it’s kind of accepted,” Naidoo said.
“But you can’t be tolerant of having no water,” he warned, “or you will die.”
A girl looks at water from the Nile flowing from a pump in the Manshiyat Nasser shantytown in eastern Cairo [File: Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters]