BNP criticises Chief Adviser Yunus’ suggestion to lower voting age to 17
The Hindu
Chief Adviser Yunus suggests lowering voting age to 17, sparking debate on potential election delays in Bangladesh.
The Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) on Saturday (December 28, 2024) said that Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus’ suggestion to set the minimum voting age at 17 would put pressure on the Election Commission and could delay the election process.
Mr. Yunus, 84, who was sworn-in to lead the interim government after the ouster of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in August, on Friday suggested that the minimum voter age should be lowered to 17 years, The Dhaka Tribune newspaper reported.
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In a video message played in an election dialogue, Mr. Yunus said, “To give their [youth] opinion on their own future, I think the voting age for them should be fixed at 17 years."
BNP secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, during a discussion at the Jatiya Press Club here, said the chief adviser’s suggestion to lower the voting age to 17 means a new voter list would have to be prepared.
"Now, people will fear that even more time will be wasted and further delays will occur,” he was quoted as saying.
Mr. Alamgir said there is an impression among the people that the interim government is deliberately trying to delay the election process. “But that is not my perception,” he added.