National Citizen Party – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sun, 28 Dec 2025 03:30:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png National Citizen Party – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Student-led NCP sees internal rift ahead of Bangladesh polls https://artifex.news/article70445514-ece/ Sun, 28 Dec 2025 03:30:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70445514-ece/ Read More “Student-led NCP sees internal rift ahead of Bangladesh polls” »

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An internal rift overnight gripped the student-led National Citizen Party (NCP) over its proposed alliance with the Jamaat-e-Islami ahead of the Bangladesh election in February, with 30 of its leaders issuing a joint letter opposing the plan and two ranking members announcing their resignation.

The NCP, a large offshoot of the Students Against Discrimination (SAD) that spearheaded last year’s violent movement, dubbed the July Uprising, toppling then Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s Awami League government, emerged as a political party with interim government chief Muhammad Yunus’ blessings in February.

Editorial | Unrest unlimited: On the crisis in Bangladesh

The first signatory to the memorandum and the NCP’s joint member-secretary, Mushfiq Us Saleheen, told reporters on Saturday night that they have sent the memo titled “Principled objections to a potential alliance in light of the accountability of the July Uprising and party values” to party convenor Nahid Islam.

The memorandum has expressed concerns over the NCP’s alliance with the Jamaat, stating that it conflicts with the party’s declared ideology and stance regarding the July Uprising and democratic ethics.

It has simultaneously pointed out the Jamaat’s controversial political history, particularly its role against Bangladesh’s independence and alleged collaboration in genocide and crimes during the 1971 Liberation War, describing these as fundamentally incompatible with Bangladesh’s democratic spirit and the NCP’s core values.

The memo has alleged that the Jamaat’s student wing, Chhatra Shibir, in recent past infiltrated and sabotaged other parties in its efforts to blame the NCP for various incidents and spread misinformation and propaganda.

It has warned that the planned alliance with the Jamaat would undermine the NCP’s political credibility and public trust, creating confusion and disappointment among “many of our activists and supporters, especially among the younger generation and ordinary citizens who support new politics”.

The memorandum was made public after the NCP’s senior joint member-secretary, Tasnim Jara, resigned from her position on Saturday evening and announced that she would contest the upcoming parliamentary election as an independent candidate from a constituency in Dhaka, the capital.

In a Facebook post, Jara, a doctor, said “due to the current political realities, I have decided not to contest the election as a candidate of any specific party or alliance”.

She, however, did not point out if her resignation was related to the NCP’s planned electoral alliance with the Jamaat, while newspaper reports said her husband and the party’s joint convenor, Khaled Saifullah, too has quit the organisation.

The mass circulation “Ittefaq” newspaper earlier on Saturday said most female NCP leaders like senior joint convenor Samata Sharmin, senior member-secretary Nahid Sarwar Niva, joint convenor Taznuva Jabin and joint member-secretary Nusrat Tabassum were opposed to an alliance with the Jamaat or any religion-based parties and that they have expressed their reservation to the party.

Most signatories to the memo, however, were the NCP’s male members.

The NCP is yet to make any formal announcement about its proposed alliance but the “Daily Star” newspaper has said the party is likely to finalise a seat-sharing deal with the Jamaat within the next one or two days.

But Jamaat’s secretary, General Mia Golam Parwar, has told the newspaper that their discussions with the NCP are underway on a one-on-one basis and “there is a possibility of sharing seats, and the issue will become clear very soon”.

The “Prothom Alo” newspaper had reported earlier that the possibility of a seat-sharing deal between the NCP and former prime minister Khaleda Zia’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) was discussed, “but no understanding was reached”.

“Since then, NCP talks with Jamaat have progressed positively,” the report read.

The BNP has emerged as the forerunner in the changed political landscape, with its once crucial ally and partner in its 2001-2006 tenure in power — Jamaat — appearing as its main rival in the apparent absence of the Awami League, disbanded by the interim government under an executive order.

Published – December 28, 2025 09:00 am IST



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Bangladesh’s student-led NCP threatens to halt elections after EC’s refusal to grant demanded symbol https://artifex.news/article70090609-ece/ Thu, 25 Sep 2025 08:46:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70090609-ece/ Read More “Bangladesh’s student-led NCP threatens to halt elections after EC’s refusal to grant demanded symbol” »

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Bangladesh’s student-led National Citizen Party (NCP) threatens to halt elections after the Election Commission (EC) refused to allocate the symbol it demanded ahead of the February polls.

The NCP, a large offshoot of Students against Discrimination (SAD), which led last year’s street campaign dubbed as the July Uprising, toppling then Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s Awami League and installing Professor Muhammad Yunus as the Chief Adviser.

“The commission could not show any legal logic for not allocating the shapla (water lily) as our symbol and therefore we are sticking to our demand,” the NCP’s convenor Nahid Islam was quoted as saying on Wednesday by newspapers a day after the EC revealed its decision on the issue.

Mr. Islam said the NCP would give its “final reaction” once the EC takes its “formal decision”. However, the party’s chief coordinator for northern Bangladesh, Sarjis Alam, threatened to halt the polls unless their demand was met.

“Since there is no legal barrier, the NCP must get the ‘shapla’ as its symbol; there is no other option. Unless we get it, we will see how the election is held and how someone could dream of attaining power,” Mr. Alam posted on social media.

EC’s senior secretary, Akhter Ahmed, on Tuesday told a media briefing that NCP would not be allotted the symbol they demanded as it is “not included in the list of electoral symbols as per the regulations”.

“The shapla is not on our list of 115 electoral symbols. According to the rules, political parties must choose a symbol from the approved list,” he said.

  The “shapla” is the national emblem of Bangladesh.

NCP chief coordinator Nasiruddin Patwary led the party delegation to the EC to get its registration earlier and said the party must be registered with the “shapla” symbol.

Asked how they would secure the symbol since it was not included in the EC’s revised list, he said amendments could be made at any time.

Patwary also said the party expected to win around 150 constituencies out of 300, with nominations including former army officers, as well as women, farmers, and workers involved in the July uprising.

Several political analysts, however, speculate a bleak fate for NCP in elections, particularly after their nominees witnessed a landslide defeat in students’ union elections in two major public universities – the premier Dhaka University and suburban Jahangirnagar University.

Bangladesh’s largest Islamist Party, Jamaat-e-Islami-backed Islami Chhaita Shibir, won in most of the posts in both elections.  Jatiyatabadi Chhatra Dal, the student wing of former prime minister Khaleda Zia’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party, also witnessed an astounding defeat, though it emerged as the second biggest student group in the central students union polls in the two universities.



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