KEY POINTS
- Tarique Rahman returned to Bangladesh after 17 years in exile ahead of elections.
- Rahman will lead the BNP campaign and could be its prime ministerial candidate.
- His return comes amid political unrest following the killing of an anti-India student leader.
- Bangladesh’s ties with India have worsened since Sheikh Hasina’s ouster.
DHAKA, Bangladesh: Political heavyweight Tarique Rahman returned to Bangladesh on Thursday, ending 17 years in self-imposed exile, vowing to restore security and justice as his party prepares for the February 12 general elections.
Huge crowds of joyous supporters waving flags, banners and posters welcomed Rahman, the son of former prime minister Khaleda Zia and acting chairman of her popular Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP).
“Today, I want to say that I have a plan for my country… a safe state that people have long hoped for,” Rahman, 60, said in his first speech after his homecoming.
“It is time we build a country together. This country belongs to the people in the hills and the plains, to Muslims, Buddhists, Christians and Hindus.”
A visibly emotional Rahman earlier took off his shoes, stood on the grass outside the airport and scooped up soil as a mark of reverence to his motherland.
He waved to supporters before ducking into a convoy under tight security, according to video footage shared by his party.
Rahman to lead BNP in Feb 12 elections

BNP backers gathered in the capital Dhaka since the early morning, plastering the streets with banners and festoons bearing images of Rahman, who is expected to take the reins from his ailing mother.
Patriotic songs blared from loudspeakers while cut-outs depicted the seasoned politician riding a stallion.
Party supporter Alamgir Hossain said Bangladesh was in a “dire situation” and that only Rahman “can fix it”.
Rahman, known in Bangladesh as Tarique Zia, left Bangladesh for London in 2008, following an arrest on corruption charges and after what he described as political persecution.
As acting party chairman, Rahman will lead the BNP through the February 12 general elections — the first polls since a student-led uprising last year toppled the autocratic government of Sheikh Hasina.
‘Repay the debt’
The BNP is widely seen as an election frontrunner, with Rahman expected to be put forward as prime minister if his party wins a majority.
Rahman’s 80-year-old mother Zia is undergoing treatment in intensive care at a hospital in Dhaka after years of ill health and imprisonment.
Rahman said his mother had “sacrificed everything” for the country and that he had come to meet her and express “my gratitude”.
Unrest over anti-India youth leader

Rahman’s return comes amid unrest over the killing of popular anti-India student leader Sharif Osman Hadi, a staunch India-critic who took part in last year’s mass uprising.
Hadi, 32, was shot by masked assailants earlier this month in Dhaka, and later died of his wounds at a Singapore hospital.
His death set off violent protests with mobs torching several buildings, including two major newspapers deemed to favour India and a prominent cultural institution.
Mobs also threw stones at the Indian High Commission in the port city of Chattogram, where visa services have since been suspended.
Bangladesh police stated that Hadi’s suspected killers have crossed the border into India after the shooting on December 12, Dhaka Tribune reported. The Bangladesh government also asked New Delhi to hand over the suspects if found in India.
Rahman urged his supporters to remain vigilant “in the face of conspiracies”.
“If the nation is to repay the… debt owed to its martyrs, it must build the country the people have long yearned for,” he said.
Bangladesh’s worsening ties with India

Dhaka’s diplomatic ties with New Delhi have worsened since the uprising, with ousted prime minister Hasina seeking refuge in India.
India has said it was considering Bangladesh’s request to extradite Hasina, who was sentenced to death in absentia for orchestrating a deadly crackdown on the uprising.
With anti-India sentiments rising in the majority Muslim nation, a Hindu garment worker was accused of blasphemy and killed on December 18.
“Rahman is the symbol of hope for this country,” said Jahan Panna, a former BNP lawmaker.
Rahman faced a slew of court cases, but since Hasina’s fall his most severe punishment has been overturned: a life sentence handed down in absentia for a 2004 grenade attack on a political rally. He denied the charges.
In Britain, he kept a low profile but remained an outspoken figure on social media.

In June, he met in London with Muhammad Yunus, the 85-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner leading the interim government until the February vote.
Hasina’s Awami League party, a bitter rival of BNP, has been barred from contesting in the polls.
The Yunus administration has announced elections on February 12, after which it is to peacefully transfer power to an elected government.



