Amid an impasse between the government and the main opposition alliance over the timing of the polls, Bangladesh will use Electronic Voting Machines (EVM) for the first time in the general elections which is to held on December 23.
"The 11th general election will be held across Bangladesh on December 23 using EVMs on a limited scale," Chief Election Commissioner Nurul Huda said in a nationally televised address.
Huda made the announcement hours after his meeting with four election commissioners to finalise the poll date which came amid calls from the newly-floated National Unity Front (NUF) to defer the election schedule while the ruling Awami League urged the commission to stick to its plan.
The candidates have to submit their nomination papers between November 9 and November 19. The nomination papers will be scrutinised on November 22.
Nearly 104.2 million people, including a little more than 51.6 million women, are registered as voters. They will elect 300 representatives to Parliament through the balloting in about 40,199 polling stations.
He said, "The countdown of the national election has already begun and the works of buying polls materials and printing have been completed," as he promised to ensure a "level playing field for all".
"We believe that if EVMs are used, it will improve the quality of the voting process and save time, money and labour," Huda said.
Earlier, EVMs were partially used in local government elections, BDNews24.com reported.
Despite objections from many political parties, the use of EVMs became possible through the amendments to the Representation of the People Order (RPO) last month.
The Election Commission plans to use 150,000 EVMs in at least 100 randomly selected constituencies across the country during the vote, the Dhaka Tribune reported.
Huda urged all political parties to take part in the election to continue Bangladesh's "development efforts and put democracy on a stronger footing" even as he asked them to minimise their differences.
As many as 600,000 members of police, BGB, Bangladesh Coast Guard, Ansar and Village Defence Party will be deployed for law enforcement. The army will also be deployed to assist the civil administration.
The ruling Awami League and its main ally Jatiya Party welcomed the announcement with League activists staging a street march supporting the polls.
Opposition parties have expressed concern that the polls will not be democratic and have threatened protests.
Detained opposition leader and Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) chief Khaleda Zia was sent sent back to jail a few hours before the announcement, after a month of treatment in hospital.
Seventy-three-year-old Zia is serving a 10-year jail term in two graft cases. She is unlikely to contest due to her imprisonment and has virtually no time to appeal.
A court had handed down a life sentence to BNP acting chairman and Zia's "fugitive" son Tarique Rahman two months ago, for masterminding a deadly 2004 grenade attack that killed 24 Awami League leaders and activists.
The BNP boycotted the last election in 2014 over fears it would be rigged. The Awami League, headed by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, won the election in 2014.
( With inputs from PTI )
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