A joint National Democratic Institute (NDI) and International Republican Institute (IRI) technical assessment mission deployed to Bangladesh to monitor potential electoral violence conditions before, during and after the country’s January 7 general election released its final report on Saturday in Washington, highlighting a decrease in physical and online violence.
The document provides a thematic analysis of different types of election violence and includes recommendations to Bangladesh’s Election Commission, the executive and legislative branches of government, political parties, civil society, and other stakeholders based on the IRI and NDI’s comparative experience, to mitigate risks of violence in future elections, in the furtherance of international cooperation and with respect for the sovereignty of Bangladesh.
The mission found that the 2024 election period, including the campaigning period, election day and the immediate aftermath, had less physical and online violence than previous election cycles, primarily due to the absence of nationwide partisan competition and the state’s increased focus on election security.
However, the mission also found that the quality of the January election had been undermined by incidents of state, ruling party and opposition violence, as well as a pre-election environment characterized by increased political polarization, violence among political actors, contracting civic space and worsening freedoms of expression and association.
“This report provides a valuable roadmap for more peaceful elections in Bangladesh’s future,” said Manpreet Singh Anand, the NDI’s regional director for the Asia-Pacific.
“Leaders across the sociopolitical spectrum — including political parties, the government and civil society – have a responsibility to reform the rules, practices and norms of electoral politics toward nonviolence.”
“Election violence is a key deterrent of citizen participation,” said Johanna Kao, the IRI’s senior director for its Asia-Pacific division. “For Bangladesh’s elections to be fully inclusive and participatory, all sides need to prioritize nonviolent politics.”
During its stay in Bangladesh, the mission’s five accredited long-term analysts met with election and government officials, security actors, political party leaders from across the political spectrum, journalists and civil society organizations, including those focusing on youth, women, persons with disabilities and religious minorities, as well as with accredited international observer missions.
This mission follows a joint pre-election assessment mission (PEAM) that the NDI and IRI conducted from October 8 to 11 last year.
The observations from the PEAM informed the structure and scope of the technical assessment, which was conducted following the laws of Bangladesh and consistent with the Declaration of Principles for International Election Observation, endorsed in 2005 at the United Nations.
The IRI and NDI are nonpartisan, non-governmental organizations that support and strengthen democratic institutions and practices worldwide.
The institutes have collectively observed more than 200 elections in more than 50 countries over the last 30 years.