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Dhaka Tribune

BNP reiterates support for reforms in talks with Consensus Commission

The BNP is a reform-oriented party, says Nazrul Islam Khan

Update : 17 Apr 2025, 01:15 PM

The BNP on Thursday told the National Consensus Commission that the party is not against reforms but wants to utilise the opportunity created for reforms.

“We have another opportunity before us and we want to seize it. We are cooperating with this commission and this government with that expectation in mind,” said BNP Standing Committee Member Nazrul Islam Khan.

The BNP leader made the remarks during his opening speech during its dialogue with the National Consensus Commission in the LD Hall of parliament.

The National Consensus Commission is holding talks as part of a series of dialogues with political parties to reach a national consensus over the state reform initiatives taken by the interim government.

A BNP delegation joined the talks, which started at 10:35am, with National Consensus Commission Vice Chairman Prof Ali Riaz presiding over it.

Pointing to the BNP's 31-point reform agenda, Nazrul said that even if the National Consensus Commission did not present a reform charter, the BNP already has its own.

“So we are in favour of it. We would like to say only one thing — that the people are at the root of everything. Everything should be done with the consent of the people. And we know through whom the people give their consent,” he said.

Referring to various reform initiatives taken by the BNP and its past governments, Nazrul said they told the chief adviser on Wednesday that no political party in Bangladesh has carried out more reforms than the BNP. “So the BNP is not against reform — it is a reform-oriented party,” he said.

BNP Standing Committee Member Salahuddin Ahmed was among the members of the BNP delegation.

A day earlier, a BNP delegation led by Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir met Chief Adviser Prof Muhammad Yunus and later expressed dissatisfaction with the outcome of the meeting, as the chief adviser had not given them any specific deadline for the election.

On March 20, the National Consensus Commission opened its dialogues with political parties, aiming to build a national consensus on the reform initiatives undertaken by the interim government.

The commission has already held talks with 11 political parties.

The National Consensus Commission, formed under the leadership of Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus, aims to establish a unified stance on critical reforms.

Since its inception on February 15, the commission has been working to finalise recommendations for state reform proposals.

In the initial phase, key recommendations from five reform commissions — covering constitutional, public administration, electoral system, judiciary and anti-corruption reforms — were compiled and shared with 39 political parties for feedback.

To date, 34 parties have responded.

The National Consensus Commission aims to complete the first round of talks with political parties by the first week of May and enter the second round in the second week of May, with the goal of building a national consensus over reform initiatives by mid-July.

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