The Awami League of former Bangladeshi prime minister Sheikh Hasina heads the counting of votes in legislative elections held in Bangladesh on Monday, according to partial results yet which seem to give a convincing victory.
After the counting of votes for 77 of the 299 seats in dispute, the bloc led by the League has obtained 60 of them compared to 17 of its rival, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), the agency reported UNB.
The same trendOffer data supplied by other electronic means Bangladeshis, the Electoral Commission has not yet officially confirmed.
According toPortal Bdnews24.com recount, the alliance led by the League of Hasina has secured 66 seats compared to only five block BNP.
The results are concluded as knowing the scrutiny of each of the 299 constituencies in the country, which is expected to be complete by Tuesday.
Following the overwhelming victory of the League to predict these partial data, the secretary of the BNP, Ruhul Kabir Rizvi, complained in a press conference that his party has evidence of massive irregularities during the vote.
Rizvi, quoted by UNB, refused to comment on the initial results and said that party leaders communicate its views on Tuesday.
Hasina headed the government since 1996 to 2001, between the two mandates of BNP Khaleda Zia.
Deep rivalry between two women degenerated into the winter of 2006-2007 in a wave of political violence that led to the president, Iajuddin Ahmed to declare a state of emergency on January 11 2007 and to suspend the elections scheduled for on January 22.
State of emergency was revoked last 17 days.
In July 2007, Hasina was arrested for his alleged complicity in the murder of six politicians and activists on charges of corruption.
