Bangladesh political heir Tarique Rahman poised for PM

In a dramatic political reversal, Tarique Rahman, leader of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), stands poised to assume leadership of the South Asian nation following what his party claims is a decisive parliamentary election victory. The February 12th polls mark a watershed moment in Bangladesh’s turbulent political landscape, coming eighteen months after a violent uprising unseated former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s authoritarian government.

While official results remain pending, the United States has already extended congratulations to Rahman on an ‘historic’ electoral achievement. This political triumph represents an extraordinary comeback for the 60-year-old scion of Bangladesh’s most powerful political dynasty, who only returned from seventeen years of exile in Britain this past December.

Rahman’s political identity remains inextricably linked to his family legacy. His father, President Ziaur Rahman, was assassinated in 1981, while his mother, Khaleda Zia—a three-time prime minister and formidable political figure—passed away just days after his return to Bangladesh. In an exclusive interview with AFP conducted before the election, Rahman acknowledged this inheritance while asserting his individual ambitions: ‘They are them; I am me. I will try to do better than them.’

The returning heir described complex emotions upon his homecoming—the joy of return immediately overshadowed by his mother’s deteriorating health and subsequent passing. ‘When you come home after so long, any son wants to hug his mother,’ he reflected. ‘I didn’t have that chance.’

Rahman’s political career has been shadowed by serious allegations of corruption and abuse of power. Classified US diplomatic cables once described him as ‘a symbol of kleptocratic government’ who ‘inspires few but unnerves many.’ Following his 2007 arrest on corruption charges—which he maintains were politically motivated—Rahman fled to London, where he faced multiple trials in absentia.

Recently, Rahman has been acquitted of the most severe charge against him: a life sentence connected to a 2004 grenade attack on a Hasina rally. Though maintaining his innocence regarding all allegations, he offered a nuanced apology: ‘If there are any mistakes which were unwanted, we are sorry for that.’

Now married to a cardiologist and father to a lawyer daughter, Rahman spent his exile leading a comparatively quiet life in Britain until his dramatic return to Dhaka—an event that captured national attention, particularly images of his ginger cat Jebu that circulated widely on social media.

Confronting the monumental task of rebuilding a nation he claims was ‘destroyed’ by the previous administration, Rahman must now translate electoral victory into effective governance for Bangladesh’s 170 million citizens.