Bangladesh intensifies security as Hasina seeks re-election on Sunday

Press Trust of India  |  Dhaka 

stepped up security Saturday with thousands of army troops patrolling the streets along with paramilitary forces and police as seeks a record fourth term in Sunday's

Law enforcement agencies in major cities are checking vehicles as part of their vigil as some 600,000 security personnel including several thousand soldiers and paramilitary border guards were deployed across the country.

Thirteen people have been killed and thousands injured in clashes between supporters of Hasina's ruling and activists of the opposition Nationalist Party (BNP).

The opposition parties have alleged that thousands of its leaders and activists have been arrested to weaken them.

The or RAB on Friday night arrested eight people for circulating "provocative videos and rumours" on relating to

Video-making materials, laptops and were seized from the detainees, officials said.

Hindu-Buddhist-Christian Unity Council said minority community leaders held a series of meetings with the and law enforcement agencies who promised to pursue a 'zero tolerance' policy against any attack or intimidation.

is seeking to return to power for a third consecutive time in the elections, the 11th since Bangladesh won independence from in 1971.

Former Khaleda Zia, 73, Hasina's archrival and the of the BNP, who is serving a 10-year jail sentence on corruption charges, has been barred from contesting the polls.

The BNP has stayed out of the parliamentary process since 2014 when it boycotted the over its demands for a poll-time non-party

It has returned to parliamentary as part of a new alliance - Front (NUF) - that was cobbled together three months ago with as its convener.

But the party is in a state of disarray in the absence of its two top leaders and her fugitive son who is the

is serving a 10-year prison term on graft charges while Rahman is living in ostensibly to evade the law as a court has sentenced him to life imprisonment for masterminding a grenade attack on a rally in 2004 that killed 24 leaders and activists.

last week allowed hardline Islamist party Jamaat-e-Islami, a crucial ally of BNP, to contest the general elections, two months after it scraped the fundamentalist party's registration.

posters are plastered on walls and poles across the country but those of opposition candidates are barely visible as they alleged that the police have created an atmosphere of fear to debar their supporters from staging street campaigns.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, December 29 2018. 13:15 IST