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Chief election commissioner AMM Nasir Uddin on Tuesday called on local election observation organisations not to appoint any person involved in politics or any party as they are field-level observers to ensure their neutral role in the upcoming national election.

‘Please make sure that your people would be totally impartial,’ he said while chairing a discussion with local election observer groups at Nirbachan Bhaban.


The discussion began at 10:35am as part of the Commission’s ongoing dialogue with stakeholders ahead of the next national election, expected to be held in early February 2026.

Election commissioners Abdur Rahmanel Masud, Tahmida Ahmad, Anwarul Islam Sarker and Brigadier General (retd) Abul Fazal Md Sanaullah were present.

The CEC said Bangladeshis are highly politically conscious, and therefore any observer who becomes politically involved during the election would ‘damage everything’.

‘Please check whether those you appoint have any political involvement or have any link and connection with any party. If they have participated in political programmes, processions or meetings, please do not appoint them,’ he said.

He said the Election Commission wants the observers as partners to deliver a fair and credible election to the nation. ‘We have promised the nation that we would deliver a fair, beautiful and credible election to the nation. The Election Commission alone cannot ensure this. We all must work together for it, he added.

Pointing at the old observer organisations, the CEC said he does not want to revisit past controversies. ‘I don’t want to dig into the past. I always want to look ahead. Mistakes may have happened for various reasons. Let’s forget about it. Rather, we should take lessons from the past and move forward.’

But he warned that the reputation of observer organisations would be at stake if their field-level staff fail to perform responsibly.  ‘Reports submitted by observers must be based on reality,’ Nasir Uddin said.

He said the organisations must take responsibility to monitor whether their field-level observers are reporting properly. ‘If any report comes that your observer is working in favour of a political party or influencing the process, this will be a great damage done to your reputation. So, please ensure they remain totally impartial,’ he said.

The CEC said the commission’s sole agenda is to deliver a ‘credible, transparent and fair election.’

Describing the observers and journalists as the CCTV cameras for the EC, he said ‘If they keep watch, no one will dare to commit irregularities. Your role is very important. You have a very important role to play.’

He reminded organisations that observers must not engage in any election campaigning or influence the vote in any way. ‘Their duty is just to observe, not to intervene. If they see an irregularity, it is their duty to report it, not to intervene or stop it.’

On Tuesday, the EC is holding two separate discussions—one with 40 observer organisations in the morning, and another with 41 organisations from 2:00pm.

The EC is holding two discussions on Tuesday — the first discussion with 40 observer organisations, while the second one with 41 other organisations from 2:00pm.

Besides, the commission is going to sit in its second discussion with top representatives of law enforcement agencies, including the armed forces on November 27 and with the top government officials concerned on November 30 next.

The meeting with the law enforcement agencies is likely to focus on the deployment of security personnel in every constituency including polling stations, their coordination among the law enforcement members and EC’s instructions to ensure security during the upcoming election.

Earlier, the Election held dialogues with 47 registered political parties, including BNP, Jamaat and National Citizen Party-NCP on November 13, 16, 17 and 19 last.

In late September 2025, the commission opened a series of electoral dialogues with different stakeholders amid talks with civil society representatives on September 28.

Later, the EC held separate dialogues with the representatives of teachers, senior journalists from different media outlets, election experts and election observers.

The Election Commission is likely to announce the schedule in early December for holding the next general election in the first half of February 2026.