M A Hossain,
The severe threat to the transition to democracy in Bangladesh today is the loss of the state's monopoly on violence. As the nation moves toward a long-awaited parliamentary election, the unresolved recovery of looted firearms—and the violence already unfolding around it—poses a serious and unmistakable danger to law, order, and electoral credibility.
During the mass uprising and ensuing state instability, police stations, security installations, and prisons were overrun. Weapons meant to protect citizens fell into the wrong hands. Although authorities report that a large portion has been recovered, the numbers that remain missing should alarm any serious observer: approximately 1,333 firearms and more than 200,000 rounds of ammunition are still unaccounted for. These are not symbolic losses. They include rifles, submachine guns, light machine guns, pistols, and shotguns—tools of lethal efficiency, now circulating beyond state control.
That this concern is being voiced openly by senior Election Commission officials matters. This is not bureaucratic pessimism. It is a warning about election-time security from those constitutionally tasked with safeguarding the vote.
History offers a harsh lesson here. Elections held amid uncontrolled weapons rarely remain peaceful. From post-Soviet states in the 1990s to fragile democracies in Africa and Latin America, the pattern repeats: when arms seep into politics, ballots lose meaning. Bangladesh is not immune to this logic.
The violence already underway suggests the danger is not hypothetical. In recent weeks alone, shootings and targeted killings have taken place across Dhaka, Chattogram, Gazipur, Narsingdi, Jashore, and Shariatpur. Political figures, activists, and businessmen have been gunned down in public spaces. Explosions linked to homemade bombs and cocktails—some apparently prepared for campaign-related sabotage—have killed young men and destroyed homes. Election offices have been torched. Buses set on fire. Threats issued openly, often online. These are not isolated crimes. They form a pattern: the re-emergence of armed violence as a political instrument.
Human rights data reinforces the point. Last year alone, political violence claimed over a hundred lives, injured thousands, and mob lynchings killed nearly two hundred people. This year has begun no differently. In just the first week, four people were killed in shooting incidents. Mob violence—often dismissed as spontaneous rage—has become a parallel threat, fueled by the same atmosphere of impunity and weapon availability.
The police insist that unrecovered weapons will not disrupt the election. As an administrative reassurance, it sounds calming. As an empirical claim, it is deeply questionable. Since the looting of state arms, incidents of robbery, extortion, contract killings, and political intimidation have visibly increased. When criminals hold state-grade weapons, the risk is not episodic—it is structural.
Consider the psychology of elections. Voters participate when they feel safe. Candidates campaign when they believe the state can protect them. Today, at least twenty political leaders from different parties have formally requested personal security. One prominent candidate was seen publicly wearing a bulletproof vest while addressing supporters. This is not theatre. It is fear, made visible.
The interim government has not been idle. Operations under the banner of “Devil Hunt” were launched, arrests made, and statements issued. Nearly 16,000 people have been detained in recent phases. Yet the uncomfortable truth is that the recovery rate of weapons remains low, and the number of professional, high-profile criminals apprehended is even lower. Only a few hundred weapons were seized—barely scratching the surface of what remains missing. This raises a harder question: is the state chasing numbers, or dismantling networks?
Effective weapons recovery requires more than raids. It demands intelligence-led policing, inter-agency coordination, mapping of trafficking routes, and a clear understanding of who rents weapons, who supplies them, and who shields them. At present, these structures appear fragmented. The result is a dangerous blind spot—no one knows with certainty where the missing arms are, who controls them, or how they might be deployed during the campaign. That uncertainty alone is destabilizing.
Compounding the risk is the release on bail of several top-tier criminals, many of whom have returned to their old networks. Add to this the fact that prisoners escaped during the July unrest remain at large, and the security picture darkens further. In politics, perception often matters as much as reality. And the prevailing perception is one of vulnerability.
The stakes are high. The February election is not merely a procedural exercise; it is a test of Bangladesh’s democratic recovery. A vote conducted under fear—of shootings, arson, or retaliation—is a vote already compromised. Turnout declines. Trust erodes. Losers reject outcomes. Winners inherit legitimacy deficits. Responsibility, therefore, does not rest with law enforcement alone. It is a state obligation.
What should be done is neither radical nor unprecedented. First, the recovery of looted weapons must be declared a national priority, not one task among many. Second, intelligence coordination between police, military, border forces, and financial investigators must be tightened to disrupt arms markets and rental networks. Third, border areas and urban hotspots require enhanced surveillance, not sporadic patrols. Fourth, informant protection and reward mechanisms must be credible enough to encourage cooperation without fear of reprisal.
Equally important is political restraint. Campaigns cannot become pretexts for intimidation. Parties must actively discourage violence among their supporters. Silence, in this context, is complicity. The monopoly over force is the foundation of the modern state. Lose it, and everything else—law, rights, elections—becomes negotiable. Bangladesh still has time to prevent that outcome. But time, like ammunition, is not infinite.
A peaceful election is not a courtesy to political actors. It is the minimum requirement of a civilized society. And the first step toward that peace is simple, though difficult: the state’s weapons must return to the state’s hands. Delay that task, and the cost may be measured not just in lives lost, but in a democracy weakened before it can fully stand.
M A Hossain, political and defense analyst based in Bangladesh. He can be reached at: writetomahossain@gmail.com
This article published at :
1. The South Asian Times, NY: 06 Feb,26