Sheik Hasina
has been sworn in as Bangladesh's prime minister for a third term. Her party
crusied to victory in deadly elections that were boycotted by the opposition.
Bangladeshi
Prime Minister Sheik Hasina was sworn into office on Sunday, a week after her
ruling Awami League party won a resounding victory in an election in which fewer than half the seats were contested.
In a
ceremony broadcast live on television, the 64-year-old Hasina took the oath
before President Abdul Hamid at the presidential palace in the capital, Dhaka.
"I am,
Sheikh Hasina, taking oath ... that I will discharge my duties faithfully as
the prime minister of the government as per the law," said Hasina, who is
entering her second consecutive term in office, third overall.
Her
48-member cabinet was also sworn into office during the ceremony.
Hasina has
insisted that her party's landslide victory in the polls was legitimate, even
though the vote was boycotted by the opposition and its allies. The Awami
League won nearly 80 per cent of votes cast.
Worst-ever
violence
The poll
saw the worst election violence in the country's history, with at least 26
people killed and dozens of polling stations torched or trashed. The opposition
and its allies boycotted the elections after the government refused to accede
to demands that a caretaker administration oversee the poll.
The
opposition has since Wednesday called for a blockade of roads, rail and
waterways to try to topple the government, in a continuation of protest actions
that have left around 180 people dead since October and cost an estimated $4
billion (2.9 billion euros) in lost production.
The leader
of the opposition Bangladesh National Party, two-time former Prime Minister
Khaled Zia, has called the polls a "scandalous farce" and demanded
new elections under a neutral government.
Zia, who
has been under de facto house arrest, was allowed to leave her home in Dhaka
late on Saturday for the first time in two weeks to attend a meeting. It is
unclear if her house arrest has been completely lifted.
The political crisis has plunged Bangladesh deeper into turmoil and economic stagnation, and could lead to more violence in the deeply impoverished country
of 160 million.
tj/pfd (AFP, Reuters)

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