Khaborwala Online Desk
Published: 15th June 2026, 8:24 AM
The initial 100 days of the newly established Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) administration have been marred by a substantial increase in major criminal activity, including murder, kidnapping, armed robbery, and mugging. These details were officially publicised in an analytical research paper compiled by Transparency International Bangladesh (TIB), the local chapter of the global anti-corruption organisation.
The study, entitled “The First 100 Days of the Government Following the 13th National Parliamentary Election: Delivering on Commitments to Good Governance and Anti-Corruption”, systematically appraised the executive branch’s performance regarding its public pledges towards governance and the rule of law. The authenticated tracking data verified that the country witnessed 605 homicides and 196 instances of kidnapping during this opening political phase.
The comprehensive monitoring data was presented during an official press conference convened at the TIB secretariat located in the Dhanmondi district of Dhaka. The published documentation highlighted a severe breakdown in domestic stability throughout the months of March and April, which represented the foundational weeks of the new executive governance structure.
Dr Iftekharuzzaman, the Executive Director of Transparency International Bangladesh, stated during the media presentation that domestic law enforcement capabilities had turned highly volatile. He stated that the continuous wave of felony offences directly counteracted institutional commitments toward state stability and security.
“The law and order situation during the first 100 days of the current government was considerably fragile,” Dr Iftekharuzzaman verified to the press. “Incidents of murder, robbery, theft, mugging, rape, and violence against women and children, alongside looting and general lawlessness, have continued unabated.”
The data compiled within the TIB text established a broader pattern of deteriorating civil rights and public safety throughout the state. State security infrastructure faced severe external resistance, exemplified by 129 separate instances of physical assaults directed at active duty police personnel.
The report also detailed a sharp rise in domestic abuse, gender-based offences, and the exploitation of minors. Statutory cases concerning violence against women and children reached a combined total of 3,496 files during the specific two-month assessment window. According to the research findings, adult rape cases ranged between 78 and 102 victims, while instances of aggravated gang rape were recorded between 30 and 36 cases. Concurrently, the investigation tracked between 49 and 71 separate instances of sexual assault perpetrated against children.
TIB concluded that although the state leadership initially showed rhetorical indicators of political will to implement administrative integrity, the absence of a structured national strategy has allowed a partisan, retaliatory culture to persist. This environment has hampered efforts to mitigate the spread of vigilantism, unlawful land occupations, and institutionalised extortion across local municipalities.
The statistical framework included in the TIB report under the index “Overview of Crime and Human Rights Violations” catalogs the total occurrences documented through March and April:
| Type of Crime / Statutory Violation | Verified Number of Occurrences |
| Murder and Homicide | 605 cases |
| Kidnapping and Abduction | 196 cases |
| Larceny and Common Theft | 2,214 cases |
| Mugging and Street Robbery | 294 cases |
| Organised Armed Robbery | 90 cases |
| Violent Attacks Against Police Officers | 129 cases |
| Abuse and Violence Against Women & Children | 3,496 cases |
| Rape Offences (Adult Victims) | 78 to 102 individuals |
| Gang Rape Offences | 30 to 36 individuals |
| Rape Offences (Child Victims) | 49 to 71 individuals |
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