Huge crowds for Khaleda funeral as Bangladesh bids farewell to ex-leader
Vast crowds have gathered in the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka for the state funeral of former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, with mourners travelling from across the country to bid farewell to a towering political leader.
Footage showed huge crowds streaming in towards the national parliament building on Manik Mia Avenue, where her coffin, draped in the national flag, was taken in a convoy on Wednesday.
Hundreds of thousands of her supporters, along with dignitaries from India and Pakistan, were expected to attend, with about 10,000 security personnel lining the streets to maintain order, officials said.
Khaleda, the first woman to serve as prime minister in the South Asian nation when she became premier in 1991, died on Tuesday aged 79, after a prolonged illness.
Bangladesh has declared three days of state mourning, while tributes have flowed from world leaders as mourners farewell a politician viewed as a figurehead of the country’s democratic movement.
‘An entire nation is grieving’
Reporting from outside parliament in Dhaka, Al Jazeera’s Tanvir Chowdhury said emotions were high among the huge crowds gathered for the state funeral.
“Many people are weeping,” he said.
“People were coming from all across the country to gather here. They said we have to come … to show that she will be missed.”
Mourners had described her as “a great leader for this country”, saying she had “shown us the way to democracy”, he said.
“An entire nation is grieving,” he added.
One mourner, Sharmina Siraj, told the AFP news agency that Zia was “an inspiration”, saying it was “difficult to imagine women in leadership positions anytime soon”.
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Siraj, a 40-year-old mother of two, said stipends introduced by Zia to support girls’ education “had a huge impact on the lives of our girls”.
Watching from behind a barbed wire barricade as Zia’s body passed by, retired government official Minhaz Uddin told AFP that while he had never voted for her, he came to honour the former leader.
“I came here with my grandson, just to say goodbye to a veteran politician whose contributions will always be remembered,” he said.

‘A guiding presence’
Zia’s son Tarique Rahman, who returned to Bangladesh on Thursday after 17 years in self-imposed exile in the UK, said in a statement that the country was mourning “the loss of a guiding presence that shaped its democratic aspirations”.
His mother, he said, had “endured repeated arrests, denial of medical care, and relentless persecution”, but “her resilience … was unbreakable”.
Rahman, the acting chairman of Khaleda’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party, “will possibly be the next prime minister” if his party wins the elections in February, Chowdhury said.
India’s government said Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar was due to attend the funeral, in the most senior visit by an Indian official since the overthrow of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, Khaleda’s great political rival.
Senior officials from Pakistan were also expected to attend.
Khaleda’s body will be interred in a park outside the parliament building alongside her late husband, Ziaur Rahman, who was assassinated in 1981 during his time as president.
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