Bangladesh's former ruling party slams the government's decision to ban all its activities

Dhaka, Bangladesh - Bangladesh’s former ruling party accused the Provisional Government of “stoking” on Sunday and trampled on “democratic norms” by banning all party activities.

The government is led by Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus, after Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was removed for a fatal mass uprising.

Asif Nazrul, a legal adviser, said the ban would continue until a special court tried the deaths of hundreds of students and other protesters during an anti-government uprising last July and August.

The Bangladesh Nationalist Party is another major party in the country led by former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, which has previously opposed a proposal to ban the Awami Alliance Party.

The ban is expected to take effect on Monday.

"Under Yunus, people no longer feel safe," X said on Sunday, "The ban condemns "the division within society, strangling democratic norms, promoting huge norms for dissidents, and strangling behemoths of people who hold different regimes, all under trials of violence and reform plans from July-August to August, all of which are not to go to democracy."

The party also condemned thousands of people on the streets for two days, including students from various groups and supporters of the newly formed party of Islamists who later joined the protests calling for a ban on Awami League. It accused the gathering of “state sponsorship.”

Thousands of protesters posted the final atum on Saturday night at the government's ban on AWAMI League party.

Hasina has been exiled in India since August 5, and many of her senior party colleagues have been accused of murdering protesters after being removed.

The UN Human Rights Office said in a February report that up to 1,400 people could be killed during three weeks of anti-Black Sina protests. In a report by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, it is recommended that “avoid bans from political parties, which undermine the return of truly multi-party democracy and effectively deprive a large portion of Bangladesh voters.”

The student-led uprising ended Hasina's 15-year reign.

Bangladesh politics is now at a crossroads.

The French Kuomintang hopes to hold elections in December and asks for a clear roadmap for the interim government, which says the elections will be held in December or June next year, depending on the level of reforms the government adopts.