Crowds mourn Bangladesh's first female PM at state funeral

WorldView · Samuel Otieno · December 31, 2025
Crowds mourn Bangladesh's first female PM at state funeral
Hundreds of thousands of people gathered as a motorcade carrying Khaleda Zia's body drove through Dhaka PHOTO/ AFP via Getty Images
In Summary

Zia, who was the country's first female prime minister, died on Tuesday, December 30, 2025,  from a prolonged illness. She was 80.

Hundreds of thousands of people travelled from across Bangladesh to the capital Dhaka on Wednesday to pay their final respects to former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia.

Zia, who was the country's first female prime minister, died on Tuesday from a prolonged illness. She was 80.

The mourners held out their hands in prayer and carried flags printed with her photographs as a motorcade carrying Zia's body - including the hearse wrapped with the national flag - drove on streets near the parliament house.

Flags were flown at half-mast and thousands of security officers have been deployed.

"I have come this far just to say goodbye. I know I won't be able to see her face, but at least I could see the [vehicle] carrying her for the last rites," Setara Sultana, an activist from Zia's Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), told the BBC.

Sharmina Siraj, a mother of two, called Zia "an inspiration", noting that stipends introduced by the former leader to improve women's education made a "huge impact" on her daughters.

"It is difficult to imagine women in leadership positions anytime soon," she told AFP news agency.

India's External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, the Speaker of Pakistan's National Assembly Sardar Ayaz Sadiq and Bhutan's Foreign Minister Lyonpo DN Dhungyel were among those who attended the funeral.

Earlier in the day, Zia's body was taken to the house of her son Tarique Rahman, who was seen reciting the Quran beside his mother's office.

The state funeral marks the end of Zia's extraordinary journey, from a homemaker to the first female prime minister of Bangladesh.

Zia will be buried next to her husband Ziaur Rahman, who was assassinated in 1981 while serving as president - an incident that thrusted Zia into political limelight.

She went on to lead the BNP in the country's first elections in 20 years. She was dubbed an "uncompromising leader" after refusing to participate in a controversial election under military ruler General Hussain Muhammad Ershad in the 1980s.

For several years, along with her bitter political rival Sheikh Hasina, she fought for democracy and against military dictatorship, enduring arrests.

There was talk among Bangladesh's rulers at the time to keep the two "battling begums" - Zia and Hasina - out of politics in what was then known as the "minus two formula".

But Zia eventually became prime minister, first in 1991 then again in 2001.

During the time of the military-backed caretaker government in 2007, she was kept under detention.

In the last 16 years, under Hasnina's Awami League government, Zia emerged as the most prominent symbol of resistance to Hasina's rule which many saw as increasingly autocratic.

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