"Some political parties have caused a law and order problem in the name of holding their programmes. Hence, no one would be allowed to hold any kind of rally for the next one month," Home Minister Mahiuddin Khan Alamgir said.
"We (however) admit that one has a right to hold rallies and public meetings, but we wave to impose the restriction in the interest of maintaining law and order," he said.
"It is not possible to protect the fundamental rights like meeting and rally when the country was hit by any natural disaster," he told reporters, adding that the ruling party too came under the purview of the ban.
Meanwhile reacting to the decision, opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party called the decision undemocratic and alleged it was aimed to gouge the opposition voice.
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The decision to ban political rallies came after radical group Hefazat-e-Islami enforced Dhaka siege on May 5 as part of their mission to "protect Islam".
The government, however, alleged that the BNP's crucial ally fundamentalist Jamaat-e-Islami, whose leaders are facing war crimes trial for human rights violation during the 1971 liberation war, was behind the violence and the two opposition parties are using Hefazat to create difficult situations for the government.