A police officer entrusted with protecting the state failed to protect his own child. The death of a newborn whose father was denied leave during election duty has triggered widespread outrage on social media, exposing the brutal human cost of rigid state machinery.
The incident occurred amid heightened security measures surrounding Bangladesh’s 13th National Parliamentary Election in February 2026. The police officer had formally requested leave to be beside his wife during childbirth and to care for their ailing newborn. His request was rejected, citing “election duty” and strict operational orders.
While the father remained on duty, the mother was left alone—without adequate support, assistance, or emotional strength. The newborn’s health deteriorated rapidly. Eventually, the child died. The father received the devastating news while still on duty.
A broken voice on one end of the phone, and the cold rigidity of state responsibility on the other—this moment has shaken the conscience of many across the country.
Rights advocates and experts say this is not an isolated incident. Police personnel in Bangladesh often work 12 to 14 hours a day, with unpredictable leave schedules and prolonged separation from their families. Such conditions, they warn, are taking a severe toll on the mental health and family lives of law enforcement officers.
Bangladesh still lacks a specific legal framework for paternity leave, particularly for male government employees. In this context, the High Court has already issued a rule asking why legislation on paternity leave should not be enacted. Legal experts argue that the death of this newborn has added urgent moral weight to that demand.
The tragedy has also revived memories of earlier incidents. In 2015, a female garment worker in Gazipur’s Kaliakair was reportedly forced to give birth in a factory toilet after being denied leave; her newborn also died. A decade later, critics say, the system remains largely unchanged.
On social media, many are asking a painful question: If a police officer cannot stand beside his child at birth or during illness, whom does the state truly serve? If ensuring security means sacrificing fundamental family rights, then how humane is that security?
The newborn will never return. But the questions left behind—for the state, the administration, and society—are stark and unavoidable: How many more families must break before humanity finds a place within duty?
Newborn Dies as Police Father Denied Leave, Exposing State’s Harshest Face
Denied leave during election duty, a police officer loses his newborn child—sparking nationwide outrage over inhuman work conditions and the absence of paternity leave in Bangladesh.
"Election duty" was cited as the reason for denying leave to the officer, whose child died while he was stationed at a polling center.

