Dhaka, Oct. 4 -- The future of Bangladesh's political transition is increasingly tied to one document: the July Charter.

Drafted after last year's mass uprising, the Charter promised sweeping reforms to make governance more accountable and to prevent a return to authoritarianism.

But nearly three months on, the nation's political actors remain divided over how exactly to implement it.

Major political parties, including Jamaat-e-Islami, have announced fresh movements to push for the Charter's implementation in their own ways.

Jamaat, along with five other Islamist and like-minded parties, has declared a new series of joint programmes to press home a five-point demand.

Among them are holding the next parliamentary elections in February...