The centre-right Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) has secured a landslide majority in parliament, 18 months after mass protests ousted the country's longest-serving prime minister Sheikh Hasina.

The party took more than two-thirds of seats in the historic general election, with Jamaat, the country's main Islamist party, coming second. Hasina's Awami League was banned from taking part.

BNP leader Tarique Rahman is set to be the next prime minister and faces huge challenges in getting the economy back on its feet and restoring democracy after 15 years of authoritarian rule under Hasina. Voters also backed sweeping democratic reforms in a referendum held alongside the election.

I am grateful for the love you have shown me, Rahman told well-wishers in Dhaka as he attended Friday prayers. His party said there would be no victory procession and he urged supporters to attend prayers instead of street celebrations in memory of his late mother, former PM Khaleda Zia, who died in December.

His formal election as the country's new leader will happen after new MPs are sworn in, which is expected to take place on Saturday.

Rahman's family background - his late father was also a leader of Bangladesh - is a reminder that while the BNP have promised change, Rahman, like Hasina, hails from a political dynasty.

The absence of both Sheikh Hasina and Khaleda Zia, who alternated in power over four decades, was one of a number of firsts in this election. Another was that, with the Awami League banned, Jamaat for the first time ran as one of the main parties vying for power. The alliance it leads took 77 seats, six of which went to the student-led National Citizen Party (NCP) born out of the 2024 protests.

For Rahman, it is a huge change of fortunes. He spent 17 years in self-imposed exile in London before returning to the country five days before his mother's death and is seen by many as largely untested. As well as being on track to become the country's next leader, he was elected as member for the Dhaka-17 and Bogra-6 constituencies, and is one of 212 successful BNP candidates, according to the Election Commission, which put voter turnout at 59.44%.

During his campaign, Rahman promised that Bangladesh's democracy would be restored. Reviving the country's economy, bringing rising food prices under control and creating jobs for its huge young population are the big challenges facing the new government.

Repairing strained ties with giant neighbour India is also high on the list of priorities. Within hours of his win, Rahman had received a call from India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi who congratulated him on a remarkable victory and reaffirmed India's commitment to peace, progress, and prosperity of both peoples.

Although the BNP are promising to lead change in the country, the party was criticised for corruption and accused of human rights violations when it was last in government in the early 2000s. Rahman himself was subject to various criminal investigations while Sheikh Hasina was in power but was later cleared of all charges.

Thursday's democratic exercise is a moment of huge potential - and risk - for the country, with one of its two main parties winning such a big victory. Among the constitutional reforms envisaged are prime ministerial term limits, a directly elected upper parliamentary house, stronger presidential powers and increased judicial independence. Greater representation of women in parliament is also in the charter but only a tiny number of female candidates were successful in the election, showing there is a long way to go. Of the main parties, the BNP fielded 10 female candidates, while the NCP just two and Jamaat-e-Islami none.

Rahman will be under great scrutiny to deliver for young voters who are hungry for change. While there may be mixed feelings about the election result, many youth believe this is a chance to raise their voices after years of authoritarian rule.