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Bangladesh: Implications for regional, global security

September 12, 2024

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The Business Guardian

Introduction: The recent resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on 5th August 2024 has thrown Bangladesh into chaos, raising concerns that go beyond its borders.

- TARUN AGARWAL

The crisis, marked by protests and violence, has been worsened by police brutality, enforced disappearances, and the involvement of groups like Jamaat e Islami. Hasina's increasingly autocratic tendencies in her later years of leadership drew uncomfortable parallels with her father's governance. As Bangladesh grapples with these issues, the impact on South Asia and the global community is significant.

Political Unrest and Governance Challenges: The unrest stemmed from discontent over the government's job reservation policies, particularly a controversial quota system favoring families of veterans from the 1971 war. Despite the Supreme Court's decision to reduce this quota, protests continued, fuelled by dissatisfaction with Hasina's administration. This discontent is deeply rooted in Hasina's undemocratic governance style, which became more pronounced in her final years in office.

Since her second term, Hasina sought to centralize power, suppressing opposition voices and burdening dissenters with legal cases. Her administration cracked down on political opponents, particularly the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and its leader, Khaleda Zia, whom Hasina imprisoned on charges widely seen as politically motivated. Hasina's obsession with the legacy of the 1971 Liberation War permeated her policies, from reserving government jobs for war veterans' descendants to invoking freedom struggle memories in her rhetoric against political adversaries.

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