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With Hasina’s death sentence, Bangladesh stands at perilous crossroads

The Sunday Guardian

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November 23, 2025

India confronts the hardest choice in South Asian politics.

- SHREYA SINGH KASANA

With Hasina’s death sentence, Bangladesh stands at perilous crossroads

What is unfolding in Bangladesh today feels like a rupture few could have foreseen: a former Prime Minister sentenced to death, an interim government struggling for legitimacy, anda society shaken by ideological fractures, foreign influence, and resurgent extremism.

A country once celebrated asa development success story now appears suspended between past traumas and future uncertainties. Yet this crisis is no longer Bangladesh’salone. It has crossed the border and placed Indiaat the centre of a diplomatic, ethical, and strategic storm.

Sheikh Hasina is in India, and Bangladesh wants her back. New Delhi now finds itself forced to choose between loyalty to a longstanding ally and the realities of an unpredictable regime next door. This is not merely a dispute over extradition, it is a defining moment for South Asia’s political trajectory.

Bangladesh's political order did not collapse overnight. Tensions had been simmering for years over governance, economic pressures, and accusations ofauthoritarian excess. Still, the speed with which the state structure weakened surprised even those who anticipated unrest. Key ministries hesitated. Administrative orders faced pushback. Segments of the security apparatus, once firmly aligned with Hasina, began to step back.

The country’s trajectory shifted not through dramatic confrontation but through this quiet erosion of institutional loyalty. The machinery that had supported the Awami League for fifteen years loosened, creating a vacuum into which opportunistic political actors quickly moved. What followed was not just a governmental transition but a dramatic rewriting of political alignments in Dhaka.

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