
Bangladesh's China pivot puts its India ties under ‘intense strain'
Bangladesh that toppled the government last year triggered a diplomatic pivot, with Dhaka warming towards China after neighbouring India was angered by the ousting of its old ally Sheikh Hasina.
One year since the protests, that realignment risks intensifying polarisation – and fears of external interference – as political parties in Bangladesh jostle for influence ahead of elections next year.
For the caretaker government, seeking domestic consensus for overhauling democratic institutions in the country of 170 million people, it is another challenge to juggle.
'India-Bangladesh relations have probably never experienced such intense strain before,' said New Delhi-based analyst Praveen Donthi, from the International Crisis Group.
There is deep resentment in Dhaka over the fate of fugitive ex-prime minister
Hasina , who escaped a student-led uprising by helicopter in August 2024 and flew to New Delhi as thousands of protesters stormed her palace.
Interim leader Muhammad Yunus said popular anger in Muslim-majority Bangladesh had been 'transferred over to
India ' because Hasina was offered sanctuary by New Delhi's Hindu nationalist government.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
10 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Will Chinese Z-10ME attack helicopters now power Pakistan air force?
Images circulating online suggest Pakistan's military has received a shipment of Chinese-made advanced attack helicopters, a version of which has been deployed by the People's Liberation Army (PLA) near China's mountainous border with India In the past week, photos and videos of the Z-10ME , the export version of the Chinese multirole attack helicopter, have appeared on Pakistani social media accounts. On Tuesday, a social media user believed to be an active-duty member of the Pakistan Army uploaded a video clearly showing the helicopter airborne, apparently conducting field airport support missions from a military base. The video was captioned: 'First look at Pakistan's Z-10ME attack helicopter armed with next-gen air-to-ground missiles.' This followed a photo posted on Monday by another user showing a Z-10ME undergoing ground maintenance. The helicopter bore the words 'Pakistan Army' and serial number '786-301' on its fuselage and tail. The image marked the first credible evidence of the Z-10ME's operational status within the Pakistan Army Aviation Corps.


South China Morning Post
a day ago
- South China Morning Post
All-out thaw: can India and China unfreeze icy ties at last?
When Indian pilgrims set foot in Tibet again this summer, their arrival heralded a new beginning for India and China , five years after a deadly Himalayan clash plunged the two bitter rivals into a diplomatic deep freeze. But with the machinery of engagement whirring once more amid flaring global trade wars and shifting strategic alliances, hopes have sprung anew that Asia's two largest economies might finally move past the years of suspicion and silence. Late last month, New Delhi resumed issuing visas to Chinese citizens across a number of categories in a gesture welcomed by Beijing as a 'positive move'. The decision came just weeks after China began allowing Indian pilgrims to return to the Tibet autonomous region, ending a pause imposed during the pandemic amid heightened border tensions. There is great potential, but they really need to work on the trust deficit Yashwant Deshmukh, Indian political analyst Direct flights between the two countries, suspended since the Covid era, are also expected to resume imminently. These initial measures could pave the way for deeper cooperation, experts say, injecting fresh dynamism into a relationship long held hostage by mistrust. 'If they can get their act together, they have more common things to work upon,' said Yashwant Deshmukh, independent political analyst and founder of Indian pollster C-Voter. 'There is great potential, but they really need to work on the trust deficit.' Deshmukh warned that the '400-pound gorilla in the room' – their disputed Himalayan border – remained unresolved. 'It is something they need to sit together and just get over with,' he said, noting that for centuries, the two civilisations had largely coexisted peacefully. Indian and Chinese troops greet each other along the Line of Actual Control near the Karakoram Pass on October 31, 2024. Photo: Indian Army/AFP War and peace India and China share a vast, undemarcated frontier snaking through the Himalayas. Since a brief but bitter war in 1962, an unofficial Line of Actual Control has served as an uneasy boundary.


South China Morning Post
2 days ago
- South China Morning Post
Will Bangladesh veer from its India-China middle path?
Published: 5:30pm, 1 Aug 2025 When a Bangladesh air force jet slammed into a school on July 21, killing 31 people, India was the first country to respond – dispatching a team of specialist doctors, nurses and emergency medical equipment. Their swift arrival earned public praise from the head of Bangladesh's interim government, Muhammad Yunus , and sparked cautious optimism that a thaw may be possible after months of strained ties between the neighbours. 'These teams have come not just with their skills, but with their hearts,' Yunus said. 'Their presence reaffirms our shared humanity and the value of global partnerships in times of tragedy.' The gesture was widely seen as a reaffirmation of the enduring ties between India and Bangladesh – ties that have frayed in recent months amid shifting political winds in Dhaka and rising Indian unease over the interim government's perceived tilt towards China. 04:32 Bangladesh Air Force jet crashes into school, killing at least 27, mostly children Bangladesh Air Force jet crashes into school, killing at least 27, mostly children Since the ousting of long-time leader Sheikh Hasina in a student-led uprising in August last year, the Yunus administration has sought to recalibrate its foreign relations, prompting speculation over Beijing's growing influence just across India's eastern border.