
After the revolution, Bangladesh warms to China as India fumes
One year since the protests, that realignment risks intensifying polarization — 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 last year 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.
Hasina, 77, has defied extradition orders to attend her crimes against humanity trial, and has already been convicted in absentia for contempt of court with a six-month sentence.
'Readjustment'
Md Touhid Hossain, who heads Bangladesh's Foreign Ministry, said that "the relationship is now at the readjustment stage."
Nobel Peace Prize winner Yunus's first state visit was to China in March, a trip that saw him secure $2.1 billion in investments, loans and grants.
Beijing has also courted leading politicians directly.
Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, a senior leader of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) — the expected election front-runner — said China is "keen" to work with the next elected government with "sincerity, steadfastness, love and affection."
Muhammad Yunus, chief adviser of Bangladesh's interim government, speaks during the opening ceremony of the Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference 2025 in southern China's Hainan province on March 27. |
AFP-JIJI
India has long been wary of China's growing regional clout and the world's two most populous countries compete for influence in South Asia, despite a recent diplomatic thaw.
Bangladesh has also moved closer to Pakistan, India's archenemy.
In May, more than 70 people were killed in four days of missile, drone and artillery fire between the forces of New Delhi and Islamabad, sparked by a deadly militant attack on civilians in India-administered Kashmir.
The following month, officials from Dhaka and Islamabad met counterparts in China.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun said the trio had agreed to "cooperation programs" including in trade, industry, education and agriculture.
Obaidul Haque, who teaches international relations at the University of Dhaka, said talks with Beijing had "borne fruit," including alternative health care after once-popular medical tourism to India was restricted.
"For example, China designated three hospitals for Bangladeshi patients when India made access difficult," he said.
'Tread carefully'
Bangladesh and Pakistan — which split in 1971 after Dhaka's independence war — began trade by sea last year, with direct flights also slated.
That sparked worry in New Delhi.
"The current Indian political leadership, owing to its ideological foundations ... are unwilling to accept Dhaka under a government they perceive as Islamist and hostile towards India," Donthi said.
"The visible engagement between Dhaka, Islamabad, and Beijing enhances this perception further."
Both New Delhi and Bangladesh have imposed trade restrictions on each other.
India, which encircles much of Bangladesh by land, has imposed multiple trade restrictions — including tightening rules on Indian imports of jute fibers, ready-made garments, plastic products and food.
But trade between the neighboring nations remains high, said Md Humayun Kabir, a former Bangladeshi ambassador to Washington, who has also served in India.
However, he urged caution, saying Dhaka should "tread carefully forming alliances," and seek to strengthen "multilateral relations" as a balance.
"Cooperation still exists between the countries, but the warmth is gone," he said.
'Attempts to undermine'
Separately, Bangladesh, the world's second-largest garment exporter, has also been caught in the global shakeup caused by U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs.
Dhaka is proposing to buy Boeing planes and boost imports of U.S. wheat, cotton and oil in a bid to reduce the trade deficit, with Yunus in June telling U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio of his "commitment to strengthening" ties.
But in terms of regional tensions, analysts say little will change soon — and warn they have the potential to escalate.
"Things might change only if New Delhi is satisfied with the electoral process and sees somebody amenable to it come to power in Dhaka," the Crisis Group's Donthi added.
"It is very unlikely that their position will change towards the current government in Dhaka," he said.
"There may be attempts to undermine it rather than to collaborate."
Hashtags

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


NHK
4 days ago
- NHK
July 23 NEWSROOM TOKYO Bangkok Live
Lineup: 1. US, Philippines reach trade deal 2. 31 dead in Bangladesh fighter jet crash into school 3. Over 200,000 people living in tents, shelters


NHK
5 days ago
- NHK
Bangladesh mourns after military plane hits college campus
A Bangladeshi air force jet crashed into a college campus on Monday in the capital Dhaka. At least 27 people are dead. Authorities say 25 are children. The interim government announced a day of mourning on Tuesday. Leader Muhammad Yunus spoke about the tragedy the day before. He said: "None of us could imagine something like this. This is beyond comprehension. But we have to suddenly accept this unbelievable reality." Officials say the other two victims are a teacher and the pilot. About 80 others are hospitalized with burns. An injured girl said she saw charred students, with many rolling on the floor to extinguish the flames. The Bangladeshi military says the FT-7 BGI aircraft suffered a mechanical failure shortly after taking off for training.


Japan Times
5 days ago
- Japan Times
Without papers: Ghost lives of millions of Pakistanis
Ahmed Raza is invisible in the eyes of his government, unable to study or work because, like millions of other Pakistanis, he lacks identification papers. In the South Asian nation of more than 240 million people, parents generally wait until a child begins school at the age of five to obtain a birth certificate, which is required for enrollment in most parts of Pakistan. Raza slipped through the cracks until the end of elementary school, but when his middle school requested documentation, his mother had no choice but to withdraw him. "If I go looking for work, they ask for my ID card. Without it, they refuse to hire me," said the 19-year-old in the megacity of Karachi, the southern economic capital. He has already been arrested twice for failing to present identification cards when stopped by police at checkpoints. Raza's mother Maryam Suleman, who is also unregistered, said she "didn't understand the importance of having identity documents." "I had no idea I would face such difficulties later in life for not being registered," the 55-year-old widow said from the single room she and Raza share. Pakistan launched biometric identification cards in 2000 and registration is increasingly required in all aspects of formal life, especially in cities. In 2021, the National Database and Registration Authority estimated that around 45 million people were not registered. It has declined to release updated figures despite repeated requests. To register, Raza needs his mother's or uncle's documents — an expensive and complex process at their age, often requiring a doctor, lawyer or a newspaper notice. The paperwork, he says, costs up to $165 — a month and a half's income for the two of them, who earn a living doing housework and odd jobs in a grocery shop. Locals whisper that registration often requires bribes, and some suggest the black market offers a last resort. "Our lives could have been different if we had our identity cards," Raza said. In remote Punjab villages like Rajanpur, UNICEF is trying to prevent people from falling into the same fate as Raza. They conduct door-to-door registration campaigns, warning parents that undocumented children face higher risks of child labor and forced marriage. Currently, 58% of children under five have no birth certificate, according to government figures. Registration fees depend on the province, ranging from free, $0.70 to $7 — still a burden for many Pakistanis, about 45% of whom live in poverty. "Our men have no time or money to go to the council and miss a day's work," said Nazia Hussain, mother of two unregistered children. The "slow process" often requires multiple trips and there is "no means of transport for a single woman," she said. Saba, from the same village, is determined to register her three children, starting with convincing her in-laws of its value. "We don't want our children's future to be like our past. If children go to school, the future will be brighter," said Saba, who goes by just one name. Campaigns in the village have resulted in an increase of birth registration rates from 6.1% in 2018 to 17.7% in 2024, according to UNICEF. This will improve the futures of an entire generation, believes Zahida Manzoor, child protection officer at UNICEF, dispatched to the village. "If the state doesn't know that a child exists, it can't provide basic services," she said. "If a child does not have an identity, it means the state has not recognised their existence. The state is not planning for the services that the child will need after birth." Muhammad Haris and his brothers, who have few interactions with the formal state in their border village in the mountainous province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, have not registered any of their eight children. "The government asks for documents for the pilgrimage visa to Mecca," a journey typically made after saving for a lifetime, he said. For him, this is the only reason worthy of registration.