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Ousted Bangladesh PM Sheikh Hasina sentenced to death for crimes against humanity

She and Modi will be dead, one in the ground ,the other into ashes soon. Bangladesh is an important neighbour, trade and business will suffer if she is kept safe. It makes no sense, unless she is the real love of Modi, since his wife is never to be seen?
Bangladesh is a nuisance.we don’t give up someone who has sought our refuge and we have granted it. Once granted sanctuary a guest cannot be given up, its nit our culture, if she had been refused sanctuary it would have been a different situation.
 
Keep on crying, Indians. We are just getting started.

Hasina's wrongdoings are all documented. Bangladesh do not need approvals from Indians.

Now return her so that we can go to next stage. :inti
Then y is bd government begging India for hasinaji’s custody
 
A Bangadeshi associate told me that Hasina was handing out prime contracts to Indian firms instead of Bangladeshi ones. I guess that is the price of doing business with BJP.
Check Bangaldesh GDP per capita growth and hdi before and after Hasina...always go by data not my jehadi mindset
 
Bangladesh must neutralize and criminalize Awami League. This party has worked for India since 1971 or even before. They don't work for Bangladesh.

About time these snakes are neutralized once and for all. Not minor neutralization. Not partial neutralization. A complete neutralization (whatever that means).
Whatever it means is called crimes against humanity...the real one not the sham against Hasina. Truth is your country is a basket case...awami league freed your country...then you murdered the tallest leader...his successor Zia got murdered..military rule and countless coup...same bs and corruption with khaleda aur hasina...total lawlessness....and the biggest threat is Jamaat and Islamic rule..you can see what it does to other countries....so be secular and follow the ethos of Bengali sovereignty and not the Sunni Muslim regressive culture...that's only how BD can survive
 
Why India likely won’t return Hasina to face Bangladesh death penalty

Shima Akhter, 24, was in the middle of football practice when her friend stopped the session to break some news for her: Sheikh Hasina, the fugitive former prime minister of Bangladesh, had been sentenced to death.

Several of Akhter’s friends were killed in a crackdown on protesters by Hasina’s security forces last year before Hasina finally quit office and fled Bangladesh. The International Crimes Tribunal in Dhaka, which tried the 78-year-old leader for crimes against humanity, sentenced Hasina to death after a months-long trial that found her guilty of ordering a deadly crackdown on the uprising last year.

“The fascist Hasina thought she could not be defeated, that she could rule forever,” Akhter said from Dhaka. “A death sentence for her is a step towards justice for our martyrs.”

But, Akhter added, the sentencing itself wasn’t enough.

“We want to see her hanged here in Dhaka!” she said.

That won’t happen easily.

Hasina, who fled Dhaka as protesters stormed her home in August 2024, remains far from the gallows for now, living in exile in New Delhi.

Hasina’s presence in India despite repeated requests from Bangladesh to hand her over has been a key source of friction between the South Asian neighbours over the past 15 months. Now, with Hasina formally convicted of crimes against humanity and sentenced to death, those tensions are expected to rise to new heights. Even though India is eager to build a partnership with a post-Hasina Dhaka, several geopolitical analysts said they cannot envision a scenario in which New Delhi turns the former prime minister over to Bangladesh to face the death penalty.

“How can New Delhi push her towards her death?” former Indian High Commissioner to Dhaka Pinak Ranjan Chakravarty said.

‘Highly unfriendly act’

Hasina, Bangladesh’s longest serving prime minister, is the eldest daughter of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, who led the war for independence from Pakistan in 1971.

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She first became prime minister in 1996. Defeated in the 2001 election, she was out of power until she won again in 2009. She remained in office for 15 years after that, winning elections that opposition parties often boycotted or were banned from contesting in amid a broader hardline turn. Thousands of people were forcibly disappeared. Many were killed extrajudicially. Torture cases became common, and her opponents were jailed without trials.

Meanwhile, her government touted its economic record to justify her rule. Bangladesh, which former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger had once called a “basket case” economy, has in recent years witnessed rapid gross domestic product growth and has outpaced India’s per capita income.

But in July 2024, a student protest that initially began over government job quotas for descendants of those who fought in the 1971 war of independence from Pakistan escalated into a nationwide call for Hasina to go after a brutal crackdown by security forces.

Student protesters clashed with armed police in Dhaka, and nearly 1,400 people were killed, according to estimates by the United Nations.

Hasina, a longtime ally of India, fled to New Delhi on August 5, 2024, and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus took over as interim leader. Yunus’s government has since moved to build closer ties with Pakistan amid tensions with India, including over Dhaka’s insistence that New Delhi expel Hasina.

On Tuesday, Dhaka’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs raised the pitch against New Delhi further. The ministry cited an extradition agreement with India and said it was an “obligatory responsibility” for New Delhi to ensure Hasina’s return to Bangladesh. It added that it “would be a highly unfriendly act and a disregard for justice” for India to continue to provide Hasina refuge.

Political analysts in India, however, pointed out to Al Jazeera that an exception exists in the extradition treaty in cases in which the offence is “of a political character”.

“India understands this [Hasina’s case] to be political vindictiveness of the ruling political forces in Bangladesh,” said Sanjay Bhardwaj, a professor of South Asian studies at the Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi.

In New Delhi’s view, Bhardwaj told Al Jazeera, Bangladesh is today ruled by “anti-India forces”. Yunus has frequently criticised India, and leaders of the protest movement that ousted Hasina have often blamed New Delhi for its support of the former prime minister.

Against this backdrop, “handing over Hasina would mean legitimising” those opposed to India, Bhardwaj added.

‘India’s equations need change’

India said in a Ministry of External Affairs statement that it has “noted the verdict” against Hasina and New Delhi “will always engage constructively with all stakeholders”.

India said it “remains committed to the best interests of the people of Bangladesh, including in peace, democracy, inclusion and stability in that country”.

Yet the relationship between New Delhi and Dhaka today is frosty. The flourishing economic, security and political alliance that existed under Hasina has now morphed into ties characterised by mistrust.

Chakravarty, the former Indian high commissioner, said he does not expect that to change soon.

“Under this government [in Dhaka], the relationship will remain strained because they will keep saying that India is not giving us Hasina back,” Chakravarty told Al Jazeera.

But he said Bangladesh’s elections scheduled in February could offer a new opening. Even though Hasina’s Awami League is banned from contesting and most other major political forces – including the biggest opposition force, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party – are critics of New Delhi’s, India will find it easier to work with an elected administration.

“We cannot carry on like this, and India needs an elected government in Dhaka,” Chakravarty said of the tense ties between the neighbours. “India should wait and watch but not disturb the other arrangements, like trade, in goodwill.”

Sreeradha Datta, a professor specialising in South Asian studies at India’s Jindal Global University, said India has been caught in a bind over Hasina but is not blind to the popular resentment against her in Bangladesh.

In an ideal scenario, she said, New Delhi would like to see the Awami League back in power in Bangladesh at some point in the future. “She [Hasina] is always the best bet forward for India,” Datta told Al Jazeera.

But the reality, she said, is that India needs to accept that Bangladesh is unlikely to ever give Hasina another chance. Instead, India needs to build ties with other political forces in Dhaka, Datta said.

“India never had a good equation with any of the other stakeholders there. But that has to change now,” Datta said.

“Currently, we are at a very fragile point in the bilateral relations,” she added. “But we have to be able to move past this particular agenda [of Hasina’s extradition].”

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Even if India and Bangladesh are no longer allies, they need to “have civility towards each other”, Datta said.

Dividends of clinging to Hasina

Bangladesh and India share close cultural ties and a 4,000km (2,485-mile) border. India is Bangladesh’s second biggest trading partner after China. In fact, trade between India and Bangladesh has increased in recent months despite the tensions.

But even though India has long insisted that its relationship is with Bangladesh and not with any party or leader in Dhaka, it was been closest with the Awami League.

After a bloody war of independence in 1971, Hasina’s father took power in East Pakistan, renamed Bangladesh, with India’s help. For India, the breakup of Pakistan solved a major strategic and security nightmare by turning its eastern neighbour into a friend.

Hasina’s personal relationship with India also goes back nearly as far.

She first called New Delhi her home 50 years ago after most of her family, including Rahman, was assassinated in a military coup in 1975. Only Hasina and her younger sister, Rehana, survived because they were in Germany.

Indira Gandhi, then India’s premier, offered the orphaned daughters of Rahman asylum. Hasina lived at multiple residences in New Delhi with her husband, MA Wazed; children; and Rehana and even moonlighted at All India Radio’s Bangla service.

After six years in exile, Hasina returned to Bangladesh to lead her father’s party and was elected to the prime minister’s office first in 1996 before her second, longer stint started in 2009.

Under her rule, ties with India flourished, even as she faced domestic criticism over brokering deals with Indian firms seen as unfair for Dhaka.

When she was ousted and felt the need to flee, there was little doubt about where she would seek refuge. Ajit Doval, India’s national security adviser, received her when she landed on the outskirts of New Delhi.

“We did not invite Hasina this time,” said Chakravarty, who dealt with Hasina’s government briefly in 2009 when he was high commissioner. “A senior official received her naturally because she was the sitting prime minister, and India allowed her to stay because what other option was there?”

“Can she go back to Bangladesh, more so now when she is on a death sentence?” he asked, adding, “She was a friendly person to India, and India has to take a moral stand.”

Michael Kugelman, a South Asia analyst based in Washington, DC, said Hasina’s presence in India would continue to “remain a thorn in the bilateral relationship” going forward but enabled “India to stay true to its pledge to remain loyal to its allies”.

However, theoretically, there could be longer term political dividends too for New Delhi, Kugelman argued.

Unlike other analysts, Kugelman said Hasina’s political legacy and the future of her Awami League cannot be written off completely.

Hasina leads an old dynastic party, and a look at South Asia’s political history reveals that dynastic parties “fall on hard times and for quite some time, but they don’t really shrivel up and die”, Kugelman said.

“Dynastic parties hang around” in South Asia, he said, and “with patience, if you live longer to see significant political change, it could create new opportunities for comeback.”

 
What opportunity, he was caught red handed, did you expect Pakistan to send him back to India to stand the trial?

India has the largest communal and racist incident in the entire sub-continent.
Read the icj judgement it says Pakistan violated jadhavs rights

Are you telling me that icj judges are not aware of the laws and thT kangaroo courts of Pakistan have more credibility than Icj
 
That doesn't address what I wrote. Data when it's selective doesn't mean that much. Especially when it's presented by a hindutva loon.

"Data" from sanghis should never be taken seriously. They probably get their data from BJP WhatsApp University. If not, they may misrepresent it.

Never trust the sanghis. :inti
 
"Data" from these sanghi turds should never be taken seriously. They probably get their data from BJP WhatsApp University. :inti


When they respond to a perfectly polite and well phrased post with jibes of "Jehadi" then sanghi turds is probably the best form of description. (y)
 
When they respond to a perfectly polite and well phrased post with jibes of "Jehadi" then sanghi turds is probably the best form of description. (y)

To them, anyone who doesn't bootlick them is probably a "jehedi". LOL. They are mentally hadicapped.

Anyway, who cares what they think? I don't read 99.99% of the stuff they write let alone respond to them. Stupidity overloaded.
 
Sheikh Hasina is currently a state/ diplomatic guest and is under full security and protocol of the Indian govt.

I am sure she is not short on $$$ from ruling Bangladesh for so many decades.

Firstly one must be delusional to think Bangladesh will even make a dent on India even if they are mad about the Hasina situation lol.

If India doesn’t hand over Hasina, worst case we might get some Nusicance value in border areas. That’s about it

Now worst case scenario India extradites Hasina to Bangladesh to cut our losses, maybe a little setback for a few days but from a larger point not an impact on Indian public. Hasina is a Bangladeshi politician and citizen. I think we call can move on.

What’s kinda ironical is while Hasina is living a good life, Imran is getting belt treatment in solitary cell everyday. His groupies are the ones spraying garbage on this thread the most of how “India got owned” here.

Explain this to me 😭🤣🤣🤣
 
^ to add I think Sheikh Hasina supporters in Bangladesh have definitely shown more spine than IK supporters with protests etc , that’s the takeaway, not point scoring on useless topics lol.
 
^ to add I think Sheikh Hasina supporters in Bangladesh have definitely shown more spine than IK supporters with protests etc , that’s the takeaway, not point scoring on useless topics lol.
Ah! Only if Pakistanis unite against current government just like Bangladeshis did against Hasina that she had to leave the country....
 
Bangladesh is a nuisance.we don’t give up someone who has sought our refuge and we have granted it. Once granted sanctuary a guest cannot be given up, its nit our culture, if she had been refused sanctuary it would have been a different situation.
That's fair.

Taliban said the same thing about Al Qaeda.

Some cultures really sanctify this type of arrangement, where you hide evil people and pretend it's noble.
 
Read the icj judgement it says Pakistan violated jadhavs rights

Are you telling me that icj judges are not aware of the laws and thT kangaroo courts of Pakistan have more credibility than Icj
He was allowed to see his relatives, no rights were violated.
 
Ah! Only if Pakistanis unite against current government just like Bangladeshis did against Hasina that she had to leave the country....
Well when Reverse Sweep, Switch hit and scoop shot were stealing ladies wear from Presidential palace, Hasina had enough influence still to arrange for a proper jet to get out of ththe country, it couldn’t happen without some support.

Imran was dragged like a 2 bit pickpocket (unfortunately) and nothing anyone could do about it.

There are some small or big protests in Dhaka all the time since Hasina left.

On the other hand Pak public can’t even protest for Gaza lol.

More spine shown by Bangladeshis in both throwing Hasina out or even protesting for her.
 
This thread has reached close to 200 posts. A big percentage of the posts are from the sanghis even though this has nothing to do with them. :yk

Hasina is not an Indian and this is a Bangladeshi internal matter. Sanghis should mind their own business. :inti

Return Hasina so that she can receive what she deserves (i.e., a justified and lawful execution).
 
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