HomeNewsOpinionDhaka Diary 3: Yunus administration outdoes Hasina government in record time

Dhaka Diary 3: Yunus administration outdoes Hasina government in record time

Fake cases, arbitrary arrests and political persecution are some defining characteristics of the Yunus-led administration in Bangladesh. Indeed, it is no different from the record of the deposed Sheikh Hasina-led government.  The difference, if that matters, is the Yunus-led regime has likely undermined the judicial system to a greater extent in far less time

June 20, 2025 / 14:30 IST
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Hasina was accused of politicising the judiciary and securing tailor-made judgments. But Bangladesh has likely seen far more, in far less time, under Yunus.

From Baridhara diplomatic zone, the taxi took the four-lane elevated tollway - deposed Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s gift to Dhaka – to reach David Bergman’s residence at Bailey Road. The Bangladeshi capital is not as vast as Delhi, but it is 2.5 times more densely populated. This, coupled with decades of low infrastructure spending since the days of army ruler H. M. Ershad (1983–90), turned the country into a logistics nightmare. Dhaka became infamous for its slow traffic.

Hasina (2009–2024) tried to address it. The most significant of her projects was the iconic Padma Bridge, which helped mitigate the North-South divide. Dhaka got a metro rail, a new airport terminal, and the elevated expressway. Most of these mega projects were completed ahead of the January 2024 election — a fast timeline by Bangladeshi standards. The expressway was partially opened; once completed, it is expected to ease connectivity with the economic nerve centre at Chittagong.

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The Lost Opportunity 

David is Bangladesh’s own foreign journalist, who has taken it upon himself to be the nation’s conscience keeper. British by birth and citizenship, he is married into one of Dhaka’s most illustrious families. His father-in-law, Kamal Hossain, is a legal luminary of international repute. He was the country’s first law minister and played a key role in drafting the Constitution — the very document the Muhammad Yunus administration is now keen to replace.