HomeWorldBangladesh to vote on Feb 12: What India must prepare for after a year of strained ties under Yunus | Explained

Bangladesh to vote on Feb 12: What India must prepare for after a year of strained ties under Yunus | Explained

Relations between India and Bangladesh have deteriorated sharply under Muhammad Yunus. His administration has leaned closer to China and Pakistan while distancing itself from New Delhi.

December 11, 2025 / 19:12 IST
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Jamaat-e-Islami party supporters rally in Dhaka on November 11, 2025, demanding the provision of legal status to the 'July Charter' and its ratification by a referendum ahead of Bangladesh's national elections. (Photo by MUNIR UZ ZAMAN / AFP)
Jamaat-e-Islami party supporters rally in Dhaka on November 11, 2025, demanding the provision of legal status to the 'July Charter' and its ratification by a referendum ahead of Bangladesh's national elections. (Photo by MUNIR UZ ZAMAN / AFP)

Bangladesh will vote on February 12, 2026, in its first national election since the 2024 uprising that forced Sheikh Hasina out of office and compelled her to flee to India. The announcement by the Election Commission marks a turning point for the country and sets the stage for a high stakes political contest. For India, the significance is far deeper. This election will determine the shape of its eastern strategic environment for years to come and will influence issues ranging from counterterrorism to regional power balance.

Relations between India and Bangladesh have deteriorated sharply under the interim government led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus. His administration has leaned closer to China and Pakistan while distancing itself from New Delhi. At the same time, attacks on minority Hindus have increased, extremist networks appear to be reactivating, and foreign intelligence activity has grown. All of this places India in a precarious position ahead of the polls.

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How relations between India and Bangladesh deteriorated under Yunus

Under Sheikh Hasina, India and Bangladesh developed one of the closest partnerships in the region. Dhaka cooperated with Indian security agencies, cracked down on insurgent groups, expanded transit links and offered reliable political alignment. This strategic comfort ended abruptly after the 2024 uprising. Since taking charge, Muhammad Yunus has pursued a foreign policy that keeps India at arm’s length. He has slowed progress on long standing connectivity projects, avoided substantive engagement with New Delhi and cultivated a narrative that Bangladesh must assert greater distance from India. This shift is not accidental but reflects a deliberate political recalibration that benefits countries like China and Pakistan.