Former Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has said she will remain in India and not return to her country under any government formed after elections that exclude her party, the Awami League. Speaking from her exile in New Delhi, the 78-year-old leader described the ban on her party as “unjust and self-defeating”.
Hasina fled to India in August 2024 after a student-led uprising that resulted in her ouster. An interim government headed by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus has since been in charge, with general elections scheduled for February next year.
“The next government must have electoral legitimacy. Millions of people support the Awami League, so as things stand, they will not vote,” she said in written responses to media. “You cannot disenfranchise millions if you want a political system that works.”
Hope for Awami League’s return to polls
Bangladesh’s Election Commission suspended the Awami League’s registration in May, citing national security and ongoing war crimes investigations against senior party figures. The Nobel laureate-led government also banned all party activities earlier this year.
Hasina said her party is not asking supporters to vote for other parties and still hopes “common sense will prevail” so that the Awami League can contest the election. However, she did not reveal if any communication is ongoing with authorities in Dhaka regarding the issue.
The Awami League and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) have dominated the country’s political landscape for decades. The BNP is expected to benefit from the ruling’s absence in the upcoming vote.
Hasina faces war crimes charges
Hasina, credited with driving Bangladesh’s economic growth but accused of human rights violations during her long tenure, is facing charges of crimes against humanity for the violent crackdown on protests in 2024. A verdict from Bangladesh’s International Crimes Tribunal is expected on November 13.
According to UN estimates, up to 1,400 people were killed and thousands injured during the unrest, primarily from gunfire by security forces. Prosecutors also allege she oversaw enforced disappearances and torture of opposition activists through secret detention centres.
Rejecting the allegations, Hasina said, “These proceedings are a politically motivated charade. They’ve been brought by kangaroo courts, with guilty verdicts a foregone conclusion.”
“I live freely in Delhi, but would love to return”
Despite her exile, Hasina remains hopeful that her party will play a role in Bangladesh’s future politics. “It’s not about me or my family,” she said, adding that her son Sajeeb Wazed, based in Washington, could lead if asked.
Hasina, who lost most of her family in the 1975 military coup, said she lives “freely in Delhi” but remains vigilant due to her family’s violent past. She was recently spotted taking a stroll in Lodhi Garden with her security team, acknowledging locals who recognised her.
“I would of course love to go home, so long as the government there was legitimate, the constitution was being upheld, and law and order genuinely prevailed,” she said.