How over-investment in Hasina puts India in an unwelcome, but inevitable new reality: Part 3
Unfriending and friending
During Hasina's friendly rule, any criticism of India was strongly discouraged.
Therefore, when Bangladesh's interim leader Muhammad Yunus spoke firmly of Bangladesh's expectations from India in bilateral matters in an interview with the Press Trust of India, it did not go well with the South Block.
Chief Adviser Prof Muhammad Yunus. Photo: Collected
Though India's foreign ministry did not formally react to his remarks, officials were reportedly "upset," according to a BBC report.
Yunus made it clear Bangladesh wants to continue maintaining its good relations with India but that these ties should reflect "fairness and equality."
He also said that both countries need to work together to improve their bilateral relations, which he described as being "at a low."
Yunus also criticised Delhi for not reaching out to Bangladeshi opposition parties.
"The narrative is that everybody is Islamist, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) is Islamist, and everyone else is Islamist and will make this country into Afghanistan. And Bangladesh is in safe hands with Sheikh Hasina at the helm only. India is captivated by this narrative," he said.
Professor Yunus had succinctly put India's long-held policy of betting on Hasina to keep its North-East in reins.
Yet, former Indian diplomats say they are taken aback by what has been described as "megaphone diplomacy" by Yunus – discussing contentious bilateral issues through the media, reports BBC.
In the latest, India's Foreign Minister S Jaishankar said the political churn in Bangladesh is that country's "internal matter" but India is keen to continue what was a stable relationship.
But he put the onus on Bangladesh by saying, "If Bangladesh understands the significance of neighbouring ties, its relationship with India will reach another height."
Bangladeshis wonder why only Bangladesh needs to 'understand the significance of neighbouring ties' while India has taken a hardened stance, though undeclared, against Bangladesh. Is India still on the right track after the ouster of Hasina in the unprecedented student-people uprising?
Even after her ouster, Hasina, who took refuge in India, appears to be a new major thorn in bilateral relations with India.
India's actions when Bangladesh asks for extradition of Hasina who is facing over a hundred murder cases including charges of crimes against humanity, will be a determinant factor of the future of relations between the two neighbouring countries.
New Delhi can't deny Dhaka's request as per the extradition agreement signed between the two countries when Hasina was in power in 2013 at India's request. But Hasina is now staying in New Delhi as a 'guest' of the Indian government. Will Modi now unfriend Hasina and become a friend of the people of Bangladesh?
How India stood by an embattled Hasina
Though Hasina claimed "I don't want anything in return," she enjoyed India's unqualified support which acted as a bulwark to protect her from diplomatic pressure from the West.
Let the facts speak for themselves.
Before the last parliamentary election held in January this year, the Hasina government was under unprecedented global diplomatic pressure spearheaded by the US, EU and the UK to hold a free and fair election.
The Hasina government was unperturbed, thanks to India's blind support of her engineered one-sided election. India even reportedly blocked the US's punitive measures against the Hasina government for undermining democracy in Bangladesh.
After the third consecutive stage-managed election participated by Hasina's Awami League, her allies and her party's "dummy independent" candidates, Indian PM Modi dialled Hasina the next day and congratulated her on her victory in the parliamentary election for a "historic fourth consecutive term."
"I also congratulate the people of Bangladesh for the successful conduct of elections. We are committed to further strengthening our enduring and people-centric partnership with Bangladesh," Modi said in a post on X.
Was it really a 'successful conduct of election'?
It was a success for only Hasina, not the people of Bangladesh who were once again denied their right to vote. Even after helping Hasina to hold such an election without people's participation, Modi assured Hasina India is committed to strengthening its "people-centric partnership with Bangladesh."
Sketch: TBS
Sketch: TBS
Hasina also highlighted the enduring friendship between the two sides and reiterated India's importance as a key ally.
In her first news conference following the "election victory," Hasina emphasised the strong bond between Bangladesh and India. "In the next five years, our main focus will be on economic progress and fulfilling all the work that we have started...The development of the people and our country is our main aim," Hasina said.
In the 2018 election, the Modi government did not have to try hard to maintain its unstinted support for Hasina.
The BNP-led alliance's participation in the election on Hasina's assurance that the election would be free and fair made things easy. It was unlike the elections of 2014 and 2024, which were boycotted by the BNP and other opposition parties as the polls were held under the Hasina government.
It came to be known as the infamous "night vote" as the election rigging was set at midnight before the election day by ruling party men in active support of the law enforcement agencies and administration.
Modi called Hasina with alacrity the next morning to congratulate Hasina on the "decisive results." Modi expressed confidence the India-Bangladesh partnership will "continue to flourish under her farsighted leadership," a statement from the external affairs ministry said.
"The victory of the Awami League in the polls is a reflection of stunning development that Bangladesh attained under your dynamic leadership," Modi said.
Modi reiterated the priority New Delhi attaches to Dhaka "as a neighbour, a close partner for regional development, security and cooperation, and a central pillar in India's 'Neighbourhood First' policy."
Hasina thanked Modi for being the first leader to call to congratulate her and she also thanked India for its "consistent and generous support which has benefited Bangladesh's development."
Things were not easy like in 2018 for either Hasina or Modi's predecessor Manmohan Singh before the January 2014 election.
The BNP-led alliance and other opposition parties already stayed away from the election process as it was held under the Hasina government after she abruptly cancelled the non-partisan caretaker government in 2011. In the middle of the race, the Jatiya Party-led by Ershad too announced quitting the election and ordered his party candidates to withdraw their candidacies.
The Congress-led Manmohan Singh government dispatched the then foreign secretary Sujata Singh to Dhaka to persuade Ershad not to quit the election. The reality then was that Hasina's party would have had none to compete had Ershad and his party withdrawn from the election.
At a meeting with Ershad, the Indian envoy warned that fundamentalist forces would rise if the election was not held. But Ershad did not buy her narrative.
Ershad was then forced by the Hasina administration to be admitted to the combined military hospital in Dhaka, which prevented many of his party candidates from withdrawing from the electoral race.
The election day was marked by the deadliest violence, though polling was held only in 147 seats and 153 MPs were elected uncontested in an extraordinary manoeuvring by the Hasina government.
Manmohan Singh was ready to become the first head of a government to congratulate Hasina over the phone immediately after she was sworn in, pledging India's support in any situation. He then sent a felicitation letter.
"I look forward to working with you to strengthen our good neighbourly relations and our mutually beneficial partnership," he wrote in the letter, lauding her role as "vital" in the just-ended tenure.
Singh "conveyed that India attaches the highest importance to its relationship with Bangladesh and expressed the hope that bilateral cooperation will be further broadened and strengthened in the coming months".
After Hasina was sworn in as prime minister, Manmohan Singh called her to convey his good wishes and also "wished her and the people of Bangladesh all success in the endeavour to strengthen democratic institutions in Bangladesh."
Western countries and rights bodies at home and internationally unequivocally said after every election that elections were not free and fair. But India was unperturbed.
India's reactions were in line with the global ones only in the 2008 election.
After Hasina won a landslide in the December 2008 election which was largely free and fair, Monmohon Singh hailed the return of democracy in Bangladesh and congratulated Hasina.
"India congratulates the people of Bangladesh on the fair, peaceful and free conduct of their general elections which mark the return to multi-party democratic politics in a close and friendly neighbour," external affairs ministry spokesperson Vishnu Prakash said in a statement here.
The words used in the congratulatory message were a reflection of the quality of the December 2008 election.
But Manmohan and Modi's congratulations to Hasina on her victory in three controversial elections in 2014, 2018 and 2024 were messages by two prime ministers of 'the largest democracy in the world' who put blinders to reality and this also is a sorry tale of India's over-investment in Hasina.
The inevitable aftermath of such a ludicrous policy is now part of history.