Bangladesh will not turn into Afghanistan: Muhammad Yunus urges stronger ties with India

Bangladesh will not turn into Afghanistan: Muhammad Yunus urges stronger ties with India

Muhammad Yunus, Bangladesh interim government's chief adviser, emphasizes that Bangladesh will not become another Afghanistan without Sheikh Hasina. He calls on India to improve bilateral ties and abandon the exaggerated narrative.

India TodayNE
  • Sep 06, 2024,
  • Updated Sep 06, 2024, 6:04 PM IST

Bangladesh interim government's chief adviser, Muhammad Yunus has stated that Bangladesh will not turn into another Afghanistan without Sheikh Hasina at the helm, urging India to abandon the narrative.

He urged India to work towards improving bilateral ties.

Stating that attacks on minority Hindus in Bangladesh are "more political than communal", Yunus told PTI, 
"These attacks are political in nature and not communal. And India is propagating these incidents in a big way. We have not said that we can't do anything; we have said that we are doing everything."

Yunus reiterated that the issue of attacks on minorities is "exaggerated" and that the incidents are a fallout of a political upheaval rather than communal violence.

The Nobel laureate also urged India to move beyond the narrative that portrays Bangladesh as being in safe hands only under Sheikh Hasina's leadership.

"The way forward is for India to come out of the narrative. The narrative is that everybody is Islamist, 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. India needs to come out of this narrative. Bangladesh, like any other nation, is just another neighbour," he said.

Yunus expressed a desire for strong ties with India and called for greater cooperation to improve the strained relationship between the two neighbours. "We need to work together to improve this relationship, which is now at a low," he said.

The military-backed caretaker government also conveyed to India that former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina must remain silent until Bangladesh requests her extradition.

"If India wants to keep her until the time Bangladesh (government) wants her back, the condition would be that she has to keep quiet," Yunus said.

Yunus's comments come amid ongoing tensions between Bangladesh and India, with India expressing concerns over the safety of Hindus and minorities in Bangladesh.

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