Bangladesh-India Ties – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Fri, 27 Mar 2026 03:33:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Bangladesh-India Ties – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Bangladesh envoy calls for amicable resolution of ‘sensitive’ issues between New Delhi, Dhaka https://artifex.news/article70791028-ece/ Fri, 27 Mar 2026 03:33:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70791028-ece/ Read More “Bangladesh envoy calls for amicable resolution of ‘sensitive’ issues between New Delhi, Dhaka” »

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Bangladesh High Commissioner to India, Riaz Hamidullah with External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar. File.
| Photo Credit: ANI

India and Bangladesh should address “difficult” and “sensitive” issues amicably and Dhaka is committed to maintain a “mutually” beneficial partnership with New Delhi, Bangladesh’s envoy Riaz Hamidullah said on Thursday (March 26, 2026).

Mr. Hamidullah reaffirmed Dhaka’s commitment to a “mutually beneficial” partnership, emphasizing the need to chart a pathway toward a deeper relationship that transcends existing “differences or divergences”.

He was speaking at an event to celebrate Bangladesh’s Independence Day. The event was attended by Minister of State for External Affairs Kirti Vardhan Singh and Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri.

“In the closest proximity as ours, should there be difficult or sensitive issues, those can, and ought to be, addressed forthright in all sincerity and candour, be in trade, security or sharing natural resources,” Mr. Hamidullah said.

“As we speak, both our countries navigate complexities and uncertainties in the global order. While we foresee tumultuous times ahead, Bangladesh looks forward to walking and working together to preserve the values and principles of open regionalism and multilateralism, for both as responsive and responsible nations,” he said.

The ties between Bangladesh and India came under severe strain during the tenure of Bangladesh’s interim government headed by Muhammad Yunus.

However, after Bangladesh Nationalist Party leader Tarique Rahman became Prime Minister following his party’s victory in the parliamentary polls, both New Delhi and Dhaka are making efforts to rebuild the ties.

PM Rahman had said Bangladesh accords “high importance” to its relationship with India.

“Our two people share considerable commonality and enjoy deep-rooted ties. As our government embarks on a robust mandate, we look forward to advancing our ties and engagements with India, premised on dignity, equality, mutual trust and respect, and shared benefits,” he had said.

“I do believe, if Dhaka and Delhi would address issues in ways that yield gains for the common people, there is so much that our two countries can accomplish in shared interests,” he said.



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Bangladesh to continue diplomatic efforts to bring back Sheikh Hasina from India: Foreign Adviser https://artifex.news/article70380384-ece/ Wed, 10 Dec 2025 12:20:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70380384-ece/ Read More “Bangladesh to continue diplomatic efforts to bring back Sheikh Hasina from India: Foreign Adviser” »

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Sheikh Hasina has said the judgment has been made by a “rigged tribunal established and presided over by an unelected government with no democratic mandate”. File
| Photo Credit: AFP

Bangladesh’s interim government on Wednesday (December 10, 2025) said it will continue diplomatic efforts to bring back from India deposed prime minister Sheikh Hasina, who has been convicted and sentenced in multiple cases.

The 78-year-old Awami League leader has been living in India since she fled Bangladesh on August 5 last year in the face of the massive protests.

“We will try to convince India to send her back to Dhaka,” Foreign Adviser Md Touhid Hossain was quoted as saying by the state-run BSS news agency.

Mr. Touhid noted that Ms. Hasina’s repatriation ultimately depends on India’s decision.

On Saturday (December 6), External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar said Ms. Hasina came to India “in a certain circumstance and I think that circumstance clearly sort of is a factor in what happens to her. But again, that is something which she has to make up her mind.”

Responding to reports suggesting possible third-country resettlement for the former premier, Mr. Touhid said he had only seen such claims in media coverage.

“I did not receive any information through diplomatic channels,” he added. Mr. Touhid had earlier said Bangladesh was not ruling out a response from India.

On November 17, the International Crimes Tribunal sentenced Hasina and former Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal to death for “crimes against humanity” committed during the July-August mass uprising last year.

Following the court verdict, Bangladesh sent a letter to India seeking her extradition.

India said it is examining a request by Bangladesh’s interim government to extradite Hasina, asserting that New Delhi is committed to ensuring the best interests of the people of that country.

Ms. Hasina has said the judgment has been made by a “rigged tribunal established and presided over by an unelected government with no democratic mandate”.

On November 27, another court sentenced Ms. Hasina to 21 years in jail in three corruption cases related to irregularities in allocations of land in a government housing project.

On December 1, Ms. Hasina was convicted by a court which sentenced her to five years in jail and her niece, British parliamentarian Tulip Siddiq, to a two-year jail term in a land scam case.



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Bangladesh Cancels Planned Training Of Judges In India Amid Strained Ties https://artifex.news/bangladesh-cancels-planned-training-of-judges-in-india-amid-strained-ties-7404738/ Sun, 05 Jan 2025 10:43:23 +0000 https://artifex.news/bangladesh-cancels-planned-training-of-judges-in-india-amid-strained-ties-7404738/ Read More “Bangladesh Cancels Planned Training Of Judges In India Amid Strained Ties” »

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Dhaka:

Bangladesh’s interim government on Sunday cancelled a planned training programme for 50 judges and judicial officers in India, scrapping a previous notification.

“The notification has been cancelled,” a law ministry spokesman said without elaborating.

The Daily Star newspaper, however, reported the cancellation came in compliance with a directive from Bangladesh’s Supreme Court.

The cancellation order came a day after the state-run Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha reported that 50 lower judiciary judges would undergo a one-day training programme from February 10 at the National Judicial Academy and the State Judicial Academy in Madhya Pradesh.

The trainee judges selected under the programme were district and session judge or their equivalent officers, additional district and session judge, joint district judge, senior assistant judges and assistant judge.

The Indian government was supposed to bear all the expenses for the training programmes.

India and Bangladesh have witnessed strained ties since the deposed prime minister Sheikh Hasina fled to New Delhi on August 5 last year following a massive student-led protest that toppled her Awami League’s 16-year regime.

There have been a series of attacks on Hindu community members and their places of worship after the interim government headed by Muhammad Yunus came to power on August 8.

New Delhi has already raised concern with Dhaka, especially after a Hindu monk was arrested in a sedition case and put in jail after he was denied bail last month. 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)




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Bangladesh AHC in Agartala suspends services after breach by mob, officials suspend 3 police officers https://artifex.news/article68943239-ece-2/ Wed, 04 Dec 2024 00:33:58 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68943239-ece-2/ Read More “Bangladesh AHC in Agartala suspends services after breach by mob, officials suspend 3 police officers” »

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Army soldiers guarding outside the Indian High Commission check the identity of a person after a call for anti-India protests in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2024.
| Photo Credit: AP

The Bangladesh Assistant High Commission in Agartala on Tuesday announced the suspension of visa and consular services for an indefinite period a day after an incident involving a breach of the consular premises by a mob during protests against the arrest of a Hindu monk in the neighbouring country.

The Assistant High Commission (AHC) posted a notice on their board without specifying when the services would resume.

This incident, which sparked a fresh diplomatic row between India and Bangladesh, resulted in the suspension of three Tripura police officers for their negligence in duty at the AHC. West Tripura Superintendent of Police K. Kiran Kumar issued the order for the suspension of the three sub-inspectors.

Seven protesters from the Hindu Sangharsh Samiti have been detained by the police in connection with the breach at the AHC. The police and security agencies are currently reviewing CCTV footage and social media posts to identify those involved in the incident.

Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and Tripura State Rifles (TSR) troops have been deployed at the AHC and two checkpoints have been set up outside as a security measure. Two additional checkpoints have also been created on Akhaura Road leading to the Agartala Integrated Check Post.

These security measures have been put in place based on assessments made by senior police and intelligence officials, according to sources. In a statement released on Monday, Chief Minister Manik Saha, who holds the Home portfolio, condemned the incident at the Bangladesh AHC.

On the other hand, protests against alleged atrocities committed on minority Hindus in Bangladesh continued in Agartala and other parts of the State on Tuesday. The Sanatani Yuba, a right-wing youth organisation, held a protest rally in Agartala city under heavy security presence.

In another major development, Tripura Hotel and Restaurant Owners Association has declared they would not provide accommodation to Bangladesh nationals in protest of the deterioration of the communal situation there. It, however, said the measure is temporary.

Meanwhile, a leader of a Hindu organisation stated that they will continue to hold protests until attacks on Hindus in Bangladesh are stopped and the country’s Hindu leader Prabhu Chinmoy Krishna Das is unconditionally acquitted from false charges.



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Revival of SAARC spirit can solve many regional problems: Bangladesh’s Chief Adviser Yunus https://artifex.news/article68613873-ece/ Fri, 06 Sep 2024 13:18:09 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68613873-ece/ Read More “Revival of SAARC spirit can solve many regional problems: Bangladesh’s Chief Adviser Yunus” »

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Muhammad Yunus, Chief Adviser of Bangladesh interim government, during an interview to PTI.
| Photo Credit: PTI

There should be a revival of the “spirit of SAARC,” Muhammad Yunus, the head of Bangladesh’s interim government has said, underlining that the eight-member bloc can solve many of the region’s problems.

In an interview with PTI at his official residence in Dhaka, Chief Adviser Yunus said that although the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) was formed with a great cause, it now exists only on paper and is not functioning.

The regional grouping comprises Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, the Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.

Mr. Yunus mentioned that he would try to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly session scheduled to be held later this month.

He also mentioned that he will try to get the heads of state of SAARC nations together for a photo op.

“Obviously, we will try to meet [Prime Minister Narendra Modi]. I will try if all the heads of state of SAARC nations come together and take a photo. SAARC was formed for a great cause; it now exists only on paper and is not functioning. We have forgotten the name of SAARC; I am trying to revive the spirit of SAARC,” he said.

Prime Minister Modi is likely to address the high-level UN General Assembly session on September 26, according to a provisional list of speakers issued by the UN.

The high-level General Debate of the 79th session of the UN General Assembly will take place from September 24-30.

“The SAARC summit has not taken place for quite a long time. If we come together, a lot of problems will be resolved,” Mr. Yunus said.

Nepal has been making efforts to activate the regional grouping, which has not been very effective since 2016.

The 2016 SAARC Summit was to be held in Islamabad. But after the terrorist attack on an Indian Army camp in Uri in Jammu and Kashmir on September 18 that year, India expressed its inability to participate in the summit due to “prevailing circumstances”.

The summit was called off after Bangladesh, Bhutan and Afghanistan also declined to participate in the Islamabad meet.

The Nobel laureate noted that although the European Union, which was formed along similar lines as SAARC, has achieved a lot through mutual cooperation, SAARC has yet to achieve the same.

“The European countries have achieved a lot through the European Union. We have to ensure that SAARC works. Look at the European Union, and how brilliantly it works. If there is a problem regarding Pakistan, other ways can be worked out. But the functioning of SAARC must not stop,” he said.

The SAARC has not been very effective since 2016, as its biennial summits have not taken place since the last one in Kathmandu in 2014.

Speaking on the issue of the Rohingya influx in Bangladesh, Yunus said he would seek help from India to convince Myanmar to take back its population.

Mr. Yunus also said Dhaka needs the help of both India and China to manage the crisis.

“We need the help of India and China to resolve the issue. Nearly one million people have come to Bangladesh, and now this population is growing. It is putting tremendous pressure on Bangladesh’s economy. Some countries are taking them but in small numbers. As India shares good relations with Myanmar, we need India’s help in convincing Myanmar to take them back,” he said.

Over one million Rohingya fled to Bangladesh in 2017 after a brutal military crackdown in Myanmar’s Rakhine State, described by the UN and others as ethnic cleansing, and now live in overcrowded camps in Cox’s Bazar—among the world’s largest and most densely populated—with little hope of returning to Myanmar, where they are largely denied citizenship and basic rights.



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Sheikh Hasina’s Stay In India Will Not Hurt Ties: Bangladesh Government Adviser https://artifex.news/sheikh-hasinas-stay-in-india-will-not-hurt-ties-bangladesh-government-adviser-6323089rand29/ Mon, 12 Aug 2024 17:58:12 +0000 https://artifex.news/sheikh-hasinas-stay-in-india-will-not-hurt-ties-bangladesh-government-adviser-6323089rand29/ Read More “Sheikh Hasina’s Stay In India Will Not Hurt Ties: Bangladesh Government Adviser” »

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Mr Hossain accused the Awami League regime of committing gross human rights violations.

Dhaka:

A key adviser of Bangladesh’s interim government on Monday said that deposed prime minister Sheikh Hasina’s extended stay in India will not hurt bilateral relations and Dhaka will always try to maintain good relations with New Delhi.

Foreign Affairs Adviser Md Touhid Hossain made the remarks when asked whether bilateral ties with India would be affected if Ms Hasina’s stay in India gets prolonged.

“This is a hypothetical question. If someone stays in a country why the relations with that particular country would be affected? There is no reason for that,” he said, emphasising that bilateral relations are a big matter.

Ms Hasina, 76, resigned and fled to India last week following widespread protests against her government over a controversial quota system in jobs.

Mr Hossain said bilateral relations are a relation of interest and friendship is also of interest. “Friendship does not exist if the interest is hurt.” He said the two sides – Bangladesh and India – have interests and they will follow those interests. Mr Hossain said the relationship between the two countries “is not influenced by the presence of one individual in a country” while “India has its interests, and Bangladesh has its interests”.

The adviser said they will “always try to maintain good relations” with India.

Earlier, he briefed the diplomats stationed in Dhaka, including Indian High Commissioner to Bangladesh Pranay Verma, on the situation in Bangladesh and sought their support.

“We believe that all our friends and partners in the international community would continue to stand by the interim government and our people as we embark on charting a new future for Bangladesh,” Mr Hossain told the diplomats.

Mr Hossain, a career diplomat and former foreign secretary, reaffirmed that Bangladesh was committed to upholding all agreements made with other countries.

The adviser accused the Awami League regime of committing gross human rights violations in its attempts to suppress a popular movement eventually resulting in its ouster.

“However, the sheer power of people ultimately led to the fall of all authoritarian regimes,” Hossain said, adding that Bangladesh had experienced a “second liberation” last week driven by a mass uprising led by “our courageous students”.

The adviser said the interim government was committed to meeting the renewed expectations of the people and expressed confidence that the international community would continue to support the interim government and the people of Bangladesh as they work towards a new future.

“Bangladesh is on the brink of a new beginning,” he said.

The adviser informed the diplomats that the government has taken quick and decisive measures to restore law and order and bring back normalcy across the country.

Representatives from all diplomatic missions in Dhaka, including UN agencies, attended the briefing while they inquired about security measures, the Rohingya issue, and the current situation.

“We can assure that the safety and security of the diplomatic and consular premises and persons will remain one of our core priorities,” Hossain said, adding the interim government remained sensitized to the need to ensure the protection of all foreign citizens.

Mr Hossain said that the government would remain focused on a smooth transition to “inclusive and pluralistic electoral democracy as soon as possible”.

During his first press briefing at the foreign ministry on Sunday, Mr Hossain was asked about the possibility of bringing home Ms Hasina. He replied that the matter falls under the jurisdiction of the law ministry while his office would respond only if that ministry makes any such request.

“Our policy is to maintain good relations with all countries while protecting our national interests,” said Mr Hossain, whose position is equivalent to a minister’s.

“We intend to maintain smooth and positive relations with all … including India and China,” said Hossain, who previously served as a deputy high commissioner to India.

When asked about the interim government’s approach towards India, Mr Hossain said both countries share a strong and deep bond.

“(But) it is important that people feel India is a good friend of Bangladesh…We want that, we want to advance the (Dhaka-Delhi) relation towards that direction,” he said.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)



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