Bangladesh struggles to contain the fallout of an uprising that toppled its leader last year

Bangladesh struggles to contain the fallout of an uprising that toppled its leader last year
Students scuffle with police during a protest to demand merit-based system for civil service jobs in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on July 11, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 15 July 2025
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Bangladesh struggles to contain the fallout of an uprising that toppled its leader last year

Bangladesh struggles to contain the fallout of an uprising that toppled its leader last year
  • One year after Hasina’s ouster, interim government faces growing unrest, delayed reforms, political fragmentation
  • Rights concerns remain a major issue, conservative religious factions gain ground and Yunus resists calls for early elections

DHAKA: Bangladesh was on the cusp of charting a new beginning last year after its former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was removed from power in a student-led uprising, ending her 15-year rule and forcing her to flee to India.

As the head of a new interim government, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus promised to hold a credible election to return to democracy, initiate electoral and constitutional reforms and restore peace on the streets after hundreds were killed in weeks of violence that began on July 15, 2024.

A year later, the Yunus-led administration has struggled to contain the fallout of the uprising. Bangladesh finds itself mired in a growing political uncertainty, religious polarization and a challenging law-and-order situation.

Here’s what to know about Bangladesh a year after the protests that toppled Hasina.

Chaotic political landscape

Uncertainty about the future of democracy looms large in Bangladesh.

The student protesters who toppled Hasina formed a new political party, promising to break the overwhelming influence of two major dynastic political parties — the Bangladesh Nationalists Party, or BNP, and Hasina’s Awami League.

But the party’s opponents have accused it of being close to the Yunus-led administration and creating chaos for political mileage by using state institutions.

Meanwhile, Bangladesh’s political landscape has further fragmented after the country’s largest Islamist party, the Jamaat-e-Islami, returned to politics more than a decade after it was suppressed by Hasina’s government.

Aligned with the student-led party, it’s trying to fill the vacuum left by the Awami League, which was banned in May. Its leader, Hasina, is facing trial for crimes against humanity. The strength of Jamaat-e-Islami, which opposed Bangladesh’s independence from Pakistan in 1971, is unknown.

Both BNP and the Jamaat-e-Islami party are now at loggerheads over establishing supremacy within the administration and judiciary, and even university campuses.

They are also differing over the timing of a new parliamentary election. Yunus has announced that the polls would be held in April next year, but poor law and order situation and a lack of clear-cut political consensus over it have created confusion. The chief of Bangladesh’s military also wanted an election in December this year — a stance Yunus didn’t like.

“Post-revolution honeymoons often don’t last long, and Bangladesh is no exception,” says Michael Kugelman, a Washington-based South Asia analyst and senior fellow of Asia Pacific Foundation. “The interim government faced massive expectations to restore democracy and prosperity. But this is especially difficult to do as an unelected government without a public mandate.”

Yunus wants reforms before election

Yunus has delayed an election because he wants reforms — from changes to the constitution and elections to the judiciary and police. Discussions with political parties, except Hasina’s Awami League, are ongoing.

Some of the reforms include putting a limit on how many times a person can become the prime minister, introduction of a two-tier parliament, and appointment of a chief justice.

There appears to be little consensus over some basic reforms. While both the BNP and the Jamaat-e-Islami parties have agreed to some of them with conditions, other proposals for basic constitutional reforms have become a sticking point.

The Jamaat-e-Islami also wants to give the interim government more time to complete reforms before heading into polls, while BNP has been calling for an early election. The student-led party mostly follows the pattern of the Jamaat-e-Islami party.

Kugelman says the issue of reforms was meant to unite the country, but has instead become a flashpoint.

“There’s a divide between those that want to see through reforms and give them more time, and those that feel it’s time to wrap things up and focus on elections,” he says.

Human rights and the rise of Islamists

Human rights in Bangladesh have remained a serious concern under Yunus.

Minority groups, especially Hindus, have blamed his administration for failing to protect them adequately. The Bangladesh Hindu Buddhist Christian Unity Council says minority Hindus and others have been targeted in hundreds of attacks over the last year. Hasina’s party has also blamed the interim government for arresting tens of thousands of its supporters.

The Yunus-led administration denies these allegations.

Meenakshi Ganguly, deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch, says while the interim government has stopped enforced disappearances and extrajudicial executions that had occurred under the Hasina government, “there has been little progress on lasting security sector reforms or to deliver on the pledge to create robust, independent institutions.”

Meanwhile, Islamist factions — some of whom have proposed changes to women’s rights and demanded introduction of Sharia law — are vying for power. Many of them are planning to build alliances with bigger parties like the BNP or the Jamaat-e-Islami.

Such factions have historically struggled to gain significant electoral support despite Bangladesh being a Muslim majority, and their rise is expected to further fragment the country’s political landscape.

Diplomatic pivot and balancing with global powers

During Hasina’s 15-year rule, Bangladesh was India’s closest partner in South Asia. After her ouster, the Yunus-led administration has moved closer to China, which is India’s main rival in the region.

Yunus’ first state visit was to China in March, a trip that saw him secure investments, loans and grants. On the other hand, India is angered by the ousting of its old ally Hasina and hasn’t responded to Dhaka’s requests to extradite her. India stopped issuing visas to Bangladeshis following Hasina’s fall.

Globally, Yunus seems to have strong backing from the West and the United Nations, and it appears Bangladesh will continue its foreign policy, which has long tried to find a balance between multiple foreign powers.

But Kugelman says the country’s biggest challenge may be the “Trump factor.”

In January, the Trump administration suspended USAID funds to Bangladesh, which had sought significant levels of US support during a critical rebuild period post Hasina’s ouster.

“Dhaka must now reframe its relations with an unconventional US administration that will largely view Bangladesh through a commercial lens,” Kugelman says.


Thai locals say Israeli tourists unwelcome amid exploitation, security fears

A restaurant on Koh Phangan island, Thailand, displays a 'No Israel' sign amid rising tensions with Israeli tourists, October 20
A restaurant on Koh Phangan island, Thailand, displays a 'No Israel' sign amid rising tensions with Israeli tourists, October 20
Updated 02 November 2025
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Thai locals say Israeli tourists unwelcome amid exploitation, security fears

A restaurant on Koh Phangan island, Thailand, displays a 'No Israel' sign amid rising tensions with Israeli tourists, October 20
  • Number of Israeli tourists to Thailand expected to reach 350,000 in 2025, up 25% from last year
  • Their lack of respect for local culture, setting up Israeli schools and religious centers also stir unease

KOH PHANGAN: After months of enduring Israeli tourists snatching his restaurant’s tissues and condiments without permission, hogging seats without paying, and skipping lines, Bob reached his breaking point and decided to no longer welcome them.

Having worked all his life in the hospitality industry, he had never come across such behavior by visitors to the island. Each time he tried to intervene, he was faced with a wave of negative reviews hitting his establishment.

“After I asked one group of Israeli tourists to leave, I received more than 4,000 bad reviews — my restaurant’s rating dropped from 4.8 to 2.2 stars. It’s now been corrected, but that experience was really frustrating,” Bob told Arab News.

In October, his restaurant, Pun Pun Thai Food, a popular establishment on Koh Phangan, a holiday island in southern Thailand, put up a sign making it clear that Israelis were not allowed even past the threshold.

“I hate the repeated behavior I’ve encountered from many Israeli tourists — it happens so often that it led me to put up a ‘No Israel’ sign at my restaurant,” Bob said.

“What I’ve experienced isn’t just from one person — it happens repeatedly.”

Over the past few months, such incidents have been increasingly highlighted by the locals, who started to record and share them on social media. In May, an Israeli woman went viral after a Koh Phangan restaurant employee requested that she leave for not respecting the establishment’s rules.

The employee could be heard saying: “You’re not welcome here,” to which the woman replied: “My money builds your country.”

Besides the nuisance that such behavior has become for them, locals are also worried about tourists competing with their businesses by renting out houses, running restaurants, organizing tours, or operating motorbike rental shops without permission.

A group of business owners and island residents recently filed a petition with more than 200 signatures, submitted to the governor of the Surat Thani province, urging action against what they described as “Israeli activities causing distress to local communities.”

Apiwat Sriwatcharaporn, assistant village chief in Koh Phangan, acknowledged the growing concern over foreigners running unlicensed business operations on the island.

“If they just live or travel here, that’s fine,” he said. “But business operations should be done legally.”

According to Thailand’s Immigration Bureau, as of late September, there were 2,627 Israeli nationals applying for visa extensions on the island, out of about 8,000 total foreigners, making Israelis the largest group under scrutiny for potential illegal commercial activity.

Tan, whose family has been operating a business in Koh Phangan, said problems with Israeli visitors are not new. But lately, they have become more noticeable, as more and more of them are visiting.

The number of Israeli tourists to Thailand has risen sharply in 2025, with an estimated 350,000 visitors expected this year — up 25 percent from the previous year.

“They have very distinct characteristics as customers, like bargaining hard or being quite demanding,” Tan said.

“Of course, tourists’ behavior varies — some are good, some are not. But in recent years, there have been more and more Israelis on Koh Phangan. Before, they used to come alone, but now we see them arriving as families. That’s made the Israeli community on the island much larger, and it’s also intensified local frustration toward them.”

Dr. Manoch Aree, assistant professor at the Department of Political Science, Faculty of Social Sciences, Srinakharinwirot University, told Arab News that since the beginning of Israel’s genocidal campaign in Gaza in 2023, Thailand has become a preferred destination for Israeli citizens, largely because of its cultural openness and previous absence of anti-Israel sentiment.

But the lack of respect for local culture and the growing sense of economic exploitation have fueled public resentment.

Many Israelis are alleged to have used Thai nominees to register businesses, trading exclusively among themselves without contributing to local communities. The establishment of Israeli schools and centers for religious activities, which are closed to outsiders, has also stirred unease among local residents.

Some organizations have also brought Israeli soldiers for rehabilitation in Thailand. According to reports in the Thai state media, some of these groups have been directly linked to the Israeli military industry.

“This has led to fears among locals about why they are here and what they are doing,” Aree said.

“The government’s intention to boost tourism has backfired, creating unintended negative consequences.”


UK police say train knife attack not terrorist incident, two British men arrested

Police Superintendent John Loveless addresses the media after a mass stabbing on a London-bound train in Huntingdon, England.
Police Superintendent John Loveless addresses the media after a mass stabbing on a London-bound train in Huntingdon, England.
Updated 02 November 2025
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UK police say train knife attack not terrorist incident, two British men arrested

Police Superintendent John Loveless addresses the media after a mass stabbing on a London-bound train in Huntingdon, England.
  • “At this stage, there is nothing to suggest that this is a terrorist incident,” Superintendent John Loveless from British Transport Police told media on Sunday

HUNTINGDON, England: British police said on Sunday that a knife attack on a train which put 11 people in hospital was not a terrorist incident, adding that two men — both British nationals — had been arrested.

Counterterrorism police had helped with the initial investigation after the mass stabbing of passengers on a London-bound train in eastern England on Saturday.

“At this stage, there is nothing to suggest that this is a terrorist incident,” Superintendent John Loveless from British Transport Police told media on Sunday.

The two men arrested on suspicion of attempted murder were a 32-year-old male, a black British national, and a 35-year-old British national of Caribbean descent, Loveless said. Both had been born in the UK, he added.

“It would not be appropriate to speculate on the cause of this incident,” he said.

The arrests were made by armed police after the train made an emergency stop at Huntingdon around 80 miles (130 km) north of London.

Of the 11 people hospitalized, four have since been discharged and two patients remain in a life-threatening condition, police said.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer called it an “appalling incident” which was “deeply concerning,” while King Charles said he was “truly appalled and shocked.”

Interior Minister Shabana Mahmood said she was “deeply saddened” and urged people to avoid comment and speculation.

The government is keen to stop rumors spreading on social media following an incident in Southport in northwest England in 2024, when Internet claims over the murder of three young girls sparked days of rioting across the country.

Witness Olly Foster told the BBC that he was on the train when someone ran past him saying a man was stabbing “everyone, everything.”

“I put my hand on this chair...and then I look at my hand, and it’s covered in blood. And then I look at the chair, and there’s blood all over the chair. And then I look ahead and there’s blood on all the chairs,” he said.

Another witness told Sky News that a suspect was seen waving a large knife before being tasered by police.

Britain’s current threat level from terrorism is rated as “substantial” by security services, meaning an attack is considered “likely.”

After a number of serious attacks in 2017, Britain has had some quieter years in the 2020s, although last month three people were killed when a synagogue was attacked in Manchester.


UK MPs call for govt adoption of new Islamophobia definition after hate crime surge

Britain's Housing Secretary Steve Reed leaves 10 Downing Street, in central London, on September 9, 2025. (File/AFP)
Britain's Housing Secretary Steve Reed leaves 10 Downing Street, in central London, on September 9, 2025. (File/AFP)
Updated 02 November 2025
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UK MPs call for govt adoption of new Islamophobia definition after hate crime surge

Britain's Housing Secretary Steve Reed leaves 10 Downing Street, in central London, on September 9, 2025. (File/AFP)
  • Letter: ‘In 2025, 45 percent of religious hate crimes were directed towards Muslims’
  • MP Afzal Khan: ‘We urgently need a robust definition that protects people while preserving free speech’

LONDON: Prominent UK politicians have written to Steve Reed, secretary of state for housing, communities and local government, urging him to adopt a new definition of Islamophobia. 

Recent statistics in England and Wales have shown a 19 percent rise in hate crimes against Muslims in the last year.

In a letter, the group of 40 MPs said adopting the new definition would be an “important step” in curbing anti-Muslim prejudice.

An independent working group of MPs was established in February to determine the new definition of Islamophobia to address “unacceptable treatment, prejudice, discrimination and hate targeting Muslims or anyone who is perceived to be Muslim.” 

It was chaired by the former attorney general for England and Wales, Dominic Grieve, and included the co-chair of the British Muslim Network, Akeela Ahmed.

The letter said the new definition “comes at a time when unfortunately, Islamophobia continues to increase rapidly, with devastating consequences. In 2025, 45 percent of religious hate crimes were directed towards Muslims.”

It added: “This means Islamophobic hate crimes have risen 92% since 2023 and the adoption of a definition by the government becomes more important than ever.”

Signatories urged Reed to adopt the definition in November during Islamophobia Awareness Month, after the working group submitted their report in October for consultation.

The proposal for a new definition has been met with criticism in some quarters over fears it could curb free speech in the UK.

Supporters of a new definition have pointed out that under the 2010 Equality Act, Muslims are not protected from racial discrimination as they are not defined as a racial group.

Shaista Gohir, a member of the House of Lords who also sat on the working group, accused government ministers of being “silent” on the increase in anti-Muslim hate in England and Wales.

A previous definition of Islamophobia from the all-party parliamentary group on British Muslims stated: “Islamophobia is rooted in racism and is a type of racism that targets expressions of Muslimness or perceived Muslimness.”

The definition was adopted by the Labour Party in 2019, as well as the Liberal Democrats, but not by the Conservative government at the time, which said it “was not broadly” accepted and required more work.

MP Afzal Khan, who penned the letter to Reed, told The Guardian: “Muslims receive the highest number of recorded religious hate crimes in the UK.”

He said there had been an “aggressive shift” in attitudes toward Muslims in the past year, and the government cannot “let the momentum slip” on a new definition of Islamophobia. “We urgently need a robust definition that protects people while preserving free speech,” he added.

A spokesperson for the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government said in a statement: “The department is carefully considering the Working Group’s recommendations and we will respond in due course.”


‘We’re not a violent city’: Chicago locals take on ICE block-by-block

‘We’re not a violent city’: Chicago locals take on ICE block-by-block
Updated 02 November 2025
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‘We’re not a violent city’: Chicago locals take on ICE block-by-block

‘We’re not a violent city’: Chicago locals take on ICE block-by-block
  • The immigration crackdown in Chicago grows increasingly heated
  • Sounding the alarm on immigration crackdown by whistle and messaging apps

CHICAGO: The immigration agents’ tear gas grenades clinked and then exploded against the concrete, shrouding the block in plumes of white gas. The dozen or so residents at the scene only screamed louder. “We don’t want you here,” yelled Rae Lindenberg. The 32-year-old, who works in marketing, ran out of her apartment when she heard the shrill sound of whistles. “Get out of our neighborhood!” The squad of agents had appeared in Lakeview last month, an upscale neighborhood dotted with dog daycares, medical spas and vegan restaurants, hopping over a gate to chase down a construction worker who was handcuffed and shoved into a vehicle.

When Courtney Conway, a 42-year-old lifelong Chicago resident, heard about the chase through Facebook groups and text message chains, she hopped on her bike to join the protesters.

“We are not a violent city. This is not a war zone, and I think these guys are terrorizing us and trying to incite us,” said Conway. “We want them out. We want them to stop kidnapping our neighbors.”

Creating a zone defense

Chicago, a city of 2.7 million, has long been known as a patchwork of close-knit neighborhoods. And since the city took center stage of President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown in September, those neighborhoods have mobilized against enforcement efforts, sometimes block-by-block. That hyperlocal effort, spun off into dozens of chats on social platforms, has helped create a type of zone defense that – activists say – has slowed down immigration agents and in some cases forced them to withdraw without making an arrest.

When asked for comment, Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary for public affairs at the Department of Homeland Security, said: “Our officers are highly trained and in the face of rioting, doxxing and physical attacks they have shown professionalism. They are not afraid of loud noises and whistles.”

Over in Chicago since early September, according to DHS.

In Facebook groups and on Signal chats, tens of thousands of residents regularly crowdsource information on immigration agents’ last-known locations, neighborhoods being targeted that day and – importantly – the license plates, makes and models of the rental cars used by agents, which can

change daily.

Some ICE-spotting Facebook pages in Chicago

have up to 50,000 members. US Immigration and Customs Enforcement and US Customs and Border Protection agents prowling city streets in unmarked cars are often trailed by drivers honking their horns and cyclists on an almost daily basis.

In some neighborhoods, confrontations between CBP and ICE agents and protesters have grown increasingly heated. Immigration agents have tear-gassed at least five neighborhoods in the past month, according to a Reuters tally, their car into another vehicle at least once, protesters trailing immigration agents, used Tasers on people during violent arrests, pointed at people and two people, including one fatally.

The Cook County Department of Public Health said it does not track injuries sustained during confrontations with federal agents and five city hospitals called by Reuters said they had not treated any protesters.

Last month, US District Judge Sara Ellis directed agents to use body cameras and issue two warnings to protesters before using tear gas in a case brought by protesters, clergy and journalists.

Helicopter watch groups

Hours after the confrontation in the Lakeview neighborhood, dozens of parents stood guard outside a school in Bucktown, another North Side neighborhood favored by families and young professionals, after hearing ICE and border patrol officers were in the area. Some parents set up an informal checkpoint next to the school to check cars for immigration enforcement agents.

And in Little Village, one of the city’s biggest Latino enclaves, businesses and residents locked their doors after activists warned them of approaching ICE and border patrol vehicles and at one point, surrounded vehicles to prevent them from making arrests.

“The community defended the neighborhood today,” said Baltazar Enriquez, president of the Little Village Community Council.

Some protesters specialize in watching out for Black Hawk helicopters the agents use to surveil neighborhoods, which don’t appear on flight-tracking apps and are often a harbinger of a raid.

On a recent Saturday morning, Brian Kolp, an attorney and former prosecutor, ran out of the house in his pajamas when word spread throughout the Old Irving Park neighborhood that immigration agents in balaclavas had grabbed a worker and a protester and shoved them into their car. Other residents came out in Halloween costumes.

“People were yelling, and it was chaos,” said Kolp. Soon after, he said, agents tossed tear gas grenades into the street and left.


Djibouti parliament removes presidential age limit: speaker

Djibouti parliament removes presidential age limit: speaker
Updated 02 November 2025
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Djibouti parliament removes presidential age limit: speaker

Djibouti parliament removes presidential age limit: speaker
  • Vote opens the way for leader Ismail Omar Guelleh to run for a sixth term
  • Guelleh, 77, has held power since 1999 in the tiny Horn of Africa nation

ADDIS ABABA: Djibouti’s parliament removed the age limit for presidents with a unanimous vote on Sunday, its speaker said, opening the way for leader Ismail Omar Guelleh to run for a sixth term.

Guelleh, 77, has held power since 1999 in the tiny Horn of Africa nation, a major port that hosts military bases for the United States, France, China, Japan and Italy.

Djibouti’s lawmakers unanimously approved the change to the constitution to remove a bar on running for president past the age of 75.

The move allows Guelleh to run in the next election in April 2026, likely facing minimal opposition in a country with limited freedom of expression and press.

“The National Assembly ratified the removal of the age limit today, so it is official,” said parliament speaker Dileita Mohamed Dileita.

Parliament had already passed the motion a week earlier in an initial vote that was then approved by Guelleh and sent back to lawmakers for the final vote.

Dileita earlier said the constitutional change was necessary to ensure “the stability of the small country, in a troubled region, the Horn of Africa, with Somalia, Ethiopia, and Eritrea.”

Guelleh won the last election in 2021 with 97 percent of the vote while his party, the Union for the Presidential Majority, holds the majority of parliamentary seats.

He succeeded Hassan Gouled Aptidon, the father of Djibouti’s independence, in 1999 after serving as his chief of staff for 22 years.

Djibouti has only around one million inhabitants but lies on the strategic trade route of the Bab El-Mandeb Strait on the Red Sea.

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