Bangladesh’s Iron Lady Sheikh Hasina falls after 15 years in power
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Sheikh Hasina won a fifth term as prime minister in January, but the opposition boycotted a vote that it said was neither free nor fair.
PHOTO: AFP
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Dhaka - Ms Sheikh Hasina once helped rescue Bangladesh from military rule, but her long rule came to a sudden end on Aug 5 as protesters stormed her palace in Dhaka.
Her 15 consecutive years in power were marked by an economic rebirth, but also by the mass arrests of political opponents and human rights sanctions against her security forces.
Protests began in July, with rallies led by university students against civil service job quotas,
Attacks on demonstrators by police and pro-government student groups that month also sparked international condemnation.
The autocratic Ms Hasina, 76, won a fifth term as prime minister in January,
Critics accused her government of a litany of rights abuses, including the murder of opposition activists.
The daughter of a revolutionary who led Bangladesh to independence, Ms Hasina presided over breakneck economic growth in a country once written off by US statesman Henry Kissinger as an irredeemable “basket case”.
In 2023, she promised to turn all of Bangladesh into a “prosperous and developed country”, but around 18 million young Bangladeshis are out of work, according to government figures.
Economic rise
Ms Hasina was 27 and travelling abroad when renegade military officers murdered her father – then Prime Minister Sheikh Mujibur Rahman – as well as her mother and three brothers in a 1975 coup.
She returned six years later to take the reins of her father’s Awami League party, beginning a decade-long struggle that included lengthy stretches of house arrest.
She joined forces with Ms Khaleda Zia’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) to help oust military dictator Hussain Muhammad Ershad in 1990.
But both women soon fell out, and their ensuing rivalry dominated modern Bangladeshi politics.
Ms Hasina first served as prime minister in 1996, but lost to Ms Zia five years later.
The pair were imprisoned on corruption charges in 2007 after a coup by a military-backed government.
The charges were dropped and they contested an election the following year, which Ms Hasina won in a landslide. She had been in power ever since.
Ms Zia, 78, is in poor health and confined to hospital after she was sentenced to 17 years in prison for graft in 2018, with top BNP leaders also behind bars.
Supporters have praised Ms Hasina for leading Bangladesh through an economic boom, largely on the back of a mostly female factory workforce powering its garment export industry.
Bangladesh, one of the world’s poorest countries when it gained independence from Pakistan in 1971, has grown an average of more than 6 per cent each year since 2009.
Poverty has plummeted and more than 95 per cent of its 170 million people now have access to electricity, with per capita income overtaking India’s in 2021.
Ms Hasina was also hailed for a decisive crackdown on Islamist militants in the Muslim-majority nation, after five Bangladeshi extremists stormed a Dhaka cafe popular with Western expatriates and killed 22 people in 2016.
Silencing dissent
However, her government’s intolerance of dissent gave rise to resentment at home and concern from Washington and elsewhere.
Five top Islamist leaders and a senior opposition figure were executed over the past decade over convictions for crimes against humanity committed during the brutal 1971 liberation war.
The trials triggered mass protests and deadly clashes. Ms Hasina’s opponents branded the trials a farce and a politically motivated exercise to silence dissent.
In 2021, the US imposed sanctions on an elite branch of Bangladesh’s security forces and seven of its top officers over charges of widespread human rights abuses.
In the face of the recent mounting protests, Ms Hasina insisted she had worked for her nation, and toured areas of Dhaka damaged during days of deadly unrest in July.
“Over 15 years, I’ve built this country,” she told reporters. “What didn’t I do for the people?” AFP

