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


FILES PHOTO: A member of the Hindu Hitarakshana Vedike holds a placard to condemn violence against the Hindu minority community in Bangladesh, during a protest at the Freedom Park in Bengaluru on December 4, 2024. Minority groups, especially Hindus, have blamed the Yunus administration for failing to protect them adequately. - AFP

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.

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Bangladesh , fallout , uprising

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