Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, the leader of Bangladesh’s interim government, declared Thursday that the rapid economic progress of his nation under former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was “fake.” He blamed the world for not challenging his claim that she was corrupt.
It “hurts me a lot personally” that the relationship with New Delhi is strained, he added. The connection between India and Bangladesh ought to be as solid as feasible. You must draw the map of Bangladesh to draw the map of India,” he said.
Weeks of violent protests prompted Hasina to flee to neighbouring India. Yunus, an economist and 2006 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, took over the South Asian nation’s interim government in August.
Dhaka has requested that New Delhi extradite Hasina, who has been in power in Bangladesh since 2009, as she is being investigated there on suspicion of crimes against humanity, genocide, murder, corruption, and money laundering.
The extradition request has not received a response from New Delhi, and Hasina and her party deny any culpability.
In Davos, she was advising everyone on how to govern a nation. In an interview with Reuters on the fringes of the World Economic Forum’s annual conference in the Swiss Alpine town, Yunus said, “Nobody questioned that.”That is absolutely not a good world system.
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