Monday, February 16, 2026
16.1 C
New Delhi

B’desh no longer a ‘submissive country’: Yunus in farewell address

Dhaka, Feb 16 (PTI): Outgoing interim government chief Muhammad Yunus on Monday said his 18-month rule restored three core pillars of Bangladesh’s external engagement – “sovereignty, national interests, and dignity”, and it is no longer a “submissive” nation.

In his farewell address to the nation, Yunus said that at the end of his regime’s rule, “Today’s Bangladesh is confident, active, and responsible in protecting its independent interests”.  “Bangladesh is no longer a country with a submissive foreign policy or dependent on the instructions and advice of other countries,” he said in the televised address a day ahead of quitting power.

He emphasised that his 18-month tenure had rebuilt the three “fundamental foundations” of the country’s foreign engagement: “sovereignty, national interests, and dignity”.

Yunus’ interim regime began in August 2024 and is set to conclude its unscheduled term with the swearing-in of a new government led by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) on Tuesday, which won a two-thirds majority in general elections four days ago.

BNP, led by its chairman Tarique Rahman, bagged a whopping 209 out of 297 seats in the crucial 13th Parliamentary elections held on February 12.

“I call upon everyone, regardless of party, creed, religion, caste and gender, to continue the struggle to build a just, humane, and democratic Bangladesh. With this appeal, I bid farewell with great optimism,” Yunus said.

Yunus, who ran the country as the outgoing regime’s chief adviser, effectively the prime minister, said Bangladesh’s open sea was its great “strategic asset”, creating huge economic opportunities in the region for the South Asian nation.

He emphasised the vast growth potential of broader regional cooperation encompassing Nepal, Bhutan, and “northeastern India”.

“Our open sea is not merely a geographical boundary; it is a gateway to the global economy,” he said, adding that connectivity was central to the country’s next phase of development.

Yunus said that his administration exhausted its efforts to “ensure democratic rights and values” and formulated some 130 new laws, amended other laws, and issued 600 executive orders, about 84 per cent of which have been implemented.

He said that international port management companies, against which workers waged massive protests, and which critics said were against Bangladeshi interests, would raise the efficiency of the facilities to global standards.

“We have come a long way in signing agreements with leading international port management companies to bring our ports’ efficiency up to international standards. If we cannot increase efficiency, we will lag behind in economic achievements,” he said.

Earlier in the day, Yunus met with senior bureaucrats and participated in a photo session with all those serving at his office.

Bangladesh’s Chief of Army Staff Gen Waker-Uz-Zaman also paid a farewell visit to him.  Yunus thanked the Army chief for the cooperation of the armed forces during the general election.  On Sunday, Yunus held the last meeting of his advisory council or cabinet.

Under Yunus’s tenure, Dhaka’s relations with New Delhi witnessed a significant downturn.

India has been expressing concerns over attacks on minorities, especially Hindus, in Bangladesh.

The community has faced a series of attacks, some fatal, after the killing of radical youth leader Sharif Osman Hadi in December.

Several foreign experts said Bangladesh earned little in foreign relations under Yunus’ leadership, while ties with its immediate neighbour, India, saw their lowest ebb.

Executive director of thinktank Centre for Policy Dialogue Fahmida Khatun said political strains with India under Yunus spilled into economic ties, “preventing the easing of tariff and non-tariff barriers that could boost bilateral trade”.

Foreign relations analyst Mustafizur Rahman said under Yunus, relations with India became strained, while ties with Pakistan marked a sudden positive development without building a domestic political consensus on these shifts.

“Whatever he (Yunus) said or called in his farewell address, his regime, apparently with a deliberate effort, divided further an already polarised Bangladesh, leaving behind a fragile political scenario, promoting far right elements,” security and political analyst Nasir Uddin said. PTI AR GRS GRS GRS

(This story is published as part of the auto-generated syndicate wire feed. No editing has been done in the headline or the body by ABP Live.)

Go to Source

Hot this week

Shanaya recalls Aryan pushing her and Suhana down stairs

Shanaya Kapoor recently revisited a wild childhood memory involving Aryan Khan and Suhana Khan, revealing how Aryan once pushed her and Suhana down a flight of stairs wrapped in a blanket, calling it a self-designed roller coaster. Read More

CEA: Tech adoption must align with mass employability

CEA V Anantha Nageswaran NEW DELHI: AI could either amplify India’s demographic advantage or weaken it, depending on the choices made now, chief economic adviser V Anantha Nageswaran said on Monday, calling for coordinated nat Read More

Los Angeles flash flood warning: What residents need to know about upcoming storms

Los Angeles and much of Southern California are facing flash flood risks as a series of strong storms moves through the region, bringing heavy rain, thunderstorms and hazardous conditions. Read More

Cong disassociates, but Aiyar says unlike Rahul friends, he is with party

Mani Shankar Aiyar (File Photo) NEW DELHI: After Congress dissociated itself from Mani Shankar Aiyar following his prediction that the rival Left front will win in Kerala elections, the veteran hit back on Monday saying he remains Read More

From robots in healthcare to drones scanning crops, it’s India story at work

A visitor shakes hand with a robot on display at the summit NEW DELHI: The AI Impact Summit 2026 marks a shift in India’s AI story – from cloud-heavy, software-led narratives to physical, deployable AI embedded in machine Read More

Topics

Shanaya recalls Aryan pushing her and Suhana down stairs

Shanaya Kapoor recently revisited a wild childhood memory involving Aryan Khan and Suhana Khan, revealing how Aryan once pushed her and Suhana down a flight of stairs wrapped in a blanket, calling it a self-designed roller coaster. Read More

CEA: Tech adoption must align with mass employability

CEA V Anantha Nageswaran NEW DELHI: AI could either amplify India’s demographic advantage or weaken it, depending on the choices made now, chief economic adviser V Anantha Nageswaran said on Monday, calling for coordinated nat Read More

Los Angeles flash flood warning: What residents need to know about upcoming storms

Los Angeles and much of Southern California are facing flash flood risks as a series of strong storms moves through the region, bringing heavy rain, thunderstorms and hazardous conditions. Read More

Cong disassociates, but Aiyar says unlike Rahul friends, he is with party

Mani Shankar Aiyar (File Photo) NEW DELHI: After Congress dissociated itself from Mani Shankar Aiyar following his prediction that the rival Left front will win in Kerala elections, the veteran hit back on Monday saying he remains Read More

From robots in healthcare to drones scanning crops, it’s India story at work

A visitor shakes hand with a robot on display at the summit NEW DELHI: The AI Impact Summit 2026 marks a shift in India’s AI story – from cloud-heavy, software-led narratives to physical, deployable AI embedded in machine Read More

India in talks with 30+ nations to curb AI misuse: Ashwini Vaishnaw

IT minister Ashwini Vaishnaw NEW DELHI: Electronics and IT minister Ashwini Vaishnaw on Monday said India is in discussions with ministers from over 30 countries to develop common technical and legal solutions to tackle the misuse Read More

India must use AI to make governance efficient, citizen-centric: Anthropic CEO

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei BENGALURU: Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said even as artificial intelligence technology produces great value, it will also bring big economic turmoil. Read More

Bertie Carvel REACTS to Baelor’s death in ‘AKOTSK’

Actor Bertie Carvel has opened up about portraying Prince Baelor “Breakspear” Targaryen and the pivotal moment in episode 4 and 5, when the prince volunteers to fight for Ser Duncan the Tall in ‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Read More

Related Articles