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	<title>Muhammad Yunus &#8211; The Milli Chronicle</title>
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	<title>Muhammad Yunus &#8211; The Milli Chronicle</title>
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	<item>
		<title>Sheikh Hasina to Milli Chronicle: Democracy, Extremism &#038; Bangladesh’s Future</title>
		<link>https://millichronicle.com/2025/12/61316.html</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Arun Anand]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Dec 2025 04:14:56 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Asia]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[In an exclusive email interview, former Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina speaks to The Milli Chronicle about the violent turn of]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="wp-block-post-author"><div class="wp-block-post-author__avatar"><img alt='' src='https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/bb9e54675a4e13ec52632e18de1bbd93?s=48&#038;d=mm&#038;r=g' srcset='https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/bb9e54675a4e13ec52632e18de1bbd93?s=96&#038;d=mm&#038;r=g 2x' class='avatar avatar-48 photo' height='48' width='48' loading='lazy' decoding='async'/></div><div class="wp-block-post-author__content"><p class="wp-block-post-author__name">Arun Anand</p></div></div>


<blockquote class="wp-block-quote">
<p>In an exclusive email interview, former Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina speaks to The Milli Chronicle about the violent turn of the 2024 protests that led to her departure, failure of Yunus-led interim government, and her concerns over extremism, democratic legitimacy, and Bangladesh’s political and strategic future.</p>
</blockquote>



<p><strong>Question: Could you share what factors influenced your decision to leave Bangladesh, and what assurances you would need to consider returning?</strong></p>



<p><strong>Answer: </strong>What began as a genuine student movement was escalated by radicalists who led the crowds into violence, destroying state and communications infrastructure and burning down police stations. By then, this was no longer a peaceful civic movement, but a violent mob.</p>



<p>My instinct has always been to protect our country and our citizens, and it was not an easy decision to leave while my country erupted into lawlessness. I regret that I was compelled to leave, but it was a decision I took to minimize any further loss of life, and to ensure the safety of people around me.<br><br>For me to return, Bangladesh must restore constitutional governance and the rule of law. This means lifting the unlawful ban on the Awami League, releasing political prisoners detained on fabricated charges, and holding genuinely free elections. You cannot claim democratic legitimacy while banning the party elected nine times by the people.</p>



<p><strong>Question: How do you reflect on your government&#8217;s handling of the 2024 protests, and how do you respond to the concerns raised about the use of force and the legal cases that followed?</strong></p>



<p><strong>Answer: </strong>In the initial days, we allowed students to protest freely and accepted their demands. Then extremists transformed peaceful demonstrations into a violent insurrection. We responded as any government would when faced with burning police stations and attacks on state infrastructure; we acted to restore order and to prevent further bloodshed.</p>



<p>I attempted to gain a full picture of the events in August 2024 by establishing a judicial inquiry commission to investigate every death. The conspiracy behind these attacks became clear only later when Yunus immediately dissolved this inquiry, released convicted terrorists, and granted blanket immunity to those he now glorifies as &#8216;July Warriors.&#8217; These same actors marched on the Indian embassy last week, no doubt emboldened by the protection of the interim government.</p>



<p>If there were genuine concerns about excessive force or wrongful prosecutions, why destroy the very mechanism designed to investigate them? The truth is that Yunus has consistently thwarted attempts to establish what really happened in July and August 2024, because an impartial investigation would reveal the orchestrated nature of the violence.</p>



<p><strong>Question: What is your assessment of the current Yunus-led regime, and how do you view Bangladesh&#8217;s future—both with the proposed February 2026 elections and in the longer term?</strong></p>



<p><strong>Answer: </strong>We cannot forget that Yunus governs without a single vote from the Bangladeshi people. He has placed extremists in cabinet positions, released convicted terrorists, and done little or nothing to stop attacks on religious minorities. The economy that quadrupled during my tenure is now stalling.</p>



<p>Yunus came to power promising reform yet all he has sown division and banned the country’s oldest and most popular political party, thus disenfranchising millions. These elections can never be legitimate if the Awami League is banned.</p>



<p>My concern is that extremists are using Yunus to project an acceptable international face while they radicalise our institutions domestically. But Bangladesh and its people have extraordinary resilience and an unwavering belief in the power of participatory democracy. I trust that democracy will prevail and that we will set our great country back on the path to recovery and growth.</p>



<p><strong>Question: Looking back, how do you view the debate over democratic space during your tenure, and what reforms or new approaches would you prioritize if given another opportunity to lead?</strong></p>



<p><strong>Answer: </strong>I believe our greatest achievement as a party was the restoration of democracy in the 1990s. When I returned to Bangladesh following my father’s assassination, the biggest challenge facing our country was a lack of popular representation. Those years of military rule and unelected leadership taught us valuable lessons about the power of democracy that we never took for granted during our time in government. As a government, we encouraged political engagement and participation across the nation. Democracy thrives with healthy opposition, yet some of those parties chose to boycott previous elections, restricting the democratic choice of millions of ordinary citizens.<br><br>It is interesting that those who accused us of restricting democratic space now rule without a single vote, have forced judges to resign, and have detained journalists brave enough to critique their increasingly authoritarian grip on our nation. The question isn&#8217;t what reforms I would implement, it&#8217;s whether Bangladesh will retain any democratic institutions to reform.<br><br>We are proud of our record in government. During those 15 years, we helped to lift millions out of poverty, empowered women, and transformed Bangladesh into one of Asia&#8217;s fastest-growing economies. We consistently protected the rights of minorities and prevented radicalism from eroding our democracy. It takes a legitimate and strong government to forge our country’s place both domestically and internationally, and we did so by operating within constitutional boundaries. We were repeatedly mandated by voters at the ballot box.</p>



<p><strong>Question: How do you assess the country&#8217;s current political course under the interim government, particularly in terms of national stability and long-term strategic interests?</strong></p>



<p><strong>Answer: </strong>The Yunus government took power with a wave of western support from those who confused economic success with political aptitude. Reality has now set in. International bodies condemn his actions, cabinet members have stepped down in protest, and our citizens face unprecedented danger. Hundreds of innocent people have been detained arbitrarily under Yunus and journalists have been censored.<br><br>On the international stage, decades of carefully cultivated economic partnerships and regional stability have also been jeopardised.</p>



<p>This goes beyond mere incompetence; it is the systemic destruction of a once-stable country. Thankfully, such regimes never endure, and Yunus’ treatment of Bangladesh as his personal experiment will soon end. I can only hope that the international community will do its part in ensuring free, fair and participatory elections, so that the next legitimately elected government can rebuild what Yunus and his cronies have destroyed.</p>



<p><strong>Question: Since your departure, Pakistan&#8217;s outreach and influence in Bangladesh appears to have grown. How do you think Bangladesh can balance evolving regional relationships while preserving its historical commitments, security priorities, and ties with India?</strong></p>



<p><strong>Answer: </strong>Bangladesh requires stable relationships with all neighbours, including Pakistan. But Yunus&#8217; rushed embrace of Pakistan, which has never acknowledged the genocide of 1971, reveals a desperate search for any international validation.</p>



<p>The fundamental issue is legitimacy: Yunus lacks any mandate to realign our foreign policy. Strategic decisions that could affect generations should not be made by an unelected administration serving ideological interests. Once Bangladeshis can vote freely and we have a legitimate government in place, I hope that our foreign policy will once again be based on sober and pragmatic assessments of the country’s national interests.</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote">
<p>Excerpts from this interview may be reproduced or quoted, provided that <strong>The Milli Chronicle</strong> is clearly credited as the source.</p>
</blockquote>
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			</item>
		<item>
		<title>OPINION: Bangladesh’s War on Lawyers Under the Yunus Regime</title>
		<link>https://millichronicle.com/2025/10/57906.html</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Advocate Shahanur Islam]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Oct 2025 13:49:33 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Top Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[abuse of power]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Advocate Shahanur Islam]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[arbitrary detention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Awami League lawyers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bangladesh interim government]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bangladeshi judiciary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[civil liberties Bangladesh]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fabricated charges]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[freedom of expression Bangladesh]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[High Court bail abuse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[human rights in Bangladesh]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Muhammad Yunus]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nobel laureate controversy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[persecution of lawyers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[political imprisonment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[political repression]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rule of law Bangladesh]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[suppression of dissent]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[UN Basic Principles on the Role of Lawyers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[weaponizing imprisonment]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://millichronicle.com/?p=57906</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[The interim government’s influence extends deep into the judiciary. Judges are pressured; prosecutors are politicized. Instead of being released on]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="wp-block-post-author"><div class="wp-block-post-author__avatar"><img alt='' src='https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/997d3c11e551377ace876ef99f352d0d?s=48&#038;d=mm&#038;r=g' srcset='https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/997d3c11e551377ace876ef99f352d0d?s=96&#038;d=mm&#038;r=g 2x' class='avatar avatar-48 photo' height='48' width='48' loading='lazy' decoding='async'/></div><div class="wp-block-post-author__content"><p class="wp-block-post-author__name">Advocate Shahanur Islam</p></div></div>


<blockquote class="wp-block-quote">
<p>The interim government’s influence extends deep into the judiciary. Judges are pressured; prosecutors are politicized. </p>
</blockquote>



<p>Instead of being released on bail granted by the High Court Division of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh, on 4 September 2025, Khodadad Khan Pitu (60), former President of the Naogaon District Bar Association and President of the Human Rights Lawyers’ Forum, Naogaon, was re-arrested by Naogaon Sadar police from the gate of Naogaon District Jail. </p>



<p>On 5 September, he was produced before the court in connection with a 2024 case filed over an incident in 2022 under the Explosive Substances Act, and the court ordered him sent to jail.</p>



<p>Earlier, in the early hours of 17 July 2025 (around 2:30 a.m.), police had arrested him from his residence in the Chokmoyrdi Post Office area of Naogaon town. Although his name was not initially included in the 2024 case of vandalism and arson at the local BNP office, it was later added during the investigation, and he was sent to prison after being presented in court. He subsequently obtained bail from the High Court Division of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh.</p>



<p>Prior to that, he had voluntarily surrendered and obtained bail in another case filed during the July movement against attacks on students and ordinary citizens.</p>



<p>On 2 September 2025, twelve lawyers in Barguna District surrendered before the District and Sessions Judge in a case related to vandalism and arson at a BNP office. The court denied them bail. Eight days later, the High Court granted six weeks’ bail to ten of them. Yet, moments before their release, they were re-arrested under a newly fabricated case filed under the Special Powers Act by Betagi Police Station and sent straight back to prison.</p>



<p>Among those re-arrested were Mahabubul Bari Aslam, former President of the Barguna District Bar Association, and Advocates Mojibur Rahman, Saimum Islam Rabbi, Humayun Kabir Poltu, and Nurul Islam. Their brief taste of freedom became a cruel illusion, underscoring a chilling reality: even High Court bail cannot protect lawyers from politically engineered persecution.</p>



<p>These are not an isolated incidents. Rather, between August 2024 and September 2025,&nbsp;Justicemakers Bangladesh in France (JMBF)&nbsp;documented&nbsp;75 incidents of imprisonment affecting 203 lawyers. Each case reveals a deliberate strategy: fabricated charges, coerced surrenders, manipulated court procedures, and prolonged pre-trial detentions.</p>



<p>The largest share of these imprisonments arose from&nbsp;attempted murder (15 incidents, 103 victims)&nbsp;and&nbsp;murder (25 incidents, 43 victims)—serious accusations crafted to discredit and intimidate. Other allegations include&nbsp;sabotage, vandalism, seditious conspiracy, and extortion, laws selectively revived to target politically active lawyers or those defending victims of state abuse.</p>



<p>The regime has&nbsp;weaponized the law itself, turning courts into instruments of fear rather than justice. Lawyers affiliated with the&nbsp;Bangladesh Awami League (BAL)&nbsp;have been particularly targeted, with legal compliance—surrendering or filing bail applications—used against them as evidence of guilt.</p>



<p>The case of&nbsp;Advocate Abu Sayeed Sagar, former Dhaka Bar Association president, epitomizes this tactic. During the&nbsp;2023 Supreme Court Bar Association election, a minor scuffle became the pretext for charges against him. After securing six weeks of anticipatory bail, Sagar voluntarily surrendered on&nbsp;5 October 2025&nbsp;to renew it. Instead of a hearing, he was&nbsp;denied bail and jailed. Under the Yunus-led interim government, surrender no longer signifies compliance with the law—it&nbsp;becomes a trapdoor into imprisonment, illustrating how even lawful acts are punished.</p>



<p>Among the 75 documented incidents,&nbsp;57 involved arrests leading directly to imprisonment. Lawyers have been detained at home, in offices, and even in courtrooms, signaling that&nbsp;no professional stature offers protection.</p>



<p>Each detention removes one voice and intimidates countless others. Bar associations hesitate to convene; young lawyers adopt silence as a survival tactic. The courtroom, once a sanctuary of justice, now functions as a stage for repression.</p>



<p>Behind these numbers are&nbsp;shattered lives. Prisoned lawyers endure overcrowded cells, denial of medical care, and restricted family visits. Many have lost their livelihoods; some have fled abroad to continue their work in exile. Families live in fear, and entire legal communities operate under siege, paralyzed by collective anxiety.</p>



<p>Since mid-2024, the Yunus administration, installed under the banner of&nbsp;“transition and reform”, has systematically dismantled civil liberties, silenced journalists, and targeted professionals aligned with the Awami League. A&nbsp;Nobel Peace laureate now presides over a government that governs through fear, betraying the principles for which he was once celebrated internationally.</p>



<p>The interim government’s influence extends deep into the judiciary. Judges are pressured; prosecutors are politicized. Bail hearings are postponed indefinitely, and lawyers are denied access to case files. This violates&nbsp;Bangladesh’s Constitution&nbsp;and&nbsp;Article 9 of the ICCPR, which prohibits arbitrary detention. Courts have shifted from being protectors of justice to instruments of political repression.</p>



<p>In today’s Bangladesh, detention is&nbsp;preventive, not punitive. Lawyers are imprisoned before dissent occurs, neutralizing critics and stifling independent advocacy. By incarcerating defenders of justice, the government effectively&nbsp;incarcerates the legal conscience of the nation.</p>



<p>Bangladesh is obliged to follow the&nbsp;UN Basic Principles on the Role of Lawyers (1990)&nbsp;and the&nbsp;ICCPR, both guaranteeing lawyers the right to perform their duties&nbsp;“without intimidation, hindrance, harassment, or improper interference.”&nbsp;The mass imprisonment of lawyers under the Yunus government is a direct violation of these commitments, making the administration complicit in&nbsp;systematic human-rights abuse.</p>



<p>The international community must act decisively. The UN and other human-rights bodies should conduct thorough&nbsp;fact-finding missions, while international legal associations monitor trials and document violations of due process. Governments should consider&nbsp;targeted measures, including visa bans and asset freezes against officials responsible for repression, and provide&nbsp;emergency visas or asylum&nbsp;for lawyers facing imminent arrest. Silence from Nobel committees, universities, or civil-society leaders can no longer be tolerated; neutrality in the face of such abuses is complicity.</p>



<p>The mass imprisonment of lawyers in Bangladesh represents a&nbsp;moral collapse of governance. By criminalizing advocacy itself, the Yunus-led interim government has weaponized justice as an instrument of fear.</p>



<p>Muhammad Yunus, once celebrated for empowering the powerless, now presides over a regime that suppresses those who defend them. The world must judge him not by accolades, but by the&nbsp;lives of those jailed for defending the law.</p>



<p>When defenders of justice are silenced, it is not only lawyers who are imprisoned—it is the&nbsp;conscience of Bangladesh itself.</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote">
<p>Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not reflect Milli Chronicle’s point-of-view.</p>
</blockquote>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>OPINION: How the Yunus Interim Government Weaponized Justice in Bangladesh</title>
		<link>https://millichronicle.com/2025/10/57662.html</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Advocate Shahanur Islam]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 18 Oct 2025 07:16:31 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[authoritarianism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bangladesh]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[democracy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[freedom of speech]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[government crackdown]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[human rights]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[judicial abuse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[justice system]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lawyers in prison]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[legal persecution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Muhammad Yunus]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[political prisoners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[political repression]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rule of law]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://millichronicle.com/?p=57662</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Statistics cannot capture the sound of a cell door closing on a lawyer who once argued for others’ freedom. It]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="wp-block-post-author"><div class="wp-block-post-author__avatar"><img alt='' src='https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/997d3c11e551377ace876ef99f352d0d?s=48&#038;d=mm&#038;r=g' srcset='https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/997d3c11e551377ace876ef99f352d0d?s=96&#038;d=mm&#038;r=g 2x' class='avatar avatar-48 photo' height='48' width='48' loading='lazy' decoding='async'/></div><div class="wp-block-post-author__content"><p class="wp-block-post-author__name">Advocate Shahanur Islam</p></div></div>


<blockquote class="wp-block-quote">
<p>Statistics cannot capture the sound of a cell door closing on a lawyer who once argued for others’ freedom.</p>
</blockquote>



<p>It began, as so many stories of injustice do, with a courtroom and a promise of fairness that never came.</p>



<p>On&nbsp;2 September 2025, twelve lawyers in&nbsp;Barguna district&nbsp;walked into the District Sessions Judge’s Court—heads high, robes pressed, faith intact. They had come not as fugitives, but as officers of the court, surrendering in good faith to defend themselves against&nbsp;false and fabricated charges&nbsp;of vandalism and arson at a local BNP office.</p>



<p>The judge denied their bail. They were taken away in handcuffs.</p>



<p>Eight days later, on&nbsp;10 September, the&nbsp;High Court granted six weeks’ bail&nbsp;to ten of them. For their families waiting outside prison gates, it was a moment of relief—wives preparing meals, children waiting at the door. But as the release orders reached the jail, the cruel machinery of the&nbsp;Muhammad Yunus–led interim government&nbsp;moved again.</p>



<p>Moments before their release, the lawyers were&nbsp;re-arrested under a new case fabricated under the Special Powers Act&nbsp;by the Betagi Police Station and&nbsp;sent straight back to prison.</p>



<p>Among them were&nbsp;Mahabubul Bari Aslam, former President of the Barguna District Bar Association, and&nbsp;Advocates Mojibur Rahman, Saimum Islam Rabbi, Humayun Kabir Poltu, and Nurul Islam, respected figures in their communities. Their “freedom” lasted mere minutes—a cruel illusion that turned hope into heartbreak.</p>



<p>This episode exposes the grotesque logic of repression now governing Bangladesh: even when the highest court speaks, its voice is silenced by handcuffs. Bail means nothing; legality itself has become a crime.</p>



<p>In a democracy, imprisonment should be a last resort, used only when guilt is proven beyond doubt. But in today’s Bangladesh, under a regime led by a&nbsp;Nobel Peace laureate, imprisonment has become a first response—a weapon of control, not justice.</p>



<p>According to documentation by&nbsp;Justicemakers Bangladesh in France (JMBF)&nbsp;between August 2024 and September 2025, there were&nbsp;75 incidents of imprisonment involving 203 lawyers. These are not isolated misfortunes. They are&nbsp;deliberate acts of political engineering, designed to dismantle independence within the legal profession, particularly among lawyers affiliated with the&nbsp;Bangladesh Awami League (BAL)&nbsp;or those who dared to defend victims of state abuse.</p>



<p>Each story reveals a pattern:&nbsp;fabricated charges, coerced surrenders, manipulated hearings, and endless pre-trial detentions.&nbsp;The justice system, once a shield of rights, now functions as an arm of persecution.</p>



<p><strong>The Anatomy of Fabrication</strong></p>



<p>Behind every fabricated case lies a story of fear.</p>



<p>According to JMBF’s findings, the largest share of imprisonments arose from&nbsp;false charges of attempted murder (15 incidents, 103 victims)&nbsp;and&nbsp;murder (25 incidents, 43 victims).</p>



<p>These were not random choices—they were deliberate. Murder charges carry the heaviest stigma, branding lawyers as violent criminals and ensuring long detentions before trial. The government didn’t just want to silence these lawyers—it wanted to&nbsp;erase their credibility, to paint defenders of justice as enemies of peace.</p>



<p>Other common allegations—sabotage (8 incidents)&nbsp;and&nbsp;vandalism (9 incidents)—served as flexible tools to justify mass arrests. And then there are the&nbsp;colonial-era relics—<em>seditious conspiracy</em>&nbsp;and&nbsp;<em>extortion</em>—revived like old weapons from a dictator’s arsenal.</p>



<p>These laws once served imperial masters; today, they serve an&nbsp;interim regime that governs through fear, turning patriotism into sedition and dissent into treason.</p>



<p><strong>Arrest as a Weapon of Fear</strong></p>



<p>Among the 75 imprisonment incidents,&nbsp;57 involved arrests leading to imprisonment, affecting&nbsp;73 victims. These were not ordinary law-enforcement actions—they were&nbsp;public performances of power.</p>



<p>Lawyers have been detained from homes, offices, and even from courtrooms. The message is unmistakable:&nbsp;<em>no one is untouchable</em>.</p>



<p>JMBF’s data show this pattern across the country—murder, attempted murder, sabotage, vandalism, and “seditious conspiracy” cases repeated with numbing precision. Arrests have become a&nbsp;psychological weapon, designed to terrify not just individuals but the entire legal fraternity.</p>



<p>Each detention silences one voice—and intimidates a hundred more. Bar associations hesitate to meet; young lawyers choose self-censorship over survival. The courtroom, once a place of courage, now feels like a cage.</p>



<p><strong>The Trap of “Voluntary” Surrender</strong></p>



<p>Perhaps the most insidious tactic employed by the interim government is the manipulation of&nbsp;voluntary surrender.</p>



<p>JMBF documented&nbsp;18 such incidents, involving&nbsp;130 lawyers—many accused of “attempted murder” or “vandalism.” These were lawyers who followed the law, who appeared before judges when summoned. Yet, instead of receiving fair hearings, they were&nbsp;immediately remanded or imprisoned.</p>



<p>The ordeal of&nbsp;Advocate Abu Sayeed Sagar, former president of the Dhaka Bar Association and ex-Legal Affairs Secretary of the Awami League, epitomizes this tactic.</p>



<p>During the politically tense&nbsp;2023 Supreme Court Bar Association election, a brief scuffle became the pretext for criminal charges. Sagar obtained six weeks of anticipatory bail from the High Court. Then, on&nbsp;5 October 2025, he voluntarily surrendered before the&nbsp;Dhaka Metropolitan Sessions Judge’s Court&nbsp;to renew his bail—a lawful and responsible act.<br>Instead of being heard, he was&nbsp;denied bail and sent to jail&nbsp;by&nbsp;Judge Sabbir Fayez.</p>



<p>This case shows how the Yunus-led regime has&nbsp;weaponized compliance itself. What should have been a routine legal procedure became a punishment for obedience.<br>Under Yunus, surrender no longer signifies respect for law—it is a&nbsp;trapdoor to imprisonment.</p>



<p><strong>A Regime Built on the Ruins of Rights</strong></p>



<p>The persecution of lawyers is not an accident—it is&nbsp;a blueprint of authoritarian control.</p>



<p>Since mid-2024, under the pretext of “transition,” the Yunus-led interim government has&nbsp;suspended civil liberties, silenced journalists, and targeted professionals&nbsp;suspected of political disloyalty.</p>



<p>The irony is unbearable: a man once celebrated for empowering the poor now presides over the imprisonment of those defending the powerless.</p>



<p><strong>The Collapse of Judicial Independence</strong></p>



<p>Every dictatorship begins by capturing the courts. The Yunus government has done one worse—it has&nbsp;hollowed them out from within.</p>



<p>Judges are pressured, prosecutors politicized, and bail hearings endlessly delayed. Lawyers are denied access to case files, while police fabricate evidence with impunity.</p>



<p>This is not merely domestic injustice—it violates Bangladesh’s obligations under&nbsp;Article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which prohibits arbitrary detention.</p>



<p>When judges become instruments of fear instead of arbiters of law, the entire edifice of justice collapses.</p>



<p><strong>Imprisonment as Preventive Repression</strong></p>



<p>In this new Bangladesh,&nbsp;imprisonment no longer follows crime—it anticipates it.</p>



<p>Lawyers are detained not for what they did, but for what they might do. This is preventive repression—criminalizing potential dissent.</p>



<p>By incarcerating lawyers, the regime has effectively imprisoned&nbsp;the idea of justice itself. When defenders become defendants, a nation’s moral compass is lost.</p>



<p><strong>The Human Cost</strong></p>



<p>Statistics cannot capture the sound of a cell door closing on a lawyer who once argued for others’ freedom.</p>



<p>Many imprisoned lawyers languish in overcrowded cells, denied medical care, cut off from their families. Some have been beaten. Others have fled abroad, leaving behind shattered practices and broken lives.</p>



<p>In every courthouse corridor, fear now walks silently. The rule of law has been replaced by the rule of intimidation.</p>



<p><strong>The International Dimension of Betrayal</strong></p>



<p>When Muhammad Yunus took charge, many abroad saw him as a reformer—a moral voice who would guide Bangladesh toward democracy.</p>



<p>But moral authority demands moral action. The&nbsp;mass imprisonment of lawyers&nbsp;is a betrayal not just of Bangladesh’s Constitution, but of&nbsp;international law&nbsp;and&nbsp;the ideals Yunus once symbolized.</p>



<p>Bangladesh is bound by the&nbsp;UN Basic Principles on the Role of Lawyers (1990), which guarantee that lawyers must perform their duties “without intimidation, hindrance, harassment, or improper interference.”</p>



<p>Under Yunus, every one of those principles has been broken.</p>



<p><strong>The Erosion of Democracy in the Name of Transition</strong></p>



<p>The government calls itself “interim.” But its methods are&nbsp;permanent tools of authoritarianism.</p>



<p>It claims to save democracy by suspending it; to ensure order by silencing dissent. History knows this lie well—from Chile to Egypt, every junta has claimed necessity as its moral cover.</p>



<p>Bangladesh today stands on that same precipice.</p>



<p><strong>A Call for International Solidarity and Accountability</strong></p>



<p>The time for polite diplomacy is over. The international community must see beyond the Nobel halo and confront the stark reality unfolding in Bangladesh, where lawyers are imprisoned for defending justice.&nbsp;Independent investigations<strong> </strong>by the UN and other human-rights bodies are urgently needed to document the systematic persecution of legal professionals. International legal associations should actively&nbsp;monitor trials and proceedings<strong>,</strong> recording every violation of due process, while governments must consider&nbsp;targeted sanctions, including visa restrictions and asset freezes, against officials responsible for repression.</p>



<p>Equally critical is the&nbsp;protection of at-risk lawyers, with states providing emergency visas and asylum to those facing imminent arrest. Silence or neutrality from global institutions, including Nobel committees and academic bodies, is no longer acceptable; it amounts to tacit complicity in the erosion of democracy and the rule of law. The world must act decisively to uphold both human rights and the integrity of the legal profession in Bangladesh.</p>



<p><strong>When the Defenders Become the Accused</strong></p>



<p>The mass imprisonment of lawyers in Bangladesh marks&nbsp;a moral collapse of governance.</p>



<p>By turning the courts into instruments of punishment, the Yunus-led interim government has criminalized justice itself.</p>



<p>Imprisonment has ceased to be a verdict; it has become policy.</p>



<p>Muhammad Yunus once preached empowerment. Today, his government practices suppression.</p>



<p>The world must judge him not by medals, but by the misery of those imprisoned for defending freedom. Because when the defenders of justice are silenced, it is not only lawyers who are imprisoned—it is&nbsp;the conscience of Bangladesh<strong> </strong>itself.</p>



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<p>Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not reflect Milli Chronicle’s point-of-view.</p>
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