ইউ এস বাংলা নিউজ ডেক্স
আরও খবর
Bangladesh’s ousted leader Hasina denounces the upcoming election from her exile in India
The Achievements of Fascist Yunus: Theft, Robbery, Murder
Bangladesh: Power Bought With Blood
Kidnapping in Bangladesh: A Rising Epidemic Under the Interim Government
Dehumanization Of Dissenters: Yunus playbook to murder family members of student wing of Awami League
Bangladesh crisis News Yunus regime Dhaka’s Turbulent Streets: The Root of the Chaos Sits in Jamuna
Bangladesh’s Export Downturn: Four Months of Decline
When The State Becomes A Personal Project
Bangladesh is watching something more corrosive than a routine change in power. What’s reportedly taking shape is a shift in how power is used: not as a public trust, but as a private instrument.
An interim administration is supposed to be temporary, restrained, and constitutionally disciplined. It is meant to keep the machinery of the state neutral until people can decide the country’s future at the ballot box. But when an unelected authority is perceived to have taken power unlawfully or unconstitutionally and then proceeds to deliver a chain of benefits that consistently favour one individual and his close allies, the
country isn’t being “stabilised." It is being quietly re-engineered. And here’s what that really means: the state becomes smaller for the ordinary citizen and larger for the connected few. Justice becomes negotiable. Regulation becomes selective. Public assets become bargaining chips. The final bill lands where it always lands — on the common people.
country isn’t being “stabilised." It is being quietly re-engineered. And here’s what that really means: the state becomes smaller for the ordinary citizen and larger for the connected few. Justice becomes negotiable. Regulation becomes selective. Public assets become bargaining chips. The final bill lands where it always lands — on the common people.



