
Muhammad Yunus, a Nobel laureate and the leader of Bangladesh’s interim government, declared Thursday that the rapid economic progress of his nation under former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was “fictional.” He accused the world of not questioning his claim that she was corrupt.
It also “hurts me a lot personally” that New Delhi and he have a tense relationship. The friendship between India and Bangladesh should be as robust as it can be. He remarked that a map of Bangladesh must be drawn before one can draw the map of India.
The 2006 Nobel Peace Prize laureate and economist Yunus, 84, assumed leadership of the South Asian nation’s interim administration in August after Hasina was compelled to leave for nearby India after weeks of violent protests.
Dhaka has urged New Delhi to extradite Hasina, who has been in power since 2009, as she is being probed in Bangladesh on charges of murder, corruption, money laundering, crimes against humanity, and genocide. New Delhi has not reacted to the request for extradition, while Hasina and her party deny any wrongdoing exists.
She was teaching everyone how to govern a nation when she was at Davos. “No one questioned that,” Yunus told Reuters during an interview conducted outside the annual conference of the World Economic Forum in the Alpine resort of Switzerland.
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