Grand Tamasha

Bangladesh’s Political Reset

10 snips
Mar 18, 2026
Naomi Hossain, Global Research Professor at SOAS and author of The Aid Lab, unpacks Bangladesh’s sudden political upheaval. She traces the protests that toppled a long-serving leader. She examines the 2026 vote, the interim government's limits, BNP’s revival under Tarique Rahman, economic pressures, rising party rivals, and the military’s restrained role.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

2026 Election Was Competitive But Incomplete

  • The 2026 election was competitive yet incomplete because the Awami League leadership was exiled or jailed and effectively barred from contesting.
  • Naomi Hossain calls the result a mirror image of 2008: a landslide win for the opposition after a caretaker-style interregnum.
ANECDOTE

Yunus Interim Inherited A State In Disarray

  • The interim team led by Muhammad Yunus faced chaos: collapsed law and order, lynchings of police, politicized institutions, and a fragile economy.
  • Hossain recounts community security groups forming and the interim reforms being narrow, elite-driven and poorly communicated via a complex referendum.
INSIGHT

Tarique Rahman Rebranded BNP On Return

  • Tarique Rahman returned from exile and rapidly reshaped the BNP's image by avoiding vengeance rhetoric during the campaign.
  • Hossain notes his swift return in December and a campaign that presented him as a changed, less violent figure.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app