18-03-2025
Bureau Report
NEW DELHI: The dramatic political developments in Bangladesh that led to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina being ousted last year have thrown up many surprises including Dhaka’s growing closeness with one-time foe Pakistan.
Last month, after decades of troubled relations, the two countries began directly trading for the first time, with Dhaka importing 50,000 tonnes of rice from Pakistan. Direct flights and military contacts have also been revived, visa procedures have been simplified, and there are reports of co-operation on security matters.
The countries, separated by the landmass of India have deep, painful historical ties. The animosity between them goes back to 1971, when Bangladesh, then known as East Pakistan, launched a struggle to gain independence from Islamabad. India supported the Bengali rebels during the nine-month war which led to the formation of Bangladesh.
While the scars from that period run deep, Dhaka had cordial relations with Islamabad between 2001 and 2006, when a coalition of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and the Jamaat-e-Islami governed the country.
This changed during Hasina’s 15-year rule from 2009 when she was strongly backed by Delhi and maintained a distance from Pakistan but after she fled to India following mass protests against her government, ties seem to be thawing.
“For the past 15 years, the Pakistan-Bangladesh relationship was on a slightly difficult trajectory,” says Humayun Kabir, a former senior Bangladeshi diplomat, adding that the relationship seems to now be returning to that of “two normal neighbors”.
The developments are being watched closely, particularly in India, which has a long history of hostile relations with Pakistan.
Relations between Dhaka and Delhi have been frosty since Hasina’s exit. India has not reacted to Bangladesh’s demands to extradite her to face charges of crimes against humanity, money laundering and corruption. Hasina denies the accusations against her.
Some experts think the reviving of relations between Dhaka and Islamabad is a strategic move.
“Pakistan and Bangladesh have a tactical relationship at the moment. Together, they want to represent a pushback against the dominance of India,” says Ayesha Siddiqa, a Pakistani academic who is a senior fellow at King’s College in London.
There have been other developments apart from starting direct trade.
Muhammad Yunus, head of the interim Bangladesh government, met Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif at multilateral forums several times in recent months and then there is a growing military relationship.
A high-level Bangladeshi military delegation made a rare visit to Pakistan in January and held talks with influential army chief General Asim Munir. The Bangladeshi navy also participated in a multinational maritime exercise organized by Pakistan off the Karachi coast in February. .
Veena Sikri, who was India’s high commissioner to Bangladesh between 2003 and 2006, describes the growing closeness between Dhaka and Islamabad as a “déjà vu” moment.
During her tenure in Dhaka, she said, India repeatedly raised the issue of “Indian insurgents getting trained inside Bangladesh with the support of the ISI (Pakistan’s intelligence agency) and a section of the Bangladeshi military”.
“We even provided evidence to Bangladeshi authorities,” she said.