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Inside Bangladesh’s Hand-Picked Election Commission and Its Loyalty to Power
Bangladesh’s reconstituted Election Commission was presented as a reset after Sheikh Hasina’s ouster. Six months on, critics say it has become an extension of interim power—delaying elections, echoing government positions, and excluding the Awami League, raising serious questions about independence, legitimacy, and the future of democratic rule.
Dec 25, 20254 min read


When Warning Became a Crime: The Political Logic Behind COVID-19’s Escape from Wuhan
COVID-19 became a global disaster not just because a virus emerged, but because China’s political system criminalized early warning. In Wuhan, doctors were silenced, data was controlled, and truth required permission. This was not chaos, it was governance by design, and its consequences spread worldwide.
Dec 23, 20253 min read


OPINION | Neutral Leadership or Legal Uncertainty? Yunus and Bangladesh’s Credibility Test
As Bangladesh navigates political uncertainty, claims of “neutral leadership” face a critical test. This article examines how unresolved labor, financial, and regulatory cases surrounding Muhammad Yunus complicate assertions of moral authority, highlighting why legal clarity, not global reputation, ultimately determines credibility in democratic governance.
Dec 23, 20254 min read


OPINION | Restitution Before Reputation: The Tk 252 Crore Welfare Fund Dispute and Bangladesh’s Accountability Test
The Tk 252 crore welfare fund dispute has emerged as Bangladesh’s clearest accountability test. At its core is not ideology or reputation, but workers’ money, deducted from wages and allegedly not returned. For affected families, justice is measured not in narratives, but in restitution.
Dec 23, 20254 min read


OPINION | Debt as Control: How Microcredit Reshaped Power and Stress in Rural Bangladesh
Microcredit promised empowerment in rural Bangladesh but often delivered discipline through debt. Rigid repayments, social pressure, and survival borrowing reshaped household power, intensified stress, and produced regional spillovers, revealing how development finance can enforce control rather than create opportunity.
Dec 23, 20254 min read


OPINION | From Protest to Silence: Hong Kong After Article 23
Hong Kong’s swift passage of Article 23 marks the institutionalisation of repression. Once a city of defiance, it now enforces laws that criminalise dissent locally and abroad, targeting even the diaspora. With civil society dismantled and opposition silenced, Hong Kong has transformed from financial hub to authoritarian outpost, an ominous warning of how quickly freedoms can collapse under the guise of national security.
Sep 29, 20254 min read


Perks at Sea: How Pakistan’s Navy Built a Parallel Economy of Privilege
Pakistan’s Navy guards more than seas—it commands a parallel economy of privilege. From subsidised land and tax exemptions to guaranteed corporate posts at Bahria Foundation, naval officers inherit wealth without risk while citizens struggle with austerity. This is not shared sacrifice but selective privilege, a caste of milbus enriching itself as the nation sinks under economic and moral burden.
Sep 18, 20254 min read
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