After Hasina, Bangladesh needs a foreign policy reset

Interim government under Yunus is off to a promising start but must tackle entrenched interests

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Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, who was recommended by Bangladeshi student leaders as the head of the interim government, speaks during a press briefing as he arrives at the Hazarat Shahjalal International Airport in Dhaka on Aug. 8.

Thomas Kean is International Crisis Group's senior consultant on Bangladesh and Myanmar.

The remarkable downfall of Bangladesh's leader Sheikh Hasina was shocking in its speed, but the prime minister's hasty escape to India as angry protesters converged on her Dhaka residence on Aug. 5 was not a total surprise. The signs of deep rot have been clear for several years. Bangladesh's "economic miracle," which lifted so many out of extreme poverty, was beginning to sour. There was also growing frustration at Hasina's manipulation of national elections, curtailing of personal freedoms and undermining of institutions.

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