Home > News > Bangladesh : Hasina was given a death sentence in Bangladesh for cracking down on protests.

Bangladesh : Hasina was given a death sentence in Bangladesh for cracking down on protests.

Bangladeshi judges have found former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina guilty of crimes against humanity for the violent repression of anti-government protests in 2024. DW has the latest.The former leader has been sentenced to death by a court in Dhaka

Hasina, in exile in India, refused to return to Bangladesh for the trial

Bangladesh’s government beefed up security ahead of the verdict

Hasina’s Awami League party called for a nationwide shutdown

Bangladesh: Hasina sentenced to death over protest crackdown

Farah Bahgat | Kate Hairsine with AP, Reuters, AFP, dpa

Published 5 hours agoPublished 5 hours agolast updated 39 minutes agolast updated 39 minutes ago

Bangladeshi judges have found former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina guilty of crimes against humanity for the violent repression of anti-government protests in 2024. DW has the latest.

Hasina was seen as pro-democracy until her rule became increasingly authoritarian

What you need to know

The former leader has been sentenced to death by a court in Dhaka

Hasina, in exile in India, refused to return to Bangladesh for the trial

Bangladesh’s government beefed up security ahead of the verdict

Hasina’s Awami League party called for a nationwide shutdown

Sheikh Hasina reacts to the verdict from India

Sheikh Hasina defied court orders to return from India and has consistently refused to recognize the court’s authority [
Bangladesh’s former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has called the verdict and sentencing in her crimes against humanity trial “biased and politically motivated.”

Hasina refused to return from exile in India to attend the trial in Bangladesh, where she was assigned a state-appointed lawyer.

“The verdicts announced against me have been made by a rigged tribunal established and presided over by an unelected government with no democratic mandate,” Hasina said in a five-page statement issued from hiding in India. 

Hasina, instead, said she would be willing to attend a fresh trial outside Bangladesh.

“I am not afraid to face my accusers in a proper tribunal where the evidence can be weighed and tested fairly,” she said.

“That is why I have repeatedly challenged the interim government to bring these charges before the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague.”

Earlier this month, Bangladesh’s Foreign Ministry summoned India’s envoy to Dhaka to demand that New Delhi block the “notorious fugitive” Hasina from talking to journalists and “granting her a platform to spew hatred.”

Leave a Reply

Menu