Indian hegemony
BNP to prioritise water-sharing, end ‘Indian hegemony’: Fakhrul
BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir on Saturday (November 15) said his party will give top priority to resolving longstanding water-sharing disputes and stopping what he described as ‘Indian hegemony’ with Bangladesh.
Talking to reporters after inspecting a rubber dam built on the Mahananda River in Chapainawabganj, Fakhrul said issues related to the Teesta and Farakka, fair water shares, and border killings will be among top priorities if their party is elected to power.
Ensuring Bangladesh’s fair share of water and stopping border killings are priorities of BNP’s politics, he asserted.
Read more: Global democracies push for fair election in Bangladesh: Khosru
Fakhrul said India, as a neighbouring country, has every opportunity to maintain good relations with Bangladesh.
“During the Liberation War in 1971, India stood by us. They should extend even greater cooperation now. But unfortunately, we have witnessed the opposite. The Modi government has put pressure on Bangladesh, taken everything, and given us nothing. That was the failure of the Awami League government,” he added.
“The relations must be on the basis of equal footing. Our national interests must come first,” Fakhrul added.
The BNP secretary general arrived in Chapainawabganj to join a mass rally organised as part of the ‘Save the Padma, Save the Country; Bangladesh First’ campaign.
Read more: BNP weighing review of ‘controversial’ nominations amid grassroots unrest
19 days ago
NCP seeks alliance with reformists, anti-Indian hegemony forces: Hasnat
National Citizens Party (NCP) wants to form an alliance with those who independently support reforms and oppose Indian hegemony, said party’s chief coordinator for the southern region Hasnat Abdullah on Tuesday (11th November 2025).
Speaking at the inauguration of the Narayanganj district office of the NCP at the Somobay Building in the city, Hasnat said, “We are ready to join hands with those who independently stand for reforms.”
“We can form alliances with those who support reforms, stand for Bangladesh, oppose Indian dominance, and uphold communal harmony,” he added.
Hasnat, however, made it clear that the NCP would not align with any group or party that has opposed reforms or obstructed the country’s reform process. “The NCP has always made sacrifices in the greater interest of the nation,” he said.
Cocktail explosion near NCP office in Banglamotor, 5 detained
Calling the Awami League “irrelevant” in today’s Bangladesh, Hasnat remarked, “The Awami League has become irrelevant now. We need to look ahead. But we’ve seen that some paid intellectuals and beneficiaries of the Awami League have tried to generate legitimacy for the party through talk shows.”
He said recent events have made it clear who were behind the acts of arson both in the past and the present.
“The fall of the Awami League did not come through ballots; it came through a mass uprising. When a party falls through a popular uprising, it loses its political relevance. Those who are now trying to restore the Awami League’s legitimacy through ballots are, in fact, legitimising arson terrorism. That’s why unity among all anti-fascist political forces is the only way forward,” the NCP leader added.
Read more: NCP’s candidate list on Nov 15; likely to skip Khaleda’s constituencies
23 days ago