Aminul Islam Bulbul
Politicisation of cricket looks set to continue under new government
In Bangladesh, cricket is far more than a national obsession. Combined with its enormous commercial appeal, the game has been converted into the ultimate political currency.
The recent dissolution of the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) and the lightning-fast installation of a politically connected ad-hoc committee exposes a harsh reality: governments may change, but the state or ruling dispensation's suffocating grip on the country's most popular sport remains completely unbroken.
For decades, ruling regimes have understood that controlling cricket is a way to control the masses. During Sheikh Hasina's long period of rule, which is often called an authoritarian regime by political analysts, the BCB functioned as little more than a direct wing of the state machinery.
The partisan dominance was absolute. It spread into every level of the administration, from the high-level boardroom decisions down to the stadium gates. It reached a point where the national team was actually led by sitting members of parliament. This wasn't a coincidence; it was a strategy to use the sport as a populist tool, designed to unify a fractured public under the ruling party's banner while masking the government’s deeper failures.
When the Awami League government collapsed in August 2024, the BCB naturally fell into chaos.
The power vacuum led to the emergence of a new board headed by Aminul Islam Bulbul, formed under the watch of the interim government. It was sold to the public as a necessary transition to keep the sport stable. However, in the tough landscape of Bangladeshi sports politics, this board quickly became a target for the next political force waiting in the wings.
This week, the National Sports Council (NSC)—now operating under the newly elected BNP-led government—dissolved Aminul’s board. They cited severe electoral fraud and manipulation as the reason. While the allegations of rigged e-voting and administrative coercion are serious, the underlying motive feels far too familiar to anyone watching.
Govt dissolves BCB board over election fraud; Tamim appointed as interim head
This ouster doesn't look like a crusade for transparency; it looks like a calculated purge. It is a move to erase the interim government's footprint and allow a new regime to capture the board's massive resources and public influence.
The makeup of the new 11-member ad-hoc committee, led by former national captain Tamim Iqbal, shows this political reality clearly. While they are tasked with holding a fair election within three months, the committee is heavily stacked with the immediate family members of senior BNP figures—including the sons of both the Home Minister and the Finance Minister, alongside a BNP-affiliated lawyer.
The faces in the boardroom have changed, but the structural strategy is identical: a new political net has simply been cast over the BCB.
This cyclical power grab shows a deep hypocrisy within the nation's sports administration. The very same political factions that spent years condemning the Awami League for weaponizing the cricket board are now eagerly sharing the rewards of winning using the exact same government tools.
Ousted BCB chief Aminul denounces board dissolution as ‘constitutional coup,’ appeals to ICC
The NSC's intervention is a blunt instrument of control, one that flagrantly ignores the International Cricket Council's (ICC) strict rules against government interference.
Yet, the usual threat of an ICC suspension for state interference might be empty this time around. The sport's global governing body is currently chaired by the powerful Indian administrator Jay Shah, and his leadership operates against a very sensitive geopolitical backdrop.
During the interim government’s time, Aminul’s board drew New Delhi's ire by refusing to play in India during the last T20 World Cup, citing legitimate security concerns amid growing tensions between the two countries. The diplomatic standoff erupted shortly after Indian authorities forced the Kolkata Knightriders to terminate Mustafizur Rahman's contract to play for them in this year's IPL, cricket's biggest money-spinner, claiming unspecified security risks.
Hanging heavily over these athletic disputes was a glaring political reality: ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina—accused of planning the deaths of over 1,400 citizens during the July mass uprising—was actively being sheltered in Delhi. Because Aminul’s public defiance directly challenged the Indian cricket establishment, the current ICC leadership may be perfectly willing to turn a blind eye to the NSC’s action, which was called a “bureaucratic coup” by Aminul. It is a situation where geopolitical retribution might be allowed to quietly override the ICC’s own governance statutes.
While politicians, ex-players, and their proxies battle for control of the lucrative BCB chair, the actual development of the sport is being pushed to the side. In Bangladesh, regimes rise and fall, but the cricket board remains a captured prize, trapped in a vicious cycle of political patronage that it cannot seem to escape.
Ultimately, this endless political tug-of-war leaves the sport itself as the biggest casualty.
5 hours ago