It’s Time India Threw Some Stones in Turkey’s Backyard
This could be a good window for India to remind Turkey that glass houses don’t fare well in a stone pelting contest. And India has a lot of cards to play.
This could be a good window for India to remind Turkey that glass houses don’t fare well in a stone pelting contest. And India has a lot of cards to play.
Erdogan-ruled Turkey is well known for neo-Ottoman delusions and exporting of Turkic identity as well as its variant of pan-Islamism.
Turkey’s deepening ties with Bangladesh, from defence zones to Jamaat support, are geopolitical curveballs; this entire episode is yet another wake-up call for New Delhi.
This article on Sindhudesh is written by Zafar Sahito, the founder and leader of the Jeay Sindh Freedom Movement. He was born in Nawabshah, Sindh and joined the Jeay Sindh Students Federation (JSSF) in 1997. He completed his graduation in Civil Engineering in 2004. He has been living in exile in the USA since 2017 after he was granted political asylum.
Israel destroyed residences of Bangladesh diplomats in Tehran on Monday. Diplomat Oalid Islam’s house was seriously damaged during the attack.
Oalid Islam revealed in a post on Tuesday that over 75% of the calls they are receiving on the numbers shared to assist people from Bangladesh are prank calls.
Bangladesh wants to turn back the clock to pre-1971. Is India clear-sighted enough to accept this new reality?
This exposé not only unearths a deliberate attempt to provoke conflict but also paints a picture of a deeply divided Bangladesh polity.
Dhaka and Its collapse, is not spontaneous; this is engineered anarchy. The perpetrators are visible—they sit at the highest levels of the interim regime.
This love affair between the Yunus interim government and Jammat is not new. Since, the ouster of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina from Bangladesh. The country has slipped down to a ditch of never ending Islamic radicalism and constant upheaval, marked with strikes and mob violence.