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    Why a repressive regime's fall hasn't helped NGOs in Bangladesh

    A year after its prime minister was ousted by a popular uprising, NGOs are disappointed in the country's lack of progress toward allowing them to do their work.

    By Catherine Davison // 12 August 2025

    One year on from a civil uprising in Bangladesh that left as many as 1,400 people dead and saw the ousting of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, hope for the restoration of a rights-based democracy and free civil society is beginning to fade for some.

    During Hasina’s 15-year rule, the development sector faced violent crackdowns against human rights activists and civil society leaders, and NGOs struggled with increasing restrictions and scrutiny, including arbitrary deregistration and the withholding of funds. When an interim government led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus — joined by several NGO leaders and human rights campaigners who had been personally targeted under the previous regime — took power last August, many saw an opportunity for change.

    But a year later, most of the promised reforms have still not taken place, and human rights activists have expressed concerns about a backsliding on women’s and minority rights. Economic woes are exacerbating problems for the sector, with drastic cuts to foreign aid leaving a gap that the government is unable to fill as it struggles to rebuild an ailing economy.

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    More reading:

    ► Opinion: At COP29, rich nations failed Bangladesh and the global south

    ► As Nobel laureate Yunus skirts jail in Bangladesh, fears for his future

    ► Bangladesh: What happens when a development darling falls from grace? (Pro)

    • Democracy, Human Rights & Governance
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    • Social/Inclusive Development
    • Trade & Policy
    • Bangladesh
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    About the author

    • Catherine Davison

      Catherine Davison

      Catherine Davison is an independent journalist based in Delhi, India, writing on issues at the intersection of health, gender, and the environment.

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