Arkamoy Datta Majumdar
Tarique Rahman, acting chairperson of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), turned 60 last month while away from his homeland for 17 long years. Since his self-imposed exile in 2008, and more than a year after the Sheikh Hasina regime in Bangladesh was toppled and she fled to India, Rahman dithers on returning to his country. BNP insiders say the reason is brutally simple: security.
Even now, after the fall of arch political rival Hasina in August 2024 and the installation of an interim government that insists there are no obstacles in his way home, Rahman continues to direct the BNP from London, repeating that coming back is "not entirely" in his hands.
The irony is that his long-ailing mother, Begum Khaleda Zia, is in Dhaka, fighting for life. The three-time prime minister and BNP chairperson is on ventilator support at the Evercare Hospital, guarded by the highest tier of state security and monitored by a medical team that includes specialists from abroad.
