A Dhaka tribunal convicts the ex-prime minister in absentia, but New Delhi signals it will not extradite.
Bangladesh’s International Crimes Tribunal has sentenced former prime minister Sheikh Hasina to death for crimes against humanity following a months-long trial conducted in her absence. Hasina, who fled to India after last year’s uprising, has rejected the verdict as politically motivated. India, balancing legal and geopolitical risks, appears unlikely to surrender her, raising fresh strain in Dhaka-New Delhi ties ahead of Bangladesh’s 2026 polls.

Dhaka’s International Crimes Tribunal on 17 November found Sheikh Hasina guilty of crimes against humanity and handed down a death sentence in a high-profile trial held in her absence. The prosecution said the former prime minister authorised a forceful and deadly crackdown on mass protests in 2024 that left hundreds — and by some United Nations estimates around 1,400 — dead. The verdict is the most consequential development yet in a year of political upheaval that toppled Hasina from power and forced her into exile.
The trial examined extensive material, including witness testimony, medical reports and communications evidence, and concluded that security operations overseen by senior officials amounted to systemic abuses. Families of victims and many protesters greeted the sentence as overdue accountability; supporters of Hasina dismissed the process as victor’s justice and politically driven. The tribunal’s decision, delivered in absentia, leaves open legal questions about defence access and the scope for appeal if the convict returns or is apprehended.
Hasina, 78, fled Bangladesh in August 2024 amid street unrest that began with student demonstrations and broadened into a nationwide uprising. She has since been in India, where her presence has been a persistent irritant in bilateral relations. Dhaka has repeatedly demanded New Delhi hand her over; New Delhi has so far refrained from doing so, citing legal and political complexities around extradition in matters deemed “political” and voicing general concerns about regional stability.
Diplomatic analysts say India’s reluctance is rooted in a mix of treaty constraints, domestic politics and strategic calculation. Extradition treaties commonly bar surrender for offences of a political character, and Indian officials and foreign-policy experts have signalled unease about appearing to validate a process some outside observers view as lacking full international standards of fairness. New Delhi also weighs the long-term diplomatic cost of sending a former ally to face capital punishment in a neighbour with which it must maintain practical ties.
For Bangladesh’s interim leadership, the conviction is both a legal reckoning and a political signal. The tribunal’s ruling dovetails with an agenda of holding past leaders and security officials accountable for alleged abuses during Hasina’s long rule. Dhaka’s authorities say the sentence affirms the rule of law and answers public demand for justice after last year’s deadly crackdown. Opposition voices and several rights groups counter that trials conducted in absentia, limitations on defence rights and expedited procedures taint the verdict’s international credibility.
International human-rights organisations have urged caution. Several have highlighted procedural concerns and called for transparent, impartial processes that meet recognized fair-trial benchmarks. Those criticisms risk complicating Dhaka’s effort to portray the verdict as a purely judicial outcome rather than a chapter in a settling of political scores. The debate over legitimacy will shape whether the international community treats the sentence as definitive or as part of a contested national transition.
The immediate practical question revolves around custody: Hasina remains in India, where arrest or extradition would require New Delhi to confront both legal obstacles and regional political fallout. Indian analysts point out that forcibly returning a former head of government to face capital charges would be a “highly unfriendly act” toward democratic norms and could be seen as endorsing a verdict critics say was politically motivated. New Delhi has publicly said it is engaging with all stakeholders and will act in the interests of peace and stability, language that leaves room for diplomatic manoeuvre but not for an immediate handover.
If New Delhi refuses to surrender Hasina, the split is likely to deepen mistrust between the capitals, even as trade and people-to-people ties create strong countervailing incentives to keep channels open. Bangladesh’s interim government may seek other levers — legal, political and diplomatic — to press its case internationally and to manage domestic expectations about accountability. Meanwhile, the prospect of elections in early 2026 adds pressure: both Dhaka and external actors will watch how the verdict and its aftermath influence political alignments and voter sentiment.
Beyond bilateral tensions, the case underscores larger regional questions about accountability, rule of law and how post-uprising societies choose to address mass violence. For victims and their families, the sentence is a hard-won recognition of loss; for many observers, it also raises hard questions about how to secure justice in a manner that withstands international scrutiny and contributes to long-term reconciliation. How those competing imperatives are balanced will determine whether the tribunal’s decision becomes a durable milestone of redress or a polarising episode in Bangladesh’s fraught transition.
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