EAM hails Khaleda's vision for India ties
NEW DELHI, Jan. 1 -- External affairs minister S Jaishankar represented India at the funeral of former Bangladesh prime minister Khaleda Zia in Dhaka on Wednesday and told her son and political heir Tarique Rahman that her vision will guide the development of the partnership between the two neighbours.
Jaishankar's brief visit, which lasted about four hours, was the first by an Indian minister since bilateral ties hit an all-time low following the formation of the interim government led by Muhammad Yunus in August 2024. It was widely perceived in diplomatic circles as part of the Indian government's outreach to the leadership of Khaleda's Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), widely tipped to emerge the single largest party in the election scheduled for February 12. Like other visiting regional leaders, Jaishankar met Rahman, the acting chairman of the BNP who recently returned from 17 years in self-exile in Britain, at the Parliament complex. Jaishankar said on social media he handed over a personal letter from Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Rahman.
"Conveyed deepest condolences on behalf of the government and people of India. Expressed confidence that Begum Khaleda Zia's vision and values will guide the development of our partnership," Jaishankar said.
Bangladesh's high commissioner to India, Riaz Hamidullah, who was present at the meeting, said on social media that Jaishankar conveyed the condolences of the people and government of India over the death of Khaleda and recognised her contribution to democracy. Jaishankar "expressed optimism to strengthen [Bangladesh-India] ties following democratic transition in Bangladesh [through] the upcoming election", he said
Hamidullah also said that the two countries "would look forward to script a new chapter in [Bangladesh-India] ties, in shared interests driven by pragmatism and mutual interdependence", and noted that this issue was briefly discussed by Jaishankar with Rahman.
Bangladesh's national security adviser Khalilur Rahman, de facto law minister Asif Nazrul, Indian high commissioner Pranay Verma and senior BNP leaders were present during Jaishankar's meeting with Rahman, who has been leading the party from abroad since his mother became seriously ill a few years ago. There was no official readout from the Indian side of the meeting. Unlike other regional leaders, Jaishankar didn't meet Yunus.
When the regional leaders gathered in the same room at the Parliament complex, Jaishankar briefly exchanged pleasantries with Pakistan National Assembly Speaker Ayaz Sadiq, people familiar with the matter said. The people said that there were no formal discussions during the brief interaction, which marked the first contact between senior leaders of India and Pakistan since the two sides fought a four-day conflict in May as part of Operation Sindoor.
India had targeted terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan on May 7 in retaliation for the Pahalgam terror attack in April. This triggered a brief but intense conflict that ended when military officials of the two sides reached an understanding....
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