Bangladesh, Sept. 12 -- South Asia today is facing an unprecedented crisis of political stability and national sovereignty. One after another, countries in the region are falling prey to engineered uprisings that begin with small-scale protests but spiral into violent regime-change operations. From Colombo to Dhaka and now Kathmandu, the pattern is strikingly similar: grievances are magnified, mobs mobilized, governments delegitimized, and chaos unleashed — leaving fertile ground for external forces and radical groups to step in. What is unfolding resembles not just a new Cold War but a neo-colonial strategy — a “Neo-East India Company” operating under the guise of democracy promotion and peoples movements. While t...