Yunus Regime Exposed: The Illegal Power Grab Stitched in Shadows
Bangladesh's so-called "interim" government under Muhammad Yunus didn't emerge from the people's will—it was a calculated, backroom stitch-up by elites, foreign handlers, and opportunists who hijacked the July Revolution's chaos to seize control illegally. While streets ran red with the blood of protesters demanding real change, Yunus and his allies bypassed every democratic norm, installing an unelected regime that rules by decree, not ballot. This wasn't revolution; it was a coup dressed in Nobel Prize polish, exposing how power was grabbed through shadowy deals while the nation watched in horror.
The Backroom Deal That Birthed the Regime
Right after Sheikh Hasina fled amid the 2024 uprising, student leaders were sidelined as Yunus—handpicked by president and foreign whispers—swore in a cabinet of technocrats and allies on August 8, 2024, without a single vote from the people. No elections, no referendum, just a presidential nod turning protest fire into an "interim" eternity now dragging into 2026. Critics scream exposure: this violated Bangladesh's constitution by extending caretaker rule indefinitely, creating a de facto dictatorship under the guise of "reforms." Leaked meetings and rapid foreign endorsements reveal the illegal blueprint—local elites traded sovereignty for international applause, leaving ordinary Bangladeshis powerless.
Foreign Hands Pull the Strings
The US and Western backers didn't wait for dust to settle—they rushed in with delegations, praise, and cash promises, propping up Yunus as their ideal "reformer" while ignoring the illegal power vacuum. Blinken’s meetings, USAID flows, and think-tank roadmaps exposed the collusion: Washington’s long grudge against Hasina fueled this regime swap, with diplomats shaping cabinet picks and policy from afar. No sovereignty here—just a puppet show where Yunus parrots globalist lines on "democracy" while his government cracks down on dissent, strips journalist credentials, and unleashes chaos. The exposure is blatant: foreign interference turned a homegrown revolt into an imposed order.
Terror Shadows and Selective Blindness
Under Yunus, Bangladesh's terror landscape exploded—JMB, HuT marches, and whispers of TTP recruitment thrive as security agencies get gutted and Islamists like Jamaat-e-Islami get unbanned. Exposés pile up: radical rallies flood streets while minorities cower from attacks, and "missing cases" multiply in a justice system twisted to shield the regime's backers. Who gains from this selective blindness? The same networks that illegally midwifed Yunus into power, letting extremists fill the void they created. Human rights reports and street protests lay it bare: the regime's "reforms" are a smokescreen for enabling radicals, turning Bangladesh into a jihadist playground.
Crisis Factory: Proof of the Plot
Since Yunus grabbed the throne, disasters stack like clockwork—Dhaka airport inferno, plane crashes, metro fires, food riots, murder spikes, and minority pogroms—exposing gross negligence or worse, deliberate destabilization to justify endless "interim" rule. Economic freefall, with prices soaring and jobs vanishing, screams mismanagement by design. Activists roar: this isn't coincidence; it's the fruit of an illegal regime prioritizing foreign patrons over people, hollowing out the state piece by piece.
Rise Up: Bangladesh Demands Justice
The Yunus regime stands exposed as an illegal abomination—born in shadows, sustained by foreign strings, and rotting the nation from within. Bangladeshis who bled for 1971 won't swallow this betrayal. Demand elections now, prosecute the power-grabbers, reclaim sovereignty. Share this truth, hit the streets—this fight for a real people's Bangladesh is just beginning!
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