India’s Modi meets with Bangladesh’s Yunus for first time since Sheikh Hasina ouster

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India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, right, shakes hands with de facto Bangladeshi leader Muhammad Yunus during their bilateral meeting in Bangkok, Thailand on April 4, 2025. (Bangladesh’s Chief Advisor Office of Interim Government via AFP)
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Above, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrives to attend the 6th Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation summit in Thailand. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina fled to New Delhi in August after being ousted. (AFP)
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Updated 04 April 2025
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India’s Modi meets with Bangladesh’s Yunus for first time since Sheikh Hasina ouster

  • Relations between the South Asian neighbors deteriorated since Sheikh Hasina fled the country
  • Former premier fled to New Delhi in August following violent protests against her rule

BANGKOK: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi met with the leader of neighboring Bangladesh, India’s government said Friday, the first such meeting since a revolution in Dhaka ousted New Delhi’s long-term ally.

Mod’s meeting with Bangladesh’s interim leader, Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunus, took place on the sidelines of a regional summit in Thailand.

Yunus posted a picture on social media showing him shaking hands with Modi.

The two men had dinner on Thursday night alongside other leaders from the BIMSTEC bloc in Bangkok, but the bilateral sit-down on Friday was the first since relations frayed between the neighboring nations.

Yunus took charge of Bangladesh in August 2024 after India’s old ally Sheikh Hasina was ousted as prime minister by a student-led uprising and fled to New Delhi.

India was the biggest benefactor of Hasina’s government, and her overthrow sent relations into a tailspin.

Tensions between India and Bangladesh have prompted a number of tit-for-tat barbs between senior figures from both governments.

Hasina, who remains in India, has defied extradition requests from Bangladesh to face charges including mass murder.

The caretaker government of Yunus is tasked with implementing democratic reforms ahead of fresh elections slated to take place by June 2026.


Israeli firm loses British Army contract bid

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Israeli firm loses British Army contract bid

  • Subsidiary Elbit Systems UK’s campaign for $2.6bn program was marred by controversy
  • Senior govt civil servant overseeing contract was dined, handed free Israel tour

LONDON: A UK subsidiary of Israeli weapons giant Elbit Systems has lost its bid to win a prominent British Army contract, The Times reported.

The loss followed high-profile reporting on controversy surrounding Elbit Systems UK’s handling of the bid.

The subsidiary led one of two major arms consortiums attempting to secure the $2.6 billion bid to prepare British soldiers for war and overhaul army standards.

Rivaling Elbit, the other consortium led by Raytheon UK, a British subsidiary of the US defense giant, ultimately won the contract, a Ministry of Defence insider told The Times.

It had been decided following an intricate process that Raytheon was a “better candidate,” the source said.

Elbit Systems UK’s controversial handling of its contract campaign was revealed in reports by The Times.

A whistleblower had compiled a dossier surrounding the bid that was shown to the MoD last August, though the report was privately revealed to the ministry months earlier.

It alleged that Elbit UK had breached business appointment rules when Philip Kimber, a former British Army brigadier, had reportedly shared information with the firm after leaving the military.

Kimber attending critical meetings at the firm to discuss the training contract that he had once overseen at the ministry, the report alleged.

In one case, Kimber was present in an Elbit meeting and sitting out of view of a camera. He reportedly said he “should not be there,” according to the whistleblower’s report.

In response to a freedom of information request, the MoD later admitted that it had held the dossier for seven months without investigating its claims. Insiders at the ministry blamed the investigative delay on “administrative oversight.”

A month after being pushed on the allegations by The Times, a senior civil servant completed an “assurance review” in September and found that business appointment rules had not been breached.

Other allegations concerned lunches and dinners hosted by Elbit UK in which civil servants at the heart of the contract decision process were invited.

One senior civil servant was dined by the British subsidiary seven times, while rival Raytheon did not host events.

Mike Cooper, the senior responsible owner at army headquarters for the army training program, also traveled to Jerusalem with two senior British military officers.

He took part in a sightseeing tour funded by Elbit Systems, the British subsidiary’s parent company.

In response to the allegations, an MoD spokesperson said in a statement: “The collective training transformation programme will modernise training for soldiers to ensure the British Army can face down the threats of the future.

“We will not comment further until a preferred tenderer announcement is made public in due course.”

Amid mounting criticism of Israel within the British military establishment, four former senior army officers, in a letter to Prime Minister Keir Starmer, recently urged the government to end involvement with Israeli-owned or Israeli-supported weapons companies.

“Now is not the time to return to business as usual with the Israeli government,” they wrote, urging harsher sanctions.