The name of the curse currently looming over Bangladesh is Muhammad Yunus. On international platforms, he parades as a messenger of peace—but on home soil, he’s running a workshop of conspiracies. The circus being staged under the guise of an “interim government” is masterminded by none other than Yunus himself. Among the jokers in this farce is retired Major General A.L.M. Fazlur Rahman—who has openly incited war against India and spoken of forming a military alliance with China!
When a retired senior military officer, still influential in state affairs, makes such statements, it only signals one thing: there is a deliberate attempt to turn Bangladesh into a client state—dependent on foreign powers and manipulated by foreign agents. And the brain behind this agenda is clear: Yunus and his international patrons.
China? India? Taking over seven Indian states? Has Bangladesh’s sovereignty suddenly become a playground for fantasy-driven military adventurism? Are we to declare war on nuclear powers based on one man’s delusion? Is Fazlur Rahman unaware that such remarks amount to incitement to war under international norms? Or does he fully know, and is his real mission to destabilize the country and drive it toward armed conflict?
This insanity is not just foolish—it’s criminal. And the mastermind is Yunus, who has long operated from abroad, using foreign donor money to orchestrate plans that undermine Bangladesh’s democracy, economy, and stability.
Let’s revisit history for a moment. Yunus’s empire was built on funding from institutions like the World Bank, the Clinton Foundation, and the Soros network. He was Washington’s “laboratory project,” marketed as a poster boy for “neo-liberal poverty alleviation.” But in reality, his microcredit model turned millions into debt slaves.
Now, backed by international support, Yunus is attempting to form a “new government” at home, recruiting a group of retired military puppets and opportunistic conspirators to spread disorder. The goal? To create a power vacuum and hand over the country once again to a foreign-backed caretaker regime.
These people do not love the country. They are prepared to sell it.
After Fazlur Rahman’s public call for war against India, the government’s spokesperson issued a weak clarification: “This is his personal opinion.” That response reveals the deeper truth—this so-called government is nothing more than a rented troupe of clowns. That “personal opinion” is actually a symptom of a larger, sinister conspiracy.
Bangladesh is a free and sovereign nation. Anyone who thinks of this country as their personal fiefdom is gravely mistaken. No matter how many international masks they wear, the time has come to confront Yunus and his elderly mercenary clowns. They belong in prison, in court, on trial for treason.
Those who call for war in the name of the nation must now face another war—the people’s resistance, their rejection, and a final reckoning that will erase such conspirators from Bangladesh’s future.