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EDITORIAL: There’s a lesson in the newfound Pakistan-Bangladesh bonhomie that’s gripped the Asian press all the way from the UN General Assembly in New York. No sooner had Sheikh Hasina been ousted and Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus taken over than welcome chatter about better ties – Pakistan’s standing position even when Bangladesh’s previous ruling dispensation placed itself squarely in Delhi’s lap – started emerging from Dhaka. And it didn’t take long for a possible roadmap to appear once Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus sat down on the sidelines of the UNGA (United Nations General Assembly).

There’s really no limit to how much the two sides, which have the same past and similar problems – the most glaring of which is poverty – can help each other if only they engage constructively; beginning with more interaction and more commerce. That is why the best idea of the meeting, which came from Yunus, was to revitalise SAARC, the premier platform for social, cultural and commercial cooperation in south Asia. Yet Dhaka knows, surely, that SAARC lies dead in the water only because India, under BJP’s hegemonic delusions, took the wind out of it and countries like Bangladesh, which was then an Indian satellite under Hasina, played a part in the sabotage.



Hence the policy reversal carries a tacit admission that India’s interference in other countries’ affairs has been blunting the entire continent’s forward march. Bangladesh .

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