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Interview at Financial Times

Students will form political party: Prof Yunus

International Desk || risingbd.com

Published: 22:00, 30 January 2025   Update: 22:22, 30 January 2025
Students will form political party: Prof Yunus

Chief Adviser Professor Dr Muhammad Yunus. File photo

“Students will form a new political party and they are campaigning. They are organising throughout the country,” Chief Adviser of Bangladesh’s interim government Professor Muhammad Yunus told the Financial Times.

Speaking on a podcast during his visit to Davos, Switzerland, the chief adviser said, “This is a good time because always I'm protecting the unity of the nation. I do not want to depart from that. One of the possibilities is the student themselves will form a party.”

The podcast, titled ‘Rachman Review,” hosted by Gideon Rachman, the chief foreign affairs commentator for the Financial Times, featured a conversation between the chief adviser and Rachman on a variety of global issues.

The recorded discussion was released in written form on Thursday (January 30).

The chief adviser said, “In the beginning when they are forming the cabinet, I took three of the students into my cabinet. I said, if they can give life for the country, they can sit in the cabinet and decide what is that they are giving life for. And they are doing good work.”

“Now the students are saying, why don’t you form your our own political party, we’ll take a chance. And they said, you have no chance. You don’t even get one seat in the parliament. Why? Because nobody knows you. I said the whole nation knows them. Let them take a chance, whatever they want to do. So they will do it.”

Yunus further said, “Maybe in the process of forming party, they will fall apart. That’s also a danger because politics is getting in, all the politicians will penetrate into them. So we don’t know whether they can remove themselves from the politics that we have in the country.

“This is the kind of chance we have to take. But the students are ready. They are campaigning. They are organising throughout the country.”

In response to another question, Dr Yunus said, “Young people are really committed. They have not a touch of ill will or a personal desire to make a political career for themselves. They are joining or creating political party under the circumstances.”

Mentioning that this is needed because they [students] have to protect the things they have earned by their blood, the chief adviser said, “Otherwise, they will be taken away by all the people who are looking for opportunity to repeat the previous kind of administration and so on. So they are trying to protect that. So I would say students will have transparent intentions.”

Dhaka/AI