Asia | An interview with Bangladesh’s prime minister

Sheikh Hasina is Asia’s iron lady

Her tragic past now threatens Bangladesh’s future

NEW DELHI, INDIA - SEPTEMBER 6: Prime Minister of Bangladesh Sheikh Hasina and Prime minister Narendra Modi address media persons after inspecting guard of honour during the ceremonial reception at Rashtrapati bhawan  on September 6, 2022 in New Delhi, India. India and Bangladesh signed seven Memorandum of understanding (MoUs). Foreign secretary Vinay Kwatra said on Tuesday that Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Bangladeshi PM Sheikh Hasina has a discussion on a range of bilateral issues related to water, trade, economic ties etc. (Photo by Sonu Mehta/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
Sheikh Hasina goes on and onImage: Getty Images
|TYSONS CORNER, VIRGINIA

Bangladesh’s prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, is the world’s longest-serving female head of government, and one of the most significant of either sex. During two decades in office she has presided over momentous poverty alleviation in her country of 170m, fuelled by average annual gdp growth of 7% for much of that time. The 75-year-old has led her party, the Awami League, to victory in three consecutive polls, and four in all—one more than Indira Gandhi or Margaret Thatcher managed. With an election due early next year, which she is expected to win, The Economist asked her, in an interview in her northern Virginia hotel suite, what ambitions she had left.

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This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Asia’s iron lady”

The haunting

From the May 27th 2023 edition

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