Second term (2009–2014) at
10 Downing Street (January 2011) On 6 November 2008, Hasina returned to Bangladesh to contest the
2008 general election scheduled for 29 December. She decided to participate in the parliamentary election under the banner of the "
Grand Alliance" with the
Jatiya Party, led by
Hussain Muhammad Ershad, as its main partner. On 11 December 2008, Hasina formally announced her party's election manifesto during a news conference and vowed to build a "
Digital Bangladesh" by 2021. The AL manifesto was entitled
A Charter for Change and included the party's commitment to
Vision 2021. The manifesto included pledges to implement measures to reduce price hikes; combat corruption by strengthening the independent
ACC and submission of annual wealth statements by influential people; introduction of a long-term policy towards power and energy increasing power generation to 7,000 megawatts by 2013; bringing vibrancy to the agriculture sector and extending the safety net to the poor; creating good governance and curtailing terrorism and religious extremism; prosecution of 1971 war criminals; ensuring an independent and impartial judiciary; reforming the electoral system; strengthening the
Human Rights Commission and de-politicising the administration. Khaleda Zia, leader of the BNP-led coalition (4-Party Alliance), rejected the results of the election by accusing the Chief Election Commissioner of "stage-managing the parliamentary election". Hasina was sworn into office as prime minister for a second term on 6 January 2009. Independent observers declared that the elections were held in a festive and peaceful atmosphere. After being elected prime minister, Hasina reneged on her agreement with the Jatiya Party to make Ershad, its leader, the president. Hasina removed Awami League central committee members who supported reforms forced by the previous caretaker government. She had to confront a major national crisis in the form of the
2009 Bangladesh Rifles revolt over a pay dispute, which resulted in 56 deaths, including Bangladesh Army officers. Hasina was blamed by the army officers due to her refusal to intervene against the revolt. However, In 2009, a recording emerged of Hasina's private meeting with army officers, who expressed their anger with how she had not reacted more decisively in the revolt's early stages, by ordering an armed raid of the BDR Rifles compound; they believed that her efforts to appease the revolt's leaders delayed needed action which led to more deaths. In 2011, the parliament removed the law that required non-party caretaker government hold elections. In 2012, she maintained a hard-line stance and refused to allow entry to
Rohingya refugees fleeing
Myanmar during the
2012 Rakhine State riots. at the
Kremlin in January 2013 On 27 June 2013, a case against Hasina and 24 other Bangladeshi Ministers and security personnel was lodged at the
International Criminal Court (ICC) for the alleged violation of human rights. She has been "credited internationally" for the achievement of some of the United Nations
Millennium Development Goals. In
2012 a coup attempt against her by mid-ranking army officers was stopped, with the Bangladesh Army being tipped off by an Indian intelligence agency. The
Bangladesh Army described the army officers involved as being Islamist extremists. In 2012, she had a falling out with
Muhammad Yunus, Nobel laureate and founder of
Grameen Bank, following a Norwegian documentary that was critical of Yunus's transferring of money from Grameen Bank to an affiliate organisation. Yunus transferred the money back after the documentary aired but it increased scrutiny of the bank by the government and media in Bangladesh. Yunus lost control of his bank following a court verdict. He criticised Hasina and other Bangladeshi politicians. She responded by saying she did not understand why Yunus blamed her when it was a court verdict that removed him from Grameen Bank. During this term, her government led and succeeded in forming the
International Crimes Tribunal, to investigate and prosecute suspects involved in the
Bangladesh Genocide, committed by the Pakistan Army and their local collaborators,
Razakars,
Al-Badr, and
Al-Shams during the
Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971.
Third term (2014–2019) after the death of First Lady
Suvra Mukherjee at
Rashtrapati Bhavan, New Delhi in 2015. Hasina secured a second-consecutive term in office with her ruling Awami League and its Grand Alliance allies, winning the
2014 general election by a landslide. The election was boycotted by leading opposition parties due to unfair conditions and a lack of non-partisan administration to conduct elections. As a result, the AL-led Grand Alliance won 267 seats out of which 153 were uncontested, surpassing its 2008 poll success—when it secured 263 parliamentary seats. Sheikh Hasina's Awami League has run Bangladesh since 2009 and won 288 seats in this election. One of the leading opposition parties accused it of using stuffed ballot boxes. The election was controversial, with reports of violence and an alleged crackdown on the opposition in the run-up to the election. In the election 153 seats (of 300) went uncontested, of which the Awami League won 127 by default. Hasina's Awami League won a safe parliamentary majority with a total of 234 seats. As a result of the boycott and violence, voter turnout was lower than the previous few elections at only 51%. The day after the result, Hasina said that the boycott should "not mean there will be a question of legitimacy. People participated in the poll and other parties participated." Despite the controversy Hasina went on to form a government with Ershad's Jatiya Party (who won 34 seats) as the official opposition. The BNP wanted the elections to be held under a neutral caretaker government and had hoped to use protests to force the government to do so. During this time corruption remained rampant. The Awami League government allowed politicians, government officials and businessmen to smuggle billions of taka out of the country to Canada, particularly
Begum Para, Toronto. The period also saw
increasing attacks by Islamic extremists in the country, including the
July 2016 Dhaka attack which has been described as "deadliest Islamist attack in Bangladeshi history" by BBC. According to experts, the Hasina-led government's repression of political opposition as well as shrinking democratic and civic space has created "the space for
extremist groups to flourish" and "has generated a violent backlash from Islamist groups." In March 2017, Bangladesh's first two submarines were commissioned. In September 2017, Hasina's government granted refuge and aid to around a million
Rohingya refugees and urged
Myanmar to end violence against the Rohingya community. The majority of the Bangladeshi people supported the government's decision to provide refugee status to the Rohingya. Hasina received credit and praise for her actions. Hasina supported calls to remove the
Statue of Justice in front of the
Supreme Court. This was seen as the government bowing down to the pressure of those who use religion for political ends. Hasina is a patron of the
Asian University for Women, led by Chancellor
Cherie Blair, and including the First Lady of Japan,
Akie Abe, as well as
Irina Bokova, the Director-General of
UNESCO.
Fourth term (2019–2024) Hasina won her third consecutive term, her fourth overall, when her Awami League won 288 of the 300 parliamentary seats. The leader of the main opposition alliance,
Kamal Hossain, declared the vote "farcical" and rejected the results. Before the election,
Human Rights Watch and other rights organisations had accused the government of creating an intimidating environment for the Opposition.
The New York Times editorial board described the election as farcical and questioned her reasons for vote-rigging, saying that she likely would have won freely. The BNP fared extremely poorly. Winning only eight seats, the party and its
Jatiya Oikya Front alliance have been marginalised to the weakest opposition ever since Bangladesh's post-Ershad democratic restoration in 1991. In May 2021, Hasina provided the inaugural address for the opening of a new headquarters for the
Bangladesh Post Office, named the Dak Bhaban. In her address, Hasina urged for further development of the postal service in response to the
COVID-19 pandemic in Bangladesh. Developmental measures outlined in the address include continuing the service's
digital transformation, and the construction of cooling units in postal warehouses to pave the way for the sending of perishable food by mail.
Nicola Sturgeon with Hasina in
COP26 in 2021 In January 2022, the government passed a law in the
Jatiya Sangsad establishing the Universal Pension Scheme. All Bangladeshi citizens, including
expatriates, between 18 and 60 years old are eligible to receive a monthly stipend under the scheme. By the end of fiscal year 2021–22, Bangladesh's
external debt reached $95.86 billion, a 238% increase from 2011. The period is also marked by massive irregularities in the banking sector of the country where the amount of default loans went from less than in 2009 to more than in 2019 according to
IMF. In July 2022, the
Finance Ministry requested fiscal assistance from the
International Monetary Fund. The government cited depleting foreign-exchange reserves as a result of the sanctions in response to the
Russian invasion of Ukraine. A staff level agreement was reached in November 2022 and in January 2023, the IMF agreed to supply a support programme totalling US$4.7 billion, consisting of US$3.3 billion under the Extended Credit Facility and US$1.4 billion under the new Resilience and Sustainability Facility. The IMF stated support package "will help preserve macroeconomic stability, protect the vulnerable and foster inclusive and green growth." On 28 December 2022, Hasina opened the first phase of
Dhaka Metro Rail, the country's first
mass-rapid transit system from
Uttara to
Agargaon. However in doing so the nation's foreign debt crisis escalated. , and
Chowdhury Abdullah Al-Mamun visiting injured police officers at Rajarbag Police Hospital on 28 July 2024, following the violent suppression of protesters of the
July Revolution. All three were later named in
criminal cases related to the
July massacre. During the
2023 G20 New Delhi summit, Hasina had a bilateral meeting with Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi to discuss diversifying India-Bangladesh cooperation, including areas like connectivity and commercial linkages. She was accompanied by her daughter
Saima Wazed, who is a candidate for a WHO election. The summit also provided an opportunity for Hasina to meet other global leaders and strengthen Bangladesh's bilateral ties.
Fifth term (2024) In January 2024 Hasina won her fourth consecutive term when her party, the Awami League, won 224 of the 300 parliamentary seats amidst a low voter turnout in an election boycotted by the main opposition. She was
inaugurated on 11 January. In May 2024, Sheikh Hasina claimed that a "white country" was plotting to topple her government and claimed that she would be promised trouble-free elections in January if she allowed a "white country" to set up an airbase in Bangladesh. She also alleged that there was a conspiracy to create a Christian country on the lines of East Timor carved out of the territory of Bangladesh and Myanmar. in New Delhi in June 2024, just over a month before
her ouster In June 2024, Hasina visited India. and one month later she
officially visited China upon invitation of its premier,
Li Qiang. The close timing of those two visits was seen as an attempt to mediate between China and India. In the same month of Hasina's state visit to China,
protests broke out in support of
reforming the quota system. In response, Hasina stated in a press conference, Protesters interpreted this as her referring to them as
Razakars and adopted the title in some of their slogans. The protests later turned violent, involving
police,
the armed forces, and members of the
Awami League,
Chhatra League, and
Jubo League, resulting in over 2,000 deaths and more than 20,000 injuries. The government then shut down internet access for all non-essential purposes, conducted a massive crackdown on protestors with the help of the armed forces, and imposed a curfew that lasted five days. The
Supreme Court agreed to reform the quota system, but the protesters then demanded justice for those killed during the demonstrations and an official apology from Hasina and the resignation of certain ministers they believed were responsible for inciting violence. On 3 August, the
protest organisers issued a single demand and announced a
non-cooperation movement, calling for the resignation of Hasina and
her entire cabinet.
Resignation and second exile , drawing sharp criticism and further escalating the unrest that ultimately culminated in her
resignation. , after Hasina's resignation Hasina resigned on 5 August 2024, as large crowds of demonstrators surrounded the prime minister's residence. Her resignation was announced by General
Waker-uz-Zaman, the Chief of the Army Staff. Later that day, Hasina fled to India in a chaotic departure, first by car, then by helicopter, and finally by plane. and that she would return to the country once elections were declared. He also insisted that Sheikh Hasina was still the prime minister, saying that she was unable to formally submit her resignation after being forced to flee from the protesters. Hasina had hoped to go to London, but the United Kingdom reportedly rebuffed initial overtures seeking
political asylum. She reportedly considered seeking temporary residence in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Belarus, or Qatar. Because her nephew lives in Finland, that country was speculated as a possible destination. Although Sajeeb Wazed lives in the U.S., she is considered unlikely to seek asylum there, as the U.S. government criticised her rule in Bangladesh. Hasina was living in a secret location in India under tight security as of August 2024. Sajeeb Wazed said that the
protests which led to her resignation had support from a foreign intelligence agency, without naming any country. In a statement published in the Indian media on 11 August, she accused the United States of influencing her resignation, and previously accused the United States of conspiring to oust her in the
Jatiya Sangsad. However, Wazed called the statement "false and fabricated" and said Hasina "did not give any statement before or after leaving Dhaka". The
White House also denied allegations of any US involvement. On 13 August, Hasina released her first confirmed statements since her overthrow published by Wazed Joy calling for an investigation into the killings made during the protests, while insisting that police and the Awami League were also victims of "terrorist aggression". ==Post-premiership==