Bangladesh, Oct. 15 -- When a peace prize becomes a shield for power and denial, truth itself bleeds. The question before the world is simple: will it listen to the victims, or to the man who calls their suffering fake?
Bangladeshs tragedy today lies in its paradox: a Nobel laureate whose name once evoked moral redemption now presides over a republic of denial. Professor Muhammad Yunus, hailed for lifting the poor through micro-credit, has refashioned himself as the interim Chief Adviser—a statesman cloaked in sanctimony. Yet when confronted with reports of Hindu killings, temple desecrations, and targeted terror, he offers not contrition but contempt.
The ‘saint who refused to see blood
In his now-notorious interview with ...
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