The Nobel laureate is supposed to bring back harmony, restore the economy, and clear the way for nothing and fair elections. Bangladesh's Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus has been approached to head the broken government following the political emergency that saw State leader Sheik Hasina escape the country on Monday.
Yunus, 84, who hailed the weeks-long understudy drove fights that cut down the Hasina government as a "Second Triumph Day", has been a pundit of Hasina's 15 years of iron-fisted rule. The challenge a task standard, which held the greater part the presence on specific gatherings including 33% for the relatives of 1971 conflict veterans. It was downsized by the High Court on July 21, however, it didn't mollify the dissenters.
"This is our lovely country with heaps of invigorating conceivable outcomes. We should safeguard and make it a superb country for ourselves and for our people in the future," Yunus told journalists.
The financial specialist and business visionary assumes control over the reins of the country after one the deadliest fights in its set of experiences, which saw more than 300 killed and thousands captured. Huge difficulties lie ahead as he needs to lay out the rule of peace and law, restore the economy, and make ready-for-nothing and fair decisions.
Ahmed Ahsan, a previous World Bank financial expert and an overseer of the Strategy Exploration Foundation in Bangladesh, says Yunus "is the main event, picked by the understudies who led the whole development".
"He deserves colossal admiration both in the nation and on the planet," Ahsan told Al Jazeera.
0 Comments
Givt your Suggestion in comment