
Head of the Bangladesh’s interim government and Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, center right, holds the July National Charter 2025 at an event in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Friday. © AP
MASUM BILLAH
October 17, 2025 20:42 JST
Updated on October 17, 2025 21:13 JST
DHAKA — After months of negotiations and behind-the-scenes wrangling, a majority of Bangladesh’s political parties gave their backing on Friday to an ambitious reform agenda that promises to redefine how post-revolution Bangladesh is governed — but some key parties have so far boycotted the charter, casting a shadow over the process.
