A Deal Drowned Before It Sailed
Bangladesh has canceled a $21 million defense contract with India’s Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers Ltd (GRSE) for an advanced ocean-going tugboat, as reported by Hindustan Times. Signed in July 2024 under India’s $500 million defense credit line, the deal was meant to strengthen ties. But after Sheikh Hasina’s ouster in 2024, Bangladesh’s government pulled the plug, as GRSE noted in a filing to the National Stock Exchange of India.
“In terms of Regulation 30… the Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh has cancelled the order,” GRSE stated.
This wasn’t just about a boat—it was a symbol of India’s regional influence, now sinking under political shifts.
A Trade War in the Making?
Tensions are rising. India restricted Bangladeshi garment exports ($700 million annually) to specific ports and, in April 2025, blocked consumer goods imports through 11 northeastern border posts, per The Economic Times. India also ended a transit deal for Bangladeshi exports via its ports. Bangladesh retaliated by halting yarn imports from India on April 13. In FY24, India exported $11.06 billion to Bangladesh, its largest subcontinental trade partner, while importing $1.8 billion.
The real victims? Garment workers and small traders caught in this economic crossfire.
The Hasina Factor: A Political Earthquake
Hasina’s 2024 ouster changed everything. Her Awami League, banned under the Anti-Terrorism Act for security reasons (Al Jazeera), was India’s ally in Dhaka. Her exit left India navigating a less friendly interim government, fueling the current diplomatic chill.
The Bigger Picture: Power, Pride, and People
Bangladesh’s move—canceling the deal, banning the Awami League—signals a push for independence. India’s response—trade restrictions—feels like a power play. But the cost falls on ordinary people: workers, traders, and businesses. Bangladesh’s defiance is bold, but sustainability is uncertain against India’s economic weight.
What’s Next? A Call for Clarity
Both nations need dialogue, not grudges. India must ease its heavy-handed approach; Bangladesh must balance assertiveness with economic realities. The people deserve better than being pawns in this geopolitical spat. Truth demands understanding, not posturing.