‘Hasina’s presence in India, Ganga waters treaty to be key priorities for BNP govt.’
UPSC Study Note: Hasina's Presence in India & Ganga Waters Treaty — BNP's Priority Agenda
1. At a Glance
- Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), led by Tarique Rahman, won a landslide in the 2026 Bangladesh general election and assumed power in Dhaka after nearly two decades in opposition. [S3]
- The incoming BNP government's India-agenda is defined by three interlinked issues: BSF border killings, renewal of the 1996 Ganga Waters Treaty (expiring 2026), and the diplomatic liability of deposed PM Sheikh Hasina's continued stay in India. [S1]
- This topic is central to GS-II (India's neighbourhood policy, bilateral treaties) and tests factual depth on the Farakka/Ganga water-sharing architecture as well as refugee/extradition diplomacy.
- A rare situation where domestic Bangladeshi politics, India's asylum practices, a water-sharing treaty deadline, and BSF conduct converge simultaneously — high probability of Mains 2026 question.
2. Why in the News
- August 2024: Mass student-led uprising in Bangladesh toppled Sheikh Hasina's Awami League government; Hasina fled to India on 5 August 2024. [S3]
- November 17, 2025: Bangladesh's International Crimes Tribunal convicted Hasina in absentia for crimes against humanity and sentenced her to death. [S3]
- November 2025: Bangladesh formally demanded India extradite Hasina. India neither confirmed extradition proceedings nor asked her to leave. [S4]
- February 5, 2025: Hasina delivered a social media address from Indian soil challenging the legitimacy of Muhammad Yunus-led interim government, embarrassing New Delhi. [S3]
- February 14, 2026 (article date): BNP sources told The Hindu that Hasina's presence and the Ganga treaty are the "key priorities" for the incoming BNP government vis-à-vis India. [S1]
- February 17, 2026: Tarique Rahman sworn in as Prime Minister of Bangladesh. [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
Sheikh Hasina & India
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 1975 | Hasina's father Sheikh Mujibur Rahman assassinated; Hasina spent years in exile — previously in India |
| 1996 | Hasina's first term as PM; signed Ganga Waters Treaty with India |
| 2009–2024 | Uninterrupted rule under Awami League; strong India-Bangladesh strategic partnership |
| Aug 2024 | Quota-reform protests escalate; Hasina resigns, flees to India |
| Nov 2025 | International Crimes Tribunal sentences Hasina to death in absentia |
Ganga Waters Treaty
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 1951 | India begins construction of Farakka Barrage (West Bengal) to divert Ganga water to Hooghly river |
| 1975 | Farakka Barrage becomes operational; Bangladesh protests unilateral diversion |
| 1977 | First India-Bangladesh Ganga Water Agreement (5-year) |
| 1982, 1985 | Successive short-term MOUs on water sharing |
| 12 Dec 1996 | 30-year Ganga Waters Treaty signed between PM H.D. Deve Gowda (India) and PM Sheikh Hasina (Bangladesh) — the operative instrument now under discussion [S2] |
| 2025 | Treaty set to expire in 2026; renewal negotiations initiated |
BNP's Two-Decade Absence
- BNP last governed Bangladesh 2001–2006 under Khaleda Zia.
- Khaleda Zia subsequently jailed; Tarique Rahman operated from exile in London.
- BNP long accused India of propping up Awami League; bilateral ties with India were strained during BNP years.
4. Core Static Facts
Ganga Waters Treaty 1996
- Full name: Treaty on Sharing of the Ganga/Ganges Waters at Farakka
- Signed: 12 December 1996 in New Delhi
- Duration: 30 years (expiry: December 2026)
- Key mechanism: Guarantees Bangladesh a minimum flow of 35,000 cusecs at Farakka during the lean (dry) season (Jan–May)
- Implementing body: India-Bangladesh Joint Rivers Commission (JRC) — established 1972
- Most recent JRC meeting: 86th meeting, held in Kolkata, March 2025, specifically on Ganga water sharing [S2]
- Farakka Barrage location: Murshidabad district, West Bengal
- West Bengal CM's stance is a domestic political complication for any renewal talks [S2]
- Bangladesh's concern: Inadequate lean-season flows; silt accumulation; upstream abstractions
BNP Government
- Party: Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP); founded 1978 by Ziaur Rahman
- Current chairman: Tarique Rahman (son of late Khaleda Zia)
- PM sworn in: February 17, 2026 [S3]
- Predecessor: Muhammad Yunus-led interim government (Aug 2024 – Feb 2026)
Sheikh Hasina — Legal & Diplomatic Status
- Status in India: Present since August 5, 2024; India granted informal refuge (no formal asylum declared)
- Legal status in Bangladesh: Convicted in absentia, death sentence (Nov 17, 2025) [S3]
- Extradition demand: Bangladesh formally demanded extradition, India has not complied [S4]
- No extradition treaty between India and Bangladesh specifically covering political offences (complicating factor)
BSF Border Killings
- BSF (Border Security Force) — India's border-guarding force under Ministry of Home Affairs
- Bangladesh-India border: ~4,156 km (longest land border India shares with any country)
- Deaths of Bangladeshi nationals at the border by BSF fire are a recurring bilateral irritant
- BNP sources described it as the single greatest difficulty for any Bangladesh government managing India ties [S1]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Geopolitical / Strategic
- India's traditional ally in Dhaka was the Awami League; BNP has historically been closer to China and Pakistan, making the incoming government's India-priorities significant. [S3]
- India faces the strategic dilemma of either complying with Bangladesh's extradition demand (angering the Hasina-Awami League constituency) or retaining Hasina (souring ties with the new BNP government).
- Hasina making political statements from Indian soil gives BNP domestic ammunition to portray India as interfering, complicating normalisation. [S1]
- The Ganga treaty renewal is a potential early deliverable that New Delhi can offer to signal goodwill — but it is contingent on West Bengal's political consent, adding a federal complication. [S2]
Legal / Constitutional
- International Crimes Tribunal (Bangladesh) — a domestic tribunal established under the International Crimes (Tribunals) Act, 1973 of Bangladesh; its judgments have no extraterritorial enforcement mechanism.
- India's Extradition Act, 1962 governs extradition procedures; India can refuse extradition if the offence is "of a political character" — a likely ground for non-compliance.
- India-Bangladesh signed a bilateral extradition treaty in 2013, but it contains standard political-offence exception clauses.
- No international convention compels India to extradite without domestic proceedings.
Administrative / Federal
- Ganga treaty renewal requires West Bengal's consent for any revision to water-release schedules — CM Mamata Banerjee has historically opposed changes that reduce Bengal's water availability. [S2]
- The JRC (Joint Rivers Commission) is the technical body but policy decisions require Ministry of Jal Shakti (India) and Ministry of Water Resources (Bangladesh) concurrence.
- 86th JRC meeting (March 2025) focused precisely on Ganga water-sharing modalities, signalling India's recognition of the treaty's impending expiry. [S2]
Diplomatic / Bilateral
- Increase in medical visas for Bangladeshis was cited by BNP as a third priority — India's hospitals (especially in Kolkata, Chennai, Vellore) are a major healthcare destination for Bangladeshis.
- Normalisation of India-BNP ties would reduce Bangladesh's drift towards China — strategic interest for India.
- India had begun signalling tilt towards BNP even before election results, per media reports. [S3]
Historical
- The 1996 Treaty was itself the resolution of a decades-long impasse that included Bangladesh dragging India to the UN General Assembly in 1976 over Farakka diversion.
- The "Battle of Begums" (Khaleda Zia vs. Sheikh Hasina) defined Bangladeshi politics for 30+ years; BNP's return closes one arc of this rivalry. [S3]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- August 5, 2024: Sheikh Hasina resigns and arrives in India; Muhammad Yunus takes charge of interim government.
- February 5, 2025: Hasina delivers public address via social media from India, attacking Yunus government. [S3]
- February–March 2025: Bangladesh's Foreign Affairs Advisor Touhid Hossain meets India's EAM S. Jaishankar in Muscat; formally requests initiation of Ganga treaty renewal talks. [S2]
- March 2025: 86th meeting of the India-Bangladesh Joint Rivers Commission (JRC) held in Kolkata; technical discussions on Ganga water sharing. [S2]
- November 17, 2025: Bangladesh's International Crimes Tribunal convicts Hasina in absentia; death sentence announced. [S3]
- November 2025: Bangladesh formally demands India extradite Hasina; India gives no public response. [S4]
- December 22, 2025: Hasina publicly accuses Muhammad Yunus-led government of "stoking anti-India sentiment" from Indian soil. [S3]
- Early 2026: Bangladesh general election — BNP wins landslide. [S3]
- February 14, 2026: BNP sources outline India-priority agenda to The Hindu: border killings, Ganga treaty, medical visas, Hasina's status. [S1]
- February 17, 2026: Tarique Rahman sworn in as Prime Minister of Bangladesh. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Ganga Waters Treaty was signed on 12 December 1996 between India and Bangladesh — a 30-year treaty set to expire in 2026. [S2]
- The treaty guarantees Bangladesh a minimum flow of 35,000 cusecs at Farakka during lean season. [S2]
- Farakka Barrage is located in Murshidabad district, West Bengal; became operational in 1975. [S2]
- The India-Bangladesh Joint Rivers Commission (JRC) was established in 1972 and is the nodal body for water-sharing disputes. [S2]
- The 86th JRC meeting was held in Kolkata in March 2025, focused on Ganga water sharing. [S2]
- Tarique Rahman is the chairman of BNP and became PM of Bangladesh on February 17, 2026. [S3]
- Sheikh Hasina was convicted by Bangladesh's International Crimes Tribunal on November 17, 2025 and sentenced to death in absentia. [S3]
- Hasina fled Bangladesh on 5 August 2024 following the student-led uprising. [S3]
- India and Bangladesh signed a bilateral extradition treaty in 2013 — but political offence exceptions apply. [S4]
- BSF (Border Security Force) operates under India's Ministry of Home Affairs; border killings are the "single greatest bilateral irritant" per BNP sources. [S1]
- The India-Bangladesh border is approximately 4,156 km — India's longest land border with any single country.
- BNP was founded in 1978 by Ziaur Rahman (father of Tarique Rahman).
- Bangladesh's International Crimes Tribunal derives authority from the International Crimes (Tribunals) Act, 1973 of Bangladesh.
- The first India-Bangladesh water agreement on Ganga was signed in 1977 (5-year term), prior to the 1996 treaty. [S2]
- India's Extradition Act, 1962 governs extradition requests; political offence exception is a standard ground for refusal.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II (International Relations — India's neighbourhood, bilateral treaties) Syllabus headings: - India and its neighbourhood — relations with Bangladesh - Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India - Effect of policies of developed and developing countries on India's interests
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "With the Ganga Waters Treaty of 1996 approaching expiry and the BNP returning to power in Bangladesh, critically examine the challenges and opportunities for India in renewing the water-sharing framework." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "Discuss how the continued presence of Sheikh Hasina on Indian soil complicates India's Bangladesh diplomacy. What are India's options under international law?" (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. "BSF border killings remain a persistent irritant in India-Bangladesh relations. Analyse the issue from the perspectives of security imperatives, human rights, and bilateral diplomacy." (GS-II, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Farakka Barrage & Teesta River Dispute | Both are water-sharing flashpoints with Bangladesh; Teesta has no treaty yet |
| India's Neighbourhood First Policy | Overarching framework within which India-Bangladesh ties are managed |
| India-Bangladesh 2013 Land Boundary Agreement | Resolved enclaves; shows India-Awami League era cooperation — contrast with BNP era |
| India's Extradition Treaty framework | Governs whether Hasina can be sent back; Extradition Act 1962 is the legal base |
| BSF & Border Management | Understand the legal mandate, rules of engagement, and bilateral protocols |
| Muhammad Yunus & Interim Government (2024–26) | Immediate predecessor to BNP; shaped the current bilateral reset |
| International Crimes Tribunal, Bangladesh | Domestic tribunal that convicted Hasina; understand its mandate and controversy |
| Joint Rivers Commission (JRC) India-Bangladesh | The only standing bilateral mechanism for river water disputes |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong treaty year: Aspirants confuse the 1977 short-term agreement with the definitive 1996 Treaty (30 years). The 1996 treaty is the operative one now under renewal pressure.
- Farakka Barrage vs. Farakka location: The barrage is in West Bengal (Murshidabad), NOT Bihar — a common geographical error.
- Extradition treaty confusion: India-Bangladesh do have an extradition treaty (2013), but aspirants often assume none exists. The issue is that the political offence exception makes it inapplicable to Hasina's case.
- BNP leadership mix-up: Khaleda Zia is BNP's founder-figure but is deceased; Tarique Rahman (her son) is the current chairman and PM. Do not conflate mother and son.
- JRC mandate: JRC covers all shared rivers (54 rivers cross the India-Bangladesh border), not just Ganga — a frequent narrowing error in answers.
11. Sources
- [S1] 'Hasina's presence in India, Ganga waters treaty to be key priorities for BNP govt.' — The Hindu, 14 February 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-14/th_international/articleG6AFJ8OH9-13500794.ece — (Tier 4; article excerpt as primary source)
- [S2] "QUESTION NO. 833 — RENEWAL OF GANGA WATER TREATY" — Ministry of External Affairs (Lok Sabha), mea.gov.in — https://www.mea.gov.in/lok-sabha.htm?dtl%2F38022%2FQUESTION+NO+833+RENEWAL+OF+GANGA+WATER+TREATY= — (Tier 1); corroborated by 86th JRC meeting reporting via search snippets
- [S3] Search result snippets: Tarique Rahman / Bangladesh post-resignation violence / BNP election 2026 / Hasina conviction — via web search result summaries — (Tier 4 / encyclopaedic)
- [S4] "Bangladesh demands India extradite ousted leader Sheikh Hasina" — Malay Mail, November 2025 — https://malaymail.com/news/world/2025/11/24/bangladesh-demands-india-extradite-ousted-leader-sheikh-hasina/199494 — (Tier 4)
Note: This study note is grounded in the article excerpt [S1] and MEA parliamentary record [S2] as primary sources, supplemented by search-result snippets. Verify latest developments as negotiations on treaty renewal are live and ongoing.