Tarique Rahman sworn in as Bangladesh PM


Tarique Rahman Sworn in as Bangladesh PM — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1978 BNP founded by General Ziaur Rahman (Tarique's father), first President of Bangladesh after independence
1981 Ziaur Rahman assassinated; Khaleda Zia (Tarique's mother) later became BNP chief
1991–96, 2001–06 Khaleda Zia served as PM; Bangladesh under BNP governance
2007 Tarique Rahman arrested during military-backed caretaker government; fled to UK in 2008
2008–2024 Sheikh Hasina (Awami League) dominated politics; BNP largely in opposition or boycotted elections
2024 (Jul–Aug) Student-led "July Uprising" — anti-quota protests escalated; Hasina government fell on 5 August 2024; Hasina fled to India
Sep 2024 Muhammad Yunus sworn in as Chief Adviser of interim government
12 Feb 2026 Bangladesh general elections — BNP landslide victory
17 Feb 2026 Tarique Rahman sworn in as Prime Minister

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Geopolitical / Strategic

Political / Constitutional

Economic

Social / Historical

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. Tarique Rahman is the chairman of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), founded in 1978 by General Ziaur Rahman. [S2]
  2. BNP is a centre-right, nationalist political party; its symbol is sheaf of paddy (dhaner shish).
  3. Bangladesh's parliament is called Jatiyo Sangsad; it is unicameral with 350 seats (300 elected + 50 reserved for women).
  4. Tarique Rahman was sworn in as PM on 17 February 2026 — exactly 5 days after the 12 February 2026 elections. [S1][S3]
  5. Oath administered by President Mohammed Shahabuddin at South Plaza, Jatiya Sangsad Bhaban (not Bangabhaban). [S1][S3]
  6. Cabinet size: 25 Cabinet Ministers + 24 Ministers of State = 49 members. [S3]
  7. Chief Election Commissioner who administered oath to MPs: A.M.M. Nasir Uddin. [S3]
  8. Mohammed Amir Ur Rashid inducted as minister under the 'technocrats' category. [S3]
  9. Jonaid Saki (Gonosanghati Andolan), a prominent Gen Z protest figure, sworn in as cabinet minister. [S3]
  10. BNP last held power from 2001–2006 under PM Khaleda Zia (Tarique's mother). [S2]
  11. The Muhammad Yunus interim government lasted approximately 18 months (Sep 2024 – Feb 2026). [S1]
  12. India's Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla attended the swearing-in ceremony — India's representative at the event. [S1]
  13. Sheikh Hasina fled Bangladesh on 5 August 2024 to India, following student-led protests. [S1]
  14. BNP-led alliance won 212 seats; Jamaat-e-Islami-led alliance won 77 seats in the 2026 elections. [S1]
  15. BNP lawmakers took oath as MPs but NOT as members of the Constitution Reform Commission. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II India and its neighbourhood; bilateral, regional and global groupings; effect of policies of developed and developing countries on India's interests
GS-I Post-independence consolidation and reorganisation within the country (extended to South Asia)
GS-II Parliament and State Legislatures; functioning of constitutional bodies (comparative)

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The political transition in Bangladesh in 2024–26 has significant implications for India's Neighbourhood First Policy and connectivity ambitions in the Northeast. Critically examine." (GS-II, 15 marks)

  2. "The student-led 'July Uprising' of 2024 in Bangladesh is seen as a democratic assertion against authoritarianism. Analyse its causes, outcome, and lessons for democratic governance in South Asia." (GS-I/GS-II, 15 marks)

  3. "Assess the strategic challenges and opportunities for India in the context of the BNP coming to power in Bangladesh after two decades of Awami League dominance." (GS-II, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
India–Bangladesh Bilateral Relations Tarique's government will redefine the bilateral architecture on connectivity, trade, water, and security
Bangladesh Liberation War, 1971 Historical foundation of India–Bangladesh ties; BNP's differing narrative vs. Awami League on 1971
BBIN Motor Vehicle Agreement Sub-regional connectivity pact involving Bangladesh; BNP's stance critical for implementation
Muhammad Yunus & Grameen Bank Interim PM; Nobel Prize for microfinance; his governance of the transition period
India's Neighbourhood First Policy Overarching foreign policy framework under which India–Bangladesh relations are managed
Teesta River Water Sharing Dispute Long-pending bilateral issue; BNP government's stance may differ from Hasina's
Rohingya Crisis Bangladesh hosts ~1 million Rohingya refugees; repatriation depends on Myanmar, India, and UN diplomacy
Gen Z Protest Movements in South Asia Broader pattern of youth-led democratic mobilisation; Bangladesh 2024 as case study

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing Khaleda Zia and Tarique Rahman: Khaleda Zia (mother) was BNP PM (1991–96, 2001–06); Tarique Rahman (son) is the 2026 PM — do not conflate their roles or timelines.
  2. Misidentifying the oath administrator: Oath of PM was given by President Mohammed Shahabuddin; oath of MPs was administered by Chief Election Commissioner A.M.M. Nasir Uddin — these are distinct.
  3. Muhammad Yunus as PM: Yunus held the title of Chief Adviser of the interim government, NOT "Prime Minister" — Bangladesh's constitutional designation for the head of a caretaker/interim setup is different.
  4. BNP founding: BNP was founded by General Ziaur Rahman (not Khaleda Zia, not Tarique Rahman) in 1978.
  5. Oath venue trap: The swearing-in was held at Jatiya Sangsad Bhaban (parliament complex), not at Bangabhaban (presidential palace) — a deliberate departure from tradition worth noting for both Prelims and essay.
  6. Seat count confusion: 212 seats = BNP-led alliance total; do not attribute this to BNP alone or confuse with total Sangsad strength of 350.

11. Sources