Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,405

On Tuesday, December 30th, 2018, this is how things are going.

allegedly an attack on Putin’s residence

    Russian President Vladimir Putin’s residence in Novgorod, according to Yury Ushakov, a Kremlin aide, “practically immediately following” talks between US President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Florida on Sunday.

  • In response to a call between Trump and Putin, Ushakov said in remarks that “will not go unanswered.”
  • No one was hurt, according to Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who claimed that Russian air defense systems shot down 91 long-range strike drones during the attack.
  • Zelenskyy accused Russia of trying to thwart peace talks, but Zelenskyy refuted that claim.
  • Trump, however, said to reporters, “I was very upset about it.” When Trump was questioned about whether there was any proof of the attack in the United States, he responded, “We’ll find out.”
  • Maria Zakharova, a spokesman for the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, stated that “Russia will not be diplomatic in responding to the attacks” and that it would change its stance on negotiating afterward.
  • The “deplorable attack” and “the threat it poses to security and stability,” the United Arab Emirates’ ministry of foreign affairs said in a statement.

Diplomacy

  • Without going into further detail, White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt described a phone call between Putin and Trump on Monday regarding the Ukraine issue as “positive.”
  • Zelenskyy said he called the leaders of Germany, Latvia, and Finland to let them know how the peace negotiations turned out and where they were after speaking with Trump.
  • In an interview with the Russian Federation’s RIA Novosti, Lavrov stated that “Kyiv and its Western supporters must acknowledge the new territorial realities that have emerged since the annexation of Crimea, Sevastopol, the Donetsk People’s Republic, the&nbsp, Luhansk People’s Republic, and the regions of Zaporizhia and Kherson.” He made reference to the Russian-backed separatists’ alleged annexes of Donetsk and Luhansk, which Moscow claims to have annexed under the names DPR and LPR.
  • According to a survey conducted by the Ukrainian think tank Ilko Kucheriv Democratic Initiatives Foundation (DIF), 76 percent of Ukrainians said they found it “unacceptable” to recognize occupied Ukrainian territories as belonging to the Russian Federation.

Fighting

  • Governor Ivan Fedorov posted a message on Telegram about the assault on the front-line town of Orikhiv in the Zaporizhia region of Ukraine, killing a 46-year-old man and injuring a 49-year-old woman.
  • In the Sunday attacks in the Donetsk region of Ukraine, Russian forces killed one person and injured five others, according to governor Vadym Filashkin’s Facebook post.
  • Russian forces killed seven civilians who were hiding in a basement in Pokrovsk, according to Dmytro Lubinets, Ukraine’s human rights commissioner, on Telegram.
  • The investigation into reports that Russian soldiers shot dead two captured Ukrainian soldiers in the village of Shakhove, Pokrovsky, on Saturday was being opened by the prosecutor general of Ukraine.
  • The prosecutor general’s office declared that the deliberate killing of war prisoners constitutes a grave international crime and constitutes a gross violation of Geneva Conventions.
  • According to local officials and Russian TASS state news agency, five civilians were hurt by Ukrainian attacks in the Belgorod region, according to local officials.
  • According to local officials and TASS, Ukrainian attacks also injured three civilians in the Russian-occupied Ukrainian region of Donetsk and four civilians in the Zaporizhia region, according to TASS.
  • Putin made a number of claims in a televised address from the Kremlin regarding the ongoing conflict between Russia and Ukraine, including that Russian troops were heading toward Zaporizhzhia, a city in Ukraine.
  • Russian forces seized 3, 460 square kilometers (2, 494 square miles) of Ukrainian territory in 2025, according to General Valery Gerasimov, the country’s army chief, during the same address.
  • Rafael Grossi, the director general of the organization, was quoted by the IAEA as saying that the power line repairs that are ongoing near the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant in Ukraine had been successfully finished.

China kicks off second day of military drills around Taiwan

In response to the most recent rise in tensions over the self-governing island, China has conducted a second day of military exercises around Taiwan.

China’s military announced on Tuesday that navy destroyers, bombers, and other forces had been deployed as part of the “separatist” and “external” war games. Beijing claims these are meant as “separatist” and “external” forces.

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According to Chinese state media, the drills included live-fire exercises conducted between 8 am and 6 pm local time (08:00 to 08:00 GMT), air and sea patrols, simulated precision strikes, and anti-submarine maneuvers in five maritime and airspace zones around Taiwan.

According to Taiwan’s Central News Agency, some of the live-fire drills would take place within 12 nautical miles (22 kilometers) of the coastline, according to Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defense.

More than 300 international flights may experience delays as a result of rerouted air traffic during the drills, according to Taiwan’s Civil Aviation Administration, which included more than 80 domestic flights that were canceled on Tuesday. Many of these were to Taiwan’s outlying islands.

The exercises, which are dubbed “Justice Mission 2025,” started early on Monday and came shortly after the United States revealed its largest-ever weapons package for Taiwan, worth $11.1 billion.

In an editorial on Monday, The China Daily reported that the drills were “part of a series of Beijing’s responses to the US arms sales to Taiwan and a warning to Taiwanese president Lai Ching-te authorities in Taiwan.”

Lin Jian, a spokesperson for the Chinese government’s foreign affairs, added that the exercises were “a necessary step to safeguard China’s national sovereignty and territorial integrity,” as well as a “punitive and deterrent action against separatist forces who seek Taiwan’s independence through military buildup.”

Since then-US Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan in 2022, China has conducted large-scale military exercises there for the sixth time since Justice Mission 2025.

According to William Yang, senior analyst for Northeast Asia at the Crisis Group, “anti-access and area denial capability” will be a key focus of the “Justice Mission 2025” exercises to ensure that Taiwan cannot receive supplies from allies like Japan and the US during a conflict.

Additionally, Yang said, taking control of strategically important waterways like the Bashi Channel and Miyako Strait, through which Taiwan imports a large portion of its energy supplies, would be akin to a blockade of Taiwan’s major ports in the north and south.

Large metal hammers strike the ports of Keelung in the north and Kaohsiung in the south, according to a poster from China’s Eastern Theatre Command, titled “Hammer of Justice: Seal the Ports, Cut the Lines.”

Between 6 am on Monday (22:00 GMT, Sunday) and 6 am on Tuesday (22:00 GMT, Monday), Taiwan’s defense ministry reported tracking 130 air sorties by Chinese aircraft, 14 naval ships, and eight “official ships.”

UN Security Council members condemn Israel’s recognition of Somaliland

The majority of UNSC members have criticized Israel’s decision to recognize Somaliland at a meeting held in response to the decision, which some members have said may have had a significant impact on Gaza’s Palestinians.

At the 15-member body’s emergency meeting in New York City on Monday, the only member of the group who did not object to Israel’s formal recognition of the breakaway region of Somalia. However, it claimed that its position on Somaliland had not changed.

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Abu Bakr Dahir Osman, Somalia’s UN ambassador, urged members to vehemently oppose Israel’s “act of aggression,” which he claimed threatened to destabilize the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea regions in particular.

Osman expressed concern that the move might serve to advance Israel’s plans to “relocate the Palestinian population from Gaza to the northwestern region of Somalia.”

He declared, “This total disregard for the rule of law and morality must end right away.”

The self-declared Republic of Somaliland was recognized as an independent and sovereign state last week, prompting the emergency meeting to be called.

According to Gabriel Elizondo, a journalist for the UN in New York, “14 of the 15 council members criticized Israel’s recognition of Somaliland,” while the US “defended Israel’s action but didn’t follow Israel’s lead.”

The US deputy representative to the UN, Tammy Bruce, stated to the council that “Israel has the same right to establish diplomatic relations as any other sovereign state.”

However, according to Bruce, there hasn’t been any change in American policy and there hasn’t been any announcement about US recognition of Somaliland.

Jonathan Miller, Israel’s deputy ambassador to the UN, stated to the council that the decision was neither a hostile one toward Somalia nor a precluded any future negotiations between the parties.

Recognizing is not defiance, the statement goes. Miller remarked, “This is a chance.”

In statements made to the UNSC, many other nations expressed concerns about Israel’s recognition of Somaliland, including the effects for Palestinians.

Maged Abdelfattah Abdelaziz, the 22-member Arab League’s UN envoy, stated that the organization “rejects any measures arising from this illegitimate recognition that would encourage the forced displacement of the Palestinian people or use northern Somali ports to establish military bases.”

Muhammad Usman Iqbal Jadoon, Pakistan’s deputy UN ambassador, stated at the meeting that Israel’s “unlawful recognition of] the] Somaliland region of Somalia is deeply troubling” because it was “made in response to Israel’s previous references to Somaliland of the Federal Republic of Somalia as a destination for the deportation of Palestinian people, particularly from Gaza.”

China’s UN envoy, Sun Lei, claimed that his country “opposes any act to split” Somalia’s territory, adding that the United Kingdom and China were two of the permanent UNSC members who did not support the move.

According to Sun Lei, “no country should support or abet separatist forces in other nations to advance their own geopolitical interests.”

South Africa, whose UN envoy, Mathu Joyini, claimed that her country “reaffirmed” Somalia’s “sovereignty and territorial integrity” in accordance with international law, the UN Charter, and the African Union’s founding act, along with other non-members who made requests for comment.

Compared to Palestinian recognition

US Ambassador Bruce compared the decision to recognize Palestine to which more than 150 of the UN’s member states have defended Israel’s position.

No emergency meeting has been set up, according to Bruce, who criticized what she called the UNSC’s “double standards,” because “some nations, including members of this council, have unilaterally recognized a non-existent Palestinian state.”

Samuel Zbogar, Slovenia’s ambassador to the UN, refuted the comparison, saying that “Palestine is not a part of any state.” Palestine is also a member state of [the UN]the UN, which is illegally occupied territory.

On the other hand, acknowledging that it is a member state of the UN violates the UN Charter, Zbogar said.

Trump claims attack on a dock in Venezuela; US strikes kill two in Pacific

Donald Trump, the first land attack by US forces in Venezuela since Washington’s four-month-long pressure campaign, claimed an attack on a dock he claimed was used to “load up boats with drugs.”

At least two people were killed in a subsequent strike on an alleged drug boat in the eastern Pacific Ocean as a result of the announcement on Monday.

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Trump claimed that the US had struck a facility where boats are loaded up when he first mentioned the strike in Venezuela in a radio interview on Friday and later in a question to reporters in the country about an explosion.

Trump met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Florida and reported that there had been a “major explosion” in the dock area where they loaded the boats with drugs. They “load the boats up with drugs,” so we hit the area as a result. The implementation area is it. That is where they put into practice. And that has vanished.

Trump declined to specify whether the CIA or the US military carried out the strike on the dock or where it took place.

“I am aware of who it was, but I have no desire to reveal who it was.” But, he said, “You know, it was along the shore.”

Venezuela did not respond to the attack immediately, and there haven’t been any independent reports about a US attack in Venezuela.

The Trump administration’s push to confront Venezuela comes as part of a wider effort to stop what the president claims are drug-smuggling operations that are bound for the US.

Caracas denies any involvement in drug trafficking and asserts that Venezuela’s oil reserves, the largest in the world, are being seized by Washington as a result of his administration’s attempt to overthrow President Nicolas Maduro.

Following months of military exercises in international waters in the Caribbean Sea and the eastern Pacific Ocean, US actions appear to be a step closer to shore-based strikes.

At least 107 people have died in the attacks since early September, according to data released by the Trump administration.

Legal scholars and human rights organizations have referred to the strikes as extrajudicial killings  and that they are generally regarded as illegal under both US and international law.

The latest victims of its Monday strikes were “two male narco-terrorists,” according to the US Southern Command, and their ship was engaged in “narco-trafficking operations.”

More than 15, 000 soldiers are stationed in the area as part of a US military exercise that Trump has ordered to stop sanctioned vessels from entering and leaving Venezuela.

Trump has suggested for months that US land attacks in South America, particularly those in Venezuela, could be expanded, and he has just stated that the country will start attacking land “soon” rather than boats.

Trump stated in October that he had authorized the CIA to conduct covert operations in Venezuela. Trump’s comments on Monday were not addressed by the organization.

Families of Bondi victims demand probe into anti-Semitism in Australia

Families of the victims of the deadly attack on a Jewish holiday in Australia’s Bondi Beach earlier this month have urged a national investigation into growing anti-Semitism.

In an open letter released on Monday, 11 of the attack’s victims’ families requested that Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese conduct a royal commission into the “rapid” and “dangerous” rise of anti-Jewish sentiment following Hamas’ attacks on Israel on October 7, 2023.

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When two gunmen opened fire on a Hanukkah celebration at Sydney’s iconic Bondi Beach on December 14 and fifteen people were killed, the majority of them Jews, according to a statement released by the organization.

Sajid Akram and his son Naveed, the suspected gunmen, were allegedly inspired by the ISIL (ISIS) group, according to Australian authorities.

The families wrote in their letters asking why “clear warning signs were ignored” and “how antisemitic hatred was allowed to grow dangerously unchecked.”

We have endured more than two and a half years of relentless attacks, according to the families.

Our kids experience unwelcome at the classroom and university. No longer do our places of comfort feel safe, including our homes, places of employment, sports fields, and public spaces.

The families said the government’s response to the attack, which included proposals to tighten, tighten, tighten, and introduce tougher laws against hate speech, was&nbsp, was “not nearly enough,” according to the families.

According to them, “Australia’s dangerous rise of antisemitism and radicalism is not going away.”

“We require immediate strong action.” Right now, we need leadership.

Albanese announced the terms of an independent review into whether law enforcement and intelligence could have prevented the attack on Monday as a result of the calls for an investigation into anti-Semitism.

Albanese and his government colleagues have argued that a public inquiry into the attack would take years and might platform extremist voices, which would undermine social cohesion.

According to Albanese, the review, led by former intelligence chief Dennis Richardson, would look into information sharing between federal and state agencies as well as other matters.

Anti-Semitic terrorists attempted to sever our nation from ours just over two weeks ago, but Albanese remarked, “Our country is stronger than these cowards.”

“They went to Bondi Beach to murder our Jewish community in large numbers. Instead of dividing and putting off a response, we must act in unity and urgency.

In Australia, there are more anti-Jewish sentiments, as well as anti-Islam and anti-immigration sentiments. One in two Australians are either born abroad or have a parent who was born overseas, raising concerns for the country’s rising rise in right-wing extremism.

In cities like Sydney, Perth, Canberra, and Brisbane, hundreds of people mobilized in September to demand the end of “mass migration.”

The rallies, which took place under the “March for Australia” banner, were “organized by Nazis,” according to Minister for Multicultural Affairs Anne Aly, who denounced the actions.

The organization behind “March for Australia” claimed on its website and social media that “mass migration has torn at the bonds that held our communities together” and that its rallies aimed to “demand an end to mass immigration, something the majority politicians never have the courage to do: demand it.”

Since October 7, 2023, there has also been a significant rise in anti-Semitic and anti-Islamophobic incidents in Australia.

After more than 2, 060 incidents the previous year, the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, which supports the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s (IHRA) definition of antisemitism, documented 1, 654 anti-Jewish incidents nationwide between October 1, 2024 and September 30, 2025.

Between January 1, 2023 and November 31, 2024, The Islamophobia Register Australia recorded 366 online and in-person incidents involving Islamophobia.

The IHRA definition of anti-Semitism has been used, according to numerous rights organizations, including some Jewish organizations, to equate anti-Jewish bigotry with legitimate criticism of Israel, particularly its genocidal war against Gaza.

Khaleda Zia, Bangladesh’s first woman PM: A life of power and resistance

Tipu Sultan, 48, a grassroots activist for the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), sat in front of Dhaka’s Evercare Hospital in early December and proclaimed, “I want to donate my kidney to Begum Khaleda Zia.”

A video of Sultan and the placard went viral in Bangladesh, a country of 170 million people that has been on edge since Khaleda, the BNP chairperson and former prime minister, was admitted to hospital on November 23. Tipu has since promised to stay put until he learns about her recovery, spending the rest of his days opposite the hospital gate.

“She is like my mother. She sacrificed everything for democracy”, he told Al Jazeera. He continued, “My only prayer is that God allows her to see the upcoming election,” referring to the February 12 national elections that are scheduled for that day.

But it was not to be. According to her party, Khaleda, 80, passed away in a hospital on December 30 early in the morning.

“Our beloved national leader is no longer with us. She left us at 6am today”, the BNP said in the statement posted on Facebook.

Khaleda’s death marks the conclusion of more than three decades of conflict between the two leaders, who were known as the “battling begums,” an honor that was customarily reserved for Muslim women of authority, and her archrival and fellow former prime minister Sheikh Hasina, who is currently imprisoned in India.

But as with Hasina, Khaleda’s legacy is grey: Both women fought for democracy, against authoritarianism. Contrary to Hasina, Khaleda was never charged with carrying out widespread atrocities against her critics. Her uncompromising style while in opposition – leading election boycotts and prolonged street movements – combined with recurring allegations of corruption while she was in power, inspired intense loyalty among supporters and equal distrust among her critics.

The rise

Begum Khaleda Zia was born on August 15, 1946, in Dinajpur, then East Bengal of British India, in northern Bangladesh.

Her father, Iskandar Majumder, originally from Feni in the country’s southeast, had previously run a tea business in Jalpaiguri (in present-day India) before relocating with his family to East Bengal, which would soon become East Pakistan after the 1947 partition of India.

Khaleda attended Dinajpur’s Government Girls’ High School for her early years before enrolling in Surendranath College.

Her entry into politics was shaped not by early ambition but by upheaval.

The assassination of her husband, President Ziaur Rahman, in an abortive military mutiny in Chattogram on May 30, 1981, plunged Bangladesh into deep uncertainty. Rahman, who had stabilized the nation after years of coups and countercoups, left behind a fragile political system and the BNP, a defunct ruling party.

Although Khaleda had not been politically active during her husband’s presidency, senior BNP leaders saw her as the only figure who could unify the party’s competing factions and preserve Ziaur Rahman’s legacy. Vice President Abdus Sattar resigned as president after his passing, and he later won an election. But within months, Army Chief Hussain Muhammad Ershad seized power in a bloodless coup in March 1982, imposing martial law. It was in this volatile context – with the military back in control and political parties fighting for survival – that Khaleda began her ascent, eventually emerging as a central civilian figure challenging authoritarian rule.

Khaleda was elected party chairperson in August 1984 after joining the BNP as a general member in January 1982, as well as becoming its vice chair in 1983. In the decades that followed, she would win three elections to become prime minister in a political landscape that she dominated alongside her longtime rival, Sheikh Hasina, and her Awami League party.

Her public life and personal struggles included: her older son, Tarique Rahman, was detained in 2008 while her younger son, Arafat Rahman Koko, passed away while living abroad as a result of a cardiac arrest. Khaleda herself later spent long periods in prison after her 2018 convictions in corruption cases brought under the Awami League government, followed by years of political isolation and deteriorating health.

Tarique eventually returned to Dhaka on December 25, after the cases against him were dropped by the interim government of Nobel Laureate Muhammad Yunus that yook office after Hasina’s ouster.

According to Dilara Choudhury, a political scientist who closely observed both Khaleda and her husband, “Her]Khaleda’s entire life was filled with hardship, yet she chose her country over personal comfort.” “That is why she is remembered across political lines as one of the most emblematic leaders of her time”.

Priority should be placed on private life.

People who knew Khaleda before she entered public life describe her as a woman who was reserved, soft-spoken and consistently courteous. She married army officer Ziaur Rahman in 1960 when she was about 15, long before he emerged as a national figure. Rahman gained notoriety after Bangladesh’s independence in 1971, when he became president in 1977 and founded the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) in 1978. Zia would later inherit her husband’s politics – centred on nationalism, multi-party democracy and a market-oriented economy.

She and her family lived in a modest military home in Dhaka Cantonment between 1978 and 1981, where her husband, President Rahman, served as aide-de-camp at 6 Moinul Road, which was later designated as the deputy chief of the army.

“She coordinated the house herself, welcomed guests and managed family matters”, Colonel Khan told Al Jazeera. “I never saw her raise her voice. She had a sense of self-awareness.

He recalled her calm approach to parenting: When her younger son, Arafat, then aged 7, struggled to gain admission to a school, she asked only for other alternative school options, when the boy later injured himself imitating a television stunt, she expressed no anger towards the staff who were supposed to be minding him.

Khan remarked, “That was the person she was.” “Graceful, composed and considerate”.

But everything changed on May 30, 1981.

Khan discovered that President Rahman had been killed in Chattogram, a port city, in an apparent coup attempt by a group of army officers that would eventually lead to Ershad’s army chief, even though Ershad would gain control several months later.

“For a moment]after learning of the assassination], I felt the ground slip beneath my feet, but I did not share the information with Madam]Begum Zia] for moments”, he said.

He immediately commanded a company of about 120 soldiers to be prepared to defend the family because he was worried the family’s residence might become the next target.

In the early morning, the two boys came out of their bedrooms, preparing to leave for school, but he stopped them. Minutes later, Khaleda stepped out of her bedroom. She inquired, “What has happened? ” I told her there was unrest outside”, he said.

She retreated to her bedroom as a housekeeper turned the radio on, and the news of her husband’s passing flooded the room.

“She stepped back, looked at my eyes – and she understood”, the former aide-de-camp said. “She sank into the floor”.

Khan stayed with the family for two more months. “She was mentally shattered”, he said.

Khaleda lived there until Hasina’s administration evicted her in 2010 because Ziaur Rahman had no other personal residence to share with his family. The government then gave her the house at 6 Moinul Road.

From first lady to first female prime minister

Following Ziaur Rahman’s assassination in 1981, senior leaders of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) urged Khaleda – who was not even a party member at the time – to take on a public role.

The army chief imposed martial law after taking over as president and suspended the constitution. Her rise coincided with growing public distaste for Ershad’s military rule.

Throughout the 1980s, the BNP and the Awami League – the two largest political parties – led parallel but often coordinated street movements calling for the restoration of parliamentary democracy.

A crucial turning point occurred in 1986, according to Choudhury, the political scientist, when Ershad announced a national election that the opposition had criticized as unconstitutional because political freedoms were still restricted and martial law was still in effect. While the Awami League eventually chose to contest the polls, the BNP under Khaleda’s stewardship boycotted the election entirely.

“Her decision to boycott the 1986 election – which she denounced as illegal even as the Awami League participated – reinforced her public image as someone unwilling to trade principle for expediency”, she said.

This perception about her was bolstered by repeated house arrests under the Ershad regime. “Khaleda Zia was unwavering in her objective to remove Ershad and restore democracy”, Choudhury said. She was praised for her willingness to endure arrest, even if she was in good health.

The 1991 election – the first after the end of military rule in December 1990 – produced a hung parliament.

The BNP won 140 seats, short of the 151 needed to form a government. The Jatiya Party and Jamaat-e-Islami won 88 seats, while the Awami League and Jamaat-e-Islami won 18 respectively.

Jamaat chief Ghulam Azam opened negotiations with Sheikh Hasina. In addition, Lieutenant General Nuruddin, Khaleda, Motiur Rahman Nizami, and Golam Wahed Choudhury, the husband of Dilara Choudhury, the former minister of communications of undivided Pakistan, convened a covert meeting at his Dhaka residence.

Khaleda arrived alone, without informing other BNP leaders. The negotiations ultimately paved the way to allow Bangladeshi citizenship for two very contrasting political figures. Azam, the Jamaat chief who had backed Pakistan during the war of independence, had previously been denied citizenship. Kader Siddique, a prominent 1971 war hero aligned with the Awami League’s political legacy, had been in exile in India after leading his private militia against the government and military following the 1975 assassination of Hasina’s husband, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman – the leader of the country’s independence struggle and its first prime minister and president.

Khaleda received the numbers needed to form a government by agreeing to back the BNP in parliament.

“This negotiation showed her political prudence and firmness”, Choudhury said. “It could easily have failed”.

In addition to Indira Gandhi, Sirimavo Bandaranaike, and Benazir Bhutto, a line of South Asian women had already held the region’s highest office.

Governance, reforms and cries of cronyism

Khaleda led Bangladesh three times, once in 1991 and 1996, once in 1996 during a short-lived second term, and once more between 2001 and 2006.

Recalling the negotiation mediated by her husband in early 1991, Choudhury, the political scientist, said that as Khaleda was leaving the meeting, she paused to speak with the women of the household and asked what they expected from her.

“My elder sister, Professor Husneara Khan, replied, ‘ We want you to give the country a comparatively honest and corruption-free administration'”.

It’s a complex question, Choudhury said, whether she ultimately delivered that. “She genuinely had that intention – inspired by her husband’s nationalist philosophy. In many ways, she was successful.

Supporters credit her government with policies aimed at stabilising a state emerging from years of authoritarian rule. Her administration pursued economic liberalisation, export-led growth, revival of industry, expansion of the garment sector, and wider access to education – particularly for girls. Her tenure also coincided with the establishment of a relatively free press.

When her last elected term ended in 2006, Bangladesh’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate stood at about 7 percent – one of the highest in the country’s post-independence history and well above the average of roughly 4.8 percent in the 1990s and about 3.8 percent in the 1980s. Bangladesh was referred to as “Asia’s next tiger economy” by the World Bank at the time.

Her administrations, however, did draw criticism too.

In 1995, an acute fertiliser shortage and a resulting sharp increase in prices – driven by hoarding and distribution failures at a crucial time for the winter paddy crop – led to protests by thousands of farmers. In clashes that sparked widespread rural unrest, police opened fire on several districts: At least a dozen farmers and one officer died.

During her 2001–2006 term, critics accused her elder son, Tarique Rahman, of building an alleged parallel centre of influence around his political office, widely known as Hawa Bhaban.

Under her leadership, persistent questions about governance were fueled by allegations of corruption and claims that important decisions were being influenced by this parallel structure.

Political missteps

Chaudhury pointed to two episodes in which Khaleda’s governments were also accused of trying to influence electoral outcomes. Numerous people criticized the 1994 by-election as being manipulated to benefit the BNP. Later, towards the end of her 2001–06 term, Zia was accused of trying to install a partisan caretaker government tasked with carrying out the next election.

Khaleda, a self-published historical account of the former prime minister’s legacy, was written by political historian Mohiuddin Ahmed, who also pointed out other instances that he claimed had harmed her credibility.

A grenade attack on a rally of Hasina’s then-opposition Awami League on August 21, 2004, in Dhaka, killed at least 24 people and injured hundreds. The investigation under the BNP-led government was widely criticised for failing to promptly pursue credible leads into the role of Islamist armed groups that were ultimately blamed by investigators. The Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami organization is one of them.

A Dhaka court in 2018 convicted several individuals in connection with the attack. Many Bangladeshis still have questions about responsibility for the 2004 attack, despite subsequent appeals and High Court decisions that have overturned some convictions and acquired others.

In another incident in April 2004, police and coastguard intercepted a large consignment of illegal weapons believed to be destined for the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), an armed separatist group in India’s Assam region.

“These incidents deepened political hostility at home and created significant discomfort in Bangladesh’s relations with neighbouring India”, Ahmed&nbsp, told Al Jazeera.

The political unrest that resulted in a military-backed takeover of power on January 11, 2007 was a result of Zia’s mistakes during her rule from 2001 to 2006.

The army’s senior leadership pressed then-President Iajuddin Ahmed to declare a state of emergency, resign as chief adviser of the sitting caretaker government and cancel elections scheduled for later that month. Former Bangladesh Bank governor Fakhruddin Ahmed was given the backing of a new interim caretaker government, which would be in charge of stabilizing the nation and putting together future elections. The move effectively sidelined both Khaleda and Hasina from front-line politics for nearly two years.

“Her]Khaleda’s] party created the circumstances]for the events of January 11, 2007], and the party – as well as her family – eventually became the victims of it”, Ahmed, the political historian, said.

“Democracy commitment”

Amir Khasru Mahmud Chowdhury, a former commerce minister in Khaleda’s 2001–04 cabinet and a current BNP leader, said that his former boss never wavered from her political positions even when she was under immense pressure to compromise.

He claimed that party workers were profoundly affected by her loyalty to democracy and patriotism. “Attempts to break the BNP – during 1/11 and later under Sheikh Hasina – never succeeded because her ideals held the organisation together”, he added, referring to the events of January 11, 2007.

Ahmed, the political historian, also said that while “many have benefited from politics in recent decades”, Khaleda had “paid a very high price, especially after 2006″. He made reference to her and her family’s years of imprisonment, political persecution, and constant pressure.

” Right or wrong, she rarely walked back from her stated positions, which we did not see among other contemporary politicians, “Ahmed said, citing her firmness during the anti-Ershad movement and her insistence on elections only under caretaker governments.

A portion of her legacy will always be that she was the first woman to hold the highest office in a socially conservative society that was historically skeptical of female leadership.

Her refusal to flee the country during crises – whether after January 2007, when her elder son was forced into exile as they faced numerous cases, or when she faced retribution under Hasina – also helped hold the BNP together, say analysts.

” She could have left, but she chose to stay and face the consequences. She was different, according to Ahmad.

The political historian also pointed to Khaleda’s restraint in political language”. She refused to respond in a manner that was offensive and abusive even when she was the target of harsh propaganda.

Her message following the fall of Hasina in August 2024 was an example.

Freed from house arrest on August 6, after student-led protests forced Hasina to flee to India, Khaleda urged her supporters not to pursue retaliation.

It was “an almost unimaginable moment for many,” Mohiuddin said. She avoided inflammatory language even when the political tide turned in her favour. “

This quality is essential to how many regular Bangladeshis will remember her. Both Hasina and Khaleda ruled the country well, but in my opinion, Khaleda did better, “said 77-year-old Nazim Uddin, speaking to Al Jazeera in early December while chatting with friends outside a commercial complex not far from Evercare Hospital.

But a key question now looms: What awaits the BNP in a post-Khaleda era?

Tarique Rahman, Khaleda’s sole surviving son, is at the center of any response to that query.

” Like the Awami League, the BNP has become a one-person-centric party, “political historian Mohiuddin Ahmed said”. The BNP is likely to experience a serious leadership crisis because Tarique Rahman’s leadership is still untested.

Choudhury, the political scientist who knew Khaleda well, offered a sharper assessment:” Leaders in the post-Khaleda BNP will likely split into two or three factions, as she served as a symbol of unity for party members. That fragmentation, I fear, will create a serious political vacuum in the country. “

Others are in opposition, though.

Amir Khasru Mahmud Chowdhury, the former minister under Khaleda, said that he believes Tarique, who has led the party as acting chair since 2018 from exile in the United Kingdom, has already” taken up the torch that his mother carried from his father, Ziaur Rahman”.

When Tarique returned from exile to Dhaka on Christmas Day, just weeks before the national election, where the BNP and its former ally, the Jamaat-e-Islami, were in a close fight for the top spot in the polls, with a significant show of support from the party’s supporters.

In his first comments since returning, Tarique spoke of wanting to build an inclusive Bangladesh. Some experts believe the 60-year-old might also be able to repair ties with India, which have suffered since Hasina’s removal and her decision to flee to New Delhi. Although India and the BNP have traditionally had chilly ties, New Delhi favors Hasina’s Awami League as Dhaka’s partner, both have recently exchanged open letters.