Bangladesh’s interim government revoked the diplomatic passport of ousted premier Sheikh Hasina on Thursday after she fled a student-led uprising by helicopter to India earlier this month.
The move to cancel Hasina’s documents leaves the former autocratic leader in potential limbo and comes on the same day that a United Nations team arrived in Dhaka to assess whether to investigate alleged human rights violations.
The interior ministry said in a statement that Hasina’s passport and those belonging to former government ministers and ex-lawmakers no longer in their posts “have to be revoked”.
It also poses a diplomatic dilemma for Hasina’s current host, regional powerhouse India.
“The former prime minister, her advisers, the former cabinet, and all members of the dissolved national assembly were eligible for diplomatic passports by the positions they held,” Dhaka’s home ministry said in a statement.
“If they have been removed or retired from their posts, their and their spouses’ diplomatic passports have to be revoked.”
Dhaka’s new authorities said that Hasina, and other former top officials during her tenure, could apply for a standard passport.
More than 450 people were killed — many by police fire — during the weeks leading up to Hasina’s ouster, as crowds stormed her official residence in Dhaka and ended her iron-fisted 15-year rule.