Asia | The need for speed

Bangladesh’s new ruler is in a race against time

The country’s police have gone missing

A man walks past graffiti that reads "our new secular Bangladesh" at the University of Dhaka in Bangladesh.
A bright new world?Photograph: Reuters
|Dhaka

OVER THE past ten days Dhaka, Bangladesh’s capital, has been transformed. Images of Sheikh Hasina, the former prime minister who fled the country on August 5th, and Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, her father and Bangladesh’s founding father, have vanished from billboards. Walls covered in posters and slogans advertising the Awami League (AL), their party, have been painted over with colourful graffiti displaying slogans and scenes from the protests that brought down Sheikh Hasina. “Gen Z cleans the mess”, reads one, “Courage is contagious”, another. The mood has changed along with the appearance of the city. “It’s very freeing to be able to talk openly about things after all these years,” says a young NGO worker.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Move fast and fix things”

From the August 17th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Asia

The scary new map of the South China Sea

Fresh fights over reefs and shoals test America’s credibility

Could Japan and South Korea finally become friends?

Younger generations are less concerned with their countries shared history


Taiwan is trying to learn from the wars in Gaza and Ukraine

Could it repel a potential Chinese invasion?


Myanmar’s military junta is battered by Chinese-backed forces

The Brotherhood Alliance continues its string of shock victories

Why Indonesia’s horror films are booming

Directors such as Joko Anwar are taking old ghost stories to new heights

Welcome to India, where the streets have four names

Constantly renaming cities, roads and stations is pointless and counterproductive