This story is from April 26, 2007

Indian govt was in touch with Hasina during her ban

The former Bangladesh premier said this shortly after the ban was lifted within four days after she was stopped from boarding a flight to Dhaka from London.
Indian govt was in touch with Hasina during her ban
LONDON: The Indian government was in touch with former Bangladesh premier Sheikh Hasina when she was in London after the Awami League leader was banned from returning home by the caretaker military-backed government.
Hasina said this shortly after the ban was lifted on Tuesday within four days after she was stopped from boarding a flight to Dhaka from London.

"India's External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee spoke to me and the Indian High Commissioner Kamalesh Sharma met me here," Hasina, Chief of the Awami League said in an interview here. She did not give further details.
Hasina said her party always valued "friendly relations with India and other neighbours." It is during my regime we signed a 30-year treaty with India for sharing of the Ganges river waters. When we came to power there were 64,000 refugees in India and during my regime we brought back all the refugees."
The Awami League chief gave credit to "media and international pressure" for the lifting of the ban.
"It is the pressure of the people at home and the role of media at home and abroad that forced them (caretaker government). There was tremendous national and international pressure and because of the pressure they had to withdraw (the ban)," she said.
Hasina also said it was her will-power and determination to return to her motherland which prevailed upon the caretaker government to reverse its decision. "They thought I will wilt under pressure but they were mistaken," said Hasina, who had faced a grenade attack on her life and became deaf in her right ear.
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