DHAKA, June 13 – Bangladesh’s new leader is set to visit Malaysia and China later this month in a trip that Dhaka says reflects its independent foreign policy – with the decision to skip India seen less as a snub than a bid to strike a diplomatic balance.
Tarique Rahman, who became Bangladesh’s 11th prime minister in February, plans to visit Malaysia on June 21–22 before a three-day official visit to China from June 23 on his first overseas trip since taking office.
The Malaysia leg, scheduled ahead of any visit to India, is expected to focus on migrant worker welfare, labour migration, recruitment costs and legal employment channels.
Malaysia hosts around 800,000 Bangladeshi workers, accounting for some 37 per cent of its foreign workforce in the manufacturing, construction, plantations and agriculture sectors.
In Beijing, Rahman is expected to further infrastructure projects under the Belt and Road Initiative while also seeking fresh investment in technology, renewable energy, agriculture and healthcare, according to Mohammad Shakil Bhuiyan, an assistant professor of political studies at Shahjalal University of Science and Technology in Bangladesh.
“Dhaka may also seek better financing terms and try to get some stalled projects back on track,” he said.
Analysts say the sequencing of visits reflects a deliberate “Bangladesh First” policy aimed at avoiding an early alignment with either India or China.
Ties between New Delhi and Dhaka have been strained by border tensions, unresolved water-sharing disputes and a trust deficit stemming from India’s refusal to extradite former prime minister Sheikh Hasina, who fled to the neighbouring country after mass protests in 2024.
Security studies scholar Shafi Md Mostofa, an associate professor at the University of Dhaka, said the coming visits reflected the government’s effort “to project Bangladesh as an independent foreign policy actor with diversified partnerships”, but cautioned that they did not necessarily signal a deterioration in Bangladesh–India relations.
“India remains too important a neighbour for any future government to ignore,” he said.
According to Shafi, a key objective in Malaysia would be to deepen Bangladesh’s economic integration with Asean – especially as the India-Pakistan diplomatic stand-off over Kashmir has stalled any work being done through the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation.
He added that opportunities in AI-driven industrial development were expected to feature in discussions with Beijing.
Sohini Bose, an associate fellow at the Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation, described visiting Malaysia first as a “practical choice” that would help Dhaka avoid speculation about its geopolitical leanings.
She said Rahman’s trips were expected to build on agreements reached during former interim leader Muhammad Yunus’ visits to both countries last year – covering trade and renewable energy cooperation with Malaysia, and in China, development of the Chinese Economic and Industrial Zone in Chattogram and the modernisation of Mongla Port in southwestern Bangladesh.
Bose noted that Dhaka had turned to Delhi earlier this year for diesel supplies amid the global fuel crunch resulting from the US-Israel war on Iran, indicating Bangladesh recognised the value of stable ties.
“There is a pragmatic understanding on both sides that rebuilding Delhi-Dhaka ties should be a priority,” she said.
The coming visits are also designed to signal that Bangladesh has achieved “domestic normalcy” following the months of unrest and upheaval following Hasina’s ousting, according to Mustafa Izzuddin, a senior international affairs analyst at Singapore-based policy consultancy Solaris Strategies.
“The strategic objective is to restore economic relations with countries that matter,” he said, noting that Dhaka was seeking formal “sectoral dialogue partner” status with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, which would allow it to engage in specific policy areas without full membership of the bloc.
Mustafa, who is also a visiting international relations professor at the Islamic University of Indonesia, added that it was only a matter of time before Bangladesh’s new prime minister visited India, which remained “vitally important” for Dhaka’s economic development.
Any Indian concerns about the order of the visits stemmed from “China threat perception and fears about losing influence”, Shahjalal University’s Mohammad said, pointing to last month’s visit to India by Bangladesh’s foreign minister as a signal that “Dhaka wants a respectful, balanced relationship”. – SCMP















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