Bangladesh’s turbulent political transition has produced many legal shocks, but few as striking as the unravelling of a high-profile murder FIR filed against former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. What was initially projected as a serious criminal case has now exposed deep flaws in investigation, documentation, and credibility, raising disturbing questions about the use of law as a political weapon. At the centre of the controversy is a murder FIR in which investigators could not even trace the alleged victim, turning a grave accusation into a symbol of institutional breakdown.
The case dates back to the violent protests of 2024, a period marked by chaos, political vendettas, and mass filing of cases against leaders of the Awami League. During this time, a murder FIR was registered at Dhanmondi police station accusing Sheikh Hasina and more than a hundred others of attempting to kill a man identified in the complaint. The FIR alleged that the victim had been attacked during unrest linked to protests, an accusation that immediately attracted national and international attention because of the stature of the accused.
As the investigation progressed, the Police Bureau of Investigation found itself confronting an uncomfortable reality. The alleged victim named in the murder FIR could not be located at the address provided. His national identity number did not match any verified record. No hospital documents, injury reports, or credible witnesses could be produced to support the claim that an attempt on his life had ever occurred. In legal terms, the foundation of the murder FIR began to crumble piece by piece.
In its report submitted to the court, the PBI stated that repeated efforts to trace the victim had failed and that essential facts in the FIR could not be verified. This admission was extraordinary, as a murder FIR is among the most serious instruments in criminal law, meant to be backed by strong preliminary evidence. Instead, investigators acknowledged that the case suffered from “factual inconsistencies,” effectively confirming what critics had long alleged: that the FIR may have been filed without due diligence.
The political context surrounding the murder FIR cannot be ignored. After Sheikh Hasina was forced out of office in August 2024, she was named in hundreds of criminal cases across Bangladesh, including an unusually high number of murder-related accusations. Supporters of the former prime minister argue that the sudden explosion of cases reflects political retribution rather than genuine criminal accountability. In this environment, the controversial murder FIR came to be seen as part of a broader pattern of legal pressure aimed at permanently sidelining the Awami League leadership.
What makes this episode particularly alarming is that the murder FIR passed through initial police scrutiny despite lacking basic verification. Legal experts have questioned how such a serious case could be registered without confirming the identity of the victim, the authenticity of documents, or the existence of medical evidence. The failure points to systemic weaknesses and suggests that law enforcement agencies may have been influenced by political considerations during a highly volatile period.
The PBI’s report also hinted at institutional pressure, noting that investigators faced resistance when attempting to submit findings that undermined the murder FIR. This revelation has fueled concerns that investigative agencies are operating in a constrained environment where outcomes are sometimes expected to align with prevailing political narratives. When even a murder FIR is vulnerable to such pressure, confidence in the neutrality of the justice system inevitably suffers.
For Sheikh Hasina and her party, the collapse of this murder FIR reinforces their claim that many cases filed against them are “ghost cases,” designed to create headlines, justify arrests, and intimidate political opponents rather than deliver justice. They argue that if a murder accusation can proceed without a victim, then the threshold for criminal prosecution has been dangerously lowered.
The interim administration, led by Muhammad Yunus, maintains that it is committed to accountability and insists that investigations will proceed wherever credible evidence exists. Officials argue that the exposure of flaws in the murder FIR demonstrates that institutions are capable of self-correction. However, critics counter that the damage is already done, as the filing of such cases itself becomes a tool of punishment through prolonged legal harassment.
As the court prepares to consider the PBI’s findings, the fate of this murder FIR has become symbolic of Bangladesh’s broader struggle between justice and political expediency. The episode underscores the need for strict safeguards in the registration of serious criminal cases and for insulating investigative agencies from political influence.
Ultimately, the unraveling of this murder FIR is not just about one former prime minister or one failed case. It is a warning sign about how easily the gravest legal accusations can be diluted when institutions bend under pressure. In a country seeking stability after political upheaval, restoring credibility to the justice system may prove far more difficult than filing another FIR.































