Mahfuz Alam, a prominent organiser of the July 2026 mass uprising and a former adviser to the interim administration of Bangladesh, has issued a detailed statement regarding the current domestic political landscape. In a comprehensive social media publication on Facebook, Mr Alam asserted that a series of strategic missteps, institutional failures, and compromised decisions by the interim government have allowed the ousted Awami League to regain political relevance. He explicitly attributed this development to specific structural, administrative, and political factors.
Direct Critiques of Administrative and Governance Failures
Mr Alam initiated his assessment by defining the political nature of the deposed ruling party, stating that the organization operates less like a standard political party and more as a deep-seated theology, which he claims is now seeing a resurgence among its loyalists. He identified the primary catalyst for this resurgence as an ongoing ideological attempt to position the accomplishments of the 2024 uprising in direct opposition to the historical liberation war of 1971. According to his statement, the political revival of the Awami League commenced the moment anti-independence factions sought to frame the recent student-led revolution against the foundational heritage of 1971.
Furthermore, Mr Alam directed severe criticism toward the interim government’s increasing reliance on non-elected bureaucratic channels rather than transparent political processes. He noted:
“The League returned the day the interim government shifted from being political to bureaucratic, and decisions began to be made by a bureaucratised kitchen cabinet. The majority of the individuals within that kitchen cabinet were covert agents of Jamat, BNP, or the League.”
Social Unrest, Judicial Compromises, and Student Demoralisation
The statement also outlined how unchecked religious extremism and a lack of accountability concerning minority rights have inadvertently validated the political narrative of the former regime. Mr Alam pointed out that the failure of state and social groups to protect vulnerable communities directly weakened the revolutionary mandate of the uprising.
The specific socio-political factors highlighted by Mahfuz Alam as key indicators of the Awami League’s political resurgence are systematised below:
| Sequence of Failure | Identified Cause of Political Regression | Operational Consequences |
| First Phase | Ideological manipulation of history. | Framing the 2024 uprising as an assault on the legacy of the 1971 liberation war. |
| Second Phase | Bureaucratisation of the executive branch. | Transition of authority to an insulated kitchen cabinet allegedly housing partisan loyalists. |
| Third Phase | Tolerance of religious extremism. | Unchecked attacks on shrines (mazars) and the forced expulsion of dissidents from mosques. |
| Fourth Phase | Failure to protect minority rights. | Silence from erstwhile repressed groups during instances of violence against Hindu citizens. |
| Fifth Phase | Institutional decay of the student movement. | Failure of student bodies to form revolutionary organizations, devolving instead into mob-centric groups. |
| Sixth Phase | Political compromises on justice. | Transformation of institutional reforms and judicial processes into bargaining chips for major political parties. |
| Seventh Phase | Relinquishing the July Manifesto. | Surrendering the foundational charter of the July movement to state bureaucrats and vested interest groups. |
Judicial Compromises and Concluding Remarks
Mr Alam expressed profound disappointment regarding the dilution of accountability mechanisms, noting that judicial processes and national institutional reforms are being compromised to serve as strategic bargaining tools for established political parties during electoral negotiations. He further observed that the foundational principles of the July Declaration have been systematically undermined after being handed over to entrenched bureaucrats and external interest groups.
Concluding his analysis on a satirical note regarding public perceptions and blame allocation, Mr Alam remarked that the Awami League would inevitably complete its return because public discourse tends to attribute all institutional failures solely to his individual actions. He concluded his text with a traditional Arabic invocation of mortality and resignation.
