Press Release

The conviction of Nobel Laureate Muhammad Yunus appears to be politically motivated, the Clooney Foundation for Justice’s TrialWatch initiative concluded in a report .


Published Date: 2024-03-02


The conviction of Nobel Laureate Muhammad Yunus appears to be politically motivated, the Clooney Foundation for Justice’s TrialWatch initiative concluded in a report .

Based on its review of the proceedings, there are significant grounds for finding that the case against Professor Yunus constitutes an abuse of process, the report said, and it urges the Labour Appellate Tribunal to overturn the conviction for alleged violations of the country’s labour law.

Yunus’s supporters say that the case is part of a relentless campaign by the administration to discredit and undermine him. Over 150 cases have reportedly been brought against Yunus and his affiliated companies since the current administration came to power in 2009.

Hundreds of global leaders and Nobel Laureates, including former US President Barack Obama and former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, have signed two open letters in which they described the recent cases against Yunus as “continuous judicial harassment” and expressed their “profound concern.”

On January 1, 2024, less than seven months after charges were framed, Professor Yunus was convicted and sentenced to six months imprisonment and a fine. The case was based on alleged violations of Bangladesh’s Labour Law by Grameen Telecom, a company that Yunus founded in the 1990s to help the poor acquire cell phones and use them to earn a living.

Yunus, who serves as the company’s non-executive Chairperson of the Board, was convicted alongside three other Grameen Telecom Board members targeted for prosecution out of the eight members of the Board of Directors. All four defendants appealed their convictions on January 28, 2024, and the Labour Appellate Tribunal has called for the file on March 3. Pending the appeal, Yunus and his co-defendants are free on bail. Meanwhile, also on March 3 a different court will hold a hearing in another case against Yunus and members of the Grameen Telecom Board.

TrialWatch’s report finds that Yunus and others should never have been charged or prosecuted for Grameen Telecom’s alleged violations of the Labour Law absent any evidence of his ‘active concern’ in the relevant decision-making by Grameen Telecom. Based on the totality of the indicia described above – the fraught political climate in which the trial took place, the many other cases brought against Yunus, the statements made by the government about Yunus, the expedited nature of the proceedings, the apparent selective targeting of Yunus amongst many other individuals at Grameen Telecom arguably subject to the same law, the authorities’ unusually aggressive and potentially unforeseeable interpretation of the Labour Law, and the reported procedural irregularities – there are significant grounds to conclude that the trial and conviction of Yunus was driven by improper motive. The Labour Appellate Tribunal should overturn his conviction on appeal.

TrialWatch calls on Bangladesh’s Labour Appellate Tribunal to overturn the conviction of Yunus and his co-defendants. TrialWatch will update its reporting after the end of the appeal proceedings.

To access the full TrialWatch report and press statement, please visit:

Statement: https://cfj.org/news/bangladeshs-labour-appellate-tribunal-should-overturn-conviction-of-nobel-laureate-muhammad-yunus/

Full Report: https://cfj.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Bangladesh_Yunus-Preliminary-Report-March-2024-Final.pdf


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