Sentences Handed Down in Absentia
A Bangladeshi court has sentenced British MP Tulip Siddiq to four years imprisonment on corruption charges, marking her second conviction in less than a year. The court simultaneously issued prison terms against her aunt, former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, and two other family members in separate corruption cases. All defendants were tried in absentia and have denied the allegations.
Labour Party Condemns Legal Process
A Labour Party spokesperson strongly criticized the proceedings: “Tulip Siddiq has been denied access to a fair legal process and was never formally notified about specific charges. Despite repeated requests from her legal team to Bangladeshi authorities, fundamental rights to legal representation were disregarded. We cannot recognize this verdict under such circumstances.”
Previous Conviction and Property Case
The new sentence follows Siddiq’s December 2025 conviction where she received a two-year term for allegedly influencing her aunt to improperly acquire land near Dhaka. The MP for Hampstead and Highgate denounced both cases as “fundamentally flawed proceedings riddled with procedural failures from start to finish.”
“These allegations remain completely baffling,” Siddiq stated. “Bangladeshi authorities have never directly contacted me despite circulating these claims for eighteen months.”
Ministerial Resignation and Ethics Review
Siddiq resigned as Treasury minister in January 2025 following scrutiny over connections to her aunt’s political network, including properties in London linked to Hasina’s associates. While the Prime Minister’s ethics adviser found no evidence of misconduct, officials noted concern over Siddiq’s “failure to recognize potential reputational risks” from these associations.
In her resignation letter, Siddiq maintained she had “acted with full transparency” but stepped down to prevent becoming “a governmental distraction.”
Political Context of Prosecutions
The legal actions against Hasina’s family commenced after her 2024 ouster following mass protests, ending her fifteen-year leadership. The former Prime Minister fled to India before later receiving a death sentence for alleged crimes against humanity during student protest crackdowns. Hasina has denounced all charges as “politically motivated judicial bias.”

