Bangladesh Isn't Fighting This War. It's Rationing Fuel Because of It.
170 million people in Bangladesh started fuel rationing this week. They're 3,000 miles from the conflict. The domino chain connecting strikes to shortages reveals who really pays.
Bangladesh started fuel rationing this week. Ten litres per car, two per motorcycle. Daily limits.
The country's 170 million people aren't fighting anyone. They're 3,000 miles from the war. But they're paying for it anyway.
The Chain Nobody Sees
Here's the domino effect nobody's connecting:
U.S. and Israel strike Iranian oil facilities → Strait of Hormuz disrupted → tankers won't risk the route → 72% of Bangladesh's LNG supply threatened → prices spike → panic buying → rationing.
Bangladesh depends on Qatar and the UAE for nearly three-quarters of its natural gas. Pakistan gets 99% of its LNG from Qatar. Both countries store one to two weeks of fuel. That's it.
When the Strait shuts, alternative routes exist. But ships won't take them. Too risky, too expensive. The supply doesn't disappear — it just becomes unaffordable.
Who Pays
Pakistan raised fuel prices this week and started planning work-from-home policies to conserve energy. Sri Lanka's watching the same supply lines. Nepal imports through the same chokepoint.
Bangladesh's government insists there's no shortage. They've secured 280,000 tonnes of diesel for March. But rationing went into effect anyway because panic buying emptied stations faster than imports could arrive.
The Bangladesh Petroleum Corporation imposed a tiered system to prevent hoarding. It didn't stop the queues. Motorists lined up for hours Saturday. Some stations ran dry.
Djibouti's finance minister warned the war would "bring severe economic consequences for developing countries." He's watching the same thing happen across Africa — states that depend on maritime trade getting pulled into economic crisis by shocks they can't control.
The Gap
Western outlets frame this as market volatility. Energy traders hedging risk. Supply chain adjustments.
South Asian coverage shows people sitting in fuel queues wondering why their lives just got harder because of a war they have no voice in.
The Albis Perception Gap Index scored coverage of this crisis at 5.13 — visible divergence. Middle Eastern outlets frame it as regional fallout from conflict. South Asian outlets emphasize domestic panic and economic vulnerability. The emotional gap's even wider.
What Nobody's Saying
Wars have invisible victims.
Bangladesh didn't strike Iran. Iran didn't strike Bangladesh. Israel and the U.S. aren't targeting South Asia.
But 170 million people are now rationing fuel. Pakistan's considering shutting schools to save diesel. Nepal's watching prices climb. Sri Lanka's already dealing with its own economic crisis — this makes it worse.
84% of crude oil moving through the Strait of Hormuz goes to Asia. When that route closes, the people who pay aren't the ones dropping bombs. They're the ones who can't afford the detour.
The distance between conflict and consequence is 3,000 miles. The gap between who decides and who suffers is total.
Sources & Verification
Based on 5 sources from 4 regions
- ReutersInternational
- CNBCNorth America
- KplerInternational
- The FederalSouth Asia
- Al JazeeraMiddle East
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