<p>Dhaka: Bangladesh's ousted prime minister <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/sheikh-hasina">Sheikh Hasina</a>, who fled to India following mass protests against her government, is going to stay in Delhi 'for a little while', her son Sajeeb Wazed Joy said on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Hasina, the 76-year-old Awami League leader, landed at an airbase near Delhi on Monday and later shifted to a safe location in Delhi under tight security. She is accompanied by her sister Sheikh Rehana.</p>.<p>In a video interview with German broadcaster Deutsche Welle, Joy was asked about Hasina’s reported plans to seek asylum in a third country.</p>.Bangladesh army refused to suppress protest, sealing Hasina's fate.<p>“These are all rumours. She has not made a decision on that yet. She is going to stay in Delhi for a little while. My sister is with her. So she is not alone,” Joy said.</p>.<p>Hasina’s daughter Saima Wazed is World Health Organisation’s Regional Director for the South-East Asia Region, which has its headquarters in New Delhi.</p>.<p>Hasina's plan to travel to London has hit a roadblock following the UK's hesitation to provide her refuge. Rehana's daughter Tulip Siddiq is a member of the British Parliament.</p>.<p>Joy, who spoke on the current volatile situation in Bangladesh, was also asked if he has any plan to join politics when he laughed it off saying: “There is no such plan right now. This is the third time a coup d'état was staged against our family.” All his family members, except Hasina, were already staying abroad for a long time and settled in their respective lives, he said and answered in negative to Sheikh Rehana and or any other family member’s chance of joining politics.</p>
<p>Dhaka: Bangladesh's ousted prime minister <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/sheikh-hasina">Sheikh Hasina</a>, who fled to India following mass protests against her government, is going to stay in Delhi 'for a little while', her son Sajeeb Wazed Joy said on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Hasina, the 76-year-old Awami League leader, landed at an airbase near Delhi on Monday and later shifted to a safe location in Delhi under tight security. She is accompanied by her sister Sheikh Rehana.</p>.<p>In a video interview with German broadcaster Deutsche Welle, Joy was asked about Hasina’s reported plans to seek asylum in a third country.</p>.Bangladesh army refused to suppress protest, sealing Hasina's fate.<p>“These are all rumours. She has not made a decision on that yet. She is going to stay in Delhi for a little while. My sister is with her. So she is not alone,” Joy said.</p>.<p>Hasina’s daughter Saima Wazed is World Health Organisation’s Regional Director for the South-East Asia Region, which has its headquarters in New Delhi.</p>.<p>Hasina's plan to travel to London has hit a roadblock following the UK's hesitation to provide her refuge. Rehana's daughter Tulip Siddiq is a member of the British Parliament.</p>.<p>Joy, who spoke on the current volatile situation in Bangladesh, was also asked if he has any plan to join politics when he laughed it off saying: “There is no such plan right now. This is the third time a coup d'état was staged against our family.” All his family members, except Hasina, were already staying abroad for a long time and settled in their respective lives, he said and answered in negative to Sheikh Rehana and or any other family member’s chance of joining politics.</p>