Here’s the short version: I couldn’t verify that any Yunus cabinet ministers officially backed or presented a “Greater Bangladesh” map, and I also couldn’t confirm a direct public response from Yunus himself from the material available to me right now. What is clear is that India has repeatedly rejected Bangladesh interim-government assertions in recent diplomatic exchanges, and the wider India-Bangladesh relationship has been tense in recent months.

What can be said safely

  • I could not confirm, from the available reporting, the names of any ministers in Yunus’s cabinet who formally supported or unveiled a “Greater Bangladesh” map.
  • I also could not verify that the Bangladesh government issued a specific, official response to Indian objections about that map from the accessible sources.
  • I could not confirm a direct statement from Yunus addressing the map itself.

Context around the controversy

The broader context is that Yunus, as Bangladesh’s interim chief adviser, has been associated in media reporting with a harder line on sovereignty and strategic positioning, which has fed debate in India-Bangladesh relations. India’s official position in similar disputes has been to categorically reject assertions it sees as unfriendly or destabilizing.

What this means

At the moment, the most accurate answer is that the map claim appears to be discussed more in political and media circles than clearly documented as an officially adopted government position. Without a primary statement or a fuller report naming the ministers involved, it would be risky to attribute support to specific members of the Yunus administration. TL;DR: no solid verification yet for which ministers supported the map, no confirmed official Bangladesh reply to India’s objections, and no confirmed Yunus statement on the map itself.