Bangladesh: Hindus are Victims of a Well-Orchestrated Conspiracy

 

Bangladesh: Hindus are Victims of a 

      Well-Orchestrated Conspiracy

                                            Nidhu Bhusan Das

It is Iqbal Hossain. Obviously, he is not a Hindu. Iqbal (35) placed a copy of the Quran at Nanua Dighir Par Durga Puja pandal in Comilla district on October 13. And the large scale violence against the Hindus of Bangladesh was unleashed which drew global attention and condemnation. Is it accidental or a well- coordinated conspiracy?

Superintendent of Police, Comilla Farooq Ahmed said the person is a resident of Sujanagar of the district. The police identified the accused depending on CCTV footage. The footage showed that on relevant day, Iqbal took the Islamic holy book Quran from a mosque and placed it on the knee of a statue of the Hindu god Hanuman in the shrine. He was later seen walking away with the Hindu God’s club in his hand.

Police say Iqbal Hossain is a drifter. Iqbal's mother reportedly claimed that Iqbal was a drug addict and had some psychological issues for the last 10 years. Will Iqbal’s being a “drifter”, “drug addict” and having “some psychological issues” have bearing on the case in the relevant laws of Bangladesh? It is an intriguing question.

Police arrested another person Md Foyez Ahmed, 41, on October 13 and got him on remand to interrogate him. He posted a Facebook live from the festival venue on that day that went viral triggering the violence.

When was the video shot, was it after the holy book was retrieved by the police? If it was shot soon after the Quran was placed by the accused, a coordinated action may be presumed. If it was shot in the presence of the police who retrieved it, the innocence of the concerned police may be taken to be questionable.

The CCTV footage at least shows that the Hindus of Bangladesh have been victimized by Islamists with a well-orchestrated conspiracy during their greatest puja festival. Will the culprits be brought to justice and awarded exemplary punishment? Secular people like Bangladesh poet & columnist Sohrab Hassan is outspoken: “In the country where violence is done with impunity, the religious minority can never think they are safe.”

The large scale violence against the Hindus this time again puts to question the intention of Bangladesh dispensation regarding the nature of demography they want to have. Is it that they have the goal to have a religiously homogeneous population with Islam as state religion through ethnic cleansing? A United Nations Commission of Experts described ethnic cleansing as “… a purposeful policy designed by one ethnic or religious group to remove by violent and terror-inspiring means the civilian population of another ethnic or religious group from certain geographic areas.

Ethnic cleansing, According to Britannica, is the attempt to create ethnically homogeneous geographic areas through the deportation or forcible displacement of persons belonging to particular ethnic groups. Ethnic cleansing sometimes involves the removal of all physical vestiges of the targeted group through the destruction of monuments, cemeteries, and houses of worship.

Even after the emergence of Bangladesh as a secular nation, the migration of Hindus and reduction of Hindu population continue which suggests religious persecution. The votaries of Islamic state are active in Bangladesh with dominance. The secular forces are apparently weak but when they act they do it determinedly. Here lies the hope. However, the decisive action by the government of the country in respect of the violence will indicate what is ahead. If the forces in favour of ethnic cleansing can go berserk with impunity, it may not augur well for  Amar Sonar Bangla.

Bangladesh could not forsake the heritage of religious persecution

 

Bangladesh Could not Forsake the Heritage  of Religious Persecution

Nidhu Bhusan Das

“In the country where violence is done with impunity, the religious minority can never think they are safe.”

                        -Bangladesh poet & columnist Sohrab Hassan

Bangladesh has drifted a long distance along the path of Islamist fundamentalism, communal discourse and violence since the tragedy of 15 August 1975 that saw the resurrection of communal forces in the country.Islamists, it appears, direct and dominate the political discourse of the country. This indicates the weak state of the secular forces in the country which emerged as a secular republic through a glorious Liberation war in 1971.They have so far failed to restore the 1972 Constitution of the country. Bangladesh could split off from Pakistan but could not forsake the heritage of religious persecution.

The religious minority Hindus and their places of worship are often attacked and the community have often fallen victim to communal violence in the country of 169 million. Silent migration from the country is relentless and the Hindu population has dwindled to around 10 percent. This year the Durga Puja was jeopardized following widespread violence by the Islamists. Such incidents are not new. True Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has been uncompromising against Islamism and communalism and her Government was prompt to take action against the culprits.

Community leader Gobinda Chandra Pramanik told the media that at least 150 Hindus were injured across the country and at least 80 makeshift temples had been attacked. Authorities did not confirm the figures. Protests by the Islamists began on 13 October after footage emerged of a Quran being placed on the knee of a Hindu god during Durga Puja celebrations. The Islamists would not let the law to take its course but come out in strength to terrorise the minority community and vandalise their puja pandals and temples. The minority community makes up about 10 per cent of the population.

Two Hindu men have been killed in fresh communal violence in Bangladesh, police officials said Saturday, taking the number of deaths to six from recent unrest in the Muslim-majority country, it is reported. The Anti-Hindu violence spread to more than a dozen districts across Bangladesh.

“One person was killed and 30 others were injured in mob attacks on ISKCON temple in Bangladesh's Noakhali on Friday. The incident unfolded in Chowmuhani area where Section 144 has been imposed to keep the situation under control. It is with great grief that we share the news of an ISKCON member, Partha Das, who was brutally killed yesterday by a mob of over 200 people. His body was found in a pond next to the temple. We call on the Govt. of Bangladesh for immediate action in this regard," the official Twitter handle of the ISKCON said.

 Police said the latest violence occurred in the southern town of Begumganj when hundreds of Muslims formed a street procession after Friday prayers on the final day of the puja. More than 200 protesters attacked a temple (ISKCON) where members of the Hindu community were preparing to perform the last rites of the 10-day festival, local police station Chief Shah Imran told reporters.

The attackers beat and stabbed to death an executive member of the temple committee, he said. On the morning of 16 October, another Hindu man's body was found near a pond next to the temple, district police chief Shahidul Islam told the media. "Two men have died since the attack. We are working to find the culprits," he added.

Earlier, at least four people were killed on the day the violence began when police opened fire on a crowd of around 500 people attacking a Hindu temple in Hajiganj, one of several towns hit by the disturbances.

Local authorities said they have deployed extra security including paramilitary border guards to control any further unrest.On 15 October (Friday) violence broke out in the capital Dhaka and Chittagong, prompting police to fire tear gas and rubber bullets at thousands of brick-throwing Muslim protesters.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina met leaders of the Hindu community on14 October and promised stern action."So far around 90 people have been arrested. We will also hunt down all the masterminds," Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan said.

  The Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was killed in a pre-dawn Army coup on 15 August 1975. Later on 3 November that year his four confidantes and national leaders who led the liberation war of 1971 in his name- former Vice-President Syed Nazrul Islam, former Prime Minister Tajuddin Ahmed, former Home Minister A H M Kamruzzaman and Captain (Rtd) Mansur Ali - were killed in Dhaka Central Jail where they had been incarcerated by the ambitious and misled military leaders.  

The Hindu population in Bangladesh has dwindled progressively since independence in 1971. It is a fact that population of Bangladesh is on the increase and a reverse trend is evident in case of the Hindus. Not that the birth rate has decreased and mortality rate scaled up among the Hindus. Then what could be the reasonable cause for the unnatural / unbiological decline of the second largest population of the country which fought for independence from the Islamic Republic of Pakistan with the avowed pledge to establish a secular state based on a linguistic-cultural nationalism rooted in the Language Movement of 1952?

The plausible answer is Bangladesh could split off from Pakistan but could not forsake the heritage of religious persecution. The heritage may be traced to the Noakhali Genocide of 1946 which made the Hindu persecution so pronounced. British historian Yasmin Khan in her prize winning book The Great Partition: The Making of India and Pakistan  tells us at least 5,000 Hindus were massacred, hundreds of Hindu women raped and thousands forcibly converted to Islam; many more fled to India. Even Mahatma Gandhi’s peace mission to Noakhali failed to quell the atrocities which continued unabated during his stay. Gandhi left Noakhali, urging the Hindus there to “Quit Noakhali or Die” (NY Times. 8 April 1947).The same template of persecution is perpetuated by the Islamists in Bangladesh.

What Gandhi said proved prophetic. Even after the emergence of Bangladesh, the Hindu population dwindled from 13.5% in 1974 to 8.96% in 2011, a nearly 33% decline. This suggests the prevalence of a deeply anti-Hindu environment in the country. Besides, on the eve of the second anniversary of victory in the Bangladesh Liberation War for tenable reasons the general clemency for the Islamist collaborators was announced. This paved the way for their rehabilitation and propagation of Islamist ideology vis-a-vis the nascent secularism in Bangladesh.

True, the Constitution adopted by the Constituent Assembly in 1972 made Bangladesh a secular democratic republic. The fundamental rights enshrined in the third part of the constitution,inter alia, promises equality before law, no discrimination on grounds of religion, right to protection of law, protection of  right to life and personal liberty and freedom of religion. The noble constitutional provisions could not come to the rescue of the Hindus because matching actions were not taken. In contravention of the    non-communal provisions of the new constitution, they retained the anti-Hindu Enemy Property Act of Pakistan and rechristened it as Vested Property Act in 1974.Bangladesh Government thereby vested itself with the “enemy” properties previously seized since the 1965 Indo-Pak War and continued to use the discriminatory law to confiscate the land owned by the Hindus.

 Approximately 1.2 million Hindu families, or 44% of all Hindu households, have been affected by Enemy/Vested Property Act. Hindus have been dispossessed of more than 2 million acres of land. Even after the Restoration of Vested Property Act passed in 2001, land encroachment involving Hindu land has continued but mostly during BNP governments. Subsequent amendments of the original constitution made the religious minorities including Hindus second class citizens and encouraged atrocities against the Hindus.

In the ruling Awami League there had been wolves-in- sheep’s clothing that formed and led the puppet Government installed by the military. So, many avowed programmes and plans could not be implemented in the war ravaged country right away. Vis-à-vis this situation when Bangabandhu took decisive steps, forces defeated in the liberation war both within and outside the ruling party surreptitiously organised the coup and killed the Father of the Nation and torpedoed the dream of nation.

A seminal book by Professor Abul Barkat of Dhaka University, Inquiry into Causes and Consequences of Deprivation of Hindu Minorities in Bangladesh through the Vested Property Act, published in 2000 shows that the largest beneficiary of Hindu property transfer in the past 35 years of Bangladeshi independence were people belonging to Awami League (the wolves-in- sheep’s clothing).They grabbed 44.2 per cent of the land. Other grabbers are affiliated with BNP (31.7%), Jatiya Party (5.8 %), Jamat-e-Islami (4.8%) and others (13.5%). The greatest appropriation of Hindu property took place immediately after independence during the first Awami League government (1972–75) and during the first period of rule of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (1976-1980). The confiscation of the land broke the economic backbone of the Hindus. So, migration of the Hindus is the natural consequence.

 

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