Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Bangladesh: Deadly anti-blasphemy protests prompt national shutdown


“We have called two days of nationwide strike to protest the mass killing of Hifajat-e-Islam workers and supporters on Sunday and Monday.”

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source/Credit: RT America
By RT America | May 08, 2013

Opposition parties in Bangladesh have called a two day national shutdown, following fierce clashes between security forces and crowds of Islamists that left dozens dead according to official reports, while unofficial sources talk about hundreds of dead.

Since local TV stations which broadcast the violence, Diganta Television and Islamic, were taken off the air, there is scarce information about what is really happening on the ground.

The reports coming from witnesses, social media and blurry mobile footage suggest that over 400 people have been killed and up to 2,500 injured as the government crushed the protest deploying army units to allegedly clean the streets after the massacre. These reports however could not be independently verified.

At least 38 people have been killed according to the AFP and hundreds more injured leading the police to ban all rallies in the Bangladeshi capital.

The strike, effective Wednesday is organized by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and its Islamist allies in protest of “mass killing” during the clashes on Sunday and Monday  when police attacked a mass rally in central Dhaka.

“We have called two days of nationwide strike to protest the mass killing of Hifajat-e-Islam workers and supporters on Sunday and Monday,” BNP spokesman Khandaker Mosharraf told the AFP on Tuesday.

Meanwhile 194 activists of the Hefajat-e-Islam (Protectorate of Islam), a hardline Islamic group behind the violence were indicted by the police.

There are also reports of the government cutting off electricity and approaching the protesters with weapons.

The government of Bangladesh has rejected the Hefajat-e-Islam demands and a May 5 deadline to introduce a new blasphemy law, reinstate the role of Allah in the constitution, make Islamic education mandatory and ban women from mixing with men.

Opposition parties in Bangladesh have called a two day national shutdown, following fierce clashes between security forces and crowds of Islamists that left dozens dead according to official reports, while unofficial sources talk about hundreds of dead.

Since local TV stations which broadcast the violence, Diganta Television and Islamic, were taken off the air, there is scarce information about what is really happening on the ground.

The reports coming from witnesses, social media and blurry mobile footage suggest that over 400 people have been killed and up to 2,500 injured as the government crushed the protest deploying army units to allegedly clean the streets after the massacre. These reports however could not be independently verified.

At least 38 people have been killed according to the AFP and hundreds more injured leading the police to ban all rallies in the Bangladeshi capital.

The strike, effective Wednesday is organized by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and its Islamist allies in protest of “mass killing” during the clashes on Sunday and Monday  when police attacked a mass rally in central Dhaka.

“We have called two days of nationwide strike to protest the mass killing of Hifajat-e-Islam workers and supporters on Sunday and Monday,” BNP spokesman Khandaker Mosharraf told the AFP on Tuesday.

Meanwhile 194 activists of the Hefajat-e-Islam (Protectorate of Islam), a hardline Islamic group behind the violence were indicted by the police.

There are also reports of the government cutting off electricity and approaching the protesters with weapons.

The government of Bangladesh has rejected the Hefajat-e-Islam demands and a May 5 deadline to introduce a new blasphemy law, reinstate the role of Allah in the constitution, make Islamic education mandatory and ban women from mixing with men.

On Monday, UN chief Ban Ki Moon, encouraged the government and the opposition to come into terms.

“The Secretary-General calls on all concerned to stop the violence, to respect the law and to express their views peacefully,” a statement read.

Overall Bangladesh has been locked in political and secular division since January, after the government created a tribunal to investigate crimes during a 1971 war of independence from Pakistan.  Three leading figures have so far been convicted for their role in during the independence struggle.

The opposition party at the time opposed Bangladeshi independence from Pakistan in the war and now refuses to acknowledge its role in the alleged murder, rape and torture during the conflict.

There is a “proxy war” raging between the opposition and the government and both sides are using “different pretext to wage this war,” independent journalist Haroon Siddiqui explained to RT.

“The government is accused of using the court to get level with the opposition. The opposition is using Islam and blasphemy to get back at the government,” Siddiqui says.





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