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Bangladesh police break up anti-PM protest with tear gas, rubber bullets

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AFP Published October 28, 2023 Updated about an hour ago


Supporters of Bangladesh Nationalist Party gather at Naya Paltan area to hold a rally in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 28. — Reuters
Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists light fire during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP

Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists light fire during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP
Police personnel stand guard in front of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP

Police personnel stand guard in front of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP
Supporters of Bangladesh Nationalist Party gather at Naya Paltan area to hold a rally in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 28. — Reuters


Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists light fire during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP

Police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at huge crowds of Bangladesh opposition supporters on Saturday to break up a giant protest against the prime minister, with one officer killed and scores of people injured in several hours of violent clashes in central Dhaka.

More than 100,000 supporters of two major Bangladesh opposition parties rallied to demand Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina step down to allow a free and fair vote under a neutral government.

Live footage on the verified Facebook page of the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) showed thousands of people running for safety as sound grenades went off one after another and plumes of black smoke rose from the roads.

AFP correspondents said the violence spread in roads and alleys in the centre of the capital as police fired tear gas and rubber shotgun rounds, while the protesters threw stones and bricks.

One officer was killed and more than 100 injured, said Dhaka Metropolitan Police spokesman Faruk Hossain, telling AFP: “The constable was hacked in the head by opposition activists.”

The protests by the BNP and the Jamaat-i-Islami were the biggest so far this year, AFP journalists on site said, and marked a new phase in their protests with a general election due within three months.

Hasina — daughter of the country’s founding leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman — has been in power for 15 years and has overseen rapid economic growth with Bangladesh overtaking neighbouring India in GDP per capita, but inflation has risen and her government is accused of corruption and human rights abuses.

At least 20 people were rushed to Dhaka Medical College Hospital, the country’s largest, with wounds from rubber bullets, police inspector Bacchu Mia told AFP.

The clashes began in front of the city’s largest Catholic church when rowdy opposition supporters fought with sticks and allegedly torched a bus and a police post.

The BNP has called a nationwide strike on Sunday to protest the violence.

“Police and armed ruling party cadres attacked our peaceful rally,” party spokesman Zahir Uddin Swapan told AFP.

Months of protests​

The resurgent opposition has been mounting protests to press their demands for months, despite the BNP’s ailing leader Khaleda Zia, a two-time premier and old foe of Hasina’s, being effectively under house arrest after a conviction on corruption charges.

Hundreds of opposition activists were detained in the days running up to the rally, officials confirmed, but her supporters poured into Dhaka on Saturday, crammed into buses despite checkpoints on roads into the capital, and even riding on top of packed trains.

“Vote thief, vote thief, Sheikh Hasina vote thief,” chanted the crowd at a demonstration in front of the BNP headquarters.

Student activist Sekandar Badsha, 24, from Chittagong, said: “We demand the immediate resignation of the Hasina government, release of our leader Khaleda Zia and establishing the people’s right to vote.”

At least 10,000 police were deployed, officials said.

Dhaka Metropolitan Police spokesman Hossain said that at least 100,000 people had joined the BNP rally, while up to 25,000 were at the Jamaat protest near the city’s main commercial district — which was banned by police.

BNP spokesman Swapan told AFP that there were more than one million people at its rally, which he described as its “final call” for Hasina to resign.

If she does not step down voluntarily — widely seen as inconceivable — the party has threatened to call more aggressive protests such as strikes and blockades.

Western governments have expressed concern over the political climate in Bangladesh, where Hasina’s ruling Awami League dominates the legislature and runs it virtually as a rubber stamp.

Her security forces are accused of detaining tens of thousands of opposition activists, killing hundreds in extrajudicial encounters and disappearing hundreds of leaders and supporters.
 
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AFP Published October 28, 2023 Updated about an hour ago


Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists light fire during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP

Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists light fire during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP
Police personnel stand guard in front of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP

Police personnel stand guard in front of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP
Supporters of Bangladesh Nationalist Party gather at Naya Paltan area to hold a rally in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 28. — Reuters

Supporters of Bangladesh Nationalist Party gather at Naya Paltan area to hold a rally in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 28. — Reuters
Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists light fire during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP

Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists light fire during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP
Police personnel stand guard in front of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP

Police personnel stand guard in front of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP
Supporters of Bangladesh Nationalist Party gather at Naya Paltan area to hold a rally in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 28. — Reuters

Supporters of Bangladesh Nationalist Party gather at Naya Paltan area to hold a rally in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 28. — Reuters
Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists light fire during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP

Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) activists light fire during a rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the release of BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia, in Dhaka, Bangladesh on October 28. — AFP

Police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at huge crowds of Bangladesh opposition supporters on Saturday to break up a giant protest against the prime minister, with one officer killed and scores of people injured in several hours of violent clashes in central Dhaka.

More than 100,000 supporters of two major Bangladesh opposition parties rallied to demand Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina step down to allow a free and fair vote under a neutral government.

Live footage on the verified Facebook page of the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) showed thousands of people running for safety as sound grenades went off one after another and plumes of black smoke rose from the roads.

AFP correspondents said the violence spread in roads and alleys in the centre of the capital as police fired tear gas and rubber shotgun rounds, while the protesters threw stones and bricks.

One officer was killed and more than 100 injured, said Dhaka Metropolitan Police spokesman Faruk Hossain, telling AFP: “The constable was hacked in the head by opposition activists.”

The protests by the BNP and the Jamaat-i-Islami were the biggest so far this year, AFP journalists on site said, and marked a new phase in their protests with a general election due within three months.

Hasina — daughter of the country’s founding leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman — has been in power for 15 years and has overseen rapid economic growth with Bangladesh overtaking neighbouring India in GDP per capita, but inflation has risen and her government is accused of corruption and human rights abuses.

At least 20 people were rushed to Dhaka Medical College Hospital, the country’s largest, with wounds from rubber bullets, police inspector Bacchu Mia told AFP.

The clashes began in front of the city’s largest Catholic church when rowdy opposition supporters fought with sticks and allegedly torched a bus and a police post.

The BNP has called a nationwide strike on Sunday to protest the violence.

“Police and armed ruling party cadres attacked our peaceful rally,” party spokesman Zahir Uddin Swapan told AFP.

Months of protests​

The resurgent opposition has been mounting protests to press their demands for months, despite the BNP’s ailing leader Khaleda Zia, a two-time premier and old foe of Hasina’s, being effectively under house arrest after a conviction on corruption charges.

Hundreds of opposition activists were detained in the days running up to the rally, officials confirmed, but her supporters poured into Dhaka on Saturday, crammed into buses despite checkpoints on roads into the capital, and even riding on top of packed trains.

“Vote thief, vote thief, Sheikh Hasina vote thief,” chanted the crowd at a demonstration in front of the BNP headquarters.

Student activist Sekandar Badsha, 24, from Chittagong, said: “We demand the immediate resignation of the Hasina government, release of our leader Khaleda Zia and establishing the people’s right to vote.”

At least 10,000 police were deployed, officials said.

Dhaka Metropolitan Police spokesman Hossain said that at least 100,000 people had joined the BNP rally, while up to 25,000 were at the Jamaat protest near the city’s main commercial district — which was banned by police.

BNP spokesman Swapan told AFP that there were more than one million people at its rally, which he described as its “final call” for Hasina to resign.

If she does not step down voluntarily — widely seen as inconceivable — the party has threatened to call more aggressive protests such as strikes and blockades.

Western governments have expressed concern over the political climate in Bangladesh, where Hasina’s ruling Awami League dominates the legislature and runs it virtually as a rubber stamp.

Her security forces are accused of detaining tens of thousands of opposition activists, killing hundreds in extrajudicial encounters and disappearing hundreds of leaders and supporters.

Anyone who lit fires in a crowded urban area - must be shot on site. And then burnt to ashes!
 
Billion dollar mara chor - Bera bhainga dilo daur. :-)

This is why she was "inaugurating" unfinished projects. so that opposition party could not inaugurate them.
 

Bangladesh opposition protest turns violent amid calls for PM to resign​

Reuters

October 28, 202310:08 AM PDT Updated 3 hours ago

DHAKA, Oct 28 (Reuters) - One police officer was killed in Bangladesh on Saturday and over 100 people injured during an opposition party protest demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and calling for a free and fair vote under a caretaker government.

Police fired tear gas and rubber bullets as clashes erupted when tens of thousands of supporters of the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) gathered in the capital Dhaka, chanting slogans against the government.

Dozens of vehicles, including police vans and ambulances, were set on fire, police and media said.

Dhaka Metropolitan Police spokesman Faruq Hossain told reporters one officer had been killed and 41 others were injured in clashes with protesters.

Several journalists were attacked and injured while trying to cover the clashes, media reports said.

Security was tightened in the city in recent days as thousands of people arrived to attend the rally. Hundreds of opposition party activists have been arrested, BNP leaders said.

The party has been calling on Hasina to resign to allow elections scheduled in January to be held under a neutral caretaker government - a demand her government has so far rejected.

1698523963368.png

Supporters of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) wave party flag during a rally at Naya Paltan area in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 28, 2023. REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir Hossain Acquire Licensing Rights

"Today's rally continued for hours in a perfectly disciplined and peaceful manner until all of a sudden the lobbing of tear gas shells started," senior BNP leader Abdul Moyeen Khan told Reuters.

"The intensity increased and violent attacks with sounds of blasts and shootings turned the whole place into a war zone."

The BNP has called for a dawn-to-dusk countrywide strike in protest against the police action.

"I came to protest the enforced disappearances, murders, and oppression that we have suffered for the past 15 years. This government is not safe anymore for even a second," BNP supporter Arif Khan said.

Hasina, who has maintained tight control since coming to power in 2009, has been accused of authoritarianism, human rights violations, cracking down on free speech and suppressing dissent while jailing her critics.

Her government is under pressure from the Western countries to hold "free and fair" elections.

In May, Washington said it would impose visa sanctions on Bangladeshis who undermine the democratic process at home, after accusations of vote-rigging and suppressing the opposition marred elections in 2014 and 2018. Hasina's government has denied the charges.

Reporting by Ruma Paul; Editing by Mike Harrison
 
Here is some analysis (what Indians expect) from a few weeks ago.

Avinash Paliwal on What Lies Ahead for Bangladesh​

“If [Prime Minister] Hasina is unable to curb electoral violence, and is unable to offer patronage to the military elites, the chances of [military] intervention increase.”

Sudha Ramachandran

By Sudha Ramachandran
September 05, 2023

Avinash Paliwal on What Lies Ahead for Bangladesh

Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) supporters shout slogans during a protest rally in Dhaka, Bangladesh, July 28, 2023.

Credit: AP Photo/Mahmud Hossain Opu

Bangladesh is due to vote in general elections in January 2024. Opposition parties are threatening to boycott the election if the Awami League government does not meet their demand for elections under a caretaker government. The opposition’s protest rallies have been peaceful so far, but this could change in the coming weeks and months, especially if the stalemate persists. The situation is complex; Bangladesh has a rich history of the military intervening in politics. Will that happen this time around? What roles are India, the United States, and China playing in the unfolding crisis?

Dr Avinash Paliwal, reader in International Relations at SOAS University in London and author of the forthcoming book “India’s Near East: A New History,” warns that if the current deadlock continues, “Bangladeshi politics could take multiple violent pathways.” In an interview with The Diplomat’s South Asia editor Sudha Ramachandran, Paliwal said that while “the re-entry of the Bangladeshi army into politics… seems unlikely” for now, the possibility cannot be ruled out “entirely.”

What lies ahead for Bangladesh if the stalemate between the Awami League government and opposition parties continues?

Bangladeshi politics could take multiple violent pathways if the current stalemate persists. For starters, political violence, already playing out on the ground, could become decentralized. The current spate of poll-related violence is largely state-led, wherein the police and local intelligence units are targeting the opposition. This is occurring in the context of the Sheikh Hasina government’s systematic campaign of enforced disappearances of Islamists and mainstream political opponents. It has created discontentment with the regime.

Increasing frustration over the stalemate could empower hardliners within the main opposition i.e., the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), who want the party to depart from its ongoing abidance to peaceful protests. If the BNP takes a violent turn, the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) could independently opt for similar methods. Such multi-sided violence, which is often driven by local factors, risks a breakdown of law and order (even if temporary) and could deepen Bangladesh’s political fault lines leading to long-term instability. Such instability could persist regardless of whether elections are held—and especially if electoral integrity is compromised (again).

The other possibility is the re-entry of the Bangladeshi army into politics. For now, this seems unlikely given how entrenched Hasina’s loyalists are within the institution. But if Hasina is unable to curb electoral violence, and is unable to offer patronage to the military elites, the chances of intervention increase.

Bangladesh has a rich history of coups. What observers often focus on are the coups that succeeded i.e., 1975, 1981-82, and 2007-08. But the number of attempted coups is just as high. The successful thwarting of attempted coups in 1996 and 2011 are cases in point. In 1996, Chief of Army Staff General Abu Saleh Mohammad Nasim tried to oust the civilian President Abdur Rahman Biswas amidst acute electoral instability similar to the current situation, but failed because government loyalists disobeyed orders. In 2011, rebel army officers with alleged support from the Hizb-ut-Tahrir planned a putsch, but were arrested before they could execute the coup.

You have written about the “possibility” of “third-party intervention” and in this context pointed to the military. What kind of intervention do you envisage? To maintain law and order in support of the Awami League government? To break the logjam? Or something else?

Military intervention during such a moment of flux is unlikely to be in support of the Awami League. After all, if the army needs to intervene to maintain law and order, it means that Prime Minister Hasina has already lost administrative control. Such an intervention, even if ostensibly in support of Hasina, will be a blow to her power.

There are two reasons why I envisage such an intervention as “third-party” in nature and not an extension of Hasina’s writ. One, because the army has an interest in maintaining institutional discipline. Pro-Hasina partisanship is likely to undermine such discipline, and tarnish the army’s apolitical image. Two, an overt pro-Awami League tilt could expose the army chief to similar criticism around authoritarianism and corruption that Hasina has been subject to. The army wouldn’t want to bear the weight of Hasina’s failures and her party’s malpractices.

In this context, if the army does intervene, it’ll have a choice to either stay in power for a prolonged period or quickly deliver untainted elections. The prudent path will be to hold elections and return to the barracks. But much of it depends on how the people of Bangladesh and powers such as India, China and the U.S. react. If the domestic and international criticism isn’t intense and the army feels that it can safely hold elections and hand over power to a freely and fairly elected party, it might do so. This will require deft, patient diplomacy by all powers interested in democratic deepening. But if internal and external pushback — especially from India — is high, a cornered army might feel the need to hold on to power and offer itself as a fait accompli. That could turn the clock back on Bangladesh’s democratic experiment, ushering in long-term uncertainty that accrues to countries run by military juntas.

The Bangladesh army has remained in the barracks for over a decade. Could you share your insights into how politicized it is? What is its appetite for a larger role in politics?

This aspect requires unpacking three interrelated themes i.e., the army’s relationship with the AL, its self-image as a national institution, and its interest landscape. The relationship between the armed forces and Hasina is marked by a Faustian bargain wherein the latter respects the former’s self-image as an apolitical and professional institution, and caters to its interests by offering high budgetary allocations towards defense, and securing paid U.N. peacekeeping roles. In return, the army culls its ranks of Islamists and keeps to the barracks. The primary role of Hasina’s defense and security advisor, Tarique Ahmed Siddique, who is also a member of her family and faces corruption charges, is to maintain this bargain. But the rub of the matter is how this bargain was struck in the first place.

Former Army Chief General Moeen Uddin Ahmed, who ran a military caretaker government in 2007-08, held elections and transferred power to the winning party i.e., the AL, only after he received guarantees from New Delhi that Hasina would not target him afterwards. The 2009 Bangladesh Rifles mutiny, which occurred a month after Hasina became prime minister, tested this arrangement. It saw New Delhi threaten military intervention on Hasina’s behalf at the peak of the mutiny. The then-Congress leadership in India feared that if General Ahmed used force against the mutineers, it could undermine Hasina’s political power and lead to her premature ouster or worse. When the army did quell the mutiny, it was done under the watchful eye of the home ministry and after Hasina succeeded in calming the tempers of the officer corps by hearing out their grievances.

This bargain has been dented — but not eliminated — by the recent Rohingya crisis, Hasina’s decreasing ability to offer higher budgetary allocations towards defense and attract international defense contracts, and the U.S.-led sanctions on the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB). The Bangladeshi army has long been wary of its Myanmar counterpart and expectedly views the Rohingya crisis from a security-centric lens. Its inability to stand up to Myanmar for political reasons but also due to capability deficits has generated a sense of unease within the officers’ corps and the rank-and-file alike.

The opposition’s mounting criticism of Hasina’s failure to manage this crisis has takers both within and outside the army. Coupled with the U.S.-led sanctions, there is an undercurrent in the garrison that Hasina is wavering on, if not jeopardizing, her part of the civil-military bargain. If the Rohingya crisis is being viewed as an affront to the army’s martial abilities, decreasing defense funding and sanctions risk spoiling the army’s image and interests alike. Given the history of military coups in Bangladesh and the emergent strenuous undercurrents in civil-military ties, one cannot entirely rule out a “third-party” intervention.

thediplomat_2023-09-05-134207.jpg

Personnel of Bangladesh’s elite Rapid Action Battalion, which has been accused of forced disappearance of opposition leaders and activists and journalists. Wikimedia Commons/ Nahid Sultan

The AL has sought to project the view that a victory by the BNP and its allies will provide a boost to Islamist forces in Bangladesh. How credible are its claims? How strong are the Bangladeshi Islamists?

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There is no doubt that Bangladeshi Islamists, especially the Jamaat, are far from being politically dead. But these forces are not as potent as they once were. This is due to Hasina’s successful crackdown against the JI’s leadership during the International Crimes Tribunals, a domestic court set up by the AL government to try JI collaborators with Pakistan during the 1971 liberation war. This, coupled with proactive co-opting of sections of the Hefazat-e-Islam, has resulted in Hasina blunting the political force of Islamists. If anything, her own conservative tilt has created unease among secular Bangladeshis and in India.

Herein, the AL’s projection of the BNP’s victory giving a boost to Islamists has a kernel of truth but is also exaggerated. The BNP, for one, has disassociated itself from the Jamaat precisely to avoid such hyphenation. This is done to reduce the taint of the 2001-06 BNP-Jamaat coalition period that witnessed Islamist violence, including a bomb attack against Hasina (then in opposition) that nearly killed her. The BNP wants to curate independent political space for itself as a secular force in the current milieu, and has, for now, maintained its distance from the Jamaat. So, a BNP win could strengthen conservatives, but whether that will translate to cross-border Islamist violence or systematic targeting of Hindus and Buddhists within Bangladesh remains uncertain.

China has had warm relations with BNP governments in the past and has expanded its footprint in Bangladesh under the AL. What is its approach to the unfolding crisis in Bangladesh?

China is firmly backing the AL. It has clarified this in multiple statements, and signaled intent when Hasina met Chinese President Xi Jinping in a one-to-one meeting at the recent BRICS summit in South Africa. Ironically, in contrast to the perception that China has warm ties with the BNP, the main opposition party has much firmer support from the U.S. and its allies than from Beijing. The BNP has been signaling Western capitals that it will reduce, if not entirely roll back, China’s footprint in Bangladesh. If anything, we’re looking at a situation where both China and India are backing Hasina, but also trying to outbid each other.

The biggest risk for India today is to lose Hasina politically to Chinese influence, while failing to carve space for itself within the BNP — or working with smaller parties such as Jatiya that lack a wider support base.

The lack of strategic conversation between New Delhi and the BNP bereaves India of wider strategic equities in Bangladesh. But the BNP too has shied away from truly addressing Indian concerns when in power, and when being courted by India. The resulting mistrust is such that any attempts to build bridges — and there have been some in recent times — have not yielded results.

I think a serious conversation between the U.S. and India on this count could go a long way. If Washington D.C. could convince India that it’ll use its leverage to prevent the BNP from undermining Indian strategic interests, limit Islamist influence, and contain Chinese ingress, there could be a possibility of rapprochement. Without such guarantees from the U.S., India is unlikely to accept the BNP’s rise to power, even if that comes at the cost of Bangladesh’s democratic integrity.

Compared to previous Bangladeshi elections, India’s profile this time around is low key. Why?

Just because one doesn’t see many Indian statements on Bangladesh, or a clear stand on the current stalemate, doesn’t mean that India has a low-key profile. If anything, Indian officials are likely working overtime to figure out the ground situation, prepare for multiple scenarios, and try to influence an outcome that is in India’s interest but also viewed as legitimate by the majority of Bangladeshis. The top leadership of the Jatiya party, for instance, was in New Delhi recently, and communication between India and the U.S. over Bangladesh has increased.

Clearly, India prefers Hasina over other candidates. But whether it wants to bear the diplomatic costs of the AL’s electoral malpractices forever is a question on which the jury is still out. Having said that, the geography and history of these two countries is such that their destiny will always be tied together. Given the asymmetry of size, Bangladeshis understand this aspect more acutely than most in India.

AUTHORS
Sudha Ramachandran

STAFF AUTHOR​

Sudha Ramachandran​

Sudha Ramachandran is South Asia editor at The Diplomat.
 
When BNP called for such rally there was transport strike!

And when tomorrow BNP calls for nationwide strike , both short and long distance transports will continue to operate! 🤔

What a strange country!


এক যে আছে মজার দেশ, সব রকমে ভালো,
রাত্তিরেতে বেজায় রোদ, দিনে চাঁদের আলো !
আকাশ সেথা সবুজবরণ গাছের পাতা নীল;
ডাঙ্গায় চরে রুই কাতলা জলের মাঝে চিল !

সেই দেশেতে বেড়াল পালায়, নেংটি-ইঁদুর দেখে;
ছেলেরা খায় 'ক্যাস্টর-অয়েল' -রসগোল্লা রেখে !
মণ্ডা-মিঠাই তেতো সেথা, ওষুধ লাগে ভালো;
অন্ধকারটা সাদা দেখায়, সাদা জিনিস কালো !
ছেলেরা সব খেলা ফেলে বই নে বসে পড়ে;
মুখে লাগাম দিয়ে ঘোড়া লোকের পিঠে চড়ে !
ঘুড়ির হাতে বাঁশের লাটাই, উড়তে থাকে ছেলে;
বড়শি দিয়ে মানুষ গাঁথে, মাছেরা ছিপ্ ফেলে !

জিলিপি সে তেড়ে এসে, কামড় দিতে চায়;
কচুরি আর রসগোল্লা ছেলে ধরে খায় !
পায়ে ছাতি দিয়ে লোকে হাতে হেঁটে চলে !
ডাঙ্গায় ভাসে নৌকা-জাহাজ, গাড়ি ছোটে জলে !

মজার দেশের মজার কথা বলবো কত আর;
চোখ খুললে যায় না দেখা মুদলে পরিষ্কার !

 
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if you are attacked with bullets and tear gas isnt that oppression which calls for retaliation.
democracy is bull sh it it is dictatorship disguised as nice guy.
 
Dhaka Metropolitan Police spokesman Hossain said that at least 100,000 people had joined the BNP rally,
I believe the number was a lot larger than police said!

Last year in 10 December govt propagate that in BNP rally 10000 people joined! But in reality it was lot larger than govt statistics!
 
democracy is bull sh it it is dictatorship disguised as nice guy.
We also used to say the same thing for Sheikh Hasina regime few years ago, while democratically elected PM Mr Imran Khan was in power in Pakistan was rulling Pakistan!

Now our Pakistani fellas are saying the same thing while we are trying to restore democracy! What an irony!

Pakistan should officially support the daughter of khalifatul Muslimeen ( declared by BCL) father of nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman ; the mother of humanity, sufi empress Hazrat Sheikh Hasina wazeed's dictatorship now!
:sarcastic:


Ps - What our jamati brothers were doing in shapla chattar under police protection , is still a puzzle to me!

 
I believe the number was a lot larger than police said!

Last year in 10 December govt propagate that in BNP rally 10000 people joined! But in reality it was lot larger than govt statistics!

Yes - closer to maybe half a million for sure.
 
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When BNP called for such rally there was transport strike!

And when tomorrow BNP calls for nationwide strike , both short and long distance transports will continue to operate! 🤔

What a strange country!


এক যে আছে মজার দেশ, সব রকমে ভালো,
রাত্তিরেতে বেজায় রোদ, দিনে চাঁদের আলো !
আকাশ সেথা সবুজবরণ গাছের পাতা নীল;
ডাঙ্গায় চরে রুই কাতলা জলের মাঝে চিল !

সেই দেশেতে বেড়াল পালায়, নেংটি-ইঁদুর দেখে;
ছেলেরা খায় 'ক্যাস্টর-অয়েল' -রসগোল্লা রেখে !
মণ্ডা-মিঠাই তেতো সেথা, ওষুধ লাগে ভালো;
অন্ধকারটা সাদা দেখায়, সাদা জিনিস কালো !
ছেলেরা সব খেলা ফেলে বই নে বসে পড়ে;
মুখে লাগাম দিয়ে ঘোড়া লোকের পিঠে চড়ে !
ঘুড়ির হাতে বাঁশের লাটাই, উড়তে থাকে ছেলে;
বড়শি দিয়ে মানুষ গাঁথে, মাছেরা ছিপ্ ফেলে !

জিলিপি সে তেড়ে এসে, কামড় দিতে চায়;
কচুরি আর রসগোল্লা ছেলে ধরে খায় !
পায়ে ছাতি দিয়ে লোকে হাতে হেঁটে চলে !
ডাঙ্গায় ভাসে নৌকা-জাহাজ, গাড়ি ছোটে জলে !

মজার দেশের মজার কথা বলবো কত আর;
চোখ খুললে যায় না দেখা মুদলে পরিষ্কার !


This is a gem @VikingRaider bhai. :enjoy:

@Joe Shearer dada, great poem, which may describe India these days as well. :-)
 
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