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Bangladesh deploys troops after new attacks on Buddhists

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Bangladesh deploys troops after new attacks on Buddhists


Bangladesh deploys troops after new attacks on Buddhists - The Times of India

AFP | Oct 1, 2012, 11.26AM IST

DHAKA: Bangladesh sent in troops to guard Buddhist neighbourhoods Monday after Muslim mobs carried out fresh attacks on temples and homes over a Facebook photo deemed offensive to Islam, police said.

At least five temples were attacked in different neighbourhoods of the resort region of Cox's Bazaar on Sunday evening, with thousands of protestors smashing several statues of Lord Buddha before riot police used force to repel the crowds.

"We shot rubber bullets to disperse the crowd," said Faruk Ahmed, deputy police chief for the southeastern region.

Police said that 107 people had been arrested in connection with the violence on Saturday and Sunday night.

"This was an organised attack. We won't spare anyone who is found to have played a role in the attack," said Ahmed.

At least five homes were torched in the overnight violence which came after a 25,000-strong mob ran riot in the Ramu district of Cox's Bazaar on Saturday night, smashing temples and setting fire to dozens of homes.

The riots later spread to Patia, home to a sizable Buddhist population, outside the southeastern port city of Chittagong, where mobs attacked and vandalised three temples.

Ahmed said soldiers were now patrolling Buddhist neighbourhoods and temples in Cox's Bazaar to prevent a further outbreak of violence.

"The army and BGB ( border guards) has been deployed in the trouble spots," he told AFP. "The situation is calm but tense."

The violence was sparked by claims that a young Buddhist man had posted a photo allegedly defaming the Koran on Facebook.

The man at the centre of the accusations has gone into hiding after telling local media he did not post the picture, insisting someone else had "tagged" his account with the image on the social network.

His mother and an aunt have been given police protection for their safety after the violence broke out, officials said.

Buddhists, who make up less than one percent of Bangladesh's 153 million population, are based mainly in southeastern districts, close to the border with Buddhist-majority Myanmar.

Sectarian tensions have been running high since June when deadly clashes erupted between Buddhists and Muslim Rohingya in Myanmar's western Rakhine state.

Although Bangladesh, where nearly 90 percent of people are Muslims, has witnessed deadly clashes between Muslims and Hindus in the past, sectarian clashes involving Buddhists are rare.

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'Jamaat fanned communal riot'


http://bdnews24.com/details.php?cid=2&id=233432&hb=top

Mon, Oct 1st, 2012 1:02 am BdST

Mintu Chowdhury and Shankar Barua Rumi
bdnews24.com Correspondents

Ramu/Cox's Bazar, Sep 30 (bdnews24.com)—The communal violence that ravaged a pre-dominantly Buddhist village in Cox's Bazar's Ramu Upazila was instigated by a religion-based political party, residents of the locality alleged.

They said the party played with local Rohingya refugees' rage against people of the Buddhist community after the recent sectarian violence between Muslims and Buddhists in northern Rakhine province in Myanmar.

Those who launched the attack chanted, "Naraye Takbir," the slogan Jamaat-e-Islami use in its political programmes.

According to locals, leaders of an Islamist party held a rally at 10pm on Sunday night alleging defamation of the Quran by posting a photograph on social networking website Facebook.

Those who addressed the rally claimed a Buddhist youth named Uttam Barua of Bouddha Parha posted the photograph on his Facebook account.

The rally touched off a mayhem that lasted for five hours starting around 11:30pm. Seven Buddhist Viharas or monasteries, around 30 houses and shops were torched, and more than a hundred other houses and shops were also attacked, vandalised and looted.

District administration had to impose section 144, which bans public gathering, for an indefinite period on Sunday morning to rein in the unrest, followed by the commissioning of an inquiry into the incident. The incident shocked Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who is currently visiting New York, who ordered bringing attackers into book.

Buddhists and other ethnic and religious minorities were living in fear in Ramu and areas close by even though huge contingents of Police, Rapid Action Battalion, Border Guard Bangladesh and Army were deployed to contain the unrest.

Locals alleged the unrest turned catastrophic just because of 'negligence' by police and RAB officials in ensuring security to distressed people.

Home Minister Mohiuddin Khan Alamgir, while visiting the area on Sunday, said the attacks were "planned."

"The attack was conducted in a coordinated manner. Temples and houses were set on fire using patrol and gun powder. It would have been impossible if the attacks were not planned," he revealed.

Resident Director of Sheema Rajban Vihara at Merongloa Parha in the Ramu, Progyananda Bhikkhu, shared his firsthand experience with bdnews24.com. He said at first a procession came and hurled brickbats at the houses in the area and vandalised boundary walls made of corrugated iron sheets.

"Around four to five hundred people chanting 'Naraye Takbir' entered our Parha (locality) as the night got darker. They set the temples on fire first," said Progyananda.

According to him, two donation boxes and a gold idol of Buddha were looted during the attack and at least 10 houses were set ablaze.

The Buddhist religious leader said it was the first time he encountered such violence and did not know how to respond.

"The violence spread due to a reluctant administration. Had police and RAB members taken the early initiative, the whole incident would have been averted," he said.

General Secretary of a temple in the Vihara, Tarun Barua reported seeing people whom he had never before seen in his locality.

"We have been living long alongside the Muslims. We did not even imagine that they could attack us. Such a big attack in reprisal of such a trivial incident was unbelievable," said Barua.

Residents of different areas including Mithachharhi and Shreekul had similar observations to make.
Barua believes the anger of the Rohingya refugees living in Cox's Bazaar was fanned. "Jamaat-e-Islami may have instigated the unrest," he suggested.

Cox's Bazaar Jhilongja Union Parishad Chairman Gias Uddin Ziku said he found Jamaat-e-Islami activists gathering around different villages of minority people and he himself made them to leave and reported it to the police.

Ziku, also Office Secretary of Cox's Bazar district committee of Jatiyatabadi Chhatra Dal, heard the news of the attack minutes later.

Ramu Upazila Parishad Chairman Sohel Sarowar Kajal thought the violence was carried out by hiring people from outside Ramu.

He also pointed the finger at the neglect of RAB and Police for the situation getting worse. "They reached the crime scene way later. Many damages could have been avoided if they had arrived as soon as violence broke out."

Cox's Bazaar district Superintendent of Police Selim Mohammed Jahangir declined comment on the matter.

"Everybody is interpreting the incident to their liking. Members of the law-enforcing agencies including the police were deployed for containing the situation in the affected areas," said Jahangir.

Home Minister Alamgir and Industry Minister Dilip Barua visited the affected area on Sunday morning, promising financial assistance from the government in the rebuilding process. Alamgir ordered investigation into the allegation of negligence on the part of the law-enforcing agencies.

Chittagong Divisional Commissioner Sirajul Hoque asked the five-strong probe body to report in ten days.

The incident left scores homeless out under open sky, more insecure than ever.

Four temples and 15 houses were burnt down in Shreekul Barua Parha.

"We don't understand why life has undergone this change. They attacked us with machetes and hammers. We don't even know who they are," said Nikash Barua, a resident.

He said he heard the slogan 'Naraye Takbir' during the attack.

Cox's Bazaar district Ameer of Jamaat-e-Islami Md Shahjahan brushed aside the allegations of instigating the unrest.

"Causing damages to life and livelihood, or attacking religious institutions should not be the language of protests. Islam does not permit it either. Jamaat-e-Islami despises these acts," said Shahjahan.

He, however, said instigators were those who want to turn the country into a 'militant' state.

The incident also left Muslims of the area shocked and grappling with the justification for the attack on Buddhists.

"I don't understand why it all happened? We all live together," said Chhalim Ullah, a rickshaw-puller, as he visited the ravaged area.

bdnews24.com/corr/mc/jk/eh/bd/2331h
 
COX'S BAZAR, Bangladesh (AP) — Thousands of Bangladeshi Muslims set fire to at least 10 Buddhist temples and 40 homes in anger over a Facebook photo of a burned Quran before authorities restored order.
The situation was under control Sunday afternoon after extra security officers were deployed and the government banned public gatherings in the troubled areas near the southern border with Myanmar, said Nojibul Islam, a police chief in the coastal district of Cox's Bazar.
He said at least 20 people were injured in the attacks that started late Saturday after a photo of a burned copy of the Muslim holy book was posted on Facebook. The rioters blamed the photo on a local Buddhist boy, though it was not immediately clear if he actually posted the photo.
Bangladesh's popular English-language Daily Star newspaper quoted the boy as saying that the photo was mistakenly tagged on his Facebook profile. The newspaper reported that soon after the violence started, the boy's Facebook account was closed and police escorted him and his mother to safety.
Joinul Bari, chief government administrator in Cox's Bazar district, said authorities detained the boy's parents and were investigating.
Buddhists make up less than 1 percent of Muslim-majority Bangladesh's 150 million people.
The Bangladeshi violence follows protests that erupted in Muslim countries over the past month after a low-budget film, "Innocence of Muslims," produced by a U.S. citizen denigrated the Prophet Muhammad by portraying Islam's holiest figure as a fraud, womanizer and child molester.
Some two dozen demonstrators have been killed in protests that attacked symbols of U.S. and the West, including diplomatic compounds.

The Associated Press: Bangladeshi Muslims torch Buddhist temples, homes

All Muslims should have been sent to the Land made for Indian Muslims and all the Non-Muslim Indians should have been taken into India.
 
A New Delhi-based rights body has petitioned Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon seeking an end to attacks against religious minorities in Bangladesh.
The plea follows the burning down of 24 Buddhist and Hindu temples in Bangladesh’s Chittagong division allegedly by Islamic radical groups apparently in retaliation to the drive against Muslim Rohingiyas in Myanmar.

“When we received the last report on September 30 midnight, fanatics had burnt down 22 Buddhist and two Hindu temples besides torching 100 houses belonging to Buddhist minorities across Chittagong division,” Asian Centre for Human Rights (ACHR) director Suhas Chakma said from New Delhi.

“The latest attacks are part of a wider conspiracy against religious minorities in collusion with the Bangladesh Army, which on 22-23 September launched a massive communal attack on indigenous tribal people in Chittagong Hill Tracts,” Chakma said. “The only person arrested in the orchestrated violence happened to be a Buddhist.”

The ACHR director added that separate pleas have been sent to Prime Minister Singh and the UN Secretary General to take up the issue with Dhaka toward ending the attacks on religious minorities, bring perpetrators to justice, rebuild all the temples burnt and provide adequate compensation to those displaced by the attacks.

While Bangladesh’s minorities have been at the receiving end, Hindus in the US have taken offence to American political satirist and TV host Stephen Colbert depicting them as a tribe of some stocky primitive furred creatures jumping in the woods.

“Everywhere you looked, there were black people, Asian people, Latinos, Jews, Sikhs, Hindus…,” Colbert said in The Colbert Report and simultaneously showed the picture of an African-American, an Asian, a Latino, a Jew and a Sikh. But while depicting Hindus, he showed what appeared to be a group of stocky furred creatures in the forest.

“This depiction is highly insulting and unacceptable to one billion Hindus worldwide,” said the US-based Universal Society of Hinduism president Rajan Zed. He sought apologies from Colbert and Philippe Dauman, president of the TV parent company Viacom.

24 Buddhist, Hindu temples burnt in Bangladesh: rights body - Hindustan Times
 
That is the Late Reaction by the Muslim Government of Bangladesh.

The Attacks are the Main Topic.

Federer, I was expecting the first post from you in the morning as you had been waiting for long to post something like that. But it would had been nicer if you could use Bombay_Dude id to post this important news.

Anyways.. i agree with captain to merge this thread with the existing one.
 
Rohingyas in Myanmar claim some kind of Arab descent, reject their roots, yet depend on BD for help when persecuted, but then create trouble in BD.

Is there lack of intelligent leadership and education in Rohingyas. This way they will not only fail to get justice in Myanmar, but will make more enemies, something they can do without.

In India where we have such gangs of angry idiots creating trouble on streets, its an issue of education and leadership. The Rohingyas need both urgently.

And whats with the obsession with smashing others religious statues with a certain kind of madmen? And these people want ''respect''. All they deserve is a one finger salute.
 
Rohingyas in Myanmar claim some kind of Arab descent, reject their roots, yet depend on BD for help when persecuted, but then create trouble in BD.

Is there lack of intelligent leadership and education in Rohingyas. This way they will not only fail to get justice in Myanmar, but will make more enemies, something they can do without.

In India where we have such gangs of angry idiots creating trouble on streets, its an issue of education and leadership. The Rohingyas need both urgently.

And whats with the obsession with smashing others religious statues with a certain kind of madmen? And these people want ''respect''. All they deserve is a one finger salute.

See the pattern. Have you ever heard any riots in the middle of the night???

These people attacked village in the midnight and torched the houses. They knew that govt cant response adequately in the night and could get away with all the vandalism till 4 O'Clock in the morning.
 

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