logo
Bangladeshi forces clash with supporters of ousted leader Hasina, leaving at least 4 dead

Bangladeshi forces clash with supporters of ousted leader Hasina, leaving at least 4 dead

The Hill17-07-2025
DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) — Bangladeshi security forces on Wednesday clashed with supporters of ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, leaving at least four people dead and scores injured, a hospital official and local media said.
The violence erupted in the morning and spread as a new political party formed by students who led the uprising against Hasina in August last year announced a march toward southwestern Gopalganj district, Hasina's ancestral home, and her Awami League party's stronghold.
Authorities later imposed an overnight curfew in the district.
Since Hasina's ouster 11 months ago, Bangladesh has been marked by chaos and unchecked mob violence. Wednesday's attack underscores the deep divisions in the country as its interim government keeps failing to bring the deteriorating security situation under control.
A chaotic situation
TV footage showed pro-Hasina activists armed attacking police with sticks and setting vehicles on fire as a convoy of about 20 vehicles carrying the leaders of the students' National Citizen Party arrived as part of commemorations of the uprising.
Party leaders took shelter in the office of the local police chief. Footage showed top leaders were being escorted by soldiers to an armored vehicle for safety. They later left for a neighboring district with security escorts.
Jibitesh Biswas, a senior official of a state-run hospital, told reporters that the bodies of at least three people had been brought in. The country's leading English-language Daily Star reported that four people died.
The interim government said Wednesday the attackers on the students would not go 'unpunished' and in a statement issued on behalf of interim leader Muhammad Yunus, described the violence in Gopalganj as 'utterly indefensible.'
Hasina's Awami League party, which authorities banned in May, issued several statements on X condemning the violence and blaming the interim government for the deaths and injuries.
'We urge the world to take note of this blatant use of security apparatus,' one Awami statement said, adding that it had used mob violence against 'dissenters.'
Student leader Nahid Islam gave the authorities a 24-hour ultimatum to arrest those responsible for the Gopalganj violence and floated the prospect of another march in the neighboring district of Faridpur on Thursday.
The right wing Jamaat-e-Islami party condemned the attacks on the student-led party and announced a nationwide protest in all districts and main cities for Thursday.
A nation in turmoil
Critics of the interim government warn of a widening polarization that has reduced hopes for national reconciliation even as Yunus' administration pledges to bring order in the post-Hasina era. They say if the situation does not improve, a peaceful transition to democracy would be jeopardized.
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Yunus took over the country three days after Hasina was toppled and fled to India, pledging to restore order. He has promised a new election would be held in April next year.
Hasina now faces charges of crimes against humanity while the government seeks her extradition from India, which has not responded to Bangladesh's request.
Gopalganj is a politically sensitive district because Hasina father's mausoleum is located there. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the country's independence leader, was buried there after he was assassinated along with most of his family members in a military coup in 1975.
The National Citizen Party launched its 'July March to Rebuild the Nation' at the start of the month, saying they would take place across all districts as part of its drive to position itself as a new force in Bangladeshi politics.
Bangladesh's political past has been largely dominated by two dynastic parties — Hasina's Awami League and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, or BNP, headed by her rival and former prime minister Khaleda Zia. The BNP, which is hopeful of coming to power in the absence of Hasina's party, was mostly silent about Wednesday's violence.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

America's nerves are twitching — so it's time go abroad
America's nerves are twitching — so it's time go abroad

New York Post

time36 minutes ago

  • New York Post

America's nerves are twitching — so it's time go abroad

America is antsy. Its nerves are twitching. Anger rising. Jobs changing. Lives aging, finances shrinking, homes switching, politics muddying. Its wardrobe's diminishing. Prices rising. CBS failing. CNN who cares. Stores closing. It's cranky. Schools fighting. Religion disappearing. English disappearing. Other languages appearing. Crazies shooting. Students marching. Kids disobeying. Foreigners entrapping. Diners in bus lanes. Commies encroaching. Drugstores getting robbed. Rules muddying. Longtime ways crumbling. And our lawmakers? Three little bears running for mayor. Advertisement It's become Our country tis of what? Sneakers are dress shoes. T-shirts are black-tie. Guns today are part of wardrobe. Dessert's a puff of pot. DAs let crazies go free. Roadways are for bicycles, motorcycles, deliveries, scaffolds, double parking. Movies are re-dos. Politicians are who? Get to packing Result? This summer our country's moving. Traveling. Not to Arkansas or — oy — Tennessee. The USA's schlepping abroad. So, if still home scratching for day-old bagels or brownies, let Little Mother clue you about airlines today. They're negotiating. Do not tell me you don't know about it. They are newly doing as well as Biden. Hunter Biden. Advertisement One traveler I know well bought a low-class plane ticket. If he could buy cheapo passage stuffed inside a rubber tire, he'd take it. At check-in he's told an extra charge could be tacked on if he wants to upgrade. So he pays the extra charge and his behind squats in first class across the ocean. The country of Qatar bought London's USA embassy which, for some reason, needed a more secure building. The new buyers are keeping our rooftop's gilded eagle. Just telling you what I know. They've turned the building into the $2,000-a-night Grosvenor Square Chancery Rosewood Hotel. Originally designed by Eero Saarinen, who also did JFK's TWA terminal, it'll open to guests in a few weeks. Advertisement Paris is dressing up. $2,000 a night. Want a super room not overlooking your john it's $4,000 a night. The Ritz's prices now look like a Hamptons timeshare. Hotel rooms in Europe — $1,000 to $1,400 a night. Three-day stay is norm but they throw in breakfast. Itchy for the Amalfi Coast? It's $5,000 a night. Rome, heating up faster than Hell's Kitchen, has hit 120 degrees. Perspired travelers are pushing north. Shoving now to Switzerland, Bavaria, cooler Scandinavia. Also they're discovering Japan. It's cheaper. Safe. Clean. Efficient. Nice. But such a long schlep that visiting the moon is shorter. And pay attention — nobody, nobody — is lining up for China. If Mao had great grandchildren even they wouldn't buy a rice cake in downtown Shanghai. However, the once greatest shopping city on the planet — Hong Kong — is still a major destination. Advertisement They're shipshape The big transport? Ships. Once, bus tours. Now cruises. Ships that squeeze in 6,000 passengers, 47 restaurants, bowling alleys, skating rinks, swimming pools, movies, lectures, shows, wall-climbing try to make you believe you're on a private yacht. All great — until some steward loses your drawers in the laundry. Listen, I wish you well. Have a nice time. Betty Grable, Hollywood's famous long ago beauty queen, once told me: 'All I want in life is to take a five-day ocean sail to England and have a different guy make love to me every night.' OK by me. Definitely beats a Remsenburg time share.

Ontario premier says he doesn't trust Trump and warns the US president could reopen trade pact
Ontario premier says he doesn't trust Trump and warns the US president could reopen trade pact

The Hill

time36 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Ontario premier says he doesn't trust Trump and warns the US president could reopen trade pact

TORONTO (AP) — The leader of Canada's most populous province said Wednesday he doesn't trust U.S. President Donald Trump and expects the president to soon reopen the free trade agreement he agreed to in his first term. Ontario Premier Doug Ford said the federal government needs to prepare for that to happen this fall. Ford made the comments after the country's provincial premiers and Prime Minister Mark Carney met in private for the first time since Trump escalated his trade war by hitting Canada with a baseline 35% tariff last week. The new tariff, which took effect on Friday after the two countries failed to hit an Aug. 1 deadline to secure a new trade agreement, applies only to goods not covered by the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement that Trump negotiated during his first term. Trump previously hailed the agreement as 'the fairest, most balanced and beneficial trade agreement we have ever signed. ' Carney has said about 85% of trade with the U.S. remains tariff-free because of USMCA. Ford said Trump likely won't wait for the scheduled review of the agreement next year. 'He's not waiting until 2026. At any given time, President Trump — not that he even follows the rules — he can pull the carpet out from underneath us,' Ford told reporters in Toronto Wednesday. 'I'm going to ask the people, do you trust President Trump? I don't.' Carney told a press conference on Tuesday that he has not talked to Trump in recent days but would speak with him 'when it makes sense.' Sector-specific tariffs on Canada, like the 50% duty on steel, aluminum and copper, remain in place. Carney also suggested he may lift counter-tariffs if that helps Canada in the ongoing trade dispute.

Afghanistan's Taliban have ‘weaponized' the judicial system to oppress women, UN expert says
Afghanistan's Taliban have ‘weaponized' the judicial system to oppress women, UN expert says

The Hill

time2 hours ago

  • The Hill

Afghanistan's Taliban have ‘weaponized' the judicial system to oppress women, UN expert says

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Afghanistan's Taliban rulers have 'weaponized' the legal and judicial system to oppress women and girls in what amounts to 'crimes against humanity,' the independent U.N. investigator on human rights in the country said. Richard Bennett said in a report to the U.N. General Assembly circulated Wednesday that after seizing power in 2021 the Taliban suspended the 2004 constitution and laws protecting the rights of women and girls. These include a landmark law that criminalized 22 forms of violence against women, including rape and child and forced marriage. The Taliban dismissed all judges under the previous U.S.-backed government, including approximately 270 women, replacing them with men who share their extreme Islamic views, lack legal training and hand down decisions based on edicts issued by the Taliban, he said. In addition, he noted that the Taliban have assumed full control over law enforcement and investigative agencies, systematically purging Afghans who worked for the previous government. Bennett, who was appointed by the Geneva-based U.N. Human Rights Council, focused on access to justice and protection for women and girls in his report. He said he held meetings, focus-group discussions and one-on-one interviews with more that 110 Afghans inside and outside the country. He did so remotely because the Taliban have refused to grant him a visa to travel to Afghanistan. Since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan, their crackdown on women and girls has been widely reported and globally denounced. Taliban leaders have barred education for women and girls beyond sixth grade, banned most employment, and prohibited women from many public spaces, including parks, gyms and hairdressers. New laws ban women's voices and bare faces outside the home. The Taliban remain isolated from the West because of their restrictions on women and girls and have only been recognized by Russia. Bennett said the Taliban did not respond to an advance copy of the report and a request for information about their efforts to ensure access to justice and protection for women and girls. The Taliban defend their approach to justice by claiming they are implementing Islamic sharia law, but Islamic scholars and others have said their interpretation is unparalleled in other Muslim-majority countries and does not adhere to Islamic teachings. They say protecting the legal rights of women is a priority. Bennett said, however, that women have virtually no rights. 'Today, there are no women judges or prosecutors and no officially registered female lawyers, leaving women and girls with fewer safe channels to report abuse or seek redress,' he wrote. 'Coupled with a lack of female officials in the police and other institutions, the result is widespread underreporting of violence and discrimination against women and girls.' Bennett said access to justice for girls 'is further undermined by the dismantling of key legal safeguards and institutions protecting the rights of children,' including juvenile courts and juvenile rehabilitation centers. The Taliban requirement that a woman must be accompanied by a male relative also creates barriers to filing complaints and attending court proceedings, he said, and disproportionately affects widows, women who are the heads of their households, the displaced and disabled. 'Women who engage with the Taliban court system — whether as victims seeking redress, to resolve family issues, to obtain official documents or as alleged offenders — face a hostile environment,' Bennett said. 'Courts often reject complaints made by women and are especially reluctant to accept cases relating to divorce, child custody and gender-based violence.' Facing these obstacles, Bennett said, women increasingly turn to traditional and informal justice mechanisms, including formal jirgas and shuras — community councils of elders — and informal mediation by religious leaders, community elders or family. But these are all male-dominated and raise 'serious concerns about the rights of women and girls,' he said. He said international forums offer the best hope for justice. He pointed to the International Criminal Court's request on Jan. 23 for arrest warrants for two senior Taliban leaders accused of crimes against humanity for persecution 'on gender grounds.' And he urged all countries to support efforts to bring Afghanistan before the International Court of Justice, the U.N.'s highest tribunal, for violating the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store