logo
Awami League activities banned to protect national security of Bangladesh, says Chief Adviser's Press Secretary

Awami League activities banned to protect national security of Bangladesh, says Chief Adviser's Press Secretary

India Gazette14-05-2025

Dhaka [Bangladesh], May 14 (ANI): Bangladesh has banned Awami League, the oldest and one of the largest political parties of the country, to protect the national security and sovereignty, Press Secretary to the Chief Adviser said late on Tuesday.
'We have witnessed how Awami League completely destroyed our democratic fabric, severely squeezed our political space and compromised our sovereignty during its 15-year-long tyrannical and kleptocratic rule. The wounds caused by the crimes against humanity perpetrated by this party are still fresh,' Shafiqul Alam, Press Secretary to the Chief Adviser, told the reporters, responding to India's comments on banning Awami League activities.
'I have already said that the ban on activities of this party is necessary to protect national security and sovereignty, ensure the safety of July Movement activists, and safeguard plaintiffs and witnesses of the International Crimes Tribunal', he added.
'As for elections, we recall how the Awami League repeatedly resorted to grossly farcical elections and caused irreparable damage to our electoral processes and institutions. We are engaged in a reform process to rebuild our democratic system', Alam said.
'Elections are entirely our internal matter. We urge all to respect the sovereign will of our people in matters relating to elections', he said.
Earlier on the day, India's Ministry of External Affairs official spokesperson, Randhir Jaiswal, expressed concern over the ban on Awami League activities.
'The ban on the Awami League without due process is a concerning development. As a democracy, India is naturally concerned at curtailment of democratic freedoms and shrinking political space', Jaiswal said.
'We strongly support the early holding of free, fair and inclusive elections in Bangladesh', India's spokesperson added.
The United States also opposed the ban on Awami League activities.
'We are aware that the interim government has banned the Awami League from all political activities until a special tribunal for the party and its leaders concludes. We do not support any one political party in Bangladesh over another,' said Thomas Pigott, Principal Deputy Spokesperson, to the U.S. Department of State.
'We support a free and democratic process as well as fair and transparent legal processes for all individuals. We urge all countries, including Bangladesh, to respect the freedom of expression, peaceful assembly, and association for all,' Pigott told the reporters, replying to a question during the Department Press Briefing on May 13, 2025.
Notably, the Bangladesh interim government on Saturday took a decision to ban all activities of the Awami League, including in cyberspace, under the Anti-Terrorism Act.
Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, also the President of Awami League, was ousted from power in a student-led uprising on August last year. Hasina fled to India. An interim government led by Nobel Laureate Muhammad Yunus was formed. (ANI)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rahul Gandhi, The Self-Anointed ‘Leader Of Pakistan'
Rahul Gandhi, The Self-Anointed ‘Leader Of Pakistan'

News18

timean hour ago

  • News18

Rahul Gandhi, The Self-Anointed ‘Leader Of Pakistan'

Last Updated: Gandhi's 2025 outbursts, particularly around Operation Sindoor—India's surgical strikes on terror camps in Pakistan and PoK—reveal a man hell-bent on tarnishing his own nation In the murky swamp of Indian politics, few have perfected the art of national betrayal quite like Rahul Gandhi. The Congress dynasty's eternal heir-apparent, with his sanctimonious smirk and rehearsed outrage, has turned slandering India into a grotesque performance piece. His latest misadventure—implicitly styling himself as the 'Leader of Pakistan" (LoP) rather than the Leader of Opposition—has sparked a firestorm, and rightly so. This isn't just a clever jab from the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP); it's a damning verdict backed by Gandhi's own venomous words, spewed both at home and abroad, that consistently undermine India's sovereignty, morale, and global stature. From Washington to London, Singapore to Bahrain, his rhetoric reads like a love letter to Pakistan's propaganda machine. Let's rip apart the tapestry of his anti-India tirades, exposing the rot beneath his self-righteous veneer, and demand: whose side is this man really on? Gandhi's 2025 outbursts, particularly around Operation Sindoor—India's surgical strikes on terror camps in Pakistan and PoK—reveal a man hell-bent on tarnishing his own nation. On May 17, 2025, he took to X, accusing the government of a 'crime" by allegedly tipping off Pakistan before the strikes: 'Jaishankar's silence screams guilt. How many Indian jets were lost because Pakistan was pre-warned? This wasn't a mistake—it was treason." The External Affairs Ministry shredded this lie, clarifying Pakistan was informed post-strike, as per diplomatic norms. Yet Gandhi, undeterred, clung to his narrative, parroting Pakistan's claims and casting doubt on India's military prowess. On May 22, he sneered that PM Modi had 'surrendered India's honour" by pausing military action, questioning why Modi trusted Pakistan's anti-terror assurances. This wasn't opposition; it was a gut-punch to the jawans who neutralised over 100 terrorists. On May 23, Gandhi escalated his assault, declaring India's foreign policy a 'wreck" and whining, 'Why didn't a single country back India against Pakistan after Pahalgam? Why are we hyphenated with Pakistan? Who invited Trump to 'mediate'?" This wasn't just a dig at Jaishankar; it was a deliberate attempt to equate India with a failing state, a narrative India has fought tooth and nail to reject. His Trump jab handed Pakistan's DG ISPR a golden opportunity to mock India's global clout. BJP's Gaurav Bhatia called it 'sinister," accusing Gandhi of sapping the morale of India's forces. And he's not wrong—Gandhi's words don't just sting; they embolden enemies. In April 2025, while pandering to the Indian diaspora in Boston, Gandhi smeared the Election Commission, claiming it was 'bought and sold" and alleging 65 lakh voters were added to Maharashtra's rolls in two hours—a logistical absurdity. 'More adults voted in Maharashtra than exist there," he scoffed, offering zero proof. 'The EC is a puppet now." BJP's Sambit Patra branded this an 'old trick" of defaming India abroad, while the EC itself debunked his claims as baseless. Union minister Ramdas Athawale roared that Gandhi was spitting on India's democratic soul, and he wasn't exaggerating. A Trail of Treachery Abroad Gandhi's 2025 antics are just the latest stains on his sordid record of trashing India overseas. In September 2024, in Herndon, Virginia, he claimed India's elections were 'rigged to the core", alleging a caste divide and questioning whether Sikhs could wear turbans or visit gurdwaras. 'The fight is about whether a Sikh can wear his turban or kada in India," he pontificated, triggering FIRs in Chhattisgarh for stoking religious discord. BJP's Hardeep Singh Puri slammed him for misleading Sikhs abroad, while Shivraj Singh Chouhan accused him of tarnishing India's image. Even Congress's Pawan Khera, scrambling to defend him, could only muster that criticising the BJP isn't criticising India—a weak dodge for a damning act. At Georgetown University in 2024, Gandhi pushed for a caste census, saying, 'Reservations will go when India is fair, and India is nowhere near fair." This painted India as a cesspool of discrimination, conveniently ignoring similar divides in the US. His meeting with Ilhan Omar, a US lawmaker notorious for anti-India resolutions, drew fire from BJP's Sudhanshu Trivedi, who called it a 'dangerous liaison" with India's foes. In 2023, at Cambridge University, Gandhi wailed that Indian democracy was 'under siege," claiming the judiciary, press, and Parliament were gagged. 'The framework of democracy—Parliament, free press, judiciary—is being choked," he said, practically begging for Western intervention by calling India's democracy a 'global public good". BJP's JP Nadda branded this 'treasonous", accusing Gandhi of inviting foreign meddling. In 2022, at London's 'Ideas for India' conference, he likened India to Pakistan, moaning: 'The deep state—CBI, ED—is devouring India, just like Pakistan." BJP's Gaurav Bhatia called it betrayal for equating India with a junta-run state. In 2018, in Hamburg, Germany, Gandhi sneered at India's gender equality, implying women were universally oppressed. In Singapore, he claimed an 'atmosphere of fear" gripped India, accusing the BJP of divisive politics. In 2017, at UC Berkeley, he alleged 'hatred and violence" were engulfing India, blaming the BJP for communal strife. That same year in Bahrain, he decried joblessness, saying, 'Anger is spilling onto the streets." Each time, he painted India as a dystopian failure, ignoring Congress's own checkered past. The Damning Pattern Gandhi's apologists, like Sam Pitroda, insist he's merely critiquing the government. But when Pakistani media celebrates his rants, and when Congress stalwarts like Tharoor and Khera tiptoe away from his recklessness, the truth is undeniable: Gandhi's words arm India's enemies. His 2010 remark to a US ambassador, per WikiLeaks, calling 'Hindutva" a bigger threat than terrorism, set the stage for his anti-India crusade. His 2023 claim that Modi dismissed 70 years of progress was a lie he himself contradicted in London, claiming he never defames India—yet his actions scream otherwise. His 2025 X post alleging Modi brokered a China-Pakistan alliance ignores India's strategic calculus, fuelling anti-India narratives. The nation demands Rahul Gandhi's open letter addressing his compulsions and reasons for not going opting, in fact, evading a delegation addressing and exposing Pakistan's terror factory. Was it the 2008 China MoU that crippled him? Yuvraj Pokharna is an independent journalist and columnist. He tweets with @iyuvrajpokharna. Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect News18's views. About the Author Yuvraj Pokharna Yuvraj Pokharna is a Surat-based author and media panelist who vociferously voices his opinions on issues of Hindutva, Islamist Jihad, politics, policies, and sometimes mules over books. He can be followed on More tags : Operation Sindoor Pahalgam attack Rahul Gandhi Location : New Delhi, India, India First Published: June 07, 2025, 16:16 IST News opinion Write Mind | Rahul Gandhi, The Self-Anointed 'Leader Of Pakistan'

After killing of 2 Maoist leaders, bodies of 5 cadres found in Indravati National Park
After killing of 2 Maoist leaders, bodies of 5 cadres found in Indravati National Park

Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • Indian Express

After killing of 2 Maoist leaders, bodies of 5 cadres found in Indravati National Park

Security forces have recovered the bodies of five more Maoist cadres during the ongoing anti-Naxal operations in the Indravati National Park area of Bijapur district in Chhattisgarh. This takes the total number of Maoists killed in the last three days to seven. The encounter began on Thursday, following which the body of Central Committee Member (CCM) Sudhakar alias Gautam was recovered. On Friday, the body of Telangana State Committee (TSC) member Bhaskar was recovered. According to officials, Sudhakar was the person in charge of the outfit's ideological training ground, the Revolutionary Political School as well as its Central Regional Bureau. Bhaskar, a resident of Urumadla village in Telangana's Adilabad district, was the secretary of the Mancherial-Komarambheem division of the Telangana State Committee of the banned CPI (Maoist) outfit. 'Later, during encounters on Friday-Saturday night, three bodies were recovered. And, on Saturday, two more were found during an exchange of fire. Two are women,' said Inspector General of Police for Bastar Range, Sundarraj P. 'Search and area domination operations are still ongoing in the surrounding forested terrain to track any remaining Maoist cadres and to ensure complete sanitisation of the region,' said Bijapur Superintendent of police, Jitendra Yadav. 'A few security personnel suffered injuries due to snake bites, honey bee stings, dehydration and other operational injuries. They are being provided medical attention. Right now their condition is normal and out of danger,' said Additional Superintendent of Police (Naxal operations), Mayank Gurjar. This takes the total number of Maoists killed this year to 209, including 192 in the Bastar region. Last year, 219 Maoists were killed in Chhattisgarh, including 217 in the Bastar region.

Murshidabad communal violence: 13 named in chargesheet for murder of father, son
Murshidabad communal violence: 13 named in chargesheet for murder of father, son

India Today

time2 hours ago

  • India Today

Murshidabad communal violence: 13 named in chargesheet for murder of father, son

The West Bengal Police have named 13 people on their chargesheet in connection with the father-son double murder case during West Bengal's anti-Waqf law protests in April this year, a police official Das, 74, and his son Chandan Das, 40, were hacked to death in the communal violence that broke out in Murshidabad district. The incident took place in the Shamshergunj area, following Friday prayers. advertisementAs per police reports, the father and the son were dragged out of their house in Betbona village after miscreants managed to force open the main door. They were attacked with an axe in broad daylight as a man stood guard. A High Court-monitored fact-finding team has pointed fingers at local Trinamool Congress leader Mehboob Alam, ex-chairman of the Dhuliyan Municipality, in connection with the attack on father and accused have been charged with rioting, forcibly breaking into a house, murder committed by a group of more than five people, and illegal possession of arms and riots, which lasted from April 8 to 12, left three dead, several injured, and hundreds fleeing their homes to the neighbouring Malda district. In the wake of the disturbance that saw attacks on police, government, and private property, the Calcutta High Court ordered the deployment of paramilitary forces to rein in the situation, which had spiraled out of have submitted the charge sheet before the district court within 55 days of the crime and have named 13 people in it," an official was quoted by news agency PTI as many as 300 people were arrested in connection with the violence with over 60 FIRs filed across various police stations in the violence-hit district of from Rajesh Saha and agenciesMust Watch

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store