Eastern Eye (UK)

Crackdown in Bangladesh

-

THOUSANDS of party activists in Bangladesh have been hit with “fake” charges of violence in a widespread crackdown by authoritie­s, the opposition said on Monday (10) as an internatio­nal rights group expressed concerns.

Opponents of prime minister Sheikh Hasina – whose government faces a general election next year and is accused of rights abuses – have held protests across the country in recent months over power cuts and demanding a poll under a neutral caretaker government.

Some demonstrat­ions have been marred by violence.

Sairul Kabir Khan, a spokesman for the opposition Bangladesh Nationalis­t Party (BNP), said that since August 22, police had charged at least 4,081 named party supporters and leaders in what he called trumped-up or “fake” cases over the violence.

Another 20,000 unidentifi­ed BNP supporters had also been charged, he added – a tactic that rights activists say gives police sweeping power to harass any opposition supporters who may or may not have attended a rally. Five activists have been killed and more than 2,000 injured at the protests, Khan said.

Police had not intervened when BNP rallies came under violent attack, mostly by stickwield­ing ruling Awami League activists, but “if we retaliate, then they start reacting”, he said. “The police are not a neutral force,” Khan added.

Police said four people have died in at least three protests, but accused the opposition of triggering the violence.

Khan’s comments came as New York-based Human Rights Watch on Monday raised concerns over “mass arrests and police raids of opposition party members’ homes”.

HRW’s south Asia director, Meenakshi Ganguly, said this set “an ominous tone for the upcoming parliament­ary elections”, which are set for December 2023.

Last December the US slapped sanctions on seven top Bangladesh­i security officers and the elite Rapid Action Battalion over their roles in hundreds of enforced disappeara­nces and thousands of extrajudic­ial killings.

Dhaka has denied it was behind any enforced disappeara­nce of opposition supporters and leaders, and said many criminals were killed during gunfights with officers.

The government has largely defied the US measures and last month promoted one of the sanctioned officers to national police chief. Bangladesh police spokesman Monzur Rahman denied officers were targeting opposition activists, saying the force “respects the rights of every citizen” and intervened only “to maintain the law and order situation”.

 ?? ?? police ave been accu of s ar sts an raid
police ave been accu of s ar sts an raid

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom