The Mercury

Modi visit sparks clashes

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HUNDREDS of members of a hardline Islamist group attacked Hindu temples and a train in eastern Bangladesh yesterday, police and a local journalist said, as violence spread across the country in the wake of a visit by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

At least 10 protesters were killed in clashes with police during demonstrat­ions organised by Islamist groups against the Indian leader’s visit, and violence raged on after his departure as anger swelled over the deaths.

Modi arrived in Dhaka on Friday to mark the 50th anniversar­y of Bangladesh’s nationhood, and he left on Saturday after gifting Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina 1.2 million Covid-19 vaccine shots.

The Islamist groups accuse Modi of discrimina­ting against minority Muslims in Hindu-majority India and violence escalated rapidly during his visit.

On Friday, dozens of people were injured in the densely-populated capital Dhaka as police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at protesters.

Thousands of Islamist activists marched down the streets of Chittagong and Dhaka on Saturday in protest.

Yesterday, activists with the Hefazat-e-Islam group attacked a train in the eastern district of Brahmanbar­ia, resulting in 10 people being injured.

“They attacked the train and damaged its engine room and almost all the coaches,” a police official said, declining to be named as he was not authorised to speak to the media.

“Brahmanbar­ia is burning. Various government offices were set on fire indiscrimi­nately. Even the press club was attacked and many injured, including the press club president. We are in extreme fear and feeling really helpless,” Javed Rahim, a journalist in Brahmanbar­ia town, told Reuters by phone said.

Several Hindu temples in the town were also attacked, he said.

Islamist activists allegedly also set alight two buses in the western district of Rajshahi yesterday, while hundreds of protesters clashed with police in Narayangan­j, pelting them with stones, police said.

Protesters used timber and sand bags to block roads, as police retaliated with rubber bullets and tear gas, leaving dozens injured in Narayangan­j, just outside the capital, Dhaka.

The protests sparked by Modi’s visit have since flared into wider demonstrat­ions against police killings, and the Hefazat-e-Islam enforced a nationwide strike on yesterday.

“Police opened fire on our peaceful supporters,” Hefazat-e-Islam’s organising secretary Azizul Haque told a rally in Chittagong on Saturday.

“We will not let the blood of our brothers go in vain.”

Hefazat militants yesterday also set fire to the central public library in Bangladesh’s Brahmanbar­ia district, the birthplace of legendary Indian sarod player and multi-instrument­alist Allauddin Khan, during the dawn-todusk nationwide strike.

The action by Hefazat-e-Islam is underway in Dhaka, Norshingdi, Narayangan­j, Brahmanbar­ia, Chittagong,

Sylhet, districts.

No long-route buses were running plying on the roads, but movement of rickshaws and auto-rickshaws was normal.

Narayangan­j Madaninaga­r madrasa students put up a barricade on the Dhaka-Chittagong highway by burning tyres, disrupting the capital city’s road communicat­ions with Chittagong and Sylhet.

In Sylhet, Jamaat-e-Islam activists under the banner of Hefazat-e-Islam brought out procession­s in different parts of the city including the Court point after morning prayers.

They set two state-owned buses on fire at Rajshahi Truck Terminal in the city’s Amchattar area yesterday.

Saiful Islam Khan, officer-in-charge of Shah Makhdum police station, said officers were investigat­ing the incident. Firefighte­rs rushed to the spot and extinguish­ed the blaze. No casualties have been reported so far. | Reuters

Rajshahi and other

 ??  ?? PROTESTERS shout slogans as they block a road with burning tyres in Dhaka, Bangladesh, yesterday. Members of the Islamic group Hefazat-e Islam called for a strike a day after at least five people were killed and dozens were injured when police opened fire to disperse protesters demonstrat­ing against Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Bangladesh. | EPA
PROTESTERS shout slogans as they block a road with burning tyres in Dhaka, Bangladesh, yesterday. Members of the Islamic group Hefazat-e Islam called for a strike a day after at least five people were killed and dozens were injured when police opened fire to disperse protesters demonstrat­ing against Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Bangladesh. | EPA

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