As the voices against the atrocities on Hindus and other minorities in neighbouring Bangladesh get mounted across India and many parts of the globe, Professor Muhammad Yunus. the head of the interim Bangla government in Dhaka made a call to Narendra Modi, and assured the Indian Prime Minister that ‘his government is committed to making all state apparatus fully functional and effective and ensuring human rights for every citizen of the country’.
Yunus, an octogenarian banker turned social thinker, who is now functioning as the chief adviser of the interim Bangla government, was also invited by Modi to join the ‘Third Voice of Global South Summit’ to be hosted virtually by New Delhi on August 17, 2024, and Professor Yunus agreed to join the meeting virtually from Dhaka. He also claimed that the situation in Bangladesh had been brought under control and life was almost becoming normal across the South Asian nation.
The lone Nobel laureate of Bangladesh thanked Modi for the telephone conversation and social media posts immediately after he was sworn in as neutral government head, and congratulated the people of India on the occasion of the 78th Independence Day.
Meanwhile, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights revealed that about 650 people were killed during student protests in Bangladesh between July 16 and August 11, 2024. According to an interim report of the UN body, nearly 400 deaths were reported till August 4 while the rest were killed in a new wave of protests on August 5 and 6 August, 2024.
The report pointed out that security forces like police and the Border Guard Bangladesh used unlawful lethal force and deliberately targeted unarmed people during the protests.
The victims included protesters, bystanders, and journalists. Thousands of protesters and bystanders were injured, and hospitals were overwhelmed by the influx of patients. The reported death toll is likely an underestimate, as information collection had been hindered by restrictions on movement due to the curfew and the internet shutdown, it asserted, adding that the student protests were peaceful in mid-June 2024 but descended into violence in mid-July, particularly following inflammatory remarks referring to the protesters as Razakars by the ousted prime minister Sheikh Hasina and many of her party Awami League leaders.
Finally, the UN body urged the interim government to take steps to restore democratic order and the rule of law through an inclusive and participatory process guided by human rights.
Amidst the rising number of protest demonstrations demanding justice for Hindus, Buddhists, Christians and other minority communities in Bangladesh, Bharatiya Janata Party leader Nupur Sharma participated in a rally at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi on August 16, where she made her point clear that Hindu Lives Matter! Coming to the public appearance after many months as she still faces Islamist threats on her life, the firebrand orator asserted, “We need to stop Hindu genocide. Those who are orchestrating this crime must be stopped.”
*Senior journalist