Members of the minority community staged demonstration in Dhaka’s Shahbagh area for the second consecutive day on Saturday, demanding immediate actions to protect their rights and ensure security.
They condemned the recent wave of vandalism, arson, and looting targeting Hindu properties across the country.
Demonstrators blocked the road in Shahbagh. Yesterday a rally was held at Shahbagh, where Hindu community leaders called for increasing representations at the policy-making level and the establishment of a ministry dedicated to minority affairs. Their demands include the creation of a minority protection commission and strict laws to prevent violence against minorities. A key demand was the allocation of 10 percent of parliamentary seats to minority groups.
The Bangladesh Hindu Buddhist Christian Oikya Parishad, a platform advocating for minority rights, issued an open letter to Chief Adviser Dr Muhammad Yunus, detailing 205 incidents of persecution across 52 districts since the fall of the Sheikh Hasina government on August 5.
Nirmal Rosario, president of the organization, presented the letter at the Dhaka Reporters Unity (DRU) yesterday. “We have preliminary information that at least 205 incidents of minority persecution have occurred in 52 districts to date,” Rosario said. “We stay up all night guarding our homes and temples. I have never witnessed such events in my life. We demand that the administration restore communal harmony in the country.”
The open letter acknowledged Dr Yunus as a symbol of a new era, marked by significant student and public movements aimed at building an equal society. However, it also expressed profound sorrow and concern over the violent actions of certain groups against minorities, which have marred these achievements.