Dhaka: Atrocities against Hindus are increasing in Bangladesh. Hindu religious leaders are being openly arrested by the police, in protest against which Hindus are being put in jail. According to a secret report of Indian agencies, the situation of Hindus living in Bangladesh may become more difficult in the coming days. In which it has been claimed that fundamentalist org.zations have become active in Bangladesh, Jamaat Al Mujahideen Bangladesh cadre is currently inciting violence between Hindus and Muslims. In the coming days, Hindus may be attacked publicly on the streets, in their homes or in jails.
Sources in Indian intelligence agencies have said on the basis of their reports that Jamaat has become active, it will attack the religious places of Hindus and can carry out the attack by holding Hindus hostage in their homes and jails. Due to which Hindus are now in a state of fear even amidst police protection. Many religious places of minorities have been attacked in Bangladesh since Tuesday night. While the local interim government has failed to stop the violence, houses of Hindus are being targeted as if the Jamaat has been given a free hand.
Mohammad Yunus, who took power after Sheikh Hasina’s coup, and the hardliners have been criticized by Hassan Mohammad, who was now foreign minister in Hasina’s government. Hasan said that Mohammad Yunus is destroying democracy in Bangladesh and bringing mobocracy. Hasan, who left Bangladesh and lived in a safe place during the rebellion against Sheikh Hasina, said in an interview that now the fundamentalists have come to power in Bangladesh, Jamaat-e-Islami has become active.
Regarding the arrest of Chinmay Das, the priest of ISKCON temple in Bangladesh, the Bangladesh government claimed in the court that ISKCON is a fundamentalist org.zation in Bangladesh. A petition was filed in the High Court demanding a ban on ISKCON, in which the Bangladesh government claimed that ISKCON is a religious fundamentalist org.zation. However, he is not affiliated with any political party. Later the High Court ordered the interim government of Bangladesh to take security measures to maintain peace in Bangladesh. According to a figure, when Bangladesh was established in 1971, the number of Hindus there was 22 percent, which has now come down to eight percent.