Bangladesh Socio-Political Crisis 2024 and onwards

The Indian cultural center in Dhaka has been burned. Seems like they don’t want to leave a trace.

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You're correct!

View attachment 58226

41% contribution to lower Hindu growth(lower fertility) is much major a reason than the
54% contribution to lower Hindu growth (outward migration- the best indicator of religious tolerance)

41% > 54%

Bye bye

Lol, it's not my problem you have
comprehension issue. I said, a major contributor.

Never made any comparison. Of course many people left. until recently, Bangladesh was poorer than India. So, there was better economic opportunities and the advantage of same religion. very reasonable.
 
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The mob also beat 13 police officers to death as well in a single incident.

This was not just vigilante justice but sheer criminality there.

As a country, BD needs to hunt the thousands of criminals that committed these crimes as otherwise the country may end up no better off than under AL, with the concept of fairness and justice missing.

Over 300+ students and general public was killed by Police and BAL goons. Not to forget the thousands killed in crossfire, extorted, abducted and unlawfully detained by Police in the last 16 year period. This is absolutely vigilante mob justice.

You have clearly never lived under an autocratic regime, so you can't feel the anger raging on the streets.

There will be investigation and it will happen for both police and the mob, but all in due time.
 
India is being burried very deeply in BD. A problematic time for India her Western allies. Is it Afghanistan 2.0 all over again?

ISI to be blamed? 🤔 Indian media and Hindutva think tanks believe so.
 

Bangladesh parliament dissolved after PM flees country​

Gianluca Avagnina
BBC News


 EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock A picture of Sheikh Hasina with holes in it


EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock

A vandalised image of prime minister Sheikh Hasina after her resignation
Bangladesh's parliament has been dissolved, a day after prime minister Sheikh Hasina was forced from power.

Ms Hasina resigned and fled the country after weeks of student-led protests spiralled into deadly unrest.

The dissolution of parliament, a key demand of protesters, paves the way for establishing an interim government.

Bangladeshis are waiting to see what comes next, as the country's military chief is holding talks with political leaders and protest organisers.

According to local media, more than 100 people died in violent clashes across Bangladesh on Monday, the single deadliest day since mass demonstrations began.

Hundreds of police stations were also torched, with the Bangladesh Police Service Association (BPSA) declaring a strike "until the security of every member of the police is secure".

The group also sought to place the blame at the door of authorities, saying they were "forced to fire".

Overall, more than 400 people are believed to have died, as protests were met with harsh repression by government forces.

The protests began in early July with peaceful demands from university students to abolish quotas in civil service jobs, but snowballed into a broader anti-government movement.

Weeks of unrest culminated in the storming of the prime minister's official residence, not long after Ms Hasina had fled to neighbouring India, ending nearly 15 years of rule.
Bangladeshi leaders are under pressure to establish an interim government to avoid a power vacuum that could lead to further clashes.

Within hours of her resignation, Bangladesh's army chief Gen Waker-uz-Zaman pledged that an interim administration would be formed, adding on state television that "it is time to stop the violence".

Student leaders have been clear they will not accept a military-led government, pushing for Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus to become the interim government's chief adviser.

Mr Yunus, who agreed to take up the role, said: “When the students who sacrificed so much are requesting me to step in at this difficult juncture, how can I refuse?”
 

It's historical, and their choice of who runs the interim government—Nobel Prize Economist Muhammad Yunus PhD in Economics from Vanderbilt University—just shows that the Bengali nation has come a long way in understanding what the priorities are and breaking the cult-personality that plagues Pakistan.

We have appointed a retired officer to head the technology department at HEC. Then, there are retired Pak Officers calling the riots in Bangladesh a Jewish conspiracy, the same mantra they always use when they have nothing else to give.

While 1971 was a sad event, I'm happy they charted a successful path, or they would have drowned like Pakistan.

@VCheng
 
It's historical, and their choice of who runs the interim government—Nobel Prize Economist Muhammad Yunus PhD in Economics from Vanderbilt University—just shows that the Bengali nation has come a long way in understanding what the priorities are and breaking the cult-personality that plagues Pakistan.

We have appointed a retired officer to head the technology department at HEC. Then, there are retired Pak Officers calling the riots in Bangladesh a Jewish conspiracy, the same mantra they always use when they have nothing else to give.

While 1971 was a sad event, I'm happy they charted a successful path, or they would have drowned like Pakistan.

@VCheng

They have their own way. We have our own. Both will get the rewards and punishments of their own choices, whatever they may be.
 
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You suffered from allowing USA with bases because USA was not fighting against proper conventional force.... they were fighting against Taliban terrorists....

Here in India case if we allow them bases it will be directed towards China.....

India cannot handle China alone and USA would love to have India as an ally who is weak compared to China but is a heavy-weight power that can surely make things much easier for USA.... so in east Asia USA with Japan, Taiwan, South Korea and in South Asia and IOR another heavy-weight joins will be a win win for USA.....

If USA is ready to deploy all her assets like ABM and other things for the protection of India like they do in European countries or in Japan and South Korea then I'm all for going ahead with a bases to USA in India....

Best of luck to India ;)

India didn't allow even Russia to establish a base in its territory, let alone USA.


That's why I said "this is something I really admire about India."
 

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