Monday, August 18, 2025

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Grief has been criminalised in B'desh: Hasina's son condemns Bangabandhu anniversary crackdown

IANS | August 18, 2025 11:42 AM

DHAKA: Former Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's son Sajeeb Wazed has accused the Muhammad Yunus-led interim government for unleashing violence across the country and "criminalising grief" after murals depicting the sacrifices of the 1971 Liberation War were vandalised, prayers were disrupted, and several citizens were arrested for mourning on the death anniversary of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman on August 15.

Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, considered 'Father of the Nation' in Bangladesh, was brutally assassinated on August 15, 1975, along with several of his family members.

The Yunus regime had scrapped the status of August 15 as the 'National Mourning Day', as it continued to suppress the activities of the Awami League.

Wazed, Former Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Advisor to the Prime Minister of Bangladesh, said that on the eve of August 15, Yunus's press secretary openly threatened citizens against organising mourning events.

However, when people defied the warning, he alleged that Yunus-backed police forces "struck with fury, " and overnight, teachers, imams, professionals, and community leaders were thrown behind bars. Wazed claimed the innocence of the people jailed and said that "their only crime was loyalty to memory and truth."

Wazed asserted that under the "iron grip" of Yunus, ordinary people, including teachers, students, religious scholars, women, and even rickshaw pullers, have been reduced to "helpless victims, crushed under the weight of his vengeance."

What was once a day of unity and mourning, he said, has now been turned into a "battlefield of fear."

"Across Bangladesh, grief has been criminalised. On August 15, the day that marks the assassination of the nation's founding father, citizens who dared to remember their liberator found themselves hunted, silenced, and dragged into darkness, " Wazed posted on X.

He recalled that for decades, the death anniversary of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was observed with prayers, when mosques were filled with supplications and communities came together to feed the hungry.

He mentioned how the Liberation War murals stood tall to remind future generations of the sacrifices made to form a free country. But under Yunus's rule, he said, "these sacred traditions have been stolen from the people."

Wazed said that through an "unconstitutional ban", Yunus declared mourning illegal, and when citizens defied his order, choosing dignity over fear, they were made to pay the price.

In Dhaka, he revealed that Yunus's loyal enforcers unleashed terror where livelihoods were torn away as arbitrary arrests swept through neighbourhoods.

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