B’desh protesters demolish house of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, other party leaders
Hasina, 77, has been living in India since 5 August last year when she fled Bangladesh following a massive student-led protest that toppled her Awami League’s 16-year regime.
PTI
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Protesting students removed the name of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman from Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Hall of Dhaka University.
NEW DELHI, 6 FEB
Protesters in Bangladesh on
Thursday resumed the demolition of the country's founding father Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman's house after vandalising and setting it on fire last night.
The violent demonstrators also demolished the houses of leaders of
Sheikh Hasina's Awami League and defaced murals of Mujibur Rahman after deposed
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's live online address here.
Several
thousand people rallied on Wednesday in front of Hasina's father Mujibur
Rahman's house in the capital’s Dhanmondi area, which had earlier been turned
into a memorial museum. The rally followed a social media call for a “Bulldozer
Procession” as Hasina was supposed to deliver her address.
Later,
an excavator started demolishing the residence. On Thursday morning, the
demolition was still underway, using heavy machines.
The
residence of Hasina, Sudha Sadan, located on Road 5 in Dhanmondi, was also set
on fire by protesters late on Wednesday, The Daily Star newspaper reported.
Since
the ousting of the Hasina-led government on 5 August, Sudha Sadan had been
completely vacated.
The
demonstrators overnight also set on fire the deceased nuclear scientist
Wajed Mian’s house in the Dhanmondi area, which was used as Hasina's political
office.
The
actions in Dhaka fuelled similar destructions in other parts of Bangladesh.
Protesters
also demolished the Khulna home of Hasina's cousins Sheikh Helal Uddin and
Sheikh Salauddin Jewel.
Thousands
of people gathered around the house, chanting "Delhi or Dhaka -- Dhaka,
Dhaka" and "Down with Mujibism".
Ahsan
Habib, additional deputy commissioner of Khulna Metropolitan Police, told The
Daily Star, "I have seen the news of the incident on Facebook, but I don't
have further information."
Sheikh
Helal was the former MP of Bagerhat-1 and Sheikh Salahuddin Jewel was the
former MP of Khulna-2.
Protesting
students also removed the name of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman from Bangabandhu Sheikh
Mujibur Rahman Hall of Dhaka University.
The
homes of former lawmaker of Kushtia-3 and Awami League Joint General Secretary
Mahbubul Alam Hanif and president of Kushtia Awami League Sadar Khan were also
ransacked.
Protesters
in Chattogram took part in a torch procession last night to demonstrate against
Hasina's speech, which was broadcast on Bangladesh Awami League's social media
accounts.
They
later defaced Sheikh Mujib's murals at Chittagong Medical College and in the
city's Jamal Khan area.
Leaders
and activists of Students Against Discrimination held a protest rally and a
sit-in in the Bandar Bazar in Sylhet.
Protesters
also defaced a mural of Mujib at Begum Rokeya University in Rangpur.
In
Barishal, demonstrators brought a bulldozer to the house of Serniabat Sadiq
Abdullah, former mayor of the city corporation and a relative of Hasina. He
owns a two-storey home in the city's Kalibari Road area.
Protesters
vandalised a mural of Bangabandhu near the Circuit House ground in Mymensingh
city with hammers and crowbars around 11.30 pm on Wednesday, Prothom Alo
newspaper reported.
The
"Mujib Mural" of Bangabandhu Hall was also vandalised at the National
Poet Kazi Nazrul Islam University in Trishal.
The
mural of Mujibur Rahman and his wife Fazilatunnesa Mujib at the Chuadanga
deputy commissioner's office was demolished around 12.15am on Thursday, the
Bangla Daily reported.
In
Bhairab, Kishoreganj, the protesters vandalised the mural of Mujib at the
upazila Awami League office and the upazila parishad last night.
The
mayhem on Wednesday began after Anti-Discrimination Students Movement leader
Hasnat Abdullah wrote on his verified Facebook account: "Tonight,
Bangladesh will be liberated from the place of pilgrimage for fascism."
Hasina,
delivering her address organised by Awami League’s now disbanded student wing
Chhatra League, in a relatively calm tone called upon the countrymen to
organise a resistance against the current regime.
“They
are yet to have the strength to destroy the national flag, the constitution and
the independence that we earned at the cost of lives of millions of martyrs
with a bulldozer,” Hasina said in a visible reference to Professor Muhammad
Yunus’s incumbent regime.
She
added: “They can demolish a building, but not the history... but they must also
remember that the history takes its revenge.”
The
deposed premier in a slightly emotion-choked voice said Pakistani troops too
looted the house during the 1971 Liberation War but did not demolish or set it
on fire.
“Today,
this house is being demolished. What crime had it committed? Why were they so
afraid of the house... I seek justice from the people of the country. Didn’t I
do anything for you?” she said.
Ali Ahsan
Zonaed, another leader of the National Citizens' Committee, a grouping of
students allied to the Anti-Discrimination Student Movement, wrote in a post:
"Today marks the completion of six months of the July Uprising."
“On
this historic day, the butcher of Bengal, Hasina, decided to come out in
public. What a day she has chosen! Now is the time for us to wake up again.
Let's eliminate all fascist elements on this historic day."
The
student movement earlier promised to scrap Bangladesh’s 1972 Constitution as
they promised to bury the “Mujibist constitution” while some far-right groups
also suggested a change of the national anthem adopted by Mujib-led
post-independence government.
Hasina,
77, has been living in India since 5 August last year when she fled Bangladesh
following a massive student-led protest that toppled her Awami League’s 16-year
regime.
Hasina's
father is widely viewed as an independence hero, but anger at his daughter has
tarnished his legacy.
He was killed along with most of his family members in a coup staged by a group of junior or mid-ranking military officers on 15 August 1975, when Hasina and Rehana were in Germany.
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