BANGLADESH: BUDDHISTS DRIVE CHRISTIAN FROM HOME

<http://www.compassdirect.org/en/display.php?page=news&lang=en&length=long&idelement=5743>http://www.compassdirect.org/en/display.php?page=news&lang=en&length=long&idelement=5743
 



In same district, Muslim land-grabbers murder defender of tribal villagers.

DHAKA, Bangladesh, December 26 (Compass Direct 
News) – Buddhist villagers in southeastern 
Bangladesh’s Rangamati district last week beat a 
young father and drove him from his house for converting to Christianity.

The Buddhists in Asambosti, in the Tabalchari 
area some 300 kilometers (186 miles) southeast of 
Dhaka, warned Sujan Chakma, 27, not to return to 
his home after beating him on Dec. 18. Chakma, 
who converted to Christianity about four months 
ago, has come back to his home but some nights 
the likelihood of attacks forces him to remain outside.

He is often unable to provide for his 26-year-old 
wife, Shefali Chakma, and their 6-year-old son, 
as area residents opposed to his faith refuse to 
give him work as a day laborer. Chakma, his wife 
and son do not eat on days he does not work, he said.

“I am ostracized by my neighbors since I became 
Christian,” Chakma said. “They put pressure on me 
to give up my faith, saying otherwise I cannot 
live in this society. Nothing daunted me, I held 
firm to my faith in Jesus. On Dec. 18, four of my 
neighbors came to my home and beat me. They 
slapped and punched on me. Later they forced me 
to leave my house. They threatened me that if I 
come back to my home, I will be in great trouble.”

Neighbors have threatened to beat him again and 
to send him to jail, he said, and they have 
pressured him to divorce to his wife.

“At first she did not like my conversion, but she 
liked my change after accepting Jesus,” he said. 
“My wife told openly to those neighbors, ‘My 
husband is a Christian, so I will be a Christian along with my son.’”

A spokesman for Chakma’s church, Parbatta Adivasi 
Christian Church, said church leaders met with 
some of the new convert’s neighbors and urged them to accept him.

“We told them that our constitution supports that 
anyone can accept any religion,” the church 
spokesman said. “Hindering their practice is unlawful.”

Church leaders said they fear that taking the 
case to local officials and police would only 
further anger local Buddhists and harm evangelical activities.

“We do not want to enrage anyone over this 
incident,” said the spokesman. “But Chakma does 
not feel secure to stay here. He does not spend 
the night in his house for security reasons.”

Rights Advocate Murdered

Earlier this year in Rangamati district, Bengali 
Muslim settlers killed a tribal Christian for 
defending indigenous peoples from illegal land-grabs.

On Aug. 19 Ladu Moni Chakma, 55, was stabbed 
repeatedly and his throat was cut at Sajek in 
Baghaichuri sub-district in Rangamati district 
after he reported to the Chittagong Hill Tracts 
Commission how a military commander helped settle 
Bengali Muslims on area lands.

A pastor of the Bangladesh Baptist Church in the 
district told Compass that Chakma was killed 
because he was a Christian who was an outspoken 
defender of minorities in the area.

“They do not want any Christian to live here,” 
the pastor said. “They hate Christians more than 
any other minority religions – it is one of the 
main reasons to evict and kill Ladu Moni. If 
people become Christian, many NGOs 
[Non-Governmental Organizations] will be set up 
here, and various local and international 
missionaries will look after them, so that 
Bengali settlers cannot grab lands illegally.”

Chakma often interceded with the Chittagong Hill 
Tract Commission on behalf of the indigenous 
people about their rights and the cruel manner in 
which Bengali settlers illegally took lands from 
indigenous people, the pastor added.

Chakma’s widow, Cikonpudi Chakma, also known as 
Minti Chakma, told reporters in Dhaka on Aug. 28 
how the Bengali settlers attacked her family around 10:30 p.m. in Aug. 19.

“Some people were shouting, ‘Open the door! Open 
the door!’” she said. “Without realizing anything 
what was going on, three Bengali people broke in our shanty hut.”

She saw knives in their hand and recognized a 
local man named Mohammed Ali, who earlier in the 
year had helped settlers seize lands from villagers.

The attackers blindfolded her and dragged her 
husband out of their home into the rain. They 
also tried to take her 13-year old daughter, Minu, she said.

“I resisted them taking out my daughter, and I 
was injured during the tussle with them,” she 
said. “They hit my forehead with a knife.”

She and her children fled through a backdoor and 
escaped certain rape and death by jumping down a 
ravine and rolling to the bottom. Drenched, they 
took shelter at a nearby home.

“I could not contact my husband that night,” she 
said. “The next morning, we were returning [to] 
our home. On the way near Baghaihat, we saw a 
blood-stained, stock-still body. It was my 
husband. His body was mutilated and stabbed with sharp knife and machete.”

Police sub-inspector Azizur Rahman Aziz of 
Baghaichari police station told Compass that his 
department had arrested three persons in 
connection with the killing of Chakma.

“We are investigating the case, and after the 
national election [to be] held on Jan. 29, we 
will submit the charge sheet,” he said.

Chakma’s widow urged the army-backed interim 
caretaker government to withdraw settlers from 
Sajek in Baghaichari and punish the murderers of her husband.

House Burnings

In April, mainly Muslim Bengali settlers aided by 
the army and a local businessman burned 77 homes 
in four villages of the tribal people in Sajek, 
Cikonpudi Chakma told reporters in August.

“In that arson attack, all of our wealth and 
assets were destroyed,” she said. “Just a week 
after, we again built a new house. At that time, 
Mohammad Ali tried to stop us making a new house 
and demanded that our land was his. The problem 
started when the Baghaihat zone army commander 
brought settlers from different areas and took 
initiative to settle them on our lands.”

Survival International director Stephen Corry 
said in a statement that the attacks were a 
“criminal human rights violation.” According to 
the Survival International, abuses have escalated 
since the army-backed emergency government came to power in January 2007.

In the Baghaichari area, at least 13 Christian 
families lived among 77 tribal Buddhist families 
until the Christians’ homes were burned down in April.

The Chittagong Hill Tracts region comprises three 
districts: Bandarban, Khagrachuri and Rangamati. 
The region is surrounded by the Indian states of 
Tripura on the north and Mizoram on the east, Myanmar on the south and east.

END


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